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THE NEWNAN HERALD
HEWN AN HERALD t Consolidated with Coweta Advertiser RpntomW 100.5 i
| Established 1866. 1 Consolidated with Newnan News wi"' }
NEWNAN, GA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1916.
Vol. 51—No 50,
Corn at $1.12 Per Bushel is $40 Per Ton
The following feed you can get at approximately $14 per ton. Won’t this saving of $26 per
ton interest you? If you have late corn, that will not make full ears, leave it on the stalk and have
it ground into feed. It will pay you well to do this. If you have gathered your corn bring the
stalks and have them ground. This will take the place of hulls and save you at least $9 per ton.
For horses and mules we add molasses, which, with a small per cent, of cotton seed meal, will give
you a feed the analysis of which you will find below:
»
Protein, 5.51 Fat, 1.53 Fiber, 16.04 Carbohydrates, 36.26
This feed will bring your stock through the winter months, and keep you out of your corn
crib until spring ploughing.
Our charge for ginning is 75c per bale and we can furnish Bagging and Ties when desired.
We buy and store seed for our customers. Highest prices paid for cotton seed.
McBride Grain & Feed Co.
IN
SHOE POLISHE:
Contain no acid and thus keep the leather soft, protecting it against
cracking. They combine liquid and paste in a paste form and require
only half the effort for a brilliant lasting shine. Easy to use for
all the family—children and adults. Shine your shoes at home and
keep them neat. ■ THE F. F. DALLEY CO., Ltd.
BLACK-WHITE-TAN
THE F. F. DALLEY CO.,
* Buffalo. N.Y.
'KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT I
II. C. HLL MERCHANDISE CO.
“THE STORE THAT UNDERBUYS"
CAN YOUR SYRUP
The time is about here for making syrup, and every year our
farmers, by putting their syrup up in dusty barrels, lose at
least 25 per cent. Why throw away this amount of syrup? You
can save this waste by canning your syrup, and you will find
the sale of it easy; because there is always a sale for goods put
up in nice, neat packages. Now we have a few gallon cans in
stock and we want to get you to try canning your syrup.
Therefore, we ask that you come in, ’phone or write for the
amount you think that you will need and we will save them for
you. Do not wait until the day you start to making up your
syrup to send after cans, for you might not get them.
’PHONE JM2
H. G. HULL MERCHANDISE CO.
“THE STORE THAT UNDERSELLS”
The subscription price of The Herald goes to $1.50 Jan. 1, 1917.
Better pay your past arrearages and a year in advance.
It Pays to Advertise.
No better proof can be found of the
true value of well directed and careful
ly distributed advertising of goods of
real merit than one will find in the ex
ample of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco
Co., of Winston-Salem, N. C., whose
growth in business is but little short of
phenomenal.
In 1875 Mr. Reynolds went from Vir
ginia to Winston-Salem with $7,500 cash
capital. At this time he built and
equipped the first plant, which, when
completed, cost $2,400. To-day the R.
J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. has an author
ized capitalization of $20,000,000 and
employs over 10,000 people. In order
that our readers may be able to grasp
and have a true conception of the size
and magnitude of the business of the
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. we give the
following, which statement can be ver
ified from the records of the Depart
ment of Internal Revenue:
A little more than a year ago the
Federal Government erected at Wins
ton-Salem, N. C., a new postoffice and
Federal building at a cost of $250,000.
Much ado was made over the erection
of such a building, and particularly
were the eyes of the public opened
when the fact was made known that in
exactly eight days, the first eight days
that the new building was occupied,
$250,000 had been received through the
revenue department in that building.
Now the building pays for itself every
six days;—in other words, the R. J.
Reynolds Tobacco C». pays the U. S.
Internal Revenue Department an aver
age of $250,000 every six days.
In 1910 the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco
Co. took up their first general advertis
ing campaign. Since that time they
have been constant and consistent users
of newspaper space, The Herald enjoy
ing a liberal amount of their patronage.
The following figures will prove in
teresting and go to show the value of
newspaper advertising. Since begin
ning the general newspaper advertising
campaign in 1910—the gain of the R.
J. Reynolds Tobacco Company’s busi
ness in pounds—smoking and chewing
tobacco included to the close of busi
ness 1915 was 31,629,1191.
All other factories combined from
1910 to 1915 inclusive lost 37,254,933.
I Cigarettes for one year—1915, (the
company having manufactured cigar
ettes less than three yearn) the gain
during 1915 over 1914 was 1,882,455,-
970 cigarettes.
All other factories combined during
1915 compared with 1914 lost 774,798,-
411.
An open door policy—honest goods
honestly advertised did the work.
Quality Brings Quantity.
When you employ a man to drive
your team on the farm you do not select
a weakling who would stagger under a
50-pound weight. You want a man.
When you want a horse for Bpeed and
endurance you do not pick out a sway-
backed, string-halted, spavined plug.
If you did you would live and die in the
shadow of the same Bpot.
Then why should not the same far
sighted sagacity be applied to the se
lection of your dairy stock?
Too many people are content to buy
dairy stock of inferior breed, and trust
to quantity to produce financial results.
Quantity is quantity, but it is quality
that brings the price. Quantity, in
fact, is one of the underlying results of
quality, and the man who keeps up the
quality invariably reaps the reward of
both quality and quantity.
There ia no economy, no spirit of
thrift, in buying cheap dairy stock, for
a cheapcow, like.everything else cheap,
is just simply cheap.
It is the essence of wisdom to get
good stock and keep up the breed. The
quantity of milk will be greater, the
quality will be higher, and the financial
returns will be larger.
Quality brings quantity, in dairying
as well as In all other lines of business.
A Bad Summer for Children.
There haa been an unusual amount of
sickness among children everywhere
thie summer. Extra precautions should
be taken to keep the bowels open and
the liver active. Foley’s Cathartic Tab
lets are a fine and wholesome physic;
cause no pain, nausea or griping. Re
lieve indigestion, sick headache, bilious
ness, sour Btomach, bad breath. J. F.
Lee Drug Co.
Warmth and sunshine give growth;
but after all it is the rain an
— .. ...... „.j(f storm
that give strength and endurance.
The Strong Withstand the Heat of
Summer Better Than the Weak
Old people who are feeble, and younger
people who are weak,will be strengthened
and enabled to go through the depress
ing heat of summer by taking regularly
Grove's.TasteiessChillTonic. It purifies
and enriches the blood and builds up
the whole system. 50c.
A Worthy Appeal.
Dr. E. F. Dempsey, who has charge
of the loan fund of Emory College, has
been quite busy with that and other
duties connected with this wise and
helpful feature of our Georgia Meth
odism. The good this fund has done is
not to be stated either in syllables or
figures. Some of the best men in
Georgia Methodism to-day were en
abled by this fund to get a college ed
ucation, and their service has been
worth many timeB over what the lib
eral-minded have put into the fund.
There are now more than twenty
young men desiring to go to college on
thie fund—they will not be able to go
without help, and the help must come
from the Emory loan fund, if at all. If
these young men could be furnished
through the loan fund a sufficient
amount of loan to begin their college
work, the probabilities are that they
will manage to go through before they
quit college.
Will not the liberal men and women
of the State open their purses and give
Dr. Dempsey the money he so much
needB? Remember, that this is in fact
a loan fund—the student who borrows
pays back that which he borrows, with
interest after he leaves college, and
then cornea another and another and ao
on. It is a sum of money which never
stops in its beneficent work for the
education of the poor. Help: And
help now.
Senator La Foiette was talking about
a corrupt political machine.
“But it's no use upraiding these
men," he said. “They only abuse you
in return. To take them to task is
only to be treated like the Lady Boun
tiful.
“A good Lady Bountiful said to a
bad little boy who Was swearing fright
fully:
“ ‘Oh, you little wretch, afefl't you
ashamed? Why, I never heard such
horrible, dreadful cursing since the day
I was born.'
“ 'Yes’ said the wicked urchin; ‘I bet
dere was a lot o' cuasin’ de day you
wuz born.' ”
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove’s
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic properties of QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents.
The Happy Man.
Burlington Tribune.
The happiest man in the world is the
common every-dsy chap who makes his
own living, pays hiB own bills and has
the respect of his neighbors. He saves
a little money as he goes along, and he
is not a slave to ambition or society.
He never intends to wear out his trous
ers in the seat, and when he glides out
of bed in the morning he wastes no
time trying to pick out the right tint
of sox, suspenders and necktie that
will blend with the general effect.
He only wears a high collar when he
feels like it, when his pet corn begins
to jump he jerkB out his knife and cuts
a four-inch gash in the side of his shoe,
and nothing iB said about it in the local
paper. He never has to sit upat night
to poultice his conscience. He believes
in the doctrine of “live and let live.’’
When he encounters one of the needy
he doesn’t stutter with his pocketbook.
The plain plug of man is happy be
cause he is satisfied, and doesn’t spend
half his time yearning for something
which his salary will not permit him to
buy.
Give us more plain men and the world
will be better.
GOOD CAUSE FOR ALARM
These Figures Will Make Newtaan
People Take Notice.
Deaths from kidney disease have in
creased 72 per cent in twenty years.
People overdo nowadays in . so many
ways that the constant filtering of poi
soned blood weakens the kidneys. Be
ware of fatal Bright’s disease, When
backache or urinary llle suggest weak
kidneys, use Doan’s Kidney Pills, live
carefully, take things easy and avoid
heavy eating. Doan’s Kidney Pills
command confidence, for no other kid
ney remedy is so widely U3ed or so
generally successful. Home indorse
ment is the best proof of merit. Read
this Newnan resident’s story :
J. H. Foster, 47 W. Washington St.,
Newnan, says : “My back gave me lots
of trouble. Invariably in the mornings
it was sore and lame. The least bit of
work or any stooping caused me to suf
fer awfully. Dizzy spells almost over
came me at times. The kidney secre
tions alBO passed irregularly. Colds
settled in my kidneys and made my
condition worse. I used two boxes of
Doan’s Kidney Pills and they cured me
of all symptoms of kidney trouble.”
Price 50c., at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for kidnev remedy—get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—The same that
Mr. Foster had. Foster-Milburn Co.,
Props., Buffalo, N. Y.