Newspaper Page Text
The Newnan Herald
HBRALr L Consolidated with Coweta Advertiser September, 1886. 1
^Established 1866. \ Consolidated with Newnan News January, 1916. \
NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 17. 1920.
Vol. 55—No. 51
Bank Vice-President
Tells How Ziron Iron Tonic Helped His Daughter
After Operation for Appendicitis.
A FTER any serious Illness, the
first thing you nottca when yon
begin to get around la your lack
at strength and energy—a tired, weak
feeling.
The aoonef you get your strength
fceclc the better. The thing to do la
to eat plenty of good, nourishing food,
,get all the fresh air you can, exercise
eonserratlTely, and take Ziron Iron
Tonic three times a day. —....
j your doctor will tail you this Is
sound adrlce, and urge you to follow It
Read this letter from Mr. J. B. Kelly,
Tlce-presldent of the First National
Bank, Oraceyllle, Fla.: “My daughter
bad been ln bad health since last April.
She was operated on for appendicitis.
She has been taking Ziron for two
weeks. Her appetite Is better than it
has been. Her nerres are better, and
she Bays she feels better ... I know
that Ziron Is good for weak and feeble
people."
Ziron Is a scientific, reconstructive
tonic, prepared from valuable strength-
bulldlhg Ingredients, for weak people
with thin blood. Druggists sell Ziron
on a money-back guarantee. Try it.
WHEN I AM DEAD.
When I am dead, my dearest,
Sing no sad songs for mos
Plant thou no roses at my head,
Nor shady cypress tree;
Be tho green grass above me
With showers, and dewdrops wot;
And if thou wilt, remember,
And if thou wilt, forget.
I shall not seo tho snows,
I shall not feel the rain;
I shall not hear the nightingale
Sing on, as if in pain;
And, dreaming through the twilight
That doth not rise or set,
Haply I may remember,
And haply may forget.
—C. G. Bosettl.
IF YOU EXPECT TO BUILD
A Residence, Bam, Garage, Store, or remodel your
Residence, we have a full stock of
BUILDING MATERIAL
On hand, including Lime, Cement, Brick, Nails, etc.
1 GET OUR PRICES.
R, D, COLE
IN BUSINESS SINCE 1854
SECOND ANNUAL
COWETA COUNTY FAIR—
OCTOBER 6, 7, 8 ancPS
RED CLOVER PAYS FOR FARM
D. A. Walkir, in Progressive Fprmer.
My experience in growing red clover
dates back to my first yoar of farming,
and I have found it to bo so essential
that I do not now Bee how I could get
along without it. All things considered
I regard red clover os the most useful
of all the clovers. My last experience
with red clover was in restoring a run
down place of land that I bought five
yours ago. fills land was so poor that'
10 to 15 bushels of corn, three to five
bushels of wheat or 150 to 000 pounds
of seed cotton per acre was the best-it
would do.
I sowed it in red clover at once and
grazed it with cattle. There were 50
acres in the farm and I usually grazed
35 to 40 head of steers. I averaged
about $10 profit on each steer each year,
and reseeded the land each alternate year,
sowing it in September. This gave the
plant time to make sufficient root growth
to withstand tho winter freezes and be
ieady to graze by the following May.
In this way I received a satisfactory in
terest on my investment. This year I
have saved a ton and a half pf hay per
Acre on 30 acres or more of the land and
Will cultivate it all in corn next yeah
I gave $40 an acre for the land and have
lately refused $12S an acre for it. tl*S
increased value is largely through the
use of red clover. I have broken the land
three times and harrowed it to make a
good seed bed. This is all the work I
have done on the farm, except keeping
up the fences. I used enough barnyard
manure and fertilizer the first year to
carry the clover through the winter. The
success of the enterprise was due to the
soil-building properties of the red clover.
At $40 a ton the hay on 30 acres of the
land will more than pay the original
cost of the farm.
TAKE A LOOK AT YOUR LABEL.
Dallas (On.) Now Era.
About once every so often or so wo
harden our hearts and revise our mailing
list. We go ever it and mako a blue
pencil mark through the names of I hose
who have neglected to ronew their sub
scriptions, and the mailing-list keeper
ruthlessly takes thorn off his books. This
is a sad, sad job. We don't mind cut
ting off a chicken's head to oblige the
rook. Or wouldn’t, if wo had a chicken.
"We have been known to kill snakes nod
rats, and once upon a time, In a moment
of j sheer bravado, wo shot a hog with
intent to murder it Hogs are not, easily
murdered, nnd we only succeeded in peev
ing this one, so that It took four of the
neighbors to lay him out finally. But
we digress. The point wo mako is thut,
while wo have been through some bur
rowing scones, nnd our heart is not as
soft as certain brands of pudding, yet
it gives us various and sundry pangs
when we have to use our deadly I due
pencil on our innocent and unsuspecting
subscribers. But when duty onlls, we
answer.
Duty called Inst week. Armed with
blue pencil, we responded. The result
is ■ that several people who have been
getting Tho Now Era will miss it tills
week. For a while we sent personal let
ters to every one when his subserietlon
expired. This got to be such a thankless
jobrthat we cut it out. Anybody con fell
when his subscription expires If he will
tnkp a slant at his label. If he doesn’t
renew, what can we do but drop him1
How do we know whether he wants to
keep taking the paper or not 1 We
wouldn’t mind sending It to anyone for
a week on credit, If he would write nnd
tell us he intended to keep tgking it ami
would pay ua when ho came in, R«t,
without any notice to the contrary, we
sre obliged to “assume that he doesn't
NEGRO
CALL ON
He came out of his first battle wound-
td in the heel.”
“Humph, that must hape been a run
ning sore. ’ ’
DELEGATIONS
HARDING.
Marion, O., Sept. 10.—Five delega
tions of negro Republicans, representing
various organizations of the race in both
tho North nnd tho South, met here nt
Senator Harding’s front porch nnd
pledged him their support in several
hours of characteristic oratory.
The Republican nominee made two
speeches, praising the loyalty nnd uttnin-
monts of the nation’s colored citizens and
promising that tho Federal Government
“will not fail (ho American negro."
He asked that thoy mako sorvlco to tho
country the standard of their citizenship,
nnd declared his abhorrence of the use
of “brutal and unlawful violence”
against the black race.
In soveral private conferences Senator
Harding hoard tho grievances of vnrtoiiH
negro leaders, and assured them he would
make a careful study of the situation.
Lynching and segregation of nogru em
ployees wore two of tho things for which
tho visitors made a particular plea.
Conventions of the negro Baptists in
session nt Columbus and Indianapolis
sent tho largest delegations nnd a camp-
meeting Bpirit ruled the dny’s celebra
tion. The first group came up singing:
Harding Will Shino Tonight,” a pur-
ody of a revival hymn, “Amen, Hnllelu-
inh.” A procession of orators poured out
their professions of loyalty to tho party
of Lincoln and Grant.
Honry Lincoln Johnson, Republican
National Committoemnn from Georgia,
headed the group from the National Bap
tist Convention at ColumbuB, which ar
rived during tho morning and was the
first to be addressed by the nominee.
The afternoon speech was to representa
tives pf the National Baptist Convention
Which is meeting in Indianapolis, the
National Equal Rights League, |ho Af
. j'ictth Episcopal Church n u—*’"
dlst Episcopal Church,
nml cleaner morals. But a woman can
do much an an Individual, just os she can
as a mombor of a club. She can en-
courago husband to interest himself In
movements for tho public good. Sho can
exert nn influence whore more mun has
much less Influence than Bhe has; for she
can tench the children of her own home,
nml of tlfo whole neighborhood, pride In
the home town and an ambition to make
It a clean and well-governed city. Tho
town tlmt becomes a model pf Its size
is tho town whore both men and women
nre planning for .it and working fur It
nil tho time.—Romo News.
How to Treat
A Torpid Liver
want it any more, and w« therefore yqiik llcttn Episcopal Church and tho Methq-
, - I rliof Tl'nlan/lnn 1 flhnenli
Look nt your label. If yon don’t un
derstand what it means, write of nnd
W0’ll explain. Then, when your time is
UPi send us $2 and we'll move you up
a botch. Simple, isn't it I
Remarkable Flight of Pigeon.
A homing pifeeon hearing the name
of,Ben Bolt was announced as having
established n new long-distance flight
record of 2,200 mllea In the" summer
of 1915, from Nonvnik, Ohio, to I.os
Angeles. Cal. The bird made the
trip In five days nine hours and thirty-
one minutes, arriving ut Los, Angeles
August 30.
No Change in Flah Hook Design.
Fish hooks have been made on ex>
•Ctly the same design for 2,000 yean.
XS9 hundred thousand votes from ne
gro women were promised the Senator
by the negro speakers, pne ol wholil
praised his stand for party government,
and said the women of the race would
claim representation lit the Government
in proportion, to their numbers.
One of those who conferred with the
Senntor during the day was William Mun-
roe Trotter, of Boston, executive seete-
tary of the National Equal Rights
League. He asked that segregation of ne
gro employees of the Federal Govern
ment lie abolished, nnd declnred after
wards that the nominee hail given the
request appreciative consideration.
The women of this town can do a lot
for it, if they will. In many towns tho
women’s clubB and other organizations
of women are found working for civic
betterment—more parks, cleaner streets
The lWer is the largest and most
important organ in the body, and
when the liver refuses to act, it causes
constipation, biliousness, headaches,
indigestion, gas, sour stomach, bad
breath, dysentery, diarrhoea, paina in
back and under ahoulder blades and
under ribs on right side. These eymp*
toms lead to colds, influenza or othen
serious troubles unless corrected im
mediately.
An inactive liver places an extra
burden on the kidneys, which, over
taxes them and cause* the blood to
absorb and carry into the system tha
impurities that the liver and kidney*
have failed to eliminate.
When you treat the liver atone, you
treat only a third of your trouble, and
that is why you have to take purga
tives every few nights. Calomel or
other ordinary laxatives do not go fa*
enough. If you would treat your kid
neys and blood while treating the live*
you irpuld put your entire system in
order end frequent purgative* would
then d* VHnecessary.
Dr, W, L. Hitchcock many wears
ago recognized these it3$brtaht facts,
end after much study and, research,
compounded wliat Is now known ss
Dr. Hitchcock’s Liver, Kidney *nd
Blood Powders, three medicines com
bined in one. This was the Doctors
favorite prescription for many years,
being used by his patients with
marked success. It is a harmless veg
etable remedy, that will not make you
sick, and you may eat anything you
like while taking it.
Get a large tin box from -your drug-
gist or dealer for 26c, under his. per
sonal guarantee that it will give re
lief, tone up the Uver, stimulate the
kidneys to healthy action and thereby
purify the blood. If your dealer, will
not supply you, it wilt be mailed direct
by Hitchcock Medicine Co., Atlanta.
Gs„
upon receipt of price.—(ado.)
Bordsoiv
TRADE MARK
The Fordson Tractor was made to meet the demands and
necessities of the every-day American farmer. It was made with
the thought that it was the necessity of the man of forty acres
as well as the man with one thousand acres. It was made not
only for plowing, harrowing, discing, drilling, seeding, mowing,
reaping, but for all other work on the farm where power is nec
essary. It was made to bring conveniences to the farmer’s home
as well as for the cultivation of his fields. It was made to furnish
power for the cream separator, silo filling, cutting feed, sawing
wood, furnishing power for milking, washing, supplying the
house With running water, electric lights, and the hundred and
one things on the farm. It was made to do all this economically
and in a reliable way. It was made to be the big profitable serv
ant on the farm.
you that you can depend upon absolutely from the first day you
put it to work. It is easy to understand. It possesses all the power
you want It is simple in control. It is more flexible than you
imagine. It will help you cultivate every foot of ground you have,
and every day in the year you will find use for it on the farm.
Its appeal to the farmer is in its dependable service and the wide
variety of work it can do.
And it has not failed in any of the expectations had for it
It has been tested as no other Tractor has been tested. It has been
proven reliable and can furnish proofs impossible to any other
Tractor. It has done these things not only in America but in
Europe, Asia, Africa, and in the Islands of the Seas. It has met
successfully the demands of farmers in every part of the civi
lized world.
We’d like every farmer that reads this, if he hasn’t a Ford-
son Tractor already, to come to us and let us sell him one. Let
us demonstrate its powers, its values, on your own farm. Let’s
get into details—power, reliability, economy. While the sale of
a Tractor gives us a small profit, the purchase of a Tractor to the
farmer means a money-making servant every day for years. So
the sale of a Fordson means more to the purchaser than it does
to us. We are arguing for your good, Mr. Farmer. Come
.and talk it over. Your time against oars. . It is worth it
in
* Therefore, the Fordson Tractor can meet all the conditions
of your farm. When you buy a Fordson, you are not buying any
experiment—-you are buying a servant and a money-maker -for
And remember, when you buy a Fordson Tractor, we are
right here to keep that Tractor in reliable running condition every
day. You won’t have to wait if anything should get out of order.
We are right here to keep it right, because one of the conditions
of the Fordson Dealer is that he must keep on hand always a
complete supply of parts. This is a guarantee we don’t believe
you can get with any other farm Tractor. Come in. Let’s talk
it over.
JONES MOTOR
Greenville Street
FORD AND FORDSON DEALERS
Newnan, Georgia