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THE NEWNAN HERALD, NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1921
SOME WORK TO RAISE CHICKENS.
;\u tilings considered, from' bCRimiing
to ending, , , ,, ,
Hutching nnd eatelung nnd feeing mid
Chasing 1 '''"' 1 hilling nnd scalding nnd
There's a grent degl of work nliout rais
ing a chicken.
Watching n lien while, she's doing the
hatching,
Wnteliing her, too, while she’s eating
and scratching,
Quarding 'gainst hawks nnd ’possums
and rats, , , ,
Driving oil crows mid dogs nnd cats,
Remly all day to give something g
lickin’—
There 'p a grent deal of work about rais
ing a chicken.
A pessimist is a man who lins backed
nu optimist.
4th
ANNUAL
Cparamount
i-WEEK ^
SEPTEMBER 1921
M
ALAMO THEATRE
7Y 2 c Per Pound
Now is the time to improve your farm with
Crimsori'Clover while the seed is cheap. Plant a
seed patch this fall and prepare to g^ow your
own fertilizer.
ORDER FROM
B. M. DRAKE
TURIN, GA.
WILL EXCHANGE FOR PIGS
ISOCIETY
_ ' TELEPHONE 447
In compliment, to Miss Myrtle Ar-
unll’s-.guests, Mias Both Allen of Elbev-
ton, Miss Elizabeth Tumor of Romo, aiul
Alias Emily Wynne of Eastman, several
lovely functions are being: given, One
of the largest was the barbecue which
Mr. A. W. Arnnll gave at the Country
CluU Wednesday afternoon at 0 o’clock.
The *oue was servod in Southern style,
and about seventy-five gueats wore* in
vited. Those who assisted in entertain
ing were Mr., hml Airs. A. H. .'Freeman,
Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Walker, Air. and Mrs.
H. C. Arnnll, jr„ Mr. and Airs. Roger
Bryant, and.Mr J. G. Arnnll. Thursday
afternoon Mrs. Roger Bryant entertain
ed at rook for the visitors at tho Coun
try Club, Misses Marie and' J amie Jones,
of Opelika, Ala., sharing honors on this
occasion. Tho honor guests are Shorter
Gollogo girls and the college colors (yel
low and white) wore effectively carried
out in the table decoration^ and the
menu. Misses Mildred nnd Martha Cald
well will;*entertain nt a bridge 'luncheon
this morning for tile popular visitors,
and Miss Sarah Stallings will ontortain
for flioni at dinner this evening. Miss
Margaret Brewster, nnotlier popular
Shorter College girl, will bo liQstess at
a swimming party at Warm Springs to
morrow, an elaborate picnic luncheon to
be servod nfterwn'rds. Severn! other
parties are being planned for Miss Ar-
iiaU ahd her guests next week.
Alias Alice Tnnkorsly, of Montgom
ery, Ala., the admired guest of Miss
Sarah Hall, was honoree at two of tho
loveliest parties of tho season at the
Country Club-the past week. Miss Hall
was hostess Saturday morning at bridge
and rook, the main room of the club be
ing beautifully decorated for the occa
sion with baskets of marigold and zin
nias. After the gnmo an elaborate menu
was served.. Monday afternoon Mrs. Ar
thur Murpiiey. and Miss Willella Mur-
pliey were joint hostesses at bridge and
rook for Mips Hall’s visitors. Guests
for ftve tables were invited, and a salad
course was served after the games.
One of the most enjoyable week-end
affairs was the house party given by
Miss Thelma Nixon Inst week nt her
lovely* country homo, 1 ( Fineliurst. ” Her
guests were Mi^s Helen McLaren of
Fairburn, Alisa Harriot Jonps, of River
side, Misses Sarah Brown, Janet M.C
Ritchie, Mary Clinton Orr and Francos
Cole of Newnan.
Miss Harriet Jones, of Riverside, en
tertained several girl friends at ji spend-
the-night party Tuesday night, her
guests including Alias Nettie Lou Stocks
of MadiBon,i Alisneis Janet McRitchio,
Sarah Brown, Mary Ella Fontlierston,
Mary Clinton Orr, Mary Stallings,
Frances Colo and Virginia Parks,
MUSINGS OF THE MERIWETHER
PHILOSOPHER.
Judge H. K. Rovill in Atorlwothor Vin
dicator.
I was talking to a friend tho other
day. He is a philosopher and a vory
wiHG man. I asked him:
“What about the future of tho coun
try—when will things-clear up/”
Ho replied: ‘ * Did you ever walk at
night b.v' the light of an old-fashioned
Inti tern l You can only see- a step ahead
of you. That is tho way with us today.
*Wo thin only see a stop ahead of ns.”
No man lms yet developed wisdom
enough to tell us of tomorrow. But for
the light* of hope, we’d all bo in a bad
fix. Hope beckons us on, and there
seems a brighter dny f nhoad. Tho swing
of the pendulum carries us just, as far
one way as it dose the other, ft lms to
swing both ways. It will Btnvt on tho
forward trip after awlillo. Tho way of
progress is marked with human drift
wood. It is a path of death and life.
The hardest jpb .in 'this world is to
do nothing. Bays drag and nights arc
hell. I read tho other day of a rich
young couple who had separated. They
had a city homo on Fifth nvomio; a sum
mer homo nt Long Branch; a winter
hpmo in Florida; twenty automobiles;
fifty blooded horsed in the stable, and
millions of money. They had nothing
to look forward to. Tho husband inher
ited nil tho money lie could spend and
tlim*e was no lneon.ti‘ve to work. Pleasure
palled on him; luxury and indulgences
weakened him. .The wife lmd nurses and
govornesH to raise her children, dooi*
oty aiul its demands boenmo intolerable,
and there you had two dissatisfied peo
ple. Wealth fails to build lmppy homes.
I boliovo that when the Great Book said,
It is easier for a camel to go through
tlio eye of a noodle than a rich man to
outer tho kingdom of heaven,” it meant
tho small eye of a small needle. Occn
Bionally you see a broken hearthstone
among tho middle clnss, but among tlio
vory rich it. is a.s common as pig
tracks in a hog-wire pasture. But for
the faith and lives of the common run of
people, morality would bo but a mean
ingless word. The- groat trouble about
it is that the style and liubits of high Ity'e
trickle down into the socalled lower strut-
urns of society nnd create a poison which
contaminates and marB and blackens.
above the character of its homos. Wo
man is tho source of life, and no stream
can bo pvp;or than its source. I read a
few days ago a special dispatch from a
Michigan city as follows: “The up-
uoarntiae of women dressed in stylish
[lathing suits in dtfwntown stores must
cense, Mrs. Snrnh McVeigh, polioo mat
ron declared Friday. A bathrobe must,
be worn by shoppers and promennders in
the future, she said. Tho fad is an off
spring of the hot wave.”
Cun a fnodcst 'Woman thus appear pn
tho public streets? I boliovo I will say
that no pure-minded woman thus array
ed can promonndo the streets and go on
shopping expeditions'.
Virtue is a thing of tho mind nnd
heart. When it censes to abide there,
it. doea^not. take the ovort. act to make a
wanton. No true man can bolieve in a
double standard. Virtue is a single rule
—a single standard. Pure womanhood
is a mail’s anchor of safety. When she
knowingly and designedly makes herself
the lure of' impuro thoughts, she turns
man adrift upon the sea of lust. Prone
to sin as the sparks to fly upward, /ncu
can be led by pure wonianhnod to vir
tuous manhood j or he can be carried
down by lecherous bait to tho boll of
impurity.
Womanhood, tho hope of the worliL
must not topplo from the throue of
chastity. When thus she falls she carries
down with her the sons of mothers.
When blessed womanhood loses tho blush
of modesty olio fiery tongues of degrada
tion will lap the nations like tho llaraca :
which devoured Sodom and Gomo.*/ah,
USUI. _ ...
school friend and was shown into a room
whore his churn’s sister*was busy ar
ranging some dried grass she had col
lected.
“Wlmt a quantity of driod grass you
have collected, Miss Ritchie,” ho said*
Then Ids humor burst forth. “Nice
room for a donkoy to got into.”
“Then make yoursolf at homo, Mr.
Smithson,” said tho girl ploasantly.
IS
FOR
itv and Service
We have them all in our store—just ready for
you—find we ask you to give our goods and service
a trial. t Note the prices offered below, and come in
SATURDAY and MONDAY-
10c OCTAGON SOAP
-July 30 and Aug 1
6c a Cake
5 Cakes for 30c
Limit 5 to a customer. This is the large-size cake.
A BLOOD PURIFIER
60c Allen’s Sarsaparilla Compound 39c
A splendid tonic and builder; cleans the sys
tem and throws off impurities.
HAVE A- CLEAN MOUTH—USE
60c Nyal’s Mouth Wash for 39c
A thorough antiseptic cleanser for the mouth
and teeth. . Your toilet is incomplete without it.
SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE
Requires the best in Stationery. That’s why
_we offer- this—
75c Arabian Fabric Correspondence Cards 40c
All colors.
CLEAN UP YOUR-STRAW HAT
Yop can do it with
15c Nyal’s Straw Hat Cleaner 11c
It’s easy with this cleaner.
INSECTS OF ALL KINDS
Instantly killed with '
20c Hofstra Insect Powder 15c
I In a gun—ready to, spray.
OUR MESSENGER SERVICE
• Is at your service. Phone us your orders.
PRESCRIPTION WORK GIVEN SPECIAL AT
TENTION.
COWETA DRUG AND BOOK CO.
PHONE 18
8 Greenville St.
Alias Beth' Allen of Elberton,. Miss
Emily Wynne pf Eastman, ancl. Miss
Elizabeth Turner of Romo, are boing
delightfully entertained as the guests of
Miss Myrtle Arnnll at the homo of her
aunt, Mrs. A. Hi Freeman.
Mrs. Julia A. Brown nnnouuSek tho
marriage of her daughter, Mrs. Effj'e B.
Moore, to Mr. James Luther Campbell,
of Atlanta, Thursday, July 28, JjfiO p.
in., at home, Dr. E. W.. Stone officiating,
Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Stringer and chil
dren, who have been tho guests of Judge
and Mrs. R. W. Freeman, returned lust
week to their home at Anderson, S. C.
Mrs. W. H. Holnjes and Miss Claire
Holmes left Wednesday for Denver, Col.,
where they will visit Mr. Frank Holmes
and family for two weeks.
Mrs. Milner Hootoii add cfulclren, of
Jacksonville, Fla,, are visiting Miss Car
olyn Milner, and will spend the summer
here.
Miss Bessie Miller haa returned to her
homo at Stone Mountain,, after spending
a couple of weeks with Migs Effio Street.
Airs. R. if Stewart has joined the New
nan colony at Borden Springs, and will
spend some time at that popular resort.
Misses Louise and Harriet Garrett, of
Augusta, are visiting their. grandmother,
Mrs. Lula Bponcler, on Perry street.
After a stay of six weeks in New
York'City and at Sharon, Conn., Mrs. B.
C. Sanders. returned v home Monday.
Mrs. Roena B. Edge and daughters,
Roena and Vircie, are, spending a week
or so at Borden Springs.
Miss May Cole'left last week to join
a party of Macon friends for a. two-
months ’ tour of Europe.
Miss Evie Davis is spending some time
with her brother,, Mr. § W. H. Davis, at
East Lake,. Atlanta.
Misses Jamie &nd Marie Jones, of
Opelika, Ala., are guests pf Mrs, Ernest
Goodwyn tins week.
Miss Carolyn Milner returned Monday
from an extended visit to her sister
Jacksonville, Fla. ■
Misses Nina and Cynthia Tompkins, of
Franklin, are spending a week or so with
Newnan ' friends.
Mrs. N. E. Hopkins, of Atlanta, spent
the week-end with hep daughter, Mrs.
T. J. Williams.
Mrs. J. A. Stephens and,.Miss-Virginia
Stephens are visiting relatives at La-
Fayette, Ala. -
Miss Alice Tankersly, of Montgomery,
Ala., is the- attractive guest of Miss
Sarah Hall.
Mies Nellie, Robinson, of Coving ton,
spent last we<& with her sister, Mrs. C.
E. Bryantr.
Mrs. C. P. Braifnan, of Savannah, is
the guest of her daughter, Mrs. W. L.
Woodroof.
— -
I passed along the public highway- a
few months ago and it wns all torn up
with the plow. A little afterwards it
was a modern roadway. Out of the
cliaoB today will come the great reforms
and progross of tomorrow. The obsta
cles will be flowed down and a smooth
way will come. But for. death, thore
never would be eternal life. Tlio dissat
isfaction ovor the evils of # today will
bring nbout tlio remedy. I reaVl a few days
ago whore the archeologists discovered
tho ruins of five cities, one right on top
of the other, and each ono marked a
step of improvement and progress, ’The
clouds are dark now, but after awlillo
the sun will drive them away and there
will be Ijghfc. The Mississippi river «ruus
toward and empties into tlio gulf, In
places it seems to run backward toward
its ^source. But the trend of it is gulf-
ward, ami it finally gets there. For
forty years -tlio Israelites wandered in
the wilderness, seeking the promised
land. Thoy finally got to Caimim*. ^Lack
of faith iii God ami disobodjeiicc to Ilia
\viltv..cfthsed the delay. It looks to mo
like the present condition of the world
lias returned from tho same causes. But
there’ is -light ahead?
No home can rj^e above tho character
of its womanhood. , No nation can rise
Bensop—“Do you know when a baby
begins to think?”
Hobson—“Yes; mine began to think
I ought to walk the floor with him when
he was a week'old.”
Cigarette
To seal In the
delicious Burley
tobacco flavor.
It’s Toasted
TRUSTEE’S SALE
OF CITT PROPERTY
TJnde£ and by virtue of the authority
contained in adeed from W. A. Potts to
the undersigned, J. R. Brown, trustee
for the creditors therein set out, made
on the 8d day of M.ay, 1021, and by and
with tho consent of the said W. A. F’otts
and with rthe advice and consent of the
creditors’ committee therein referred to,
I will sell at public outcry before tlio
court-house door in the city of Newnan,
Coweta county, Ga., on the second day of
August, 1021, at 11 o'clock a. m., the
following described property to-wit—
A certain* city lot in the city, of New
nan,. Coweta county, Ga., with a brick
stable thereon, situated on the > north
side of West Broad street and on the
east side of Brown street, nnd common
ly known as tho ” Potts Stable Build
ing,” and bounded as follows: North
by lands of Mrs. Tommie Niminons
Powell and the John Dunbar estate, oast
by an alley, south by West Broad street,
and west by Browfi street.
All persons having claims against said
property have agreed that same may be
sold free of liens, and that proceeds
may stand in lieu of same, so that the
purchaser will get a complete title to
said property, free of incumbrances.
Terms of pale—-CASH.
For full information apply to tho un
designed. J. K.' BROWN,
Trustee for Creditors.
Self-Shavers
i,
We recommend our line of shaving
soaps and supplies to give a smoother
and more comfortable shave than you
have been getting.
" $■{ / I
We sell the very best makes of
safety razors—blades for any of them,
too, and every kind of soap you can
think of. Don’t try to shave with poor
soapT—it’s so little trouble to get.the
right kind here.
. Lots of face powders and lotions to
finish the jojb v^th, and make you feel
comfortable. If you are a self-shaver,
be a satisfied one.
i
J R. McCalla
$
' ' I r , ; 1
After this date our business will be conducted
on a cas^ basis, and we will give our customers the
advantage of cash prices, with the best grocery stock
in Newnan to select from, and prompt and reliable
delivery selvice. You get QUALITY GOODS at
LOWEST CASH PRICES, with unequaled service,
Sunshine Crackers, package.. Tie and 15c
Quaker Grits—2 packages for.... 25c
Post Toasties—2 packages for.... 25c
Palmoliv^ Sqap—3 cakes for .. 25 C
BEST WATER-GROUND MEAI^-bushel 1.15
Best Chicken Feed per 100 lbs 2.50
SUGAR—15 lbs. for : \ .QQ
Carnation Milk,’ small, 3 for 25c
Carnation Milk, large ... 16c
No. 2 can Hillsdale broken-sliced Pineapple 23c
Pint can Wesson Oil 29c
Orange Pekoe Tea—try this today—lb. 50c
No.2 can Hillside broken-sliced Pineapple. 25c
Pint jar of Queen Olive's, 55c value... 45c
12-oz.,Ritter’s Catsqp, 25c value..- ■ 17c
30c carton Peanut Butter........... 15c
Full-weight can Oysters........ 10c
Best Full-Cream Cheese, lb ••'••27c
Best grade Pink Salmon, 2 cans for,...... 25c
Very best Side Meat, lb 16c
Remember, you are getting the highest quality
Groceries in Newnan at our store. Try them.
W.E. WOODS
GROCERY COMPANY
•*
PHONE 78
'
NEWNAN, GA.