Newspaper Page Text
FACE TWO
THE STANDARD, CEDARTOWN. GA.
AUGUST 3, 1922.
THE CEDARTOWN STANDARD
W. H. Trawlck. C. C. Bunn, Jr.
BUNN & TRAWICK
Attorneys at Law.
Peek Block, CEDARTOWN, GA.
All business placed in our hands
erlll be given prompt and vlllgant at
tention.
MUNDY & WATKINS
Attorneys at Law.
Careful and prompt attention is
what your business gets when placed
with us.
Office in Mundy Bldg, over Vance
A Hunt's store, Ccdartown, Ga.
Published Every Thursday
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
One Year.. .. .. - - .. ._$1.50
Sia Months. 7S
Three Months... .. .- .. .. _. .40
E. S. AULT,
Attorney at Law.
Brorapt and careful attention given
■11 business,both Civil and Criminal.
Office in Richardson Building.
Phone 16.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
W. K. FIELDER,
Attorney at Law.
Practice la ell the Courts.
Office in Chamberlain Building.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
P. O. CHAUDRON
PhonsISS.
HALL & CHAUDRON
Physicians & Surgeons.
Office In Peek Block.
Office Phone 87.
C. V. WOOD,
Physician and Surgeon.
OFFICE PHONE 119
RESIDENCE PHONE 121.
Office) VanDcvnndcr Houso, West Av.
SEALS l. whitely,
Physician and Surgeon.
Phene 216.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
j7w. GOOD,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office: VanDovander Houso,West Av.
Ree. Phone 200. Oftlco Phone 208.
F. L. ROUNTREE
DENTIST,
Ulfera his services to the public.
Phone 62. Office Smith Bldg.
W. T. EDWARDS,
DENTIST,
Office over Liberty National Bank.
Office Phone 64. Res. Phone 40.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
Drs.J.W. & Carl Pickett
Dentists.
Office and Laboratory up-stairs in
the Peek Building.
E. B. RUSSELL, Editor.
THURSDAY, AUG. 3, 1922.
DON’T RISK NEGLECT.
Don't neglect a constant backache,
+mnp, darting pains or urinary dieor-
dt(«. Tha danger of dropsy or
■right’s disease is too serious to ig-
^re. Use Doan’e Kidney Pills as
Stye your friends and neighbors. A
OMartown case.
Mrs. R. L. Hudsoa, 521 Fletcher
S&. says: “Several years ago my
hade was weak and it was hard for
gn le do my housework. Sharp
J ngoa seized me through my back
an I stooped. I was dizzy and
ck spots jumped before my oyos
which blurred my sight Nervous
^rl'n came over mo and I went all to
jfecos. I had terrible headaches
ahlch followed the nervous spells.
Mg kidneys wore weak and I suffer-
sfl from their irregular action. I had
beard co much about Doan's Kidney
Nile that 1 got two boxes at Brad-
Jfejd’s Drug Store. These two boxos
•wore all I needed to make my kidneys
Bormal and to rid me of tho aches
aad pains in my back. I felt like a
different person after using Doan’s."
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
%>., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
FOR CONGRESS.
To the Voters of the Seventh Cunereaflionai
District:
I hereby announce my candidacy as Rep
resentative from the Seventh Congressional
District of Georgia In the 68th Congress,
subject to the Democratic Primary of Sep
tember lath, 1922.
As your Representative in Congress. 1
have devoted my best efforts to every in
dividual and business interest in the dis
trict and state, and believe the experience I
have had better qualifies me to render more
efficient service In the future.
I appreciate your endorsement of my
FOR STATE SENATOR.
To the Voters of Polk County: I hereby
_nnounce my candidacy for State Senator
for the R8th Senatorial District, subject to
the white primary. . „ .
I have served one year In the State Sen
ate and three years in the House of Repre
sentatives. It Is Polk's time to nominate
the Senator. I feel that my past services
somewhat qualify mo to serve you a term
in the State Senate.
I take this opportunity to thank you sin
cerely for all past support and helpful co
operation, and to assure you that I will ren
der the very pest service of whieh I am ca
pable, to promote the highest and best in-
its of our 8—— J —-
b. Yoi
WILLIAM W. MUNDY.
Polk and the State to the best of my ability,
representing the people in all walks of life
demands present themselves.
T. I. PARTEE.
To ths Voters of Polk County: I hereby
announce my candidacy for the Legislature,
subject to the white primary. In making a
decision to offer for this important office, I
had two ends in view:
1st, that I might be of some service to
V people.
2d, I coveted the honor and distinction of
representing a great county like Polk.
Yours very sinceroly,
CIIAH. W. PEEK.
FOR JUDGE.
To the Voters, Maje and Female, of I’olk
County:—
I have gone In and out before you
ore than thirty years; I believe you know
e. I have tried to answer all calls made
upon me when In my power. You have very
generously responded when I have called.
May I now hope that you will respond to
this, possibly my last call? I stand for re-
election to the responsible position I now
hold, subject to the primary in Beptember.
I have discharged the duties of the office
conscientiously and to the very best of my
ability, and promise to continue to do i
with the aid of the additional experience
have had. Heartily thanking you for your
most generoun support in the past, I earn
estly solicit your support In tho coming pri
mary. Respectfully,
F. A. IRWIN.
tu Circuit:
have been
for Judge of
To tho Voters of the Tallap
For more than six months
strongly urged to make the rac
Workers and Shirkers.
A belated honor was given by the
War Department a few days ago to
the brave young officer who carried
the important message to Gen. Gar
cia in Cuba during the Spanish-A-
merican War that helped us to an
enrly winning of the war.
Many of us have read and re-read
the famous editorial of Elbert Hub
bard on "Carrying the Message to
Garcia," but in these days when so
many workers are turning shirkers,
trying to "get by" with as little la
bor as possible and still draw their
pay—unmindful of the act that such
hirelings are always the last to get a
job and the first to be fired if con
ditions change in the least, —watch
ing the clock for quitting time and
letting their tools "hang up in the
air" when the whistle blows, depend
ing on pull or length of service in
stead of honest effort to hold their
jobs,—so many, we soy, are doing
these things that it would be well for
everyone to clip Mr. Hubbard’R red-
blooded message and read it over and
over again. Here are itH most im
portant features:
"In every store and factory there
is a constant weeding-out process
going on. The employer is constant
ly sending awny ‘help’ that have
shown their incapacity to further the
interests of the business, and others
are being taken on. No matter how
good times are, this sorting contin
ues; only, if times are hard and work
is scarce, the sorting is done finer—
but out nnd forever out, the incom
petent nnd unworthy go. It is the
survival of the fittest. Self-interest
prompts every employer to keep the
best;—those who can carry a message
to Garcia.
"And in our pitying let us drop a
tear, too, for the men who are striv
ing to carry on a grent enterprise,
whose working hours are not limited
by the whistle, and whose hair is fast
turning white through the struggle to
hold in line dowdy indifference, slip
shod imbecility, and the heartless in
gratitude which, but for their enter
prise, would be both hungry and
homeless.
"Have I put the mntter too strong
ly? Possibly I have; but when all
the world has gone a-slumming 1
wish to speak a word of sympathy
for the man who succeeds —the man
who, against grent odds, has directed
the efforts of others and, having
ceeded, finds there’s nothing in it;
nothing but bare board nnd clothes.
I have carried n dinner pail nnd
worked for day wages, and I have al
so been an employer of labor, and I
know there is something to be said on
both sides.
"There is no excellence, per se, in
poverty; rags are no recommenda
tion; and all employer? are not ra
pacious and high-handed, any more
than all poor men are virtuous. My
heart goes out to the man who does
his work when the ‘boss’ is awny, as
well ns when he is at home. And the
man who, when given a letter for
Garcia, quietly takes the missive,
without asking any idotic questions,
nnd with no lurking intention of
chucking it into the nearest sewer, or
of doing else but deliver it, never
gets ‘laid off’ nor has to
ROGERS
have become bo irenoral and urgent
from all parts of the circuit that I am con
vinced that It is my duty to comply with
them, and I now so announce to the voters
of the cirouit.
If my candidacy meets with your ap
proval I shall strive to discharge the duties
of the office with promptness and a due re
gard to the rights of litigants and with as
little expense to the tax payers as possible.
Respectfully, PRICE EDWARDS.
To all white voters of Polk county, and
tho entire Tallapoosa Judicial Circuit:
I hereby announce my candidacy for the
office of Judgo of tho Superior Court of the
Tallapoosa Judicial Circuit of Goorgia, elec
tion Sopt. 13, 11)22. H elected, it will he
my pufposc and pleasure to give the people
of the circuit an honest, upright nnd impar
tial administration, looking to the general
welfare of the whole people upon a plane of
justice nnd right. Upon this plane I earn
estly solicit your support, with my promise
to curtail expenses put upon yuu in the
past. .
With sincere thanks for your past loyal- strike for higher wages. Civilization
ty. I he
aln,
BARTLETT.
I hereby announce myself a candidate for
the office of Solicitor General of the Talla
poosa Circuit subject to the White Primary
when held for the nomination of the same.
1 favor a salary for the Solicitor General,
the judgment of iny home people to my flt-
I ask you to investigate my standing as a
lawyer and beg to call your attention to my
continued re-election without opposition to
the mfice «I Vrainary n Dougus county,
wh|ch office I now hold as an evidence of
the judgemene of my home people to my fit
ness for office.
I will appreciate the support, vote and in
fluence of every one whether I am able to
Bee you in person or not.
If .elected I promise to use my beat ef
forts to see that the laws are duly and
faithfully enforced and that justice Is done.
J. H. McLARTY.
To the Voters of the Tallapoosa Judicial
Circuit:—I take this method of announcing
my candidacy for the office of Solicitor Gen
eral of the eaid circuit, subject to the ac
tion of the state primary election to be held
about Sept let I will greatly appreciate
your eupport: and promise, if elected, to
discharge tha duties mi this most respon
sible office faithfully and afflciently.
Thanking you m advance ror anytnmg
you may do for me, I beg to be.
Yours to serve,
S. W. RAGSDALE.
Dallas. Ga.. April 10th. 1022.
To the White Voters of the Tallapoosa Cir
cuit :
I hereby announce myself a candidate for
the office of Solicitor General of the Talla
poosa Circuit, eubjeot to the primary to be
held for the nomination of a candidate for
said office.
t have eeen in tn
practice of law for i
With this experience, I promise, if nom
inated and elected, to give the best that is
within me to th*. honest, fair and fearless
discharge of the duties of the office, and in
the see/ice of the people.
Ycnr vote and influence will be highly and
sincerely appreciated.
E. S. GRIFFITH
Look! During tke month of July
and August wo are able to offer you a
apocial bargain: THE STANDARD
and I be TRI-WEEKLY CONSTITU
TION fourteen months for only $2.25
—cash in advance^ of cossreo.
FOR ALDERMAN—3d Ward.
I take this method of announcing myself
a candidate for Alderman from the 3d Ward
subject to the White primary, and respect
fully ask your support. J. A. MORTON.
With no kinsmen to vote for if elected,
with no one soliciting me to run, and with
to grind. I hereby announce mvself
J. J. CRUMBLEY.
FOR ALDERMAN—4tk Ward.
I take this means of announcing my ca
didacy for Alderman from the 4th Ward,sub
ject to the White Primary, and will appre
ciate your support. J. H. STEWART.
I harebv announce my eattuidacy xor a
derraan from the 4th Ward, eubject to the
White Primary, a&d respectfully ask your
J. G. WITCHER.
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
lO Large Cakes Star Soap 40c
iO Packages. Star Naptha Powder 40c
Rogers Quality
Bread
5c
Q pks. Sugar Crisp QHft
0 Corn Flakes ^Ull
Q Can Corn Beef
£ Hash
15c
1 O lb. can 11 on
1 Cm Gov.Bacon ^ | ,3U
24 Ibs mou? 99c
Q lb. can Golden £ H OO
O Glow Coffee $ | ,U9
Choice Cuts
Side Meats
Best Creamery 01
Butter, pound Of 1#
Rogers Quality Pea- ^1^
nut Butter, 10c val. f 2\j
Bordens Eagle Brand OOg\
Condensed Milk ILlAj
is one long, anxious search for just
such individuals. Anything such a
man shall nsk shall be granted. He
is wanted in every city, town nnd vil
lage —in every office, shop, store nnd
factory. The world cries out for
such; he is needed and needed badly
the man who can ‘carry a mess-
ape to Garcia.’ "
Smith coiyity, Kns., has been found
to be the geographical center of the
United States. We presume that
Kansas county will now try to have
the capital moved there.
Too bad those people in Echols
county don’t get posted as to the ad-
vantapes of being free from the cat
tle tick. If they did, they would build
dipping vats instead of dynamiting
them.
Nay, Patricia, if your screen door
is full of holes or if you keep it stan
ding open, you might just as well
have no screen door at ell as far as
typhoid flies and malarial mosquitoes
are concerned.
’Tis a funny old world—
This fact I’d impress;
The higher the society
The higher the dress.
—Quitman Free Press.
But this high stuff don’t po,
Of proof there’s no lack,
At the top of the dress,
•spgq jo apis ;uojj joq^ig
In these days when the pessimist is
pouring plaints profusely as to the
decadence of civilization, it may help
a little to call attention to the fact
that in the past eight months 360
church buildings have been either be
gun or completed in the South alone.
And the church is the saving infiu-
encee that will keep this country
from bolshevism and anarchy.
Don’t Forget to Guess at Soap Window and
Win a Prize.
ROGERS
405 Main St. CEDARTOWN, CA.
Where Satisfaction Is a Certainty.
OHRhrrat?
And now we find it widely planned
To make the sea as dry ns land.
First thing we know the Volstead cy-
czars
Will do awny with the ocean bars.
This is a world of strikes nnd woe—
Hope it won’t be always so.
Time will come when men of sense
Will try to use intelligence
And settle trouble in ways unlike
Either the lock-out or the strike.
G. O. P. high tariff leaders
Don’t seem to be right much of
speeders.
They’re really getting quite a "skeer"
Since ’22 is election year,
And if they put the blamed thing
through
They’ll find themselves in a hot old
stew.
Had a bid to Savannah town.
Sorry we had to turn it down,
For we had a sorter and kinder hunch
The old town has its old-time punch.
You’ll find your life is far,far sweeter
If you screen against the fly and skee-
ter.
But a screen door that’s full of holes
Or that's left open—bless your
souls!—
Is a way to invite, os sure as sin,
Typhoid and Malaria to fly in.
Life, liberty and property rights
must be protected in any country that
rises above the lovel of barbarism.
And life is entirely too cheap in the
United States these days, and will
stay that way until juries awake to
the necessity of protecting civiliza
tion against murderers.
A New England society is protest
ing agninst the execution of Mrs.Cora
Vinson who is under sentence for the
murder of her husband in Atlanta.
They had better give some study as to
how to prevent the crime wave in
their own section instead of trying to
interfere with the execution of the
laws in Georgia.
IN THE GARDEN.
"Oh, marry me," the turnip cried;
The beet blushed very red,
And glancing at him, gently sighed;
"We cantaloupe," she said.
—Dalton Citizen.
Some pumpkin, though, he thought
himself;
His bean was swelled up fat.
"Lettuce," he urged, but she said,No,
And squashed his hope right flat.
MICKIE SAYS—
EM'RN TIME NOD SEMO TO
MJOTUEV. TO^N PER X JOB
OP PRINTING, NOU'RE
BOOSTING TUKT TOV4N
XNO KNOCKIN' NER OVWN \ j i
And the same thing is true of any
thing else that you go away from
your home town to buy which you
could get there.
Frank DuPre, the "Peachtree hoy
bandit," has been re-sentenced to
hang, Sept. 1st being the day set for
his execution in the Fulton county
jail.
There are generally at least two
5ides to everything, ^ry to get a
glimpse at more than one of them
before you get too "sot" in your o-
pinions.
The State Legislature and the Geor
gia editors were invited to spend the
week-end as the guests of the city of
Savannah. It is needless to say they
had just whatever kind of a good
time they were looking for.
The announcement of Judge A. L.
Bartlett, a well known citizen of Dal
las, for Judge of the Superior Courts
of the Tallapoosa Circuit, appears in
this issue. He has many friends
throughout the circuit who have sup
ported him in all his races for this
position.
INK PADS and INK—You can new
find them at the Standard office.
Worthy of Support.
On our first page appears the an
nouncement of Judge Wm. II. Fish as
candidate to succeed himself as Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court. He is
one of the best known men in the
state, and is held in high esteem by
the people and the bar. He has been
a member of the Supreme Court since
1896, and has rendered the state
splendid service.
Judge Fish was born in Macon. He
graduated at the University of Geor
gia, and took a law course at the Uni
versity of Virginia. In 1891 he was
elected Judge of the Superior Court
of the Southwestern Circuit by the
Legislature to fill the unexpired term
of the late Allen Fort. He was re
elected for the full term without op
position the succeeding year, and in
1896 was again re-elected without
opposition for the term of four years.
Prior to beginning his new term on
the bench, the membership of the Su
preme Court was increased from
three to six Judges, and Judge FiBh
was nominated for one of the new
places. He has been re-elected ever
since that time. In 1905 upon the
death of Chief Justice Simmons, he
was appointed Chief Justice by Gov.
Terrell, and was re-elected for the
full term the following year. Judge
Fish has now been Chief Justice for
seventeen years, and has made a
great record as a member of the
highest court in the state. His friends
in every section feel confident that
he will be re-elected to the position
which he has honored.
In every strike the two parties cut
their own throats far more than they
injure the other fellow.
The flea’s a funny critter. His
Behavior’s queer and quaint;
You try to hit him where he is,
And there, by gosh, ho ain’t
—Macon Telegraph.
The skeeter is a funny cuss. His
Behavior’s mighty ill.
We have to lump what w r e don’t like
When he presents his bill.
The British coal miners crippled
the coal industry of Great Britain
very seriously by their nation-wide
strike, which they waged and finally
lost at heavy cost to themselves and
the nation. Our striking coal miners
are now reviving British industry,
however, coal now being shipped in
large quantities to this country and
South America because of the short
age resulting from the strike.