Newspaper Page Text
SEPTEBER 14, 1922.
THE STANDARD. CEDARTOWN. GA.
THE CEDARTOWN STANDARD
r«UkM Et«tj Thursday
hunl to Ik* PtoMha *1 r*4*rtiw* a*
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Ok* Y**r_. .. .. ..$1.80
Sis Month*.. ._ .. .. .. .. .78
Thrao Month*... .. .. .. .40
E. B. RUSSELL, Editor.
W. H. Trawick. C. C. Bunn, Jr.
BUNN & TRAWICK
Attorneys at Law.
Peek Block, CEDARTOWN, GA.
All busineu placed in our hands
will be <?iven prompt and viligant at
tention.
MUNDY & WATKINS
Attorneys at Law.
Careful and prompt attention is
what your business nets when placed
with us.
Office In Mundy Bldg, over Vance
R Hunt’s store, Cedartown, Ga.
E. S. AULT,
Attorney at Law.
Prompt and careful attention given
all business,both Civil and Criminal.
Office in Richardson Building.
Phons 19.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
W. K. FIELDER.
Attorney at Law.
Practice in all tha Court*.
Office in Chamberlain Building.
CEDARTOWN, OA.
■* M. RAIL P. O. CHAUDRON
Bw Phone 226 Phonelli.
HALL & CHAUDRON
Physicians & Surgeons.
OOca In Psak Block.
Offlca Phone 87.
C. V. WOOD,
Physician and Surgeon.
OFFICE PHONE 119
RESIDENCE PHONE 121.
Office: VanDevander House, West Av.
SEALS L. WHITELY,
Physician and Surgeon.
Phona 218.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
j. w, good”
Physician and Surgeon.
•flee: VanDevander House,West Av.
Baa. Phona 200. Office Phone 208.
F. L. ROUNTREE
1i DENTIST,
Offer* hli services to tho public.
Phono 82. Office Smith Bldg.
W. T. EDWARDS,
DENTIST,
Mice over Liberty Natienal Bank.
Race Phone 54. Res. Phone 49.
CEDARTOWN. GA.
Prs.J.W. & Carl Pickett
Dentists.
#0ce and Laboratory up-stairs In
the Peek Building.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 14, 1922.
TWICE PROVEN.
If you suffer bsckache, sleepless
Mghts, tired, dull days and distressing
■riaary disorders, don't experiment,
load this twite-told testimony. It's
Oedartown evidence—doubly proven.
Hrs. J. H. Brown, 448 Prior St,
aays: “I cannot help but say a good
word In praise of Doan’s Kidney
Pills as they have been of great ben
efit to me when suffering from weak
kidneys ami lame, achy back. At
one time my kidnoys actod irregular-
h r . There was a heavy dull ache in
■y back. I had splitting headaches
and suffered from dizziness and ner
vous spells. I recommended Doan’s
Kidney Pills In 1918 and now I wish
0* state that I have the same opiniop
*f Doan's Kidney Pills as I had at
that time. Doan’s arc fine and an oc
casional use of them keeps my kid-
aeys in good condition.”
Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't
■imply ask for a kidney remedy —get
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mrs. Brown had. Fostor-Milburn
Co, Mfrs, Buffalo, N. Y.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
FOR ALDERMAN—l.t W«nl.
I *m ■ eanriwlnte for Ald.rman from ....
1.1 W*rd, subject to th* white primary,and
will appreetot* your vote.. A. E. YOUNO
FOR ALDERMAN—34 Ward.
I take thif method of announcing myself
a candldata fnr Alderman from the 9d 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
* ages to grind, I hereby announce myaelf
candidate for Alderman from the Sd Ward,
subject to tha whlta primary. Thanking
you In advnnea for your support, I am,
Vary truly yours,
J. J. CRUMBLEY.
FOR ALDERMAN—<tk Ward.
I taka thla means of announcing my ea..-
dldacy for Alderman from tha 4th Ward.suh-
Jert to tha White Primary, and will appre
ciate your support. J. H. STEWART.
I harabr announce my candidacy tor Al
derman from tha 4th Ward, subject to th#
White Primary, and respectfully ask yogi
support. J. o. WITCHER.
0"RJ A Z z R E C°R D
WHEN YOU have your automo
bile worked on, be sure you take it
where you got service and A REAL
GUARANTEE. Casey & Sloan do
this very thing.
Use Polk county products.
Election’s over; now we’ve more
space
For other things 'bout the human
race;
But it’s right hard to pick and choos
As to who will win and who will lose.
Things in Europe are looking murky;
Lots of trouble brews with Turkey;
Roasting the fowl has had to cease,
For the fuol bird was spilling
Greece.
We ask our allies for our “mun”
But they must get it from the Hun,
And he has reached the bankrupt
atage—
Tho whining beggar of the age.
Hi Johnson snd Bob LaFollette
Their old scats in the Senate get;
This wasn’t good news, hr you’ll a-
gree,
For the bosses of the G. O. P.
Mississippi has tied the can
To old Jimsky Vardaman;
Voters there now see right clear
In the Senate he cost them dear.
Henry Ford la quitting his strike role,
Buying four million tons of coni;
Hank thinka It one of tho fine arts
To win a strike before it starts.
In Atlanta’s recent “shaking dice"
Chief Beavers cut mighty little ice;
Got n lesson he necdod about quit
ting,
And learned to stick to his own knit
ting.
^ m m
Since the big strike, we will all of
us have to "dig” for coal.
There is no counterfeit Germnny
money. It Isn’t worth counterfeiting.
Cole Blease has been defeated for
Governor of South Carolina. Good!
Tho state primary campaign hns
been a very quiet one—but aren’t
you glad it’a over?
Greece proved so slippery after the
war that ahe is getting very little
world sympathy right now.
The fact that this is a “horselesi
age” has a lot to do with making it
hard for us to get back to a stable
condition.
Henry Ford hns bought four mil
lion tons of coni, so his threatened
“strike” against high prices will hard
ly materialize.
King Constantine, of Greece, is
likely to find Li -» throne rather incon
stant. It is getting so slippery that
he may soon find himself overthrown.
The re-nomination of United States
Senator LaFollette by the Wisconsin
Republicans is another hard hit at the
Harding administration. When the
President was a Senator the two were
together on many things, but LaFol
lette now goes out of his way to an
tagonize the President.
Just keep your eyes wide open, lad,
'Twill help you, if. you please;
A tater has a world of eyes,
But yet it never secs.
—Dalton Citizen.
Just keep your cars wide open, lnd,
As you go through the years,
The corn may have a plenty ears.
But yet it never hears.
Europe owes us millions of money,
but hns no money with which to pay
us anything on tho principal and not
much on the interest. We might in
time get something in ' the way of
trade, but the new Republican tariff
will effectually prevent that. It
like taking his land from a debt-rid
den farmer, and still demanding pay
ment in full.
Buy It in Cedartown.
The Turk Comes Back.
The Turk, "the Sick Man of Eu
rope,” is recovering some of hi.i
strength, and —as is always the case
with him—whenever he has any
strength, he makes trouble for his
neighbors. This time, however, no
one can blame him—much as we
may dislike him,—for he is success
fully repelling a Grecian invasion.
The Turkish army in its capture of
Smyrna and overwhelming defeat of
the Greeks have won an epoch-mak
ing victory.
Greece yems likely to take Turk
ey’s place for a while on the "sick
list.” She was foolish enough after
the World War to throw out her
great statesman, Vcnizelos, and take
back King ConRtantinc, who had been
dethroned because of his pro-Gcr
man proclivities. Constantine thought
the Turk so sick that he could tackle
the job of throwing the old repro
bate into the Bosphorus, but Greece
has found herself not strong enough
to do this by herself, and her treat
ment of the Allies made it impossible
for her to get any aid.
Constantinople, the great eaRtem
key to the Mediterranean, is the
coveted vnntago point for which all
arc scrambling. Turkey wants to
keep it, und Soviet Russia is dicker
ing for joint control; Greece was
making a drive fnr it; the Allies want
it an international port in which no
nation would have an advantage over
others.
The Belkins are again seething,and
the situation no longer resembles the
“keg of gunpowder” but is full of dy
namitc and T. N. T.
Polk’s County Fair will be held in
Cedartown Oct. 6th, 6th and 7th.
Plan your exhibits now. Of course,
you’re coming.
The wife of President Harding has
been critically ill the past week, but
it Is now felt the crisis has passed.
The entire nation hopes for her re
covery.
It is very significant that the Re
publican State Convention in Ohio—
President Harding's home State —
declined to endorae either his tariff or
ship subsidy bill.
Associate Justice Clarke has re
signed his position on the bench of
tho Supreme Court of the United
States. He believes that the salva
tion of the world — including, of
course, the welfare of the United
States—depends upon tho success of
the League of Nations, and he pro
poses to devote the rest of his life to
working for it.
In Atluntn's primary last week
there were some surprises sprung on
the rest of the state. “Jim” Wood
ward, who was picked as a winner by
outsiders, ran n poor second aguinst
Sims, though he will run again in the
second primury and may fBre better.
Beavers, who got leave of absence
ns Chief of Police to run for Mayor,
didn't get enough votes to even give
him a good start.
The Litcrury Digest hns just given
the nation some interesting figures to
digest. That publication has just
taken a mammoth poll on the prohi
bition and bonus questions, 922,383
ballots being returned. The final
summary shows the following percen
tages on the prohibition issue: For
enforcement, 38.6; for modification,
41.1; for repeal, 20.04. These fig
ures include the separate poll taken
for women, in which—much to the
surprise of many—the percentage for
enforcement wns only 44.6 The final
margin on the bonus was close—62.2
per cent in favor of it, and 48.8 per
cent opposed.
MICKIE SAYS-
?0US DOW W.NJ1E IT,
BUT ni JEST AS POOR.
■to COME rn WERE AVI' START
RENMM' PROOFS AVI’ NOSlW ROUND
’ AS VT*0 BE TO GO IWTD SOME .
BOON'S VOYewEN AVI 1 LOOK IN f
1VV VJESSEL’S ON TM STOVE
TO SEE V1UW TUEN'RE GOIN&]
TO WAVE FER DINNER.!
ROGERS
WHERE SATISFACTION IS A CERTAINTY.
We Quote a Tew of Our Regular Prices.
No. 10 SNOW DRIFT LARD.
91.21
No. 10 PURE LARD
91.40
No. 5 Snow Drift
62c
No. 5 Pure Lard
72c
Pints Wesson Oil
22c
Large Octagon Soap
5c
Quaker Oats
8 c
Ivory' Soap
6 l-2c
Lea ^ Perrins Sauce,
U
*
CM
Shredded Wheat
9l-2c
Bon-Ami, cake
8c
Puffed Wheat
11c
Old Dutch Cleanser, ^ l-2c
Puffed Rice
13c
Palm Olive Soap
7c
5 pounds Grits
16c
10 lbs. Irish Potatoes
23c
3 pkgs. Corn Flakes
20c
Bayers’ Asperin, doz. 15c; 2 dozen 25c
Best Creamery Butter 39c. 24 lbs. White Lily Flour $1.24
48 lbs. ROGERS 37-FLOUR $1.94 Sell-Rlsine. Guaranteed.
ROGERS
405 Main St.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
Bible Thoughts for
This Week
Sanday.
BEGIN THE DAY RIGHT:—
Cause me to hear thy loving kind
ness In the morning; for In thee do
I trust; cause me to know the was
wherein J should walk; for I lift
up my soul unto lliee.—Psalm
143: A
Monday.
ETERNAL PROTECTION:—The
Lord shall preserve thy going out
and thy coming In from this time
forth, nnd even for evermore.—
Paulin 121: 8.
Tuesday.
KINGDOM IS WITHIN :—Neith
er shall they say. Lo here; or. lo
there! for, behold the kingdom of
God Is within you.—Luke 17: 21.
Wednesday.
GOD IS GRACIOUS—Thou art a
God ready to pardon, gracious and
merciful, slow to anger, nnd of
great kindness.—Nehemlah 9: 17.
Thursday.
HOW TO GAIN ALL:—Seek ye
first the kingdom-of God and-his
righteousness; and all these things
shall be added unto you.—Matthew
6: 83.
Friday.
SAFE FROM ALL EVIL:—The
Lord shall preserve thee from all
evil: he shall preserve thy soul.—
Psalm 121: 7.
Saturday.
SELF-PRAISE: — Let another
man praise thee, and not thine own
mouth; a stranger, and not thine
own lips.—Proverbs 27: 2.
BILL SAM’S DICTIONARY
By J. L. MARTIN
Slim Longfellow got off something
real clever at Shorty Smith's logroll
ing last Friday. Slim got enough of
being teased about having sick head
ache so much snd came hack at the
boys by telling them that the reason
some folks never have sick headaches
is because they haven’t brains enough
In their cranium to get sick. Slim
thinks so much of his Joke, he is
thinking of having It published sev
eral times In the Taterhlll Herald.
CRANIUM: A cavity at the upper
part of the human body, containing
various substances, sometimes brains.
Bill Sam's Dictionary, page 399.
Make Dollars Stretch.
The purchasing power of a dollar
has shrunk considerably in the last
few years. There has never been a
time when careful buying paid big
ger dividends.
* • " | Every week this paper contains in-
However wise it may be to show J formation that you should havc to in .
mercy to first offenders, forbearance j crease your buying power. The ad-
ceases to be a virtue when it is seen , vertisements are timely lessons in
that lawbreakers are taking advan- I every-day economy. They teach you
- . .. . n , how. when and for what your dollar
tage of such a sentiment. Punish- ... . .
ment, by the way, should not be look-1 ' V1 * e a ** '
ed upon in the light of vengeance so ' To those " ho know how to “ s «
much as a protection of humanity ; "7”! J! ^
from the crimes of evil-doers.—Ce-
Chamber of Commerce
Happenings.
R. O. McCORD, Secretary.
We are pleased to announce the
membership, beginning Sept. 1st, of
the following:
Central of Georgia Railway Co.
Georgia Railway & Power Co.
The question has been asked why
these corporations should be interest
ed in the growth and prosperity of
Cedartown. The answer is simple.
These "soulless” corporations are
headed by big men of vision. That’s
why they arc at the head of Big Busi
ness. if Cedartown is to grow and
expand, as is her just rights, we need
men of vision who can see ahead of
the present profits on a dollar and
invest their time and energy in the
future.
Mr. Trimble, Secretary of tho Car-
roll County Trade Board, was a cal
ler last week. Mr. Trimble informs
us that he is soon to sever his con
nections at Carrollton to accept the
place as Secretary of the Chamber of
Commerce at Griffin. Mr. Trimblo
is a live wire, and we arc glad that he
is still to be in our vicinity.
Gin Notice.
We have our Gullett gin outfit in
first-class condition, and with oulr
huller breast and cleaner system we
can make from one to two grades
better sample than the ordinary gin
system. We also give you the very
best turn-out of lint by thoroughly
cleaning the seed. We will appre
ciate your patronage, and guarantee
satisfaction.
COLLARD VALLEY GIN CO.,
P. C. Griffin, Mgr.
of dollars—a continuous source of
economy and satisfaction. Mer
chants tell of their bargains through
the advertisements. Almost every
should be tempered with mercy, but' new opportunity is offered through an
there are also times when mercy ' advertisement. Practically every un-
dartown Standard.
There are times when justice
needs be attended by justice, for the
good of the majority. The Standard
has the right viewpoint. Punishment
is not administered for vengeance for
offenses already committed, but is
meted out as a means to check furth
er lawlessness.—Dalton Citizen.
usual “buy” is advertised. You can
stretch your dollar to its elastic limit
by keeping abreast of the opportu
nities to get full value.
There is just one way to do this:
Read the Advertisements in The
Standard.
Some MSN ARE LIKE KNI
XOU SET 'EM MOT AI4C
they lose their.
- temper.—