The Post-search light. (Bainbridge, Ga.) 1915-current, July 06, 1916, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

...THE... | Bainbridge Hospital Well Equipped | Prices Moderate \ 527 E. Shotwell Street (NON-SECTARIAN) >AAAAAA^AA tWW CITY PROPERTY Fill SILEil. & N. One two story dwelling, six rooms and kitchen, all modern conveniances. all in first alass condition, now rented to a pood tenant. One vacant T lot adjoining this house all on Evans Street, in a fine locality. Also one house and lot situated on the A. C. L. Ry. Street on three sides can put side tract to either end. This lot is suitable for wholesale ware house on light manufactory being less than 200 feet from the electric plant where the city will furnish power cheap, There are but very tew available lots close in on the A. C. L. Ry. which makes this a fine investment to hold if not used now. Will sell all this pro perty at a sacrifice. Write or see L. F. PATTERSON for quick sale. LADIES HATS Will sell every Hat in our store. Noth ing above $3.50. We had rather sell them all at cost and below than carry them over. They are all high grade and right up to the minute in style and usually sold for $4.00 to $8.00. It will pay you to call around and look over our stock, you will be pleased. Also Ladies ready-to-wear garments, latest in style and workmanship, 75he Ladies Shop CAl.l.AllAN BLOCK BAINBRIDGE. GA. Federal Inquiry or Railroad Strike? Faced by demands from the conductors, engineers, firemen and brakemen that would impose on the country an additional burden in transportation costs of $100,000,000 a year, the railroads propose that this wage problem be settled by reference to an impartial Federal tribunal. With these employes, whose efficient service is acknowledged, the railroads have no differences that could not be considered fairly and decided justly by such , a public body. Railroads Urge Public Inquiry and Arbitration The formal proposal of the railroads to the employes for the settlement of the controversy is as follows: "Our conferences hive demonstrated that we cannot harmonize our differences of opinion and that eventually th# matters in controversy must be passed upon by other and disinterested agencies. Therefore, we propose that your proposals and the proposition of the railways be disposed of by one or the other of the following methods: 1. Preferably by submission to the Interstate Commerce Commission, the only tribunal which, by reason of its accumulated information bearing on railway conditions and its control of the revenue of the railways, is in a posi tion to consider and protect the rights and equities of all the interests affected, and to provide additional revenue necessary to meet the added cost of operation in case your proposals are found by the Commission to be just and reasonable; or, in the event the Interstate Commerce Commission cannot, under existing laws, act in the premises, that we jointly request Congress to take such action as may be necessary to enable the Commission to consider and promptly dispose of the questions involved; or 2. iiy arbitration in accordance with the provisions of the Federal law" (The Newlands Act). Leaders Refuse Offer and Take Strike Vote Leaders of the train service brotherhoods, at the joint conference held in New York, June 1-15, refused the offer of the railroads to submit the issue to arbitration or Federal review, and the .employes are now voting on the question whether authority shall be given these leaders to declare a nation-wide strike. The Interstate Commerce Commission is proposed by the railroads as the public body to which this issue ought to be referred for these reasons: ployc No other body with inch an intimate knowledge of railroad conditions has such an unquestioned posi tion in the public confidence. T he rates the railroads may charge the public for transportation are now largely fixed by this Govern ment board. Ovit of every dollar received by the railroads from the public nearly one-half is paid directly to the till ages; and the money to pay increased wages from no other source than the rates paid by the public. The Interstate Commerce Commission, with its con trol over rates, is in a position to make a complete investigation and render such decision as would pro tect the interests of the railroad employes, the owners of the railroads, and the public. A Question For the Public to Decide The railroads feel that they have no right to grant a wage preferment of $100,000,000 a year to these employes, now highly paid and constituting only one-fifth of all the employes, without a clear mandate from a public tribunal that shall determine the merits of the case after a review of all the facts. The single issue before the country is whether this controversy is to be settled by an impartial Government inquiry or by industrial warfare. National Conference Committee of the Railways ELISHA LEE, Chairman L. W. BALDWIN. Gam l Manat", Central ol Georgia Railway. C. L. BARDO, Gan‘1 Managar. New York, New Haven A Hartford Railroad. B. H. COAPMAN. VicaPraiUamt. Sootbera Railway. S. B. COTTER, Gan‘1 Managar. W abash Railway. f. B. CROWLEY. Aut. VUaPraaUrmt. . New York Central Railway. G. H. EMERSON. Gan t Mamma**. Great Northern Railway. C. H. EWING. Garni Mama far. Philadelphia A Reading Railway. B. W. GRICE. Gan’t5a#;. Tramp.. Chesapeake A Ohio Railway. A. S. GREIG. 4itt ta Xacatmart. St. Louis A San Francisco Railroad. C. W. ROC NS. Gam'l Managar. Atchison. Topeka A Sauta Fe Railway. H. W McM \STFR. Gam‘l Mamagar. Whetting A Lake brie Railroad. N. O MAHER. Viea-Praiidamt, Norfolk A Western Rsilway. JAMES RUSSELL, Gam'l Mamagar. Denver A Rio Grande Railroad. A. M. SCHOYER. Kasidmt Vico-Proa.. Pennsylvania Lines West. W. L SEDPON. Vica-Pr,* . Seaboard Air Lina Railway. A. J. STONE. Tica- Pros tdout. Eric Railroad GAINS 18 POUNDS ON ONI! li BOTTLES Capt. Parker—Now Eats Cabbage and Pork Like a Section Hand. IT100 TO CHURCH SEVENEEEN REASONS “I have got to hand it to that Tanlac, for there is no doubt about it being the finest thing ever sold in a drug store for the people that have any sort of stomach trouble or indi gestion.” said Capt. Eugene Parker, a popular Louisville and Nashville conductor, running be tween Birmingham and Montgo mery and who lives at 417 Sixth avenue, Inglenook, a few days ago. “Why the way it has straigh tened me out in just a short time,” he continued, “is a myst ery and it has done for me what nothing else I ever tried would do. I had mighty near got to where I didn’t need to go to the table any more, so far eating was concerned, for I couldn’t eat (anything after I got there. If I did, I had to pay dear for it in a little while, for my stomach had just about played out all together. ‘ 'There was a continual sore ness in my stomach and I thought sometimes it must be an abscess. My liver never was right and there was not a day but what I had to get something from the drug store for head ache land to settle my stomach. I never had much life in me and had fallen off a great deal. I was in a badly run down shape generally and hardly fit to do my work. ‘‘About three weeks ago a friend of mine asked me why I didn’t try this Tanlac, as he had used it and found it to be the very thing he needed, so I took him up on his suggestion and stopped at the Anderson Drug company in Inglenook and I bought two bottles of it, but 1 must say I never looked for it to do any good, as so many things had been recomended tc me and I tried them all without any benefit. “Well, I am atraid some people won’t believe it, but it is a fact and I can prove it. After I had used those two bottles I weigh ed and found I had actually gaimd 18 pounds. It just straightened my stomach out in no time and since I took the first dose 1 have not had to take anytl ing for a headache. “I have the finest kind of an appetite now and can eat any thing. The other day out on the road our supplies had run low and I had [some salt pork and cabbage cooked up on the ca boose and I ate it like a section hand and enjoyed every mouth ful of it. That’s ‘going some’ for a man who had stomach trouble, but it did not hurt me one bit. ‘T notice I sleep a great deal better now and am just about about 100 per cent in better shape every way. I really be lieve Tanlac is the best remedy in the world and there are a lot ot other people out my way who think the same thing.” Tanlac is sold in Bainbridge exclusively by Willis Drug Co., in Donalson\ille by the Palace Drug Co; Climax by the Climax Pharmacy: Iron City, by Strick land and Cordell; Brinson, by H. B, Harrell Supply Co. fci I attend Church on rainy Sun days because— 1. God has blessed the Lord’s Day, and hallowed it, making no exceptions for rainy Sundays. 2. I expect my clergyman to be there. I should be surprised if he were to stay at home for the weather. 3. If his hands fail through weakness, I shall have great rea son to blame myself, unless I sus tain him by my prayers and my j presence. 4. By staying away I lose the prayers which bring God’s bless ing, and the sermon which might ; have done me great good. j 5. My presence is more need ful on days when there are few, | than on those when the Church ' is crowded. | 6. Whatever station I hold in the Church, my example must influence others; if I stay away, why may not others? 7. On any important business rainy weather does not keep me at home; and Church attendance is, in God’s sight, very import ant. Among the crowds of pleas ure-seekers, I see that no weath er keeps delicate people from the ball, the party, or the con cert. 9. Among other blessings such weather will show me on what foundation I am building. It will prove how much I love Christ; true love rarely fails to meet an appointment. 10. Those who stay from Church because it is too warm, or too cold, or too rainy, frequent ly absent themselves on fair Sundays. 11. Though my excuses satis fy myself, they still must under go God’s scrutiny; and they must be well grounded to bear that. 12. There is a special prom ise, that where “two or three” meet together in God’s Name, He will be in the midst of them. 13. An avoidable absence from Church is an infallible evidence of spiritual decay. Disciples first follow Christ at a distance, and then, like Peter, do not know Him. 14- My faith is to be known by my self-denying Christian life, and not by the rise or fall of the thermometer. 15. Such yielding to surmoun table difficulties prepares for yielding to those merely imagin able; until thousands never enter a Church, and yet think they have good reason lor such neg lect. 16. By a suitable arrangement on Saturday, I shall be able to attend Church without exhaus tion; otherwise my late work on Saturday night must tend to un fit me for the Sunday enjoyment of Christian privileges. 17. I know not how many more Sundays God may give me; and it would be a poor prepara tion for my first Sunday in Heav en to have slighted my last Sun day on earth. Scottish Chronicle, quoted by Canadian Churchman Look Good--Feel Good No one can either feel good nor look good while suffering from constipation. Get rid of that tired, draggy, lifeless feel ing by a treatment of Dr. King’s New Life Pills. Buy a box to day, take one or two pills to night. In the morning that stuff ed, dull feeling is gone and you feel better at once. 25c at your druggist. (2) A SERIOUS LOSS is loss of appetite. TONIC DIGESTIVE sharpens your appetite, aids di gestion, improves the health, and gives strength and vigor. Sold only by us, $1.00. MILLS PHARMACY Callahan Bldg. Bainbridge, Ga. Many Suffering Just another re J in Bainbridge. Ar Jl case. _ Kidney ail J in Bainbridge with tv ney Pills. u °« Mrs. E. W. Hall J ers St., Bainbridge'cJ back ached all the’«J wasn’t able to stral after stooping, without! became so nervous that! hardly get to sleep The kidney secretions i frequent in passage .J I had dizzy spells, blj floated before my ey | suffered from frequej aches. Doan’s Kidnel which I got at the Ehrll Co., brought lasting J Price 50c at all dealer! simply ask for a kidney! —get Doan’s Kidney ff same kind that Mrs, H| Foster-Milburn Co' rI N. Y. ” 1 LICENSE I! You are hereby notii the date for the examii. applicants for license tote] be held on Friday and August the 4th and 5th the public schuol building city of Bainbridge, Th mination will embrace lowing: Primary and Generali tary and High School and visory. Those teachers to renew first grade granted in 1913 will t following Reading Course ual of Methods for G Teachers, free: Cubberley al Life and Education, S( School Book Depository Ga; Colgrove’s, The Teacl The School, Charles Sc: Sons, Atlanta, Ga; Hoi High School Administj Southern School Book I tory, Atlanta, Ga. The examination will promptly at 8:30 a. m. applicant will be admittec 9 o‘clock. Pencils and will be free. J. S. Bradwell, C. Stop using this dang( drug before it saliva you! It’s horrible You’re bilious, sluggish' c patedand believe you need dangerous calomel to start liver and clean bowles. Here’s my guarantee! Ask druggist for a fifty cent bot Dodson’s Liver Tone and t spoonfull to-night. If start your liver and strait you up better than calomel without griping or making sick I want you to go back t store and get your money, Take calomel to day an< morrow you will feel weak sick and nauseated. D° n 1 a days work. Take a spoon harmless Dodson’s Liver tonight and wake up * great. It’s perfectly hann so give it to your children time. It can’t salivate, s( them eat anything aften^ ORIOtt LODGE Ao. F. & A. M. Meets Every Fi rst .. * Third Thursdayjw Out of town Brethren E;P 6C ly Invited^^ V. B£FJ!' GEO, H. FIELDS, W. M. S«