Newnan herald & advertiser. (Newnan, Ga.) 1909-1915, October 23, 1914, Image 4

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DC DC DC DC DC li JL DC DC All Next Forty People Under Canvas n STOCK CO. 12-piece Band and Orchestra M< )M)AY NIGHT “WHEN WOMAN LOVES” FOUR ACT DRAMA Specialties between acts, featuring Livington and Addison AND LELAND, THE CLEVER COMEDIAN DC DC ir ir DC DC DC DC The Herald and Advertiser NEWNAN, FIRDAY, OCT. 22. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR IN ADVANCE. State Meeting W. C. T. U. Georgia's whole attention now i.s cen tered upon the coming of the National Convention of the W. C. T. U. to At lanta on Nov. 12 ami 12, for the year’s work is now closed, and all reports, State and local, should be in the hands of the several ollicers ere this. The State report is to be ready for distribu tion at the close of the National Con vention and everything in shape for the greatest year’s work in our history. There will be no free ei tertainment for Georgia women this year, except delegates to the National. Georgia is entitled to the following delegates: By virtue of their office, State President, Stale Vice-President, State Corres ponding Secretary, State Recording Secretary, State Treasurer, State 1,. T. 1,. Secretary, State Y. P. B. Secre- tarp, Editor of the State Paper, and one delegate at large and one delegate, for each live hundred paid members. As the Vice-President holds three of- liees and the Recording Secretary two, this cuts us out of three votes in the convention, us we are not allowed to substitute for these. If Georgia has 4,0011 paid members, as she should, this will give her fourteen delegates eligi ble to free entertainment. Eight delegates and the six ollicers make the required number of voting delegates. No Georgia woman should miss this great convention because of not being entertained. If you have friends and relatives hero arrange to be with them, if you are not able to pay hotel bills. 1 have been here for three weeks doing everything in my power to muko the best arrangements” possible for out wo men. 1 give below rates secured, and every woman who expects to attend the convention and expects to stop at a hotel, write at once to one of the hotels in this list and reserve your room, for the American Roads Convention meets here about the same time, and unless rooms are engaged early all the best rooms at reasonable rates will lie en gaged, for the cheaper rooms are al ways engaged first, so write at once ami make your reservation. Where three or four expect to attend, one could write and reserve a room for the party. The Ansley Hotel makes a splendid olfer for our women. They have n number of large rooms with pri vate bath that will accommodate four or live, and they will reserve those for our women at the rate of $1 each per day. The Ansley will be headquarters and will throw those taking advantage of these rates with the national party; will lake eare of your mail, convenient to telephone und telegraph, and is right at the best cafeterias and restaurants in the city, and in easy walking dis tance of all the buildings where con vention services will bo held. Anyone desiring to reserve one of these rooms should write Charles R. Day, care Ans ley Hotel. . The Terminal Hotel makes the next best olfer. There are not better, nicer or more convenient rooms in any hotel in the city thanjthe rooms in this hotel. Very convenient to the station, and, while not right at Broughton's Taber nacle, it is in lousy walking distance. Two persons in a room, with convenient bath and running water in the room, $1 per day each. Two in a room, with private bath, $1 25 each. Reserve your rooms here right away if you wish them. Mrs. Armor always stops at this hotel when in Atlanta. Write Bruno Bukofz-r, care Terminal Hotel. The following hotels are all right up town and accessible to (tho convention hall; no car fare. European plan: Hotel Aragon.- Rooms, with one per son, $1 to $2. Two persons in a room, $2 to $2. Address H. A. Tisdei, care Hotel Aragon. Kimball I louse. -Rooms, with hot and cold running water, $1. Private hath, $2. Rooms with connecting bath, $1.50. Address Ed L. Brown, care Kimball House. I’iedmont Hotel.—All the regular ' $1.50 rooms engaged for the Good Roads Convention. (Jan secure rooms, j two in a room, $1.51) each. Address ! Wm. C. Royer, care I’iedmont Hotel. j Pickwick Apartments.—Right at the j Ansley Hotel, nice rooms, good beds, beautifully clean and neat, near Falk’s Cafeteria, the very best in the city, where you can get a nice meal from ten cents up. With two or four in a • room, $10 per week, this sum to be di- ] vided between the parties occupying I the room. Nice, convenient hath. Write Mrs. Walker, care Pickwick Apartments. The following hoarding-houses have been consulted, and will lake as many delegates as they are able to accommo date at that time, for room and thre.e meals at $1 per day for each person, provided they go two in a room. Some are large, nice rooms with two beds, and will accommodate four nicely: The Wilton. Address Miss Kirtley, 22b Peachtree street. The Crush House.—Address Mr. Da vis, 1)7 Capitol Square. Mrs. G. C. Sigman, ($6 per week,) 1)2 Capitol Square. Mrs. Belle Milner, 121 Capitol Square. Mrs. Annie Bunch, 13G Washington street. Miss Sallie Morrison, 121 Washington street. Mrs. C. B. Sewell, 126 Washington street. Mrs. S. E. !,ethers, 125 Washington street. Mrs. G. 11. Turned, 103 Washington street. Mrs. A. .1. Adkins, 22-1 Ivy street. Please read this carefully so there will be no misunderstanding about the arrangements. There is no committee here to look after this for you. You 1 must make the arrangements with the information furnished above, so please write to hotels at once, but to the boarding-houses not more than a week before convention, for they will not re serve a room if they have application for regular boarders and will not be in a position to give dr finite information until a few days ahead. The outlook for the entertainment of our guests as we wished to do, ami as we hail hoped to do, is *not ing. Dur only hope is in God. He can "remove the mountains” of prejudice, "divide the Red Sea" of difficulty, und crown every effovt with glorious success if we only trust Him. And I beg that our women who pray will remember me especially and all our helpers here each day at the Throne of Grace, and will all join in a united prayer for the success of the plans to entertain the convention. The railroad rates are based on a rate of 2 cents a mile plus 25 cents, which is practically one fare plus 25 cents. Parties will purchase a round-trip tick et from starting point. Consult your local ticket agent for further informa- j tion. All ticket agents have been fur nished information in regard to rates for the National Woman’s Christian Temperance Onion and the American Good Hoads Congress, both of which meet in Atlanta at the same time, and for this reason we have secured the lowest rntes ever given us. From some points the rate is a few cents more than one fare plus 25 cents, and from some a little less. Yours for a glorious convention. Mrs. T. E Patterson, Slate President. fell 1 " ——Yrh The Tragedy of Belgium. New York World. Smaller than Maryland, hut with a population close to 8,000,000, Belgium was the most densely populated coun try in the world. Centuries of thrift had made its soil an incomparable gar den; its huge industries exacted great imports of food. Antwerp stood per haps second to New York in the bulk of its commerce. Generations of skilled architects had enriched the doomed land with cities whi se beauty was the despair of emu lation. To call the roll of towns, like Bruges, Ypres, Louvain, Ghent, Cour- j trail, is to bring up visions of pictured beauty familiar to the world. To call another roll, beginning with Waterloo und Oudenarde, is to name Belgium ks the cockpit of past wars; but to give Europe a buffer state for peace, its neutrality for the future was guaran teed by treaty. Having little faith in the false oaths of emperors, the Bel gians taxed industry to sustain an army of a quarter of a million soldiers and encourag- j reserves. That was Belgium, To-day it is a ruin. German arms have crushed a re sistance which German diplomacy ad mits was "legitimate,” and military governors "pay” for food and supplies with contributions wrung from defense- loss cities. Belgian capitalists are held for ransoms of millions. Many priests are hostages; other clergymen are ly ing with the dead. Peasants about Liege are driven like slaves to Germany to help harvest the enemy’s crop. Civic life lias ceased. The conquerors are wasting the gar- I nered wealth of ages. The Malines Ca thedral is in ruins, and only 200 of the 60,000 inhabitants are reported to be ! left in the buttered city. Louvain, with its beautiful old city hull, its price- i less library, its splendid churches, its cloth-workers’ hall, hallowed by 600 years of admiration, has been utterly destroyed and many of its citizens mur dered because —though this they deny— some of them tried to defend their domes against the invader. Invigorating to the Dale and Sickly The Old Standard general strengthening touic. GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out M*Uria.enrichc* the blood.Bnd builds up the »>’*• | ~ n'T tem. A true tonic, hot adults md children. 50c salt? DV all Ut*Hlt*rS. Foley Cathartic Tablets-. You will like their positive action. Thev have a tonic effect on the bowels, and give a Wholesome, thorough clean ing to the entire bowel tract. Stir the liver to healthy activity and keep stom ach sweet. Constipation, headache, dull, tired feeling never affiict those who use I Foley Cathartic Tablets. Only 25c. For $500,000 to Be Turned Loose in Crisp County. Cordele, Ga., Oct. 15.— By the forma tion of the Crisp County Cotton Asso ciation over half a million dollars will be put in circulation in Crisp county during the coming few weeks. It will not be greenbacks, gold certificates, sil ver or gold coin, and will be money hitherto unseen. But it is money, and that is the important feature, and will be sufficient to cause much rejoicing in this business community. This money will be in the form of bonds or certifi cates issued by the association and se cured by cotton grown in the county, stored in the warehouses, weighed graded and insured. The scheme for f<- rming such an as sociation originated in the brain of Hon. \V. H. Dorris, who conceived the idea of issuing bonds, so to speak, on the 1914 cotton crop of Crisp county. The farmers and purchasers of cotton are the owners of the security, which is cotton. The association is the trustee who holds the cotton for the farmers and other owners thereof, and for the benefit of the holders of the certificates or bonds issued thereon under a contract to sell the cotton only when the price reaches 10 cents, or, if the owner de sires it sold, the trustees will sell it, provided the price at the time is suffi cient to cover all certificates issued on the cotton to be sold, or if the cotton is not sold by the owner at the maturity of the bonds or certificates issued there on, which is one year from date, then the trustee must sell the cotton to re deem the bonds. The plan is based on 7 cents for good middling. The warehousemen of Crisp county— J. B. Ryals, W. B. Mathews, O. S. Bazemore, H. C. Wheeler and Thomas Nesbitt—are the trustees in charge of the new association. The certificates or bonds are now being printed and will be in circulation this week. What Would You Do? There are many times when on? man questions another's actions and motives. Men act differently un der different circumstances The ques tion is, what wouid you 'do right now if you had a severe cold? Could you do better than to take Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy? It is highly recom mended by people who have used it for years and know its value. Mrs. O. E. Surgent, Peru, Ind., says, “Chamber lain's Cough Remedy is worth its weight in gold and I take pleasure in recommending it.” For sale by ail dealers. ' i wyes Dream NO SMOKE, NO DIRT Hang up the dust pan and the turkey wing —their day past. Cole's Original Hot Blast Heater j allows no smoke or gas to escape into the room. or ashes, that way. virtues. It has in and let us It scatters no soot It can’t. It’s made That is one of its many more. Come demonstrate them. After that no other stove will suit you. Burns soft coal, hard coal or wood. See the name "Cole's" on the feed door y". genuine without it of each stove. None DARDEN-CANP HOW. CO. Newnan, Georgia ■ ----- ~ Have You Poultry Troubles 1 J Pnr#» 1iv#»r anH vmt ritro Hiq VGf/J Cure the liver and you cure the bird. Nearly all poultry troubles are due to a disordered liver. Thousands of poultry raisers who use it all year round to keep their flocks in good health, highly recommend Ree Dee ST0CK 4 P0ULTRY MEDICINE It’s a Liver Medicine. Also a strengthing Tonic. Bee Dec STOCK & POULTRY MEDICINE is a splendid cure for liver trouble, roup and chicken cholera. Given regularly with the feed, in small doses, it also makes an excellent tonic. F. J. Stowe, Purcell, Okla. 25c, 50c and $1. per can. At your dealer’s. P, B. 5