Newspaper Page Text
THE
Herald
HEWN AN HERALD 1 Consolidated with Coweta Advertiser September. 1886.1
Established 1866. i Consolidated with Newnan News January. 1916. 1
NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, JUNE 4$ 1920.
Vol. 55—No. 36
Pull Together lor an
American Merchant Marine
The war resulted In the creation of a great merchant
marine—10,000,000 tons of American ships which cost 113
$3,000,000,000.
' Everybody agrees, that we must keep this fleet on the
eeas.
If we fall back to pre-war conditions—when only 0 per
cent of our foreign trade was carried In American ships—
We shall be in the position of a department store whose
goods are delivered In Its competitor’s wagons.
Congress Is considering legislation which will pbrpetuate
our war-built merchant marine.
Un'til this Is done the ships we have should not be sold
to face conditions which, prior to the war, resulted In the
decline of our merchant marine to Insignificance.
This Committee calls attention to these facts because a
right solution of our shipping problem Is vital to the future
prosperity of shipbuilding, but equally vital to the safety
and prosperity of the nation.
■Send for free copy of "For an American Merchant
Marine."
/ Committee of American Shipbuilders
30 .CHURCH STREET, NEW YORK CITY
••IF I WERE KING.”
• • If I wore ' king—-ah, love, If I wore
king
What tributary nations would I bring
To stoop bofore your scoptre and to
swoar
Allegiance to your Ups and eyes and
hair 1—
Beneath-yonr feet what treasures I would
fling—*
The stars would bo your pearls upon
n Btring, .
TUo world a .ruby for your flngor-ring,
And you should hove the sun and moon
to wear,
—If I were king.
Let these wild dreaniB and wUder words
take wing;—
Deep in the woods I hoar a shepherd
sing
A simple bnllnd to 0 sylvan air
Of love that ever finds your face most
fair—
I could not give you any godliet thing
—If I wore king I ’ ’
—Justin Huntly McCarthy,
GOOD PAY FOR THOSE WHO WHLJj
LEARN PRINTING.
The Southern Newspaper Publishers 1 Association boa founded at Ma
con, Ga., in connection with the Georgia-Alabama Business College, a VO
CATIONAL SCHOOL for teaching young men and young women how to
operate typesetting machines. The time required for the training is short,
the surroundings pleasant, the compensation for the operator is high, and
EMPLOYMENT IS CERTAIN WHEN YOU ARE TRAINED.
Gives SPLENDID EDUCATIONAL ADVANTAGES—The printer of
to-day takes high rank in professional and business life to-morrow.
Ask the publisher of The Herald for any desired information.
FOR PROSPECTUS ADDRESS: TYPE SETTING DEPARTMENT,
Georgia-Alabama Business College.
(Accredited). y/’•*’"
Eugene Anderson, Pres. * MACON, GEORGIA.
\
Notice to Debtor, and Creditor..
GB .9, ROIA —Coweta County:
. A i* creditors of the estate of
A. D. Tinney, late of Coweta county,
deceased, are hereby notified to
j render In their demands to the under-
• signed according to law: and all DSr-
esons Indebted to said estate are 10-
•ec red *0 make Immediate payment.
'This May 21, 1920 J. tv, TINNEY,
_ , _ „ Administrator.
Turin, Ga., E, F. D. 1.
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
OH0tttttA=M3aWeta .dbtiflty:
All creditors Of tile estate Of JameB
S. Price, Me flf. Coweta bounty.
Ga„ deceased, ate hereby, ribtlfled to
render In their, dcTnstrids to the under
signed according to lrtvf; arid ail Per
sons indebted to said cst.te are re
quired to make immediate payrh'eiit,
This May 21, 1920. .,...
,t J. FRED RUSSEJLt',. „
Moreland, Ga. Administrator..
LIBERATION OF A CLASS.
Farm Life.
Many tears' formerly were shed over
the poor farmer in cortain sections of
the South. It was said that he never
produced anything but cotton, and his
crop was always mortgaged to some
grasping town merchant, who charged
him double for, everything ho bought,
and paid him half for everything lie
had to sell. The home town bank soaked
him 40 per cent, interest and took a
chattel mortgage-on his oye teeth bofprb
it would lend him enough money to buy
hiB mother-in-law a coffin. That was what
the general public thought, and, while the
matter was exaggerated^ there waq more
than a grain of truth in it. Hut there
has been a great change in the condi
tion of this poor “chattel slave* ‘ of (the
Dixie hills.
. The explanation, aa gWen by. Direotor.
R. S. Wilson, of the Mississippi, .exten
sion department, is very simple, “tu
the hill sections of Mississippi,- espe
daily, the iniquitous credit system has
been practically abolished, farmers as
a rule are out of debt, and bank deposits
nave doubled and trebled. This ib UQ
argument against cotton as a money crop,
because it is, as a.Tqle, our best money
crop; but it is-bimply because our cotton
money has gone into the bank rather than
to 1 tiler jStftfes to pay debts for supplies
at orenlt prices I and, furthermore, we
bod other money oropsthat brought us
cash at all ’ ’
Similar reports come to
sections * ~ ~~
does it.
-Herald Want Ada. Pay. We do Job Printing.
I VV11IU W UU ' -. , ..
of the South. DiverBiflca...‘?‘ tl
. i’iiepd—‘‘I,suppose you wouldn't lie
derehmCng the hank robber If you thotigfHt
lie ,1 felly. took the iriofley," .
-;' f I wouldn y t be defending
bdri’t' think, he took enough to
pay my htl
uSSSBBl
SENATOR JIM REED.
Chicago Nows,
Senntor Jns. A. Rood, of Missouri,
antl-Admlnlstrntioii Domoirat, 1ms boon
from first to lust, oho of tho bitterest
us well as one of tho noisiest opponents
of the Ponce Treaty and tho Longue of
Nations covonant. Not even Senator
Borah was more uncompromising. Ho
not only fought the tronty In Washing
ton, bat felt called upon to make 11 spook
ing tour of tho country against It.
During his spooking tour the eloquent
Missourian wns inttdo tho target for a
lot of eggs that had boon too long In
cold storage. A little later fifty of tho
sixty-sovon Democrats of tho Missouri
Legislature signed resolutions asking him
to resign. Now, by an overflowing vote,
the Missouri Democratic Stato Conven
tion 1ms rejected his request that ho be
named one of tho delogutes to tho San
Francisco convention.
Senator Rood probably got a lot of
fun out of lighting the Ponce Tronty,
but. in so doing ho made a good many
poisons weary—including Ills own Demo
cratic constituents.
Still, Reed has a lieonso to go on talk
ing in tho Senate for throe more years.
Tt socnm a lonif, long tiino.
Tho season of fruits and vegetables
is at hand. During the coming months
tho orchards of this Beetled will bo giving
up tliolr rich treaseros, and family gar
dens and backyards will ho adding their
quota of poaches, plums nnd figs, bonus,
tomatoes, niid what not. It usually is
a busy Benson for^tho frugal housowifo,
blit' tills year the sugar profiteers liavo
knocked it into a cocked hat in ndvanc
of its coming, That somebody is profit
eering outrageously in,sugar is ns clear
ns daylight. There are crooks in the
game, and they havo their hands in the
pockets of ovbry family in the iutttl,
There is more than a Suspicion thftt (hey
are'the ‘' big fellows/^ who hftvq fq
cilities for manipulating ft <( cornet,’
and it is the “corner** and nftt ft scarcity
of sugar tliftt is Causing the shortage.
But somebody ought to go to jail, and
stay there until sugar prices tumble.—
Albany Herald. -
Newspapers^ »re_ again voicing their
protest' at tho' wanton waste of papor
by tho various Government departments
at Washington. The newspapers of the
country are up against a paper famine,
and some are paying enormous prices
in order to keep going, while tho pos:
iiWlitios are that the supply will bo
completely exhausted, with no opportu
nity to secure, it at any price. At tho
snmo time the Government , departments
continue to waste tons upon tons ol paper,
much of which goes Into the waste hag-
ketB of- 4 ' 11 ! JiflWBpftPSis. If the Benfiteni
and Congressmen iront ‘ -Wftht to
-do the newspapers ft real service they
Will get busy and make a vigorous kick
Sjaihsl"this neodleBS’and alarming waste.
—Walton Tribune, ■ L ■
; < * —B-— , ; -
' . Most nf 'iif the law fififoi'emf -on
tho .other fslfotv.'
THE PLACE OF COWPEAS.
Tho oowpoa is an old favorlto, but un-
quostlonnbly in many sections it is giving
away to soy nnd volvot bonus. Whore
tho seed are available, It mny bo plnatod
with volvot bonns in the corn, and tho
result is one of tho groatost feod and
soil-improving .combinations wo over saw,
Tho oowpoa is also an excellent food,
and will probably always bo planted for
this reason if for no othor. Tho oow-
pon'B inability to produce fttlr crops of
seed except in favorablo years is its ohlol
drawback, and is the ronson for its be
ing supplanted to a conisldornblo extent
by soy and volvot beans. Tho crop is
a valuable 0110 for liny, probably the
best, whore soy bonus and lespodozn are
not grown.
All threo of tho crops here mentioned
nro good, nnd at least one of thorn should
be planted In nil our corn Holds this yoar.
Soeil soom high-priced, It is true, but
food and plant foods nro also high-priced,
anil there crops nro great feed nml fer
tility-producers.—Progressive. Farmer.
“Do you net toward your wifo as you
did boforo you married her'/’’
"Exactly. I remember how X used to
net when I first foil In - love with her.
I used to lean over tho fence in front
of hor house nml gnzo at her shadow on
thb 'curtain, afraid to go in, and I act
just the snmo way now when I got homo
Into. ’ 1
Tho following advertisement appeared
in a recent issue of tho Allendale, a. 0.,
Advortlsor—
For Sale,—One Ford car witli piston
ringB; two roar wheels and Olio front
spring, Has no fonder, seat or plank,
burns lots 0 ’ gas, and is hard to crunk.
Carburetor busted half-way through; 011-
gino missing and liitB on two. Throe
.years old, coming four this Bpring; has
slioek-nbsorhors and everything. Radia
tor bustod, and sure does leak; differen
tial dry, mid you cun hoar it squeak.
Ten spokes missing, front all boat; tiros
blown,out, ain’t worth a cent. Got lots
of speed, will run like tho doiico; hums
oithor gas or tobacco juice. Tiros nil
off, boon run bn tho rim; but n dura
good Ford ftir tho sliapo it *s in. ’ ’
With the winter’s wheat crop promis
ing a yield of 348,000,000 lmfdiels loss
than Inst yoar, and the Government warn
ing tho public that nearly nil of the old
wheat now in stock is of inferior grade
and of low milling quality, mid indi
cations pointing to roduood acreago of
spring wheat, tho country noods to bo
aroused quickly to tho danger of an in
adequate food supply, With now pota
toes selling, in Florida at $19 to $20 a
barrel, or threo times what was formerly
considered a good price, we must once
more turn to tho homo gardenias. an aid
to the nation's food supply. And tho
sooner the country understands tills sit
uation and its danger tho bettor it will
bo for us.—Manufacturers Rocord.
Conditions flro not as pooplo want,"
but rather ns they think.
Prom tho way some mon fool Monday
morning, thoy muBt put in Sunday culti
vating a grouch.
; i 1 ". 11 0 . 1
Father—fl’iiat yOUng roller conies hold
too often; I want it stopped.
Daughter—I’m sure, father, I do all
I Cftri to Utajourogo jils visits.
Father—Nonsense I I liavon’t hom'd
you »lng,for him. PIIC9<
SAYS HE WOULD NOT
HAVE BELIEVED IT
Georgia Farmer Delighted at the Way
Tanlao Has Brought Relief to
His Little Girl.
After wlmt Tanlao has done for our
daughter Annie Ruth, I can’t liolp but
bollove in tho medicine, mid I’m right
glnil of the chance to recommend it, ’ ’
said Goorgo W. "Karr, woll-kuown farmer
of Villa Rica, Goorgla.
“Our daughter, who is just fourteen
years old, suffered from asthma, for fully
five or six yours. Her throat used to swoll
up and got vory sore, and in any kind
of bad weather, or if she made tile least ,
extra oxortion, she would have a bad
spell. Hor breathing would get difficult
anil she would almost cough herself to
pieces. This coughing enmo on Vory bad
at nights au(l kept her awnko for hours,
mid many times my wtfo or I have been
up half tho night attending to hor. Some
times those spoils wore so bad that we
feared sho would clioko nnd moro than
once I ’vo had to jump into the car and
go and fotoli the doctor, Sho didn’t
oat onougli scarcely to keep a bird alive.
She was very thin and woak and lost a
lot of time away from school in conse
quence. Sho was always having treatment
nnd modicino of some kind, but thoy. .
novor gave' hor more than temporary re
lief. She was always complaining of
headaches, and. was just as white as a
shoot. Wo wore very much worried' about
hor condition and often llsod to wpndef
it wo should over raise hor. > '
“Tho way wo enmo to try Tanlao was 1
llko this: My mother had taken it with',
good results, and my noiglibor Arthur ,
Honsloo and Ills wifo had both booh ,
liolpod by it, and bo wo decided to get 5
some for Annio, Well, if it hadn’t hap- -
poned under my own roof and before my.
own oyoH, I novor would hftvo belley^
it posslblo for such a bhapgB \ 0 fe m (, .
ovor a girl. It Qnscd n tf hor aethraa right’
away, s n « S I 10 >„ never booh troubled with
V touch of it, nnd oxposuto to wonthor
novor affected her ft bit. Her appetite
ptokiiit uff 'tthd she Id now sating well,
sho lifts gained quite tt lot In weight
and tho color has como into hor ebooks.,
Wo hover hour anything about her head
aches now. and bIio’b back at school SI!"
the (lino and rarely misses a day. Tanlao
Was the only thing that Over did hor
Any good, ami both my wifo arid' J think
it’s a grand medicine,”
Tunlnc is sold in Newnan by Gowota
Drug & Book Co, and in Senoia by Holt-
berg Pharmacy,
VALUES
Models—One-Halt Price
These Suits are of lovely materials, in both Tricotine and Serges—plain-
tailored and braid-trimmed—made by several of the best manufacturers in New York. /
$107.50 SUIT NOW ; $53.75
95.00 SUIT NOW 47.50
85.00 SUIT NOW 42.50
' 79.50 SUIT NOW 39.75
.75.00 SUIT NOW 37.50
35.00 SUIT FOR
$60.00 SUIT NOW $30.00
55.00 SUIT NOW 27.50
$50.00 SUIT NOW 25.00
45.00 SUIT NOW 22.50
39.50 SUIT NOW ... 19.75
17.50
Taffeta and Foutard Dresses—One-
Off
$75.00 DRESSES FOR
6400 DRESSES FOR
60.00 DRESSES FOR
'$50.00
42.67
40.00
$39.50 DRESSES FOR ..
$55.00 DRESSES FOR
49.50 DRESSES FOR
45.00 DRESSES FOR ....
............. $26.27
$36.67
33.00
30.00
These Dresses are of best Taffeta and Foulard—every dress a new style.
There are only a few Suits and Dresses in above lots; so come in at once before sizes are broken.
New Voiles and Organdies are received every few days—styles and prices are very attractive.
GLOVER-JONES COMPANY