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I
The Newnan Herald
ichWNAN HERALD 1 Consolidated with Coweta Advertiser September, 1886. I
Established 1866. f Consolidated with Newnan News January, 1916. I
NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29. 1920.
Vol. 56—No. 5
Helped Father and Son
"Ziron Did Us Both Good,” Writes Mr. Gentry,
of Norene, Tenn.
I T Is a well-known medical fact, that
iron is a necessary constituent of the
blood, and that blood lacking iron is
the cause of many troubles that only iron
will cure.
Ziron, a scientific compound of iron
with other valuable ingredients, is the
remedy to take when your blood needs
more iron, and your system requires a
tonic. Ziron is mild and harmless, does
not stain the teeth, and is good for chil
dren as well as adults.
Mr. P. Q. Gentry, of Norene, Tenn.,
writes: "Ziron Iron Tonic has made good
In my family. 1 have used it to a very
great advantage to myself and my 14-
year-old boy. it did us both good. I
think it Is a good medicine for what it is
recommended.”
If you are pale, weak, tired, feel down
and out, take Ziron. it will put iron into
your blood, and should help build you up.
Get a bottle from your druggist today,
and give ZIRON a fair trial. Sold by
him under a money-back guarantee.
Ask him about it He will tell you.
THIS BUILDING PATS TOR ITSELF
IN GARAGE RENT SAVED
DO YOU realize how much garage rents—
constantly increasing—add to the “over*
head” in keeping a car?
See US for FREE working plans and ac
curate cost estimates for this and other
moderate priced garages.
R. D. COLE MANUFACTURING CO.
Newnan, Georgia.
OCTOBER.
Oh, tho muscadine is purplo
’Neath its leaves of tinted gold,
And the red squirrel barks at ovoning
On tho goldenrodded hills
Where tho hedges flame a beacon
With their sumac's sullen gold,
And tho shocked corn’s pungent odor
All tho sails of Fancy Alls.
And it’s Gordon, Gordon, Gordon,
And tho highlands that I lovo,
With their crystal singing waters
And tho blue-green sky above—
Where an inspiration’s waiting
For a weary soul like mine,
And a lyric song is singing
In every festooned vine.
O, give mo back my childhood
’Mid those bills of circling blue,
’Ero tho shades of life have lowered
Liko a melancholy pall:
0, givo mo, too, tho sorrows
That my simplo boyhood know—
They wore sweeter than buccossos,
Than u triumph, after all.
Yos, It’s Gordon, Gordon, Gordon,
And tho bluo hills I adore,
Where the Oostannula’s wators
Lap a willowed, sandy shore,
And tho wild Cohuttns, looming
In tho north with gentle frown,
Keep a sentinel eternal
Over valley, plain and town.
—Lawson Fields, in Cobb County Times.
‘at a tlmo when
COTTON EXPORT CORPORATION
TO BE ORGANIZED.
Washington, Oct. 21.—Plans for the
organisation of a $12,000,000 cotton ex
port and financing corporation wero
adopted at a mooting hore today of bank
ers and representatives of cotton inter
ests attending tho convention of tho Amor
ican Bankers’ Association. The meeting
approved suggestions contained in a re-,
port of a committee headed by Robert F.
Maddox, Atlanta banker, to move at once
in the direction of preliminary stops to
ward organizing the corporation. Tenta
tive arrangements provide for the pay
ment of half of the capital stock, for an
initial working fund of $5,000,000 capi
tal, and $1,000,000 surplus.
Capital subscriptions will bo based on
an assessment of $1 a bale on cotton
raised in the respective States, thereby
making the organization one of influence
through all territory which has had diffi
culty in financing tho movement of the
cotton crop. Tho decision to call for this
initial payment of only half of tho total
capital means, therefore, that the sub
scriptlons will bo prorated among tho
purchasers of Btock on tho basis of $.50
per bale. It was made clear by speakers
of the corporation, which will be organ
ized under the Edge Act amending the
Federal Reserve Act, is not to hold tho
cotton crop, but to insure that the com
modity will bo moved
tho markot is stagnant.
Under provisions of tho Edge Act tho
corporation is ennhled to handlo trade ac
ceptances and agreements of tho purchas
ers to tho amount of ton times its cap
ital and surplus, or, In tho ense of tho
proposed corporation, tho nblllty of hand
ling acceptances of cotton purchases to
tho amount of $80,000,000. Although
no specific mention was made, there
were indications that tho formation of
tho corporation would immediately open
tho way for tho sale of cotton in Europe,
where the demnnd is estimated at from
3,000,000 to -1,000,000 lmlos.
Tho committee informed those in at
tendance at tho mooting that it would
make ‘ ‘ no extravagant promises, ’ ’ but it
liopod that tho establishment of such a
corporation would bo “of tremendous
bonofit to tho South.” The mooting was
told also that the corporation would not
move a “remedy for nil ills,” although
t would make possible the provision of
a markot in time of emergency, such ns
tho cotton producers nro now passing
through.
Although tho corporation mny in tho
future extend its operations to other com
modities,' those in attendance urged that
it dovpto its resources to tho handling of
this crop nlono. Tho way was loft opon,
however, so that onlargomonts and sug
gested extensions can bo made ns noodod,
speakers declared.
Bankers can and should aid farmors by
assisting in tho establishment of co-op
erative warehousing nnd selling organi
zations, Chairman Joseph Hirach, of tho
agricultural commislon of tho American
Bankers’ Association, doclarod today, in
presenting tho report of tho commission
to tho convention.
“Many of ub hnvo boon.foarful of en
tering tho field of marketing because in
doing this wo havo boon afraid wo would
come in conflict with our own customers,
tho middlemen, who are buying tho far
mers’ products,” the report said. “But
it is high tlmo for tho bankers of tho
country to realize that a more economical
method of distributing our food products
is absolutely essential to tho success of
American agriculture; that unless farm
ers can produce and soli thoir crops with
some reasonable -assurance of a fair pro
fit there will be an increasing tide of
men drifting from tho farms to tho cities.
We believe in co-oporation for oursolvos.
Tho Federal BoBorvo syBtom is a co
operative enterprise. In liko manner
co-operation among farmers in appor
tioning what they produco to moot tho de
mands of tho country is economically
Bound. Tho farmer needs your help in
this work, because you can supply him
with that essential which he chiefly lacks
—a knowledge of business organization
and business methods.
MUSHROOM MERCHANTS.
The “mushroom merchant” is tho
subject of an article appearing in a re
cent letter issued by tho Amorlcnn Ex
change National Bank, a monthly publi
cation for tho benefit of its clientele nnd
for such others nH may bo interested, Tho
hank assorts that these ‘ mushroom mer
chants” nro tho ones who will furnish
tho failures In tho pvocobs of readjust
ment nnd getting back to normal busi
ness. On this subject the bunk's letter
is quite Interesting. It says:
11 Most of the failures now being re
ported are from nmong the concerns
which grew up over night In response to
the opportunities presented by tho war—
concerns which had no part or place la
tho distributing machinery of tho coun
try before the wnr—concerns whose de
velopment would hnvo been impossible
under normnl conditions, and whoso elim
ination, oneo tho condition that prodneo-
od them had passed, was as certain as tho
rising of tho sun. Few of ns fully ap
preciate just how much of a disturbing
factor tliu mushroom merchant really was.
Excopt for tho fact that, ho did perform
tho function of pnssing goods on from
tho producer to tho seller, ho wns not ac
tually a merchant. Ho was a plain op
portunist who had tho wit to boo what
was coming in tho wny of increased do-
mnnd for goods and tho money to go into
tho markets and bid against tho estab
lished concerns, or ho wns a small trader
who found himself shoved Into what look
ed like succors by tho rushing tblo of
ovonts nnd, gonornlly spoaklng, lost hiB
head in tho process. In cither case ho
wns doomed to find his wny back to tho
obscurity from which ho enmo, little bet
tor off than ho was boforo, but leaving
wreck in ids wako. Tho merchant owos
a duty to tho OBtablishod ordor more im
portant that that of any otlior of its
functionaries, for ho is nonrost to tho
consumor and is in roality tho agont of
the consumor in his rotations with tho
producer. Tho closer the merchant nd-
lores to tho interest of his principal and
tho bettor bargains he drives on his bo-
half, and tho more restraint ho exorcises
on his own, the hotter chance wo have for
stability and contentmont. ”
Wise mon nro liko sponges: they seek
to absorb all tlioy can.
The armadillo, dospito its Bhort logs,
wan outrun a man.
Lovo at first sight may bo a good idoa,
If you have a fow days at tho beach.
HOW DOCTORS
TREAT COLDS
ANDJHE FLU
First Step in Treatment Is a Brisk
Purgative With OalotabB, the
Purified and Refined Calomel
Tablets that are Nausea-
less, Safe and Sure,
Doctors lmvo found by oxporionce
that no modicino for colds and influ
enza can bo dopondod upon for full ef
fectiveness until tho livor is made thor
oughly notlvo. That is why tho first
stop in tho troaitmont Is tho now, nausea-
loss colomol tablets called Calotabs,
which aro froo from tho slckonlng and
weakening offoctB of tho old stylo calo
mel. Doctors also point out tho fact
that an active livor may go a long way
towards provonting influonza and is ono
of tho most important factors in en
abling tho patient to successfully with
stand an attack and ward oft pneu
monia.
Ono Calotab on the tonguo at bod
tlmo with a swallow of water—that’s
all. No saltB, no nausea nor tho slight
est intorforonce with yqur eating, pleas
ure or work. Noxt morning your cold
has vanished, your livor is. activo, your
systom is purlflod, and you aro fooling
fine, with, a hearty nppotlto for broak-
' tB soil Oalotabs only in
fast.
b, price thirty-
five cents. Your money will ,bo ohoer-
fully refunded it yoii do not find them
delightful.—-(Adv,
.r
Our idoa of a good citizen is ono
always ready to givo, according to his
moans, to community enterprises. Ho
takes stock in them all, nnd doosn’t Iobo
faith if an occasional vonturo proves bad.
He is not afraid to buy roal estate nnd
pay what it is worth. Ho talks up his
town at homo and abroad, thinks it is
tho b0Bt plnco on oarth, bolioving it dos-
tlnod to bo tho biggest city in its Boctlon,
and wants to bo burlod thore When he
dies. He’s worth a wholo regiment of
tho lukowarm kind.—Hartwell Bun.
6
Tho man who quarrels with his broad
and buttor is likoly to dino on scraps.
CHICHESTER SPILLS
BRAND
DIAMOND
LADIES t
Aik roar Urunt.i for Cm-CHBS-TBR'S
DIAMOND BRAND FILLS In Run and/
Gold metallic boxes, sealed with Bluer
Ribbon, Tabs ho other. Bay “
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
Si EVERYWHERE
You Con Get
—They’re COLLEGIANS
You want to be well-dressed this fall.
You want Clothes that are stylish and sen
sible—Clothes that will hold their shape and
give you good service—Clothes that are
fairly and honestly priced. We have that
kind. They are Collegian Clothes—stylish;
they fit right; they’re comfortable; they’re
all-wool, of course. It will pay you to buy
Clothes more carefully than ever this year.
That is why you should come in and see
our new Collegian Suits and Overcoats. We
have all the new patterns and colors to
choose from. They are designed to “keep
you looking your best.”
Our Collegians are priced right. The makers of
these Clothes believe in giving honest values at
lowest prices—so do we. You can save money
by wearing a Collegian Suit or Overcoat. Come
in and see our new patterns and styles.
COLLEGIAN CLOTHES
$30—$35—$40—$45—$50
HUBBARD BROTHERS
NEWNAN’S EXCLUSIVE MAN’S STORE
%
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0 Collegian Clothe* 1920
rhvlzi Adler Son* Cormx-f