Newspaper Page Text
NEWNAN, GA., FKIDAY.THE NEWNAN' HERALD, APRIL 15, 1921
Renew your health
by purifying your
system with
Quick and delightful re-
lief for biliousness, colds,
constipation, headaches,
and stomach, liver and
blood troubles. '
The genuine are sold
only m 35c packages.
Avoid imitations.
Professional Cards.
J. P., McPHERSON
Civil Emttneer nn«l Surveyor,
Sewerage systems, water systems,
lonographlcal surveys, rnaplne, aeourate
land surveys, paving roads. Office, Ma
sonic building, 'phone b.5. Griffin, Ga.
WAITING.
Serene, I fold my hands and wait,
Nor cure for wind, nor tide, nov sen;
1 rave no more ’gainst time or fate,
For, lol my own shall como to me.
T stay my haste, 1 make delays,
For wlmt avails this eager pace!
V stand amid the eternal ways,
And what is mine shall knew my face.
Asleep, awake, by night or day.
The friends T seek are seoklng me;
No wind can drive my bark astray,
Nor change the tido of destiny.
Whnt matter if I Btnnd alone—
1 wait with joy the coming years;
My heart shall reap whore it hath sown,
And garner up its fruit of tears.
The waters know their own and draw
The brook that springs in yonder
heights;
So Hows the good with equal law,
Unto the soul of pure delights.
The stars come nightly to the sky;
The tidal wave eomcB to the .sen;
Nor time, nor space, nor deep, nor high,
Can keep my own away from mo.
—Jolm Burroughs.
o
, CIVILIZATION’S CRISIS.
A New Year Appeal by Laymen for
Prayer.
These are troubled times. livery
thoughtful person faces the New Year
with deep concern. The world outlook
Seemed gravest by those who best
RESOLUTIONS
By Woman’s Missionary Society of the
First Baptist Church.
We, as a society, feel constrained not
to lot puss the, opportunity of ascribing
n trlbuto of love and respect to the
memory of our sister, Mrs. Frmices H.
SI yBON H. PABJIBR, M. D„
Physician nml 'Surgeon.
Office over T. G. Farmer & Sons Co.
Office ’phone 606; residence ’phone 73,
I,. E. MOOItli
Attorney-nt-Lnw
Will practice in all courts. Prompt
loans made on Improved farms In Cow
eta County. Over Cates Drug .Store.
W. L. STALLINGS,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law.
Will practice In all the Courts. Spe
dal attention given to preparation of
wills and the administration of estates
In the Court of Ordinary.
Oltlee In Court House, 'phono 414.
T. S. BAILEY.
Physician and Surgeon.
Office upstairs in Kirby building, 11%
Greenville street. 'Phone 87. (office
and residence.),
JOE B. PENISTON,
Physician and Snrgeon.
Office hours 8 to 10 a. m.; 3 to 6 p. m.
Office with Dr. Paul Penlston. Office
and residence ’phone 30.
DR. J. E. MARSH
Veterinary Surgeon
Office at W. A. Potts Stable, 11 E.
Broad St, Office phone 106, Res. 370J.
A. SIDNEY CAMP,
Attorney and Counselor at Law.
Office in Arnall Bldg., Court Square
h. h. McDonald, .-
Physician and Surgeon.
Office 3% East Broad Street, upstairs.
Office hours 9 to 11 a .m. and 3 to "
p. m.
Office 'phone 66; residence ‘phone 39J
WM. H. LYDAY,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office over Lee-King Drug Co.
SlOSS ' ’
Res
Idence. ,Office ./plume,,316..
Office Hours—9 to 11 a. m., 2 to 4 p.
m.. and 7 to 8 p. m. Sunday—9 to 11
s. m. and 2 to 4 p. m.
T. B. DAVIS,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office—Sanitorlum building. Office
‘phone 6—1 call; residence 'phone 6—
calls.
W. A. TURNER,
Physician and Surgeon,
Special attention given to surgery
and diseases of women. Office 19
Spring Btreet. 'Phone 230.
P. A. HANEY.
Physician and Snrgeon.
Special attention to eye, ear, nose
and throat, and diseases of chest.
W. L. WOODBOOF,
Physician and Snrgeon.
Office 11% Greenville street, 'Phone
161. Special attention given to dis
eases of children.
J. LITTLETON JONES,
Attorney-at-Law.
Prompt attention to legal business.
Loans made on farm lands. Office over
H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.’s.
THOS. G. FARMER, JR..
Attorney-at-Law.
Will give careful and prompt atten
tion to all legal business entrusted to
me. Money to loan. Oflloo In court
house,
WILLIAM Y. ATKINSON.
AttornCy-at-Law.
Office over Cuttlno’s store.
K. W. STARR,
Dentlat.
Office over H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.'s
store. White patronage exclusively.
Residence ’phone 382-L.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA
RAILWAY CO.
Effective Nov. 14, 1920.
ARRIVE FROM
Ceilartown . . 6.45 a. m.
Columbus
Chattanooga
Carrollton .
Raymond ..
Griffin ..
9.40 a. m.
1.00 p. m.
4.48 p. m.
5.22 p. m.
11.18 a. m.
6.25 p. m.
6.52 p. m.
Griffin
Columbus ..
Chattanooga
Raymond ..
Carrollton .
Cedartown .
DEPART FOR
.. . 6.45 a. m.
8.25 a. m.
11.18 a. m.
4.48 p. m.
5.25 p. m.
6.52 p. m.
1.00 p.
5.22 p.
COURT CALENDAR.
know .international conditions. Our own
favored America fronts many-sided
problems that will tax our every resource.
We are surely in. the midst of days of
destiny.
In the realm of iudividaal life tho
times are testing our soul-stuff. Busi-
iness men are carrying burdens that fair
ly break hearts. Many working men and
their families are already 'experiencing
the bitter pinch of real want, Tho
weight of the world’s woe is pressing
heavily upon us all. Human spirits
everywhere are hungry for comfort, and
guidance.
What shall we do about ifc« all? For
do something we must; the hour is too
critical for drifting.
Tho laymen who sign and issue this
paper do so because of a. deep conviction
that only by spiritual means may'our
civilization be saved from tho unprece
dented perils that beset it. The only
way out is the way up.
Holding no ecclesiastical positions,
nml representing, quite unofficially, va
rious branches of the Ohrictinn Church,
wo take this unusual step of appealing
ditectly, through the public proas, to
men and women of all faiths, who be
lieve in an Omnipotent God and in tho
power of prayer, to join us in a common
nml concerted, and continuous exorcise
of intercession, to the end that humanity
everywhere, torn ns it is by dissension,
and suffering many kinds of ill effects
of the worhbwar, may turn to the pa
tient Father in heaven for new motives
and guidance and succor.
Our world will never get right with
itself until it gets right with God. Only
spiritual remedies can euro the present
ills of mankind.
Therefore we call upon all who, bo
liovo that the living God hoars and an
swers prayer to offer daily petitions, in
JiQ.h.aif,, of .,opr_doubled. .wqrlvbrfflith. nil
its international strife and ^jealousies
and self-seeking; with its industrial un
rest, its social unrest and its political
unrest—that the Lord Almighty may
suffuse the hearts of all people every
where with a consuming desire to seek
first the Kingdom of God and His right
eousness. Then all other things needful
may be added unto us, as promised by
our Lord Jesus Christ.
We crave for ourselves and for our
time a. revival of the sense of the reality
of God, and of our dependence upon
Him, and of a spirit of loyalty to Him.
Because of the. extraordinary part He
must take in the affairs of our nation
and of the world, at this most difficult
time, we also ask that daily prayer be
made for the President-elect of tho Uni
ted States, that he may be illumined
and sustained for hiB trying tasks by
the very power of the Highest.
As says the Apostle: ‘ ‘ I exhort there
fore, first of all, that supplications, pray
ers, intercessions, thanksgivings, he made
for all men; for kings and all that are
in high place; that we may lead a tran
quil and quiet life in all godliness and
gravity. ’ ’
Nor can ’we forget our stricken ex
President, for whom we would also ten
derly pray.
By way of the throne of a prayer
answering God, even the least of us may
wield a power for patriotism anil for
universal good will beyond all human
calculation.
Pray for my soul. Mord things aro
wrought by prayer
Than this world dreams of. Wherefore,
let thy voice
Rise like a fountain for me night and
day;
For what are mien better than sheep or
goats
That nourish a blind life' within the
brain,
If, knowing God, they lift not hands of
prayer
Both for themselves and those who call
them friend?
For so the whole round earth is every
way
Bound by golden chains about the feet
of God.”
So we entreat all spiritually-minded
persons, in whatever wayB and at what
ever times individual judgment may sug
gest, to engage, privately or publicly,
in daily prayer that tho very gravity of
present world conditions may drive
all to the Eternal God who is our rofugo,
and who is the only Light in our dark
ness. In Him we shall find peace and
good will, and power for the task of re
making the world.
‘‘All things, whatever ye shall ask in
prayer, believing, ye shall receive.
nuunury ui , .
Kite, who was (’filled home on March 1
11121, nt tho vjpe ago of 76 yours, A
wrltor beautifully spanks of tho home
going of tho mother rfs “the passing of
tho sweetest soul that ovor looked with
human eyes.” Those who have boon
called upon to pass beneath tho chasten
ing rod of sorrow in ft similar expovienco
know full well tho meaning of tho lad
ing awav of the lovo light which never
was on ’ land or son. When tho win
dows of the soul nre opened, then the
love light iB most resplendent in the
eyes of mother.
Out BiatoT accepted aa her Savior God b
only Son, and was an humble, gentle
lover of God. Hors wag a faith child
like in its simplicity, and portrayed tho
beauty of her soul. Sho possessed the
swoot spirit of charity, which ‘ tliink-
oth uo ovil,” mid her lips were closed
to speaking guile. Sho was a devoted
wife, and toiled unceasingly for the com-
fort and welfare of her husband as long
as God permitted them to walk together.
As a mother she taught her, children
from youth to consecrate their lives to
tho Master, to bo loyal to His service,
and to be regulnv In their attendance
upon the church services. It gave her
great joy to soo her grandchildren come
into the kingdom. During tho nctive
years of hor Christian lifo she served
Him by bearing her own yoke, and in
inter years she served by standing and
waiting, all the while spending much
time in prayer and tho study of God's
word. When hor loved ones are weary
of seeking for tho best, may they como
back and find it in the Book from which
their sainted mother foail the Word that
was a lamp to hei' path. In tho evening
tiino of her life, when afflictions were
great, sho seemed to catch glimpses of
heuvon, and there wub a longing in her
heart to go homo and be at rost. Tho
greatest tributo that can bo paid her
is that she was a follower of tho Lord
Jesus Christ,, and her children rise up
and call her blessed. Therefore, bo it—-
Resolved, That' n page of our minutes
be dedicated to hor memory, and, with
our teiulorost sympathies extended, we
commend God’s ‘all-sufficient grace to
tho , bereaved family.
Respectfully submitted,
Mrs. Bennett C. Sanders.
Mrs. Roy M. Morrell,
Mrs. Ira W. Brooks,
. Committee.
OBITUARY.
On Nov. 16, if)20, the Death Angel
visited our home and took our darling
sister, Corn Mao, Oh, how sad and
lonely Is our homo without her I—never
to look on her blessed face or hoar her
gentle voice again. Wo know not why
our dear sister was taken just in the
bloom of life; blit the laird knew best,
and loved Corn Mao better tlmu we, so
He said, ‘ ‘ Come up higher. ’ ’
Cora Man Was In years of age, nml
joined Providence Baptist church In
1919. Sho lived ns a true Christian
should live. She loved music, nml Just
n few. days before her death she snug,
‘‘When 1 Get to the End of tho Way.”
Sho was sick just one wook, The Inst
words that we could hear wore: ‘‘I
want to go to heaven; 1 mn so tired, ’ ’
How sWeot nml comforting to know that
our darling is now walking tho golden
streets with hor little brother, It had
boon but a few abort yonrs sinco our
darling little brother, Walter Raymond,
went to live with the hugels.
So, dear mother, weop not, for some
Bwoet day wo can meet them again--
not now, but in tho coming years wo.will
rend tho lneaniug of our tears, and then
we will understand why they were taken.
We laid our darling to rest, hosldo her
brother nt Coke’s Clmpel. Sho is now
watching and beckoning us to como.
Estelle Harper.
Reading Matter. ■
It Is estimated that over 155,000 dlf-
ferent'books. pamphlets nml mngnzlnea
are published annually In the different
countries of the world,
MCHESTERS PILLS
DIAMOND oTiCn^Si BRAND
00^
LADIES |
Goto metallic liotes. sealed wllb Bluett/)
Rlbhon. Tacs no tiinnn. Bur ac raur'C/
Dninalut nml ask for OUI.OUEH.TER 8 V
DIAMOND Hit A NO 1’II.I.H, for twcutv-flvo
years regarded aa Best, Safest, Always Reliable. | <
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
EVERYWHERE
Atlanta anti West Point
RAILROAD
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE
OF TRAINS ATNEWNAN. GA,
EFFECTIVE JAN. 16. 1B21.
Sulijeot to obango and typographical
nrrom.
TIME
TRIED
WORTH
TESTED
Coweta Clrcnlt.
J. Render Terrell, Judge; Solicitor-
General, C. E. Hoop.
Meriwether—Third Mondays in Feb-
luary and August.
Coweta—First Mondays In March and
September.
g^He^ard-—Third Mondays In March and
October* 1 — Flrat Mondays in April and
.Troup—Fourth Mondays In January
and July.
City Court of Newnaa.
Solicitor P ° at " Jud8 ’ e: W ’ L Stallings,
.Quarterly term meets third Mondays
“ January, Apr& July - - -
y and October.
There are many things mortal mail
cannot understand. For instance, why
two men will sit side by side on the
same bank of a stream, .use the same
sort of hook, line, Cork ami sinker, take
bait out of the same can, fish at the game
depth ami swap places half a dozen times
in the coarse of an afternoon, at the.end
of which one man will have ten pounds
of' fish and the other will have nothing
’but a sour disposition. The explanation,
we have been told, is in the fact that
fish has some way of knowing whether
hook .was baited by.4>eal -fisherman or.
a novice.—Albany Herald.
On Jan. 7, 1921, God in His infinite
love removed from our midst Mrs. M.
. Eason, ono of our most highly esteem
ed members. Mrs. Eason, as Miss Ida
Johnson, Was ,boni ill Carroll county
on Oct. 1, 1886. Joined tho Baptist
church at Indian Creek in August, 1903;
was married to Rev. M. 'P. Eason Dec.
9, 1906; was buried at, Indian Crook
cemetery Jnn'. 8, 192]. Our church and
community feel keenly our loss in the
going away of our beloved sister; 'there
fore, be it resolved—
1. That wo extend our lieartfolt sym
pathy to tho parents, the stricken hus
band, and tho eight dear little children,
and commend them for consolation to
IjQtn whose graco is' efficient ,-fqr all,..
*2. ■ iMiat siio was- a'truo, dojml -member
of the Woman’s Missionary Society cf
the First Baptist church, and we desire
to express our deep sorrow at the sever
ing of ties of this useful life from us;
that as a member of our circle she was
capable, faithful, unselfish and loving,
and that wo will remember, with grate
ful appreciation the worthy example of
her life, so full of good works and kind
words. Respectfully submitted,
Mrs. -G. S. Darden,
Mrs. Luther Kidd,
> Mrs. Z. R. Hardegreo,
1 Committee.
o
OBITUARY.
Mrs. A. M. Meeks died March 15, 192i,
She was a worthy companion of her hus
band. The confiding love which sho
manifested ns a bride seemed to mellow
and deepen with the passing years. Hav
ing visited in her home and been asso
ciated with her married life for years,
I can testify that she was blessed with
a cheerful disposition. Indeed, hors was
a real home, where cheer and happiness
reigned. She spent a. busy, though not
strenuous life. Relatives and friends
speak of her aB a good woman, af true
wife and a splendid stepmother. Through
an illness lasting for months Bhe suffered
greatly, but never murmured; All that
loving hands could do for her relief was
done. One, in speaking of her said:
'She was a good neighbor, always ready
to lend a helping hand to those in need.”
Many of her friends and associates will
long remember the delightful hospital
ity she dispensed in hor home. Her
loved ones now have no one to go to
with their troubles, as they did ''Hood
ie,” as she was called. No one knows
how much they will miss her. She did
not give away to troubles and trials as
most of us do.
Though missed, in the home and com
munity, she is hot forgotten, nor is her
influence gone. She was a woman of
well-balanced temperament, bearing her
trials and disappointments with beauti
ful resignation. While she was espec
ially devoted to her family, sho’was an
unfailing friend and splendid neighbor.
She was laid to rost in Oak hill ceme
tery, within sight of her home. ,
May our Heavenly Father, who tem
pers the wind to the shorn lamb, bind
up the broken-hearted. We tender our
deepest sympathy to her bereavfed hus
band, stepdaughter and other relative^.
Minnie.
o ■
Shelby county, Ala., lias appealed to
Gov. Kilby to send the State militia to
aid local authorities in driving out the
moonshiners, who are represented as mul
tiplying so rapidly as to overrun the
county. Many farmers are reported as
having Bet up ‘‘stills” as a means of
finding a market for their com, which
in the grain is unsalable, lmt as an “ex
tract” finds a brisk and boundless de
mand in and around Birmingham.—
Selma Timcs-Journal
THEY FEAR' LOVE IN A COTTAGE.
Mauvieo Long, writing in the London
Mull, contributes nn artiela, that is of
more than passing Interest, Tho follow
ing is an excerpt from it:
‘Nowiulnys the young poople want to
begin married lifo where their parents
loft off,” remarked with a touch of dis
appointment tho mother of a girl who
Tin.ll been engaged for some years.
“I should not- care to remember too
exactly how little wo had to begin with, ’ ’
sho added, ‘ 1 But although it was just
enough, it did moan economies in the
small things, and I had to do all sorts of
household work which Monica refuses
ovon to contemplate.
“And yet," sho concluded, with a
smile that reflected memories of strug
gles 30 years back, “If I had my time
all over again I would not begin differ
ently, anil to my mind Hugh and Monica
are missing more than they know in wait
ing until his salary will keep them with
out a shadow of anxiety. ’'
Certainly tho couple in question do not
regard the matter from her standpoint.
Hugh, a bachelor nearing 30, with an
incomo ample for ono, .but questionably
sufficient for two, is not. anxious to risk
matrimonial happiness .until he is certain
that both ends will meet without any
ifiiiftihing.
'' And Monica, who lifts never known tho
early regime of tho unpretentious house
and the ono small servant under which
her mother began, • would rather wait
until' her man can provide hor with a
home us comfortable ns that to which
she jin's always been accustomed.
o
R at-snap
KILLS RATS
Also mice. Absolutely prevents oilors
from oaroaBB. One package proves thin.
HAT-SNAP eoinos In oftUes—no mixing
with other food. Guaranteed.
USc. Nine (l vnke) enough for Pantry,
Kitchen or Collar.
«Be. sire (2 dikes) for Chicken House,
coops, or small buildings,
#t.2r> sl*e (IS dikes) enough for all
farm and out-bulldlngs, Htorngo build
ings, or factory buildings.
Sold and Guaranteed by
LEE-KING DRUG COMPANY.
COWETA DRUG & BOOK COMPANY,
NOKTHROUNDl
No. 42 6.45 a. m.
No, 18 9.45 n. m.
No. 38 11.18 a. m.
No. 40 1.00 p. m.
No. 20 6.30 p. m.
No. 34 5.20 p. m.
No, 36 10.20 p, m.
SOUTHBOUNDI
No. 35 7.08 a. m.
No. 19 8.25 a. m.
No. 38 .... '. 9.45 a. m.
No. 39 2.46 p. in.
No. 17 5.20 p. m.
No. 41 -..8.52 p. m.
,No. 37 7.19 p. m.
Q J. P. BILLUPS, O, P. A.
Give us a trial order on
Job Work.
" ■■ ■ ~T-
Old papers ?6r sale here.
Herring Fisheries.
The herring forms the chief fisheries
of the British isles, mid It Is estimated
that .2,200,000,000 herrings are lauded
In 3rltaln during one season.
Pains
Were
Terrific
Read how Mrs. Albert
| Gregory, of-.R. F. D v No,
1 1, Bluford. 111., got rid of
her ills. Wring-. . . I
was awfully weak . . .
My pains were terrific. I
thought I would die. The
bearing-down pains were
actually so severe I could
not stand the pressure of
my hands on Ihe lower
F art of my stomach .. .
simply felt as if life was
for but a short time. My
husband was worried...
One evening, while read
ing the Birthday Alma
nac, he came, across a
case similar to mine, and
went straight for some
Cardui for me to try.
TAKE
The fellow that cuts off his advertising
entirely because of the dull timeB will
soon find the sheriff after him. Fate
takes care of the poor newspaper man.
Every time a fellow tries to beat him
or dodge him, Old Bankruptcy grabs him
,by the seat of his pants.—Bainbridge
Post-Searchlight. \
The Woman's Tonic
•‘I took it faithfully and
the results were immedi-
1 afe,” adds Mrs. Gregory.
“I continued to get bet
ter. all my ills left; me,
and I went through . . .
with no further trouble.
My baby was fat and
strong, and myself—thank
God—am once more hale
and hearty, can walk
miles, do my worit,
though 44 years old, feel
like a new person. All I
owe to Cardui.” For
many years Cardui has
been found helpful in
building up the system
when run down by dis
orders peculiar to women.
Take
Cardui
in
What about the homeyotT
have promisedyuurself
build it NOW!
See us for FREE building helps—
working plans and cost estimates
R. D. COLE* MANUFACTURING CO.
Newnan, Georgia.
“You have enough Spring
Suits to give every moth
in the world indigestion."
r
These headlines are not original—we are
simply requoting the expression of an alert
young man who was taken back by the number
of patterns and models we laid out in his size
37.
“Why,” he continued, “I thought all cloth
iers were laying low. Is this condition general?”
“No, sir,” we replied. “Selections like these
are not general, nor is this a general store.
What you see here is here because we are
here. We are banking on our values and our
models to make this season make last season
look microscopic in volume of sales.”
Easy to talk this way, with a store full like
this to guide your key board.
Compare before you purchase.
SPRING SUITS, AND LOTS OF THEM.
$30 to $40
Boone* s