The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1915-1947, May 27, 1921, Image 5

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THE NEWNAN HERALD. NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY. MAY 27, 1921 Get Bid o£ - ConJtipation Constipation Is the fore runner of 85% of all i human ills. It brings on more suffering, more sleeplessness, more ill-temper than any other «ingle cause. But YOU CAN GET RID of constipation. Nor do you have to take ■( any nauseating,,griping & medicines to do it Take RICH-LAX RICH-LAX la a new treatment It deana ?he system, removes the poisona from the leavine you weak and half-sick, as you d.vays feel after taking ordinary laxatives. ni.«r,n»ed •» Our Store. We are so sure that rK"x will please you that we want you to purchase Dfic** jolm R. Cates Drug Co., Nswnan, Ga. Professional Cards. j. r. mopBEUson Civil Engineer imd Surveyor. Sewerage systems, water, systems, topographical surveys, maping, accurate miul surveys, paving roads. Office, Ma sonic building >'phone 676, Griffin, Ga, MYRON H. FARMER, M» D„ Physician and Surgeon. Office over T. Q. Farmer & Sons Co. Office ’phone 606; residence 'phone 72. L. 15. MOORE Attorney-nt-Luw Will practice in all courts. Prompt loans made on improved farms in Cow eta County. Over Cates nrug Store. W. L. STALLINGS, Attorney ahd Counsellor nt Law. Will practice in all the Courts. Spe cial attention given to preparation of wills and the administration of estates In the Court of Ordinary. Office in Court House, ’phone 414. T. S. BAILEY, Physician and Surgeon. Office upstairs in Kirby building, 11% Greenville street. ’Phone 87. (office and residence.) NEWNAN BRANCH W. C. T. U. The Inst meeting was a splendid “Sabbath Observance M program, ar ranged with great care and forethought by Mrs. T. E. Ansley, superintendent of this dopartmbnt. When so much is being done to. tnko the Sabbath of our fathers from us 1 and substitute the continental Sabbath of amusement, it is well to lis ten for the Voice that thundered from Mount Sinai; “ Remeifibor the Sabbath day, to keep it holy 1 ’ ’ All civil law is based on tlio Ten Commandments, and the fourth, regarding the Sabbath, is just ns binding as the others. Multiplied misfortunes have befallen people in nil agi\j who) polluted the Sabbath, and Isaiah Waxpil eloquent as ho promised unnumbered blessings to those who honor God’s day. • Under the camouflage of patriotism Sabbath desecration increas ed during jthe war, and arguments are advanced for its continuance, but our truest patriots any that only by the. ap plication of Christian- principles, can wo end the troubles from which the worbl suffering, ybltqiro, the infidel, spiff, We can never overthrow Christianity till wo destroy the Sabbath.”, Roose velt said, “ Experience’shows tho day of rest is necessary to mankind.” Gom- pers says, “Soven-ffny workers are poor workers. Four million laborers are com pelled to work on Sunday ; 150,000 cad dies afe on the golf links, who should be in Sunffay-scliool; and thousands of church members are motoring for pleas ure instead of attending church*' The biblc and tho Sabbath are pillars in the temple of our republic;” The Newnan union makes these re quests— To Car Owners—Fill your tanks Sat urday-and get all supplies you will need till Monday. If your car is in the shop. Saturday night, ask the mechanic not to work on it on Sunday, for .it is unjust to expect him to work on it that day. To the Housekeeper—Buy full supplies of groceries and meats .on Saturday to meet your needs till Monday. Thought less customers cause these places to open Sunday morning. Christians will ,not ask them to do this. Under no poilsifferatiou patronize soda founts, or ..order ice cream sent to your home. . Boys serve here who are deprived of attending Sun day-school by having to work. Buy nothing on Sunday except necessities for the sick. Through the recurring Chris* tian Sabbath the hearts ■ of the people Q,re turned to Gpd, whom to know and love and serve is life eternal. “Right eousness exaltetli a nation*” N, L. C. JOE B. PENISTON, Physician and Surgeon. Office hours 8 to 10 a. m.; 3 to 6 p. m. Office with Dr. Paul Peniston. Office and residence ’phone 30. DR. J. E. MARSH Veterinary Surgeon Office at W. A. Potts Stable, 11 B. Broad St Office phone 105, Res. 370J. A. SIDNEY CAMP, Attorney and Counselor at Law. Office in Arnall Bldg.. Court Square. r. h. McDonald, Physician and Surgeon. Offlde 3% Bast Broad Street, upstairs.- Office hours 9 to 11 a ,m. and 3 to 5 ). m. Office ’phone 65; residence 'phone 39J WM. II. LYBAY, Physician and Surgeon. Office over Lee-King i)rug Co. Res idence - ’phonhv 464. Office 'phone 216. Office Hours—9 to 11 a, m„ 2 to 4 p. m,, and 7 to *8- p. m, Sunday—9 to 11 a. m. and 2 to 4 p. m. T. B. DAVIS, Physician and Surgeon. Office—Sanitorlum building. Office Dhone 6—1 call; residonce ’phone 6 1 calls. W. A. TURNER, Physician and Surgeon, Special attention given to surgery and diseases of women. Office 19 spring street ’Phone 230. D, A. HANEY, Physician and Surgeon, Special attention to eye, ear, nose and throat, and diseases of chest. w. L. WOODROOF, Physician and Surgeon. Office 11% Greenville street lol. Special attention given •uses of children. ’Phone to dis- J. LITTLETON JfONBSy Attorney-at-Law. Prompt attention to legal business. Loans made on farm lands. Office over a. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.’s. THOS. G. FARMER, JIL, Attorney-at-Law. .Will give careful and prompt atten tion to all legal business entrusted to aio. Money to loan. Office in coutt- •lOUHtJ. i WILLIAM Y. ATKINSON, Attorney-at-Law. Office over Cuttino’s store. K. W. STARR, Dentist. Office over H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.'s wore, white patronage exclusively, nesidence 'phone 382-L. CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY CO. Effective Nov. 14, 1920. Cedartown Columbus .. Chattanooga . Carrollton . . Baymond .. Griffin .... ARRIVE FROM 6.45 a. m. 9.40 a. m. 1.00 p. m. 4.48 p. m. 5.22 p. m. 11.18 a. m. DEPART FOR 6.45 a. m. Columbus .. . 8.25 a.' m. Chattanooga Raymond . Carrollton Cedartown 11.18 a. m. . 4.48 p. m. . 5.2§ p. m. . 6.52 p. m. 6.25 p. m. 6.52 p. m. 1.00 p. m. 5.22 p. m. J^ILLS RATS ‘hat's BAT-SNAP, the old e rod ®nt destroyer. Comes in Yft,,® 8 — no mixing with other food. *our money back if it fails. *'* e cake) enough for Pantry, *‘tchen or Cellar. cooTL* * ,16c <2 cakes) for Chicken House. SfV’-small buildings. (5 cakes) enough for all Inc? out-buildings, storage build- n ioid°and C Guaranteed 1 by Herald Want Ads. Pay. BONE-DRY AND LEAK-PROOF. Philadelphia Public Ledger. The mills o<P the Anti-Saloon League grind on and on. They are about to grind more rapidly again. Having looked over the present Congress, re ferred to the card index and picked those spots most vulnerable to .pressure in this list of Congressional membership Wayne B. Wheeler and his general staff are now eaffy to go into action once more. The drys refuse to worry about the danger^ of enforcing more drastic legis lation. Unwarned by the fact that the present Volstead Act is being ignored and repudiated by juries, they propose to get even farther along • the troubled road. Absolute repression is in their minds, repression, up to thd v liinit, and they have not as yet found that limit. ^Unquestionably tho ,next-»step .is- to .bo in the outlawing of liquor of any and’ all kinds for medicinal uses. In the mean time, the last trickle of liquor is to be stopped if the placing of laws in tho statutes will do it. It .might be well, however, to catch, up. with the enforcement of such v laws as we now have an the subject before crowd ing others on the statutes,. It is a giant t&sk to enforce the present Volstead Act without making others still more drftstie and repressive. The public temper, is cynical, even wqrse than cynical, at the present time* The Volstead Act is a law and it ought to be enforced. We are learning, however, that the basis of law Enforce ment is genuine pppqlar approval. Pop ular approval has not caught up witli tho present law. What the country needs is more education on the present prohibi tion law and less legislation on the sub ject generally. 65,000 GIRLS HAVE DISAPPEARED IN UNITED STATES. Washington, D. G,% April, 27.—Sixty- five thousand girls have disappeared in the United States without leaving a trace. The groat majority were lured to the big cities from the small towns and farms. They have dropped frdm sight, and their fate is an unsolved mys tery. This story was brought to the Nation al Congress of Mothers and Parent Teachers' Convention here today with a plea for the creation of a central bu reau to help find missing girls. Lieut. Catherine Van Winkle, of the District of Columbia police department, told the convention one of the biggest needs of the country Was to Bave the army of girls who annually are lost in the mael stroms of the big cities. Police depart ments and civic associations devoted to the task afe unable to cope with the sit uation successfully, she said. She asked the convention to take im mediate steps to create a central bureau and auxiliary bureaus in all parts of tho country for the purpose of co-ordinating and enlarging the facilities, for tracing lost girls. Plans were being made today to ask the convention to launch a vigorous cam paign against loose morals. Mrs. Ward Morgan and Mrs, Wm, Ull- man, of the Missouri State organization, were prepared to introduce resolutions demanding— Abolition of checking of corsets by school girls and older women when at tending dances. The knee-length "skirt. Diaphanous attire. Rouge. Objectionable movies. A refreshment bar on a Northern mil way is kept by, a veteran baker, sprightly young traveler complained of one of his.pies the other day. The old man became an$ry. “Young man,” he said severely, made pics before you were born.” “Yes,” responded the traveler, fancy this must be one ot them. 11 Ever notiee yon always have- to wait to get a haircut in the chair of a good barber! Most people who do their jobs well have all the work they can do. I As in tho finatoBt citioe so in his own homo town—the U. 5. Tire user tfofs fresh, livo titoO of current production, ” THE U. S. CHAIN TREAD Ono of tho few tires of which it may be said that they deliver ocohdmy year in and year out andtiro after tirp. The U. S. Chain Tread 'gives sufficient traction oh all ordinary road surfaces. lf v ia probably the handsomest, and by all odds the most popular, of the whole r U. S. Fabric Tire line. " In ovory section, liowovor remote, you Dnrl <i denlvr in fioj/i, livo U, H. T/roft." I F you could get together all the car owners you know, you’d probably find that* their tire experiences had been much the same. Most of them have .taken their fling at “job lots," “discontinued lines” and “surplus stocks.” Soon or late, nearly all settled back on quality first as the one sound assurance, of tire value. * * * As soon as a man forgets the cut- price tag, and comes to the dealer who concentrates on a full, completely sized stock of U. S. Tires—he leams what it means to get fresh, live tires —not once in a while but every time. Not merely in the big cities, but in his own home town. Not merely for the heavy car, but for the medium and light-weight car—a full selection of size, tread and type. * * * Your U. S. Tire dealer can give you this service because of the service he gets from his neighboring U.S. Factory Branch. There are 92 of these Branches. Each gets its share of U. S. Tires, so that the dealer is always supplied with fresh, livestock. U. S. Tire3,sell as fast as they are made. There is no over production. No sur plus piled up waiting for a “market.” Wherever you buy a U. S. Tire-— you buy a tire of current production, as full of life and value as the day it left the makers. 1 United States Tines United States 9 Robber Company R. B. ASKEW & CO., Newuan, Ga. C. C. McKNIGHT & BROS., Senoia, Ga. ."■f V Beware of “Price Goods sold for a price—the only valid argument advanced to induce the prospective purchaser to buy—are always danger ous, but never so dangerous as RIGHT NOW! We are in business to make money. To make money for ourselves we mu^t perform a service or sell merchandise that is really valuable to the customer. So we mu^t sell merchandise that we KNOW is good—that we KNOW is suitable for the buy er’s use, and no more—we must BELIEVE IN what we sell! There’s no mystery about the about the automobile supply business, except the ability some dealers show in “getting by” with poor stuff, with careless and harmful service. If you want service and merchandise that represent REAL VALUE, you get it here, always, and we charge you a legitimate profit—but re member, RESULTS COUNT! If your money isn’t getting you results where you trade, try us. We make it payyou to patronize us.