Newspaper Page Text
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THE NEWNAN HERALD, NEWNAN, GA., FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1921
Nothing will turn ambi
tion into ill-tempered
laziness quicker ~
than constipation.
And nothing will ren-
der the bcdy more liable to
dangerous diseases than this
same poisonous condition.
Don't be constlpatcdl It isn’t mfel It
isn’t Bcnslblel It isn't necessary! Be
well—but don’t rely on ordinary laxatives
to help you. Try instead the newest
scientific treatment lot constipation —
RICH-LAX
This preparation not only overcomea con
stipation, but it does away with all tho
nausea, cramping and deranged digestion
caused by ordinary laxatives.
CutrantMd at Our Store. We are eo lure that
Rich-Lax will please you that we want you to
come to our etore and net a bolt e and try It en
tirely at our risk. It It doesn't suit you, it it Isn’t
the best laxative med cine you ever used, simply
tell us to and we wilt promptly refund the full
purchase price,
John R. Cates Drug Co., Newiimi, On.
Professional Cards.
J. w. poHvell.
At tovnej-nt-I.mv.
Will pniotlco In nil the courts, both
Stole and Fafloral.
Oirico over First National Bank.
MYRON II. FARMER. M. It..
Physician nnd Hiiraeoit.
Officii over T. <1. Farmer & Sons Co.
Office 'phono -000; residence ’phone 72,
L. H. MOORE
Altorney-iit-Linv
Will practice In nil courts. Prompt
loulift made on Improved farms In Cow
eta County. Over Cates Drug Store.
W. 1.. (4TALLINCIS,
Attorney mid f iMiii-icllor nt l.aw.
Will practice In nil the Courts. Spe
cial attention given to preparation of
wills and tho administration of estates
In the Court of ordinary.
Oltlcu In Court House, 'phone 4if.
T, S. IIAll.r.V,
I’hyxlclun nnd HlTrireoii.
Otllco upstairs In Klrliy building, 11'A
Greenville streot. 'Phono 87. tolllco
and residence.)
join II. FHMSTON,
I’liyslelnn mill Surgeon.
Cidlce hours 8 to 10 u, m.i 3 to 6 p. in.
Ofllr.c with Dr. Paul I’enlstou. Olllco
and residence 'phone 30.
A. SIDNEY CAM I*.
Attorney nnd Counselor nt Lmv.
0flics In Arnall Bldg.. Court Siiuare.
It. II. MoDONAliH,
I'JiyNlelun nnd Stiruenn.
Office Ills Ulust Broad Sflret't. upstairs.
Olhce hours It to it a ,m. and 3 to 0
p. in.
Onice 'photic 66; rosldunco phono 30 1
\VM. It. I, YtJAY,
Pliyslclnn mid Surgeon.
Olllco over Leu-King Drug Co, lles-
id'oee 'phone 464. Oillce 'phono fill.
Giiti-o llouis—I) Id. It a. in., f to 4 p.
tu.. sail 7 to 8 p. m. Sunday—II to 11
a. in. and 3 to 4 p. in.
T. 11. DAVIS,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office—Hanttorlum building. Other
phoiia 0—l call; residence 'phono 0—
1 calls.
W. A. Till NEK,
I'hyslelnu and Surgeon,
Upoolal attention given to surgery
Mid diseases of women. Olllco 1'J
Spring street. Phone 330.
D. A. HANEY,
Physician and Surgeon.
Special attention to eye, ear, nose
ind throat, and diseases of chest.
\V, I,. WOOD HOOP,
Physician and Surgeon.
Othco UV1 Qroonvlllo street, 'Phone
til. Special attention given to die-
**uos of children.
J. LITTLETON JONES,
Attoruey-gt-Law.
Prompt attention to letfal bustnosB.
'Loans made on farm lands. Otttoe over
H C. Arnall MdBe. Co.'b.
THON. G. FARMER, JH„
Attorney-at-Law.
Will give careful and prompt atten
tion to all legal business entrusted in
me. Money to loan. OBloo In court-
house.
WILLIAM Y. ATKINSON,
Attorney-at-Law.
ORtoe over Cuttlno's store.
K. W. ST a nit.
Dentist.
Oftlce over H. C. Arnall Mdse. Co.'a
•tore. White patronage exclusively.
Residence ‘phone S82-L.
Atlanta and West Point
RAILROAD
ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE
OF TRAINS AT NEWNAN, G A.
EFFECTIVE AUG. 14. 1921.
Subjeot to ohange and typographical
errors.
NORTHBOUND!
Mo. 48 .0.45 a. m.
No. 18 10.00 n. m.
No. .18 10.57 a. m.
No. 40 1.00 p. m.
No. 80 6..10 p. m.
No. 34 5.20 p. m.
No. 30 10.13 p. ny
- ■ ■ - — a
SOUTHHOUND i
No. 35 7.00 a. m.
No. 19 8.50 a. m.
No. 33 10.02 a. in.
No, 39 2.40 p. m.
No. 17 .... i 5.20 p. m.
No. 4.1 0.52 p. m.
Ufa. $7 .. ... .7.19 p. nt.
« 4 P.mLLUPS. Q. P. A.
- ——
Notice to Debtors nnd Creditors.
-3EORQIA—Coweta County:
All eredltors of the estate of Merritis
-Chandler, lalo of Coweta county, G»..
deceased, are hereby notified to render
in their demands to the undersigned
-according to law; nnd all persons in-
•debted to said estate are required to
make Immediate payment to the tin-
sderslgnod. This Sept. 9. 1921.
LUNIE S. SHROPSHIRE.
Administrator,
ft. 1 F. D. 1. Palmetto, Go.
WHAT COMES AFTER THE PUR
CHASE PRICE?
tVimt comes nl’ti'i' tlm imri'lmso prii’i-f
Ever si ie Ihis cryptic phrase begnii
appenrimf in the national magazines,
daily iieirapui’.ei's and nil billlitiiir'ls from
one end *»f tho country to tho other, nil
niitumnlillc mnnufactui'er, who propouiul-
till the question, Inis been receiving mi
incessant stream of comments, borne
were from eriiies who questioned the
prudence of llaunling a “ negative sug
gestion” before the world. Others weie
from iidmlrers who wanted to sa.v that
it was tho “best, attention-getting slogan
they had ever Been.” Hundreds mine
from mr owners, who hastened to ven
ture the opinion that “satisfaction,” or
“dependability” or “low upkeep cost
would soon be flashed across the country
ns tlie official answer.
But the great majority ol' this:' com
ments—-many of them scrawled across
tliu margin of an advertisement taken
from n newspaper or magazine—were
humorous references to perplexing situ
ations in-'which motorists have found
themselves after putting down the pm-
chase price. “Jail,” wrote one, adding
tlmt, “our speed cops never nijss a
thing. ’ ’
In the opinion of those who laid oppor
tunity to see nil those common la, how
ever, the masterpiece, the true, mmmmri-
zntiou of all tlie impressions express:d
in the mass of letters nnd marginal no
lotions which were received, was an edi
torial which appeared in tlie Ohio Daily,
of Klyrin, O. Judge its merits fo" your
self. It follows;
“A well-known ear has been carrying
an advertisement, for the past month or
two, with the one sentence: ‘What comes
after the pui'elmse jirlcof We were
reminiscent when wo read this. WJiut
does .come after the piuVhase price?
Well, *wo remembered there was tho li
cense to run the cur. There was the
membership in tho automobile nsaoii'i-
t.ion, which the secretory insisted we
should take out. There wuh tlie spot
light, wo Imd to get; for self-protection.
There was the gasoline nnd the oil; and
then there was the puncture, 19 miles
from a lemon, and we Imd left the pump
in the garage, and we did not have, a
spare tube. Ami then there was tho col
lision, nml tho repair man; and then
there was tlie insurance, and the speed
ing, nnd the eop, and tho judge, nml the
line, un1.il it (innlly reached :t point whore
we begun to wonder if we ought t,o fig
ure up tho cost after the purchase price,
and we concluded that we Imd better nci;
like the mini whom we asked how much
his ear cost him—tins was before we
owned one—and he said. 'I do not. know.
I kept track of it until I found 1 could
not. afford it, and then I quit keeping
truck.’ Wo thought tlmt would be wise
fur am' man tu do.
“But, then, there is the oilier side.
The automobile is a tremoudons boat for
business. It 1ms undoubtedly lowered
the erst, of transportation. It makes it
oiissilde to get packages nnd freight on
time. It, simply annihilates distance and
time, so that the person living three
miles from church is but six or seven
minutes nwny. .It turns every country
township into a neighborhood, nml it
transforme the city back to tho country.
II miitss families for a joyful holiday,
which cannot be estimated in value, nnd
.1 brings many unto Clod's groat cul-of-
iloom. and gives everybody i proi loct
in life, which they knew nothing abaci
; Tore.
“Much of tlie expense can lie a-eided
To be. suit, yon must have a lic-nne to
run tlie car. and while membership in
the automobile association is , valuable
thing, you can live without it. You io
not have to get a apot light. 1’iiiietmvs
do not happen ns often us they us -1 to;
in fact, we have driven 5,009 miles with
out a puncture, and there era people
who have driven for 15 or 20 y-vsn and
never had a collision;—and, of course,
speeding should not be indulged in by
anyone.
There are some things a family
should have before they have in nutomo-
bilo, to bo sure; but wo do lioHeeu that
tho uutomobile Ims kepfi families to
gether, Ims dissolved approaching di'y
vorco eases into thin air, nnd 1ms been
tin inexhaustible joy to tho home,
“Yus, tho automobile is worth what
it costs to every family which can af
ford to have one. After tho purchase
price comes business, pleasure, union,
mingling with others more frequently,
nnd brotherhood. As tho follow said
about mnrringe, it costs move than to-re
main single, but it’s worth it.”
o
EFFICIENCY OVERDONE.
Columb'us (O.) Dispatch.
A now arrival among the characters
of current fiction is tlie efficiency ex
port—tlie case-hardened individual who
knows tlint. the great object of life ami
business is to make money. His con
suming desire is to eliminate all waste,
smiling desire is to oliminnto all waste, in
crease production, nnd make practicable'
the greatest possiblo gain in dollars ami
cents. For the human element in busi
ness lie 1ms no consideration. Long ser
vice, gray hairs, family responsibilities,
breaking hearts, affection, helpfulness nnd
good ohoer only oxcito in him contempt
"lion it. is a question of saving or mak
ing a few dollars more a year. “Busi
ness is business, ’ ’ ho declares, ‘‘and you
must not allow kindness or charity,* or
good will to creep into it.” No", for
they are the parasites that eat. tlie heart
out of the pile of dollars that you loavo
when you die.
Nearly everybody knows tlie type by
now. Up to tho time of the war at least
lie-was-pampered and fed and ftattorod
till lie had come to b.o the autocratic ruler
of tho hearts of many business men.
There is a good picture of his rule in
Basil’s King “Empty Sack,” together
with the tniin of evils that followed the
dismissal of an aged employee, who,
though, faithful and honest, was not quite
“up to the scratch’' in nmchiue-like
■sci-vice. '
The efficiency expert will probably al
ways lie npolled, but he ims too often
overdone his work. A man is more than
a machine, mid better-than a commodi
ty. (lain without human sympathy is
tainted. It is at least as much to mako
happiness ns to make money.
tV.
Unqle Charlie’s Whistle.
Anna nml her mother often go to
tee her aunt nnd unele. Her uncle
plays a clarinet, or which site Is much
ftfrnlil. When she sees him reach for
It site Hikes hotel of her mother's hand
inti says, "Come home, omnium.
Uncle Charlie Is going io blow him’a
whistle.”
LET’S AI.L SING.
Telfair Enterprise.
It lias lieen truthfully said tlm- a
singing people are n happy fearilc. And
we know that the standard of a commu
nity can be judged pn-ttc ,-y
i's appreciation of goad music. It- oit-
ae lamiot In* nvere-, iinaM*d, and tho
modern rest, ill of public school Inst.v -
lion w .ni l lie '-mmiilercd Incompkt i if
singing were h'ft out of It. The war
taught os many Ic.-s'ins, one of which is
the s >1 ini value of group or mass sing
ing. We should encourage the develop
ment. of mass singing ill McRae, and
wo could do no more valuable thing
throughout tlie long winter evenings than
to have an occasional “sing,” in which
everyone in the neighborhood could join.
The social value of such gatherings
would lie worth more to us than wo can
estimate; we would be brought into
closer communion us neighbors mid
friends, nml we’d soon find so much en
joyment in them we’d make the commu
nity singing nil event worth looking for
ward to.
"Willie Imd never eaten an oyster, so
he asked Ids mother if he might have
one. Willie put. it in Ids mouth. Mean
while the conversation at the table pro-
eroded for about ten minutes, when Ids
mother noticed that Willie was very red
in llm face, nml thinking he was too
shy t,u speak, naked ldm if lie would like
another oyster.
■Willie (endeavoring to speak with Ids
mouth full)—“No'm; 1 don’t want tho
one 1 ’ve got. ’ ’ '
Tiro head of a eoal firm, Irritated be
yond endurnneo at u driver’s blunder,
told the man to go to the office nml get
i i> pay and not come back.
'' You are so confounded thick-bended
you enn't learn anything,” he shouted.
“Bogqpra,” answered the driver, “I
harp hunt one thing since I been with
you, ’' -
“ What's that?” snapped the other.
“That siveuteen hundred pounds
make a ton.”
Send your name and ad-,
dress to <
! The REGENERATOR CUJS
Box <181, Atlanta, Ga. j
And you will receive by
return mail a free ropy of
fj the book entitled "Tho
* Story of the Cells," and
directions for using Your
Own Mind with Begener-^
ator a for all Heart
Troubles.
Don *t be too hard on tho fellows who
play golf. Otherwise they might play
poker.
ECZENIf
Money back without queatlon
If HUNT'S GUARANTEED
SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES
(Hunt’s Salve and Soap),fall In
the treatment ofltoh, Eczema,
Ringworm,Tetterorotherltch-
ing skin dleeaiea. Try thle
treatment at our rltk.
For Sale by John R. Cates Drug Co.
R at-snap
KILLS RATS
Also mice, Absolutely prevents odors
from carcass. One package proves this.
BAT-SNAP comes In cakes—no mixing:
with other food. Guaranteed.
35c. size (1 rake) enough for Pantry,
Kitchen or Cellar. . , „„„„
05c. size (2 cnkeH) for Chicken House,
coops, or small buildings. -
*1.25 size (5 cukes) enough for all
farm and out-bulldlngs, storage build
ings, or factory bulldlnfSf. ■'
Sold and Guaranteed vy/
lee-king drug 5 Company.
COWETA DRUG & BOOK COMPANY.
SHERIFF'S SALES FOR NOVEMBER.
GEORGIA—Coweta County:
Will be sold before the oouct-house
door In Newnan. said count v, on the
first Tuesday tn November, 1921, to the
highest and best bidder, the following
described property, to-wlt:
' A certain tract or parcel at land ly
ing and being In tho First district f ,r
Coweta county, Ua„ and being the .
hnlf of lot of land No. 1114, containin'-
one hundred one and one-fourth (lnm'j
acres, more or toss, Levied on us t|, .
property of H. L. Coats to satlsi'v ,
El. fa. issued from the City Court ,,
Newnan in favor of R. B, Perkin-, v
the said H. L. CoatH. Tenant In nnsJ
session notified In terms of tlm i,(,
This Oct. 1, 1921. Trs. fee, $5.in '
Also, at the same time and pine,,
a certain tract or parcel of land B lt-i
ate, lying and liolng in that part or
Newnan, Coweta county, Qa„ known -i
"Chalk Level," and more fullv descrli,
ed as follows; Fronting on Ida street
forty (40) feet and running buck ova
an equal width slxty-ntne c09) f t . 0 j
tho same being a parallelogram of
the back or north side of lot of \'
thony Smith and whereon the said An
thony Smith residod prior to his death
and descrlbed as follows; Begin at that
point on the east side of Idu street
where the land formerly belonging to
Anthony Smith and Ellon Hatchett join
and run. east along the line oE Eiieti
Hatchett and Anthony Smith sixtv.
nine (69) feet, more or less, to tho cor
ner of the lot heretofore deeded to
Octavla Smith (now Octavla Jenkins)
by Anthony Smith, thence south along
the line of Anthony Smith lot forty
(40) feet, thence west along a straight
line to a point on Ida street (40) feet
south of the beginning point, thence
north forty (40) feet to beginning point
At tho same time and place will he
sold one black mare mule and one
brown mare mule. All the above-de
scribed property levied on as the prop
erty of Otis Churn to satisfy n fl fa
issued from the City Court of Newnan
in favor of Trammell & Nash vs. the
said Otis Churn. Defendant tn II. fa
notified in terms of the Taw. This
Sept. 27. 1921. Prs. fee, 810.72.
J. D. BREWSTER. Sheriff.
Old papers for sale here.
I
SET HEADY
—FOR THE—
AUCTION SALE
MONDAY, NOV. 7,1021
The auction sale in connection with Golden Rule Sale
Day, which will be held on the first Monday in November,
1921, will begin at 11 o’clock a. m., on the vacant lot at the
corner of Jefferson and Madison Streets, Newnan, next to
the building of Powell & Keith.
Mr. J. L. Brown will probably act as auctioneer.
The only expense to the seller is a fee of 2 per cent.,
payable to the auctioneer at the time of the sale.
All bids must be bona fide—no by-bidding will be al
lowed. If anyone desires to name a minimum price on
articles to be sold he may do so, informing the auctioneer
of that fact, and it will be announced before bidding begins.
No formal entry or listing is required—just bring what
you wish to sell—livestock, used implements, etc. But if
you wish free advertising notify the Secretary of the Adver-
tish Club of what you wish to sell not later than October 28.