Newspaper Page Text
The Henry
County Weekly
By J. A. FOUCHE.
Entered at the postoffice at McDon
ough, Ga., as second -class mail matter.
Advertising Kates 15c per inch, posi
tion 5c additional —special contracts.
Official Organ of Henry County.
McDonough, Ga., Nov. 28, 1919.
The peace treaty is not dead —
only in a trance.
All men are born illiterate and
many never outgrow it.
A man’s religion is the true sort
if he uses it in his business.
First a sugar shortage, now a
coal shortage. What next?
How did you spend Thanks
giving. In jollity or prayer?
The recent elections seem to
have been a dog fall for both par
ties.
Love thy neighbor as thy self,
doesn’t mean the other fellow’s
wife.
A nice Christmas present —a
lump of sugar or coal —if you can
get it.
About the best way to rid your
self of an unpleasant debt is to
pay it.
When it comes to paint, the
women have the Indian skinned a
block.
Laugh and grow fat doesn’t
apply to the fellow with the
mumps.
Lest we forget. Henry county
is going to have a county fair
next year.
The senate adjourned without
ratifying the treaty Johnay
get your gun.
Life should be considered a
measure to be filled, and not a cup
to be drained.
With coal short, paper short,
help short, the life of the country
editor is not a bed of roses.
The teacher is worthy of good
wages if his talent, and not a
political pull, gets him the job.
What are you doing to help out
the memorial hall in memory of
our boys who sleep in France ?
Fainting is not always confined
to women. A fellow out West
fainted when he found triplets at
his home. ______
Now that they have their Emory
wheel back, our Methodist friends
are planning great things for the
coming year.
A woman’s smile can work
wonders. Griffin News. Quite
so, old dear. Look what a smile
cost Cashier Green.
If the operators would oust a
few of those bull headed miners
from their houses, it might prove
a solution of the present coal
trouble.
Greater production is the crying
need of the day, and because of
the devastation in Europe the
iulk of this burden falls upon
America.
The Baptist $75,000,000 drive
will help humanity in general,
in its uplift work, regardless of
denomination, and should have
the hearty support of all.
Reconstruction Work.
Editor Henry County Weekly:
I have been amazed to find
how little our people know about
the reconstruction that is neces
sary after a big war. Those who
have read history have overlooked
or failed to find some very impor
tant history about reconstruction
and the horrors of it. A fewi
weeks ago I was appointed chair
man of the Red Cross membership
of the Sixth Congressional Dis
trict. To my amazement we found
some of our very best people
absolutely indifferent to humani
tarian work now since, as they
said, “the war is oyer.’’ I actually
found some good people busying
themselves with trying to build
monuments to the dead even while
the air is filled with the groans of
the dying. Every government
hospiatl in the United States is a
scene of great agony among the
suffering soldiers who are hover
ing between life and death. And
yet our good men and our good
women do not hear the cries of
distress, but are complacently
busying themselves about erect
ing monuments to the dead. The
monuments to the dead will be all
right, they will express 4 noble
sentiment, but I would appeal in
heaven’s name not to get so occu
pied with the dead that we neglect
the dying.
The only person who is not
more concerned with the welfare
of the Red Cross this year than
he was last year or the year
before, is the person who is not
informed. He is the person who
has followed the false theory; he
is the person who does not know
the toll that diseases exact of
humanity after every great war.
If we allow the Red Cross to
suffer now for workers and for
funds we will be responsible for
forty times as many deaths and
for much greater agony than the
Germans caused in the world.
The White Plague is spreading
among mankind as never before
in the history of creation. There
are many cdus< s. 'The gas
poisons, the Hu, the modes of
living, the hardships, exposure,
etc. The want of food and medi
cine in some sections, the critical
times, the poverty produced by
the high cost of living, the impossi
bility to get the necessities for
health and comfort, are all con
tributing to the spread of the
White Plague and its forerunner,
the flu.
There is no agency that can so
successfully combat tuberculosis
as the Red Cross organization.
If we had had such an organiza
tion when smallpox was first intro
duced into the American nation
following one of our great wars of
the past, several hundred thou
sand poor wretches who have
gone into Eternity, isolated like so
main lepers, neglected and suffer
ing the tortures of the damned,
wouid not have lost their lives as
they did. In the present year
following the Armistice the pros
pects are that we will lose from
post-war epidemics more Ameri
cans than were killed by the Ger
mans throughout the war. Is it
possible that there is a human
being who can think on these
things and yet cling to his miser
able dollar? Is there a human
being who can think on these
A Good Cough Medicine for Children
Mrs. J. W. Phillips, Redon, Ga..
phoned to J. M. Floyd, the mer
chant there, for a bottle of Cham
berlain’s Cough Remedy and said
she had bought a bottle of it at his
store recently and that it was
doing her children so much good
that she wanted to keep up the
treatment. Yon will find nothing
better for conghs and colds in chil
dren or for yourself. It keeps the
congh loose, expectoration easy and
soon frees the system from cold.
For sale by Horton Drug Co.
HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY, McDONOUGH, GEORGIA
things and not be anxious to get
into the work of the Red Cross ?
Is there one of us who is indiffer
ent to the success of the Red
Cross enterprise at this time it is
because we have not been think
ing; we have not been reading;
we are simply ignorant of the
facts in the case.
I was delighted to find that
there were people in your com
munity who could be aroused to
the importance of putting new life
into this great organization, and
that they are glad to do what they
can to save the soldiers that are
now hovering between life and
death in our hospitals and to save
the needy families of the soldiers
and to help suffering mankind
wherever it needs help.
If this interest is not aroused
throughout the nation we'wil
hear the death groans ot many
thousands who might have been
spared if we had not been so bliss
ful in our ignorance.
Eugene Anderson,
Chairman Sixth District.
Many a man who is sure he is
right is unable to go ahead.
Only a Cold.
Are you ill ? is often answered :
‘•Oh ! it’s only a cold,” as if a cold
was only a matter of little conse
quence, but people are beginning
to learn that a common cold is a
matter not to be trifled with, and
that some of the most serious dis
eases start with a cold. As soon
as the first indication of a cold
appears take Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy Remember that the
sooner you get rid of your cold the
less the danger, and this remedy
will help yon throw it off. For
sale by Horton Drug Co.
There Is Real Pleasure In Giving
Would you feel like you had celebrated the birth ot our Savior if you did not
GIVE to your loved ones and friends? You would not. But the question
has always been “What shall I give?” Let us eliminate the worry this year for
you. Come in NOW to see us before the best has been picked over. You can
select very appropriate gifts for every one on your list without moving out of
your tracks.
A FEW SUGGESTIONS
For Dad and Grand-Dad: How about a nice Waterman Fountain Pen or a Watch
Charm with or without his lodge emblem ?
Does Brother Smoke ? We have a most beautiful line of Cigarette Cases—Gold and
Sterling Silver or Gold inlaid. Also something new and exclusive in Silver Belt Buckles.
You haven’t seen anything like these yet. We will engrave his initials. Or how about
an Emblem Ring?
For Sister or Daughter: Silver and Gold Inlaid Card Cases. They are beatuies.
Dorines? Yes, lots of them. Stone Cameo Rings or Brooches. We’ll say they are
darlings. LaVallieres are so dainty you just can’t resist them.
Mother wants something in Cut Glass, Ivory Sets. We have them NOW. Or maybe
she would be proud of a real nice Thimble. They’re small, but oh, so pretty. But we’re
going to suggest the best —last. Here they are —
Gold and Silver Salad Forks, Iced Tea Sooons, Orange Sooons and the like. If
there ever was anything that mother would hug your neck foi, it is these. Wish we
could describe their beauty, but —well, come and see.
Now, if there is anything left out, we have it. There are so many beautiful things
here we could fill this newspaper telling about them.
You are cordially in vited to
Buy Your Christmas Presents at
BOOKOUT’S
110 Peachtree Arcade = = Atlanta, Ga.
GUARANTEE—if. after umiu; entire contents r — J \y
of the ran according to directions, you are * 'A
not satisfied in every respect, your grocer I , a'"n'»i» N
will refund the money you paid for U. | | HZ* A "’wf
Such r !
Luzianne is such a coF-
Fee as you long have
wishea for—ofaistinc
tive Quality and of fla
vor unsurpassed. It is
literally true that you
will never know now
good coffee can be un
til try Luzianne.
The Reily-Taylor Company
, New Orleans //
For Administration.
GEORGIA—Henry County
To whom it may c mcern: A. S. McGar
ity having in due form made application
to mt* to be appointed permanent admin
istrator upon the estate .7 no. M. McGarity
lat.e of said county, notice is hereby given
that said application will he heard at the
regulai term of the Court of Ordinary for
said county, to be held on the first Mon
clay in December, 1919
Witness my hand and official signature,
this 27th day of October, 1919.
A. G. HARRIS, Ordinary.
Administrator’s Sale.
By virtue of an or - er from the Court of
Ordinary, will be sold ltefore the court
house in McDonough, Ga., on the first
Monday in December, next, to the highest
bidder, for cash, t he following land belong
ing toestate of Annie Knight : One house
and lot in tin* town of Srockbride. Ga , con
taining one-half acre, more o less, and
bounded as follows: On North by Church
street; on South and East by land of
Charlie Knight, and on the West by pub
lic road. Sold for distribution and pay
ment of debts-
This November 3rd. 1919
W W. MILAM, Adrnr.
Dismission From Administration.
GEORGIA—FTenry County.
Whereas J. M. Tarpley; Adminstrator
of W. H Tarpley, represents to the court
in hi> petition, duly filed and entered on
lecortl. that he has fully administered W.
H. ' ,- arpley’sestate
This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned. kindred and creditors, to show
cause, if any they can. why said Adminis
'rator should not be discharged from his
administration, and receive Letters of
Dismiss on on the first Monday in Decem
ber, 1919. A. G. .lAK RIS, Odrinary.
HOW’S YOUK .SUBSCRIPTION ?