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DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL, DOIJGLASVILLE. G
Worming Peaches
l will be. at Douglasville every first Tuesday
from February 1st, to May lsf, and every Saturday
after the 2nd Saturday in March till May 1st.
First Round
DISTRICT DATE
Litliia Springs - Feb. 1, 9 ti.l 11 a. m
Chestnut Log Feb. 1, 2 till 3 p. m
Chapel Hill -Feb. 2, 9 till 11 a. m.
Crombies . Feb 2, 2 lilt 3 p. m
Fair Play Feb. 3, 9 till 11 a. m.
Middle . Feb. 3, 2 till 3 o. in,
Conners. ... Feb. 5, 9 till 11 a. m,
Douglasviile Feh. 5, 2 till 3 p. m.
Second Round
Lithia Springs Mar. 1, 9 till 11 a in.
Hurt Farm... Mar. 1, 12 till 1 p m.
Ike Strickland's residence Mar. 1, 2 till 3 p. in.
CHEST NOT LOG
Ferguson's Mill. ..Mar 2, 9 till 11 a. m
Court House - Mar. 2, 12 till 1 p. m.
Brockman Place Mar. 2, 2 till 3p. m.
Chapel II.11 .Mar. 3, 9 till II a. m.
Cov. Mar. 3, 12 till 2 p. m.
Bill Arp Mur 5, 9 till 11 a. m.
Maxwell’s Store Mar. 5, 2. to 3 p. in.
FAIR PLAY DATE
McWhorte Mar. 7' 9 till 10 a. m.
Hannah Mar. 7, 12 till 1 p. m.
Court House Mar. 7, 2 till 3p. m.
MIDDLE
T. H. McHATTON, Prof. Horticulture,
Ga. State College Of Agriculture
regular?; :ours of labor
Another Opinio: Added to the Already
Large r!•:r.» r That Mas Been
Given vo the World.
The moth of the peach tree borer That the h .i;;th of the working
deposits eggs on the trees from about day should not be fixed arbitrarily
the middle of July until frost, the but should rest upon the results ot a
greater number of eggs being laid rigid scientific study was the conclu-
during the months of late July, August si cm reached by Prof. F. S. Lee in
and early Sepomber. These eggs hatch his late address to the American
and develop into little grubs that work |» u bllc Health association. Some
under the bark of the peach tree. kj d f 1|l|mr ar0 more exhausting
Worming ot peach trees may ho done ,
any time after frost. Where dirt has than others and laborers are not all
been banked up about the tfunks, it alike, and the study should aim to
Will Hembree Residence
Court House
Daniell’s Store
CONNERS
Winston
TidweTs Store
Thompson’s Store. j
Sulphur Mine3
Villa Rica
Nalley Farm
... Mar. 8, 9 till 10 a. m.
.. Mar. 8, 12 till 1 p. m,
.. Mar, 8, 2 till 3 p. in.
tmuld he rake.l away and a close in-
Bjc.tlon given the tree for borers ;
lnssil'y work and workers on the
basis of the physiological effects of
and where feund, these Insects should , , ,. , ,, ,
ho cut out with a sharp knife, care he-! different occupations and the phys.o-
ing taken not to girdle the tree. Again
111 the spring it is well to go over the
trees and search for borers, getting
those that may have escaped the Hist
hunt.
... Mar. 9, 8 till 10 a. m.
Mar. 9, 12 to lp.m.
_ Mar. 9, 2 till <\ p. m.
..Mar. 10, 9 viil 10 a. m.
..Mar. 10, 11 till 1 p m.
.. Mar. 10, 2 till 3 p.m.
DON’T BURN WHAT
CAN BE TURNED UNDER
The College of Agriculture urges
farmers not to burn any vegetable
matter that can be plowed under. In
their effort to kill the boll weevil in
its winter quarters, farmers must not
make the mistake of burning off of the
field, stalks, vines, g.ass, etc., beforo
plowing. Of all needs of Georgia
soils, liumus is the greatest. Vege
table matter turned under will pro
vide for It. If it is turned upder four
inches or more as all land should be
turned, then the weevil in the stalks
or other hiding places will be buried
and killed.
Burn off and clean up only those
| places where the plow can not reach.
| Bury the vegetation as deeply as pos
sible with a drag cnain attached tc
the plow.
TV ird Round
lithia springs
Pat Winn’s St u-e__
Hart Farm.
Bells Cross Roads.--.
CHE V.'.’NUT LOG
Ferguson's Mill.. .
Freeman's Gin....
Cburt House..
Apr. 2, 9 till 11 a. m. i
Apr. 2. 12 till 1 p. m. i
Apr.2, 2 till 3 p in.'
Had the Wrong Idea.
“The boys at our school had a chin
nlng contest.“ “What, good la school
to you. if that is the language you
uae?” “Why, it was a chinning con
teHt. dad. You sec how many tiroes
you can chin a horizontal bar.' "Oh
L thought y*u u-r.’o talking about l
Job'll—Louisville Courier-Journal.
logical capacities of diffarcut labor
ers. Such an inquiry, which is be
lieved to be not impossible, would
probably lead to an elastic system, in
which the work would be adapted to
the worker and the workers to the
work. In one industry the duration
of labor might be eight hours, in an
other it might he more or less than
eight hours and in a single industry
one worker might labor longer than
another. Such a solution could be
made to satisfy both economic and
social demands, and lead to the maxi
mum of individual and national elli-
eicncy. Any formal regulation of
the (lay is only for those employed
by others. As a man leaves this stage
he is free to choose his working time,
and it is a noteworthy fact that the
daily task of the world’s leaders is
limited by no consideration of 8, 10,
12 or 1G hours.
JUST A REGULATION BEtt
Witness Would Not Agree That Kile
Deceased Friend Was in a
* “State of Coma.”
No judge has ever enjoyed itokte
popularity than tlie late Right. Hut*..
Lord O’Brien, the lord chief justice.-
of Ireland. He had n great reputa
tion for good stories, and in the.r
posthumous book of reminisccrxois
edited by his daughter, the Hoacv-
Georgina O’Brien, there are many
amusing anecdotes, which, like tf*:-
mnn himself, are interesting, witty,
and vivacious—reminiscences with*
the real Irish flavor.
Lord O’Brien was hearing a win
suit, and it was a question of wheth
er the man who made the will v.-as
mentally capable. The evidence
showed that the deceased was vjsitedl
on the day preceding his death* h.y
several of his neighbors, who* de
scribed him as being more or IV-.ys
in a state of stupor and collapse.TShw
judge put the question to one rattV-r
voluble witness at. the end of liis-tsa-
dence:
“I gather that the deceased ger-
tlenuin, when you saw him, was iyir-fg
in a coma?”
“Oh, no, my lord,” he reptif.r’.'.
without hesitation; “it was just ao.
ordinary bed he was lying iuf—
Loudon Tit-Bits.
Apr. 4, 9 till 11 u. m. j
Apr. 4, 12 till 1 p. m.:«
Apr. 4, 2 till 3 p. in. ji
Chapel Hill - Apr. 5, 9 till 11 a. m. j|
Joe Thomason’s Mill. Apr. 5, 12 to 1 p. m,
CROMBIES
Bill Arp - Apr. 6, 9 till 11 a. m.
Isaiah Smith’s Residence. Apr. 0, 12 t.o 1 p. m.
Maxwell's Store.. Apr. G, 2 till 3 p. m.
CONNERS
Winston l Apr. 11, 9 till ilu. til.
Nalley farm Apr. 11, 1 to 2 p. rn.
Sheffield’s Apr. 11. 3 to 4 p. in.
MIDDLE
Court House Apr. 12. 9 till 10 a. m.
Daniell’s Store....s. - Apr. 12, 11 til'. 1 p. m.
•C. P. Stovall’s Apr. 12, 2 till 3 p. m.
Spend night at E. T. Stovall’s ...Apr. 12:
FAIR PLAY
Tyre Apr. 13, 8 till 9 a. m. I
Court House .Apr. 13 10 till .12 a. m.
McWhorter Apr. 13, 1 till 3 p. m. j
Rutherford’s Store (Town Dist.) Apr, 18, 12 till 1 p. m i
Will he in Douglasville Apr. 26 27-28 and 30. j
Please know the number of your land lots before giving in :
taxes, as required by law.
The books will close May 1st.
J. W. JAMES,
Tax Receiver Douglas County.
T„-
j anuary
Nature’s Equalization.
A peculiarity of doaC cats is tha*
hey seora to have a very great sense
if feeling in their feet pads. It if
’.linost an impossibility for a heavy
inimal to approach a (leaf cat from
jeumd without giving it warning, and
his may he attributed to the extrema
'jnoitiv.T. of the cat’s tcet record-
,ig l.lie slightest tremor of the
;; omul.
.earance
MODEST.
She—That scar on your head must
be very annoying.
lie—Oh, it’s next to nothing.—
Columbia Jester.
GOOD THEOUY.
“Don’t yon believe in the theory off
the helping hand?”
“Yes, if it's been dealt to you.*-
partner at bridge whist.”
c
p Q
o
I have again bought the Palace Pres
sing Club and will give your work personal atten-'j
tion. I also represent the old reliable tailoring
firm: Edward E. trauss & Co. and would like to
measure you for your next suit.
G. H. EUBANKS:
—
Women’s Suits
Dresses—Coats
Misses and Girls’
Dresses-~Coats
Men’s and Boys
Glothing—Blais
Millinery
Shoes
It is a fad: that at all
times, our prices are
1-3 to 1-2 lower tl ai
elsewhere and when
ever we hold a clear
ance sale our prices
are lowered to a point
that can-not be equal
led.
Sale will continue
through January and
covers your every need
with the bed winter
merchandise, that is
absolutely reliable in
every way.
AND HIBK8
H HIGHEST IIPABKT* PRICE PAID
m Si foh raw Fum and hides
BnJW Pi MS Wool on Commission. W'ite for price-
ha wil nit mentioning this ad.
mmmmmm—mm «* m m- SSstftl'IUlhed 1887
ili-HK sl/diTvS uda L«uisv(iu.fiir,