Newspaper Page Text
DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL, DOUGLASVILLi. URGIA
It Shorely
is Good”-
The Luzianne Guarantee:
If, after using the contents
of a can, you are not satisfied
in every respect, your gro
cer will refund your money.
Start the day with a cup of
good, old Luzianne. There’s cheer
in its very aroma—spunk and go-
to-it in every swallow. You’ll
like Luzianne. Buy a can today
and, if you don’t agree it goes
farther and tastes better than any
other coffee at the price, tell the
grocer and he will give you back
exactly what you paid for it, with
out argument. You simply can’t
go wrong on Luzianne. Ask for
profit-sharing catalog.
.coffee
The Reily-Taylor Company, New Orleans
Rid of the Torment
of Rheumatism
Prince ion
ATLA NTA
Hotel
, GA.
45-51 West Mitchell St within Half Block of Tcdminal Station
MODERN. C NVKNIENT AND UP-TO-DATE
ALL ROOMS HAVE ET AND COLD RUNNING WATER, astern
heat, electric lij;'‘ ts and telephone. New electric elevator.
One hundred and f) ty rooms. One hundred with ppivate and con-
nseting hatha. M. urn in its equipment and attractive Furnishings
No expense has r spared to provide for the comfort and conven
ience of our patron h.
Europe ri Plan. Rates,75c to $2.
H- R. Cannon, Prop
ACTS ON
MERCURY! IT SICKENS!
LIVER LIKE DYNAMITE
“Dodson's Liter Tone" Starts Your Liver
Better Than Calomel and Doesn't
'* Salivate or Make You Sick.
Liston to mol Tako no more sick
ening, salivating calomel when lnlious or
constipated. Don’t lose a day’s work!
Calomel in mercury or quicksilver
which causes luScronia of the holies.
Calomel, when it coinos into contnet
with sour bile crashes into it. breaking
it up. TJiitj is when you fool that awful
nausea and cvnmping. If you are slug
gish and “all knocked out,” if your
liver is torpid and bowels constipated
or you have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, if brenth is had or stomach sour
.just tnko a spoonful of harmless Dod
son’s Liver Tone on my guarantee.
Here’s my guarantee—Go to any drug
store and get a fiO cent bottle of Dod-
Tone. Take a spoonful to
night and if it doesn’t straighten you
right up nnd make you feel lino and
vigorous by morning 1 want you to go
back to the store and get your money.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying Che
sale of calomel because it js real liver
medicines entirely vegetable, therefore it
can not salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod
son's Liver ’rune will put your sluggish
liver to work and clftiu your bowels of
that sour bile and constipated waste
which is clogging.your system and male-,
ing you feel miserable. 1 guarantee that
a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone will
keep your entire family feeling line for
months. Give it to your children. It is
harmless; doesn’t gripe and they liko its
pleasant taste.
Every Housewife or
Mother is ever under
that Nervous Strain
which so often results
in Headaches, Dizzy
Sensations, Faintness,
Depression and other y
Nervous Disorders.
. Dr. Miles'
Nervine
is Highly Recommended
in Such Cases.
IF FIRST BOTTLE FAILS TO
BENEFIT, YOUR MONEY WILL
BE REFUNDED.
BADLY RUN DOWN.
'T had become greatly r\\n down
nnd my nerves were in terrible
__ .. lythlng.
bottle of Dr. Miles' Nerv
ine. I soon began to feel better,
my nerves were quieted. I re
covered my strength, and have since
recommended Dr. Miles’ Nervine
to many of my friends who hove
used It with satisfactory results.**
MRS. FRANCES WHITLOCK,
179 Broadway, Schenectady, N. YJ
“Send mo Foley Kidney Pills. I am
badly dono up with rheumatism and
they are Iho only thing that help
me.” A. J. Walsh, Sneffels, Colo.
Rheumatism !s stubborn as a mulo
—It bangs cn like a leech—wears out
your strength—worries you With pain
—div.cfa on your vitality—deprosaca
your mind—affects your health!
Don’t lot It hang on you! Don’t rtvo
up to it! Don’t overlook Fo’ay Kid
ney 1*11131 For they work directly on
ihe kidneys—tono up and strengthen
them to the perfect action that keeps
uric acid out of the blood, and clears
eway the cause of rheumatism, lum
bago and stiff, swollen, achin'? joints.
Begin now, today, and soon you will
ngain be active and free from pain
Mr. Walsh winds up Ills letter to us
by saying: “I consider Foley Kidney
Pills the beat I have ever used,
1 have tried several different rea
cdles.” Your druggist pells them.
A Letter From The Wat-
kin’s Man
To my Customers and friends
of Douglas county, I desire to
thank y.iu for your liberal patro
nage of the Watkin’s line since
Mary Baker Eddy Memorial
my charge of it here. I am turn-
my interests over to Mr. L. A.
Eskew, who will bd glad to sup
ply you in the future as I have
in the past. On account of me
retiring, my accounts will be due
on my next trip, which will be
in a very few -Jays.
C. E. Westbrook.
Cooper
(Last Week’s Letter.)
H. Hendrix .made a business
trip to Marietta Tuesday.
M. A. J. Landers and wife and
daughter motored to Atlanta last
Thursday,
Messrs. Crawford and Mathew
Landers and Miss Dovie Garner
of Atlanta, spent Saturday
night and Sunday with Mr. Lan
ders and family.
Misses Mamie Hill and Annie
Brown are spending a few days
with the Misses Alllies near
Brownville.
Aubry Hilley of Atlanta, spent
Saturday night and Sunday in
oar vicinity.
Mr. Coalston and' wife took
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. H. M.
Adair Sunday and attended the
singing at this place in the after
noon.
Guy Mozley of Austell, and
OwenStandridge of Douglasville,
took dinner with Hobson and
Rader Hall Sunday. They also
attended the singing.
Rev. S. T. Gilland spent Satur
day night with J. C. Hall and
family.
Frank-Eskew’s mule got badly
cut on a wire fence lastweek.
Kid Addison.
FURS
AND HIDES
HIGHEST DARKT PRICE PAID
FOR RAW FlIP • AND HIRES
WMMCimMm. Will, lor
Hot inentloRlo, Mila (4.
Light and Water Notice
To avoid delays and disputes,
the following rules will be strict
ly followed in future: All bills
for water and lights not paid by
the 20th of the month, will be
cut off and an extra charge will
be made for cutting in again.
V. R. Smith, .Mayor
J. E. Phillips, C erk.
ENGRAVING
Let us show you samples of
engraved cards, invitation, an
nouncements, stationary, etc.
Lowest prices possible on high
grade work.
Wedding Invitations $10 per
hundred and up, including double
Envelopes
Cards, all kinds $1.50 per hun
dred and up.
Stationery to suit your taste
and price. THE SENTINEL.
n CASTOR IA
Tor InfiuiH a^u Children.
ft# KM You Hph Alrap Bought
The memorial to Mary Balter Eddy,
the Discoverer and Founder of Chris
tian Science, erected in Mt. Auburn
Cemetery at Cambridge, Mass., has
been turned over to The Christian
Science Board of Directors by Elbert
S. Barlow of New York, who had
charge of its construction. Over a
year-And a half has been required to
complete it. Christian Scientists
throughout the world have contributed,
as expressions of sentiment, the entire
cost of over $150^000.
The memorial is of Bethel white
granite and consists of an open circu
lar colonnade of eight columns fifteen
feet in height surmounted by a cornice
am\ cresting. The space inside the
colonnade is to be filled with growing
flowers. Thj columns rest cn a stylo
bate of three steps, which also rest,
at one side, on a broad platform of
Pompton pink granite and, at the
other, which is about five feet lower,
on a double.flight of ciFSttler 3tGjXs.
These lire fiahked on each side by a
large pylon. The pylons were exhib
ited a short time ago at the American
Institute of Architecture in New York,
8iid were pronounced by several ex
perts to be the finest pieces of ckrved
granite ever executed. The detail is
elaborated to an extent never before
attempted in granite; some of the
stems and leaves are pracUcally free
standing, so great is the relief.
Interviewed regarding the memorial,
the architect, Mr. Egerton Swart^Out
of New York, said: “The site is
singularly pleasing; in fact, I question
whether a finer site could anywhere
be found. It can be seen from ail sides
equally well, close at*hand from the
cemetery road, and from a quarter of
a mile away across the lake. Indeed,
it is“ this body of water which forms
the chief beauty of the site. There is
a drop of approximately 10 feet from
the level of the road to the level of
the lake, there being a natural terrace
on the axis of the plot which lends
itself admirably to the architectural
development of the memorial. The
lake is unusually still, and has a
mirror-like quality which .reflects ad
mirably the white granite of which the
memorial is made.
“As to the memorial I think It can
be said without contradiction that*,
leaving aside entirely any artistic ex
cellence, such perfection and delicacy
have never been attained before^ in
this unyielding and enduring jnatqriftl.,
Therg. is- certainly nothing in modern.
Times that can approach it nor, as far
as I know, in any of the monuments
of antiquity. -
Mr. Swartwout. designed the new
Missouri State capitol and the new
Federal Building in Denver, and re
cently won the competition for the
new George Washington memorial..
All that now remains to be done to
complete the memorial to Mrs. Eddy
is the planting for the landscape,
which is to consist chiefly of some-
e\ergreen plants that will preserve '
their form and leaves throughout the
year, and some cedars and rhododen
drons.
Better Farming in the South
Permanent Influence Of Fertilizers On Southern Soils
Feeding the Plant the Real Purpose Developing the Resources of the
Soil Secondary
“How has he done It?” was asked.
“It has been the practice of this
farmer to put on his land the amount
of fertilizer that he could purchase
with the proceeds of the sale of his
cotttm seed from thid|same*land. Of
course, this farmer could have grown
his cotton more economically had ho
grown it in rotation with other crops.
Loss Through Leaching
“Sandy soils naturally erode and
leach readily. Phosphoric acid does
not leach away ,but remains in the
top twelve inches of soil till, it is used
by the plant. Potash will wash out
of sandy soils to a limited extent, but
“In recent years
soil fertility has
come to be look
ed upon in a new
light. Soils are
no longer spoken
of as being rich
simply because
chemical analysis
shows that they
contain a b u n d
a n c e of plant
food. Much of
this plant food
may be locked up
not get at it.
J. N. HAW,PER,
Agronomist,
so that plants cun
be available plant food must be In
soluble form; that is, it must dissolve
in the soil water and change into just
the form that the plant can U3e for
Its grewth," says Professor Harper.
“In fact,” he continues, “a chemical
analysis may show that a soil has lit
tle total food content, but that little
may often have iplant food in a more
available form than the richer soil,
and, as a consequence, will produce
greater yields.
“Most of the soils of the South have
been formed from granite rocks which
have decayed or crumbled into parti
cles. Soils derived from granites con
tain considerable’ sand. Such soils
are found very extensively in the re
gion east of the# Mississippi river.
“Can these sandy loam soils of the
South be made to produce abundant-
crops?
“The answer is ‘Yes.* Proof is pro
vided from the experience of thou
sands of farmers. They won through
proper farm management and fertili
zation. Many farmers of the South are
today getting a bale of cotton to the
acre where they once got only one-
third of a bale. They are producing
from 6t) to 75 bushels of corn on the
same land which a few years ago pro
duced only 15 to 20 bushels.
“What is the secret of their suc
cess?
“Is it in the change in the methods
of cultivation? There has been con
siderable Improvement in this respect
“Has it been due to deeper plowing?
This has been a help.
“Is it due to crop rotation? The
right kind of rotation is beneficial.
“What then Is the great reason? It
is this, the plants have been fed bet
ter and they have responded with bet
ter yields. In other words, It came
about through proper fertilization,
“A successful Southern fanner,
whom the writer knows well, is now
producing a bale of cotton to the acre
on land which twenty-five years ago
was’ producing only one-third of a bale.
He has constantly grown cotton on
this land. Yet In spite of this, he has
Increased yields.
with clay soils it is practically all
available. The nitrates, on the other
hand, cannot long be retained by the
soil. It is soluble in water and there
fore leaches out with every heavy
rain.
Winter Cover Crops Help
“When a field is left bare through
the winter months, sometimes more
than 40 pounds of nitrogen is leached
.rom an acre. It will take ^600 pounds
of cottonseed meal per acre to replace
this loss of nitrogen. If the farmer
plants a cover crop such as rye, crim
son clover or bur clover, the greater
portion of this nitrogen will be re
tained and become available for the
succeeding crop.”
TO MAKE COTTON FRUIT BETTER
J. C. Pridmore, Agronomist
Inquiry—"My cotton produces plen
ty of weed, but fruits poorly. What
fertilizer would correct this?
From the knowledge of plant nutri
tion as it is understood at the pres
ent time, it appears that you have a
soil containing a fairly good supply
of nitrogen, but deficient in phosphoric
acid and potash. The element nitro
gen is considered largely with the de
velopment of vegetative parts of the
plants, such as the stalk, stems and
leaves. The phosphoric acid-Is respon
sible to a large extent for the develop
ment of the fruit, and the hastening ot
thematurity of the plant. Potash gives
general tone and vigor to the plant,
and improves the quality of the fruit.
The use of fertilizer will supply these
plant food elements, and enable one
to overcome these apparent soil defi
ciencies.
A material analyzing from % per
cent to 2 per cent nitrogen, 10 per
cent to 12 per cent phosphoric acid*
and 1 per cent to '2 per cent potash,
could be used profitably in such oases.
Apply at the rate of three or four
hundred poqnds per acre before the
crop is planted, so that the plant can
get fall benefit of the material early
In its growth, especially under boll
weevil conditions.