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DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL, DOUGtASVILLE, GEORGIA
^Commissioners Disburse
merits on First Tues
day
The following accounts on the
'General County Fund were
ipassed and ordered paid at the
April Term of the Board of
^County Commissioners:
■A-S Baggett $194,
OT Sellman 6,
LN B & J T Duncan 2.
T L. Pitman 91.
<J W Smith 9
,A K Bomar 4
Smith-Harding Supply Co 41,
■H Q Nichols 4,
L Bartlett 20.
J S Gray 3
H S Hudson 52
Town ofjDouglasville 19
A S Gresham 7
I H Willoughby 14
J A Ayers 8.38
LXH Willoughby 1.50 j
>W T Mozley 7.00
W Q Bnt«rkin 9;00|
HA Yancey 9.55'
■ W Q Enterkin 6.30
Astor Merritt 6.00
_Z T Dake 22.76
J H McLarty 4.00
J E Davis 1.00
T A Henslee 18.36
L E Roberts 66.00
E P Strickland 1.00
S L Hembree 4.00
S L Hembree 7.05
Banks Bros 23.65
J M Whitley 3.34
J T Freeman 47.18
W F Wallace . 19.00
Total of General $741.20
The following accouts on the
Road Fund were passed and
ordered paid: j
JH Mann $ 7.55 !
.J E Baldwin 1.60
W D West 6.60;
W M Richardson 14.85
John H Reed 10.95
J1 Hines If*®!
Airland &M‘ : * s ‘- oy 16.15
.Frank P Dorris & Co 6.60
J?., H. McGouirk 15.70j
W R Willoughby 59.72
u H Butler 17
L H Baldwin 8
Banks Bros 1
II arison Hudson 3
Stewart Bros 115
.NB&.I T Duncan 107
W C Abercrombie 480
G A Hembree 2
L O Meadows & Crew 187
C T Hallman 4
W L Fain Grain Co 77
W S Duncan Co 39
Rogers & Prater Co 38
H H Sullivan 5
Gulf Refining Co ■ 350
Beck & Greg Hardware Co 21.04
A D Broadwell 6.15
Mozley Bros 4.70
DW Peace 30.50
F M Yancey 4.30
M L Lyle 6,20
Sulphur Mining & Rail
road Co 4.31
•C C Yancey 8.70
H A Yancey 13.50
L E Hathcock 4.05
M L Dorsett 4.80
C C Lane 2.40
Charley Steadwell . 1,70
A 1 Yancey 9.75
Upshaw Bros 20.62
T A Thompson 1.50
Benkham Auto & Tire Co 44.40
J W Strickland - 4.12
Duncan & Selman 6.65
Totai of Roads $1,796.00
Making a Place In the World.
The world Is no longer clay, but
rather Iron In the hands of Its work
ers, and men hare got to hammer out
• place tor themselves by steady and
rugged blows.—Emerson.
Too Much.
"There Is such a thing as carrying
one's love for poetry too far," stated
Grout P. Smith. "Yesterday while my
'Wife was attempting to hang up a por
trait of the poet Goethe—I reckon he
was a poet, or something—she fell off
from the stepladder on to the cat,
wrenching her back and also that of
■the cat.”—Kansas City Star.
Helps
Sick
Women
Cardui, the woman’s
tonic, helped Mrs. Wil
liam Eversole, of Hazel
Patch, Ky. Read what
she writes: “1 had a
general breaking-down
of my health. I was in
bed for weetfs, unable to
get up. 1 had such a
weakness and dizziness,
... and the pains were
very severe. A friend
told me 1 had tried every
thing else, why not
Cardui ?... I did, and
soon saw jt was helping
me ... After 12 bottles,
1 am strong and well."
TAKE
The Woman’s Tonic
Do you feel weak, diz
zy, worn-out? Is your
lack of good health caused
from any of the com
plaints so common to
women? Then why not
give Cardui a trial? It
should surely do for you
what it has done for so
many thousands of other
women who suffered—it
should help you back to
health.
Ask some lady friend
who has taken Cardui.
She will tell you how it
helped her. Try Cardui.
All Druggist^
/
9
When In Doubt
Go to
Robison’s Furniture Store
PRYOR ST. FRONTING HUNTER ST.
OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE
Atlanta
Elegant House Furnishings
Prices and Terms Moderate
A Lontr List of Delighted Customers Our
Best References
BEST OF 150 VARIETIES
[Officially Tested]
I ’m going to offer you the purest, most productive and carefully
selected early cotton seed you can buy.
When the late R. J. Redding was the head of the Georgia Ex
periment Station—he was there seventeen years—he tested 150 va
rieties of cotton and selected one of the best suited for general
planting. Then he bred it carefully. And he found that it’s
stocldness, low height and early maturity made it. admirably
adapted to boll weevil conditions.
After Mr. Redding’s death his method of breeding these seed
was continued under my personal supervision. I call it
Duckworth’s
EARLY BIG BOLL COTTON
SEED- : —
It’s the finest I ever saw. Shows no taint of anthracnose nor
wilt. Ha3 exceptionally good fiber, running
38 to 42 per cent Lint
I have a limited quantity to sell, all grown under my personal
supervision and so I know it is pure. You’d better write to me
at once—if you want some. You ought to get enough to plant a
• patch to provide seed for your whole crop another year.
1 Bushel $3.00
12 Bushels, per bushel 2.50 ’
60 Bushels or more, per bushel 2.00
f : o. b. Union City
H. S. Taylor, of Winston, Ga„ has some of my cotton seed at $2
, per bushel.
R. F. DUCKWORTH, UNION CITY GEORGIA