Douglas County sentinel. (Douglasville, Douglas County, Ga.) 190?-current, April 27, 1917, Image 3

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DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL, DOUGL AS VILLE, GEORGIA In Memorium Esquire J. M Whitley was born Nov. 12, 1£5' > , and at the age of 17 years joined the Bap tist church and ever since tried to live as near like God as he k tew how. In 1876 was marrii d to Miss Alice Hooker ana was a most devoted husband and fath er. Oh, weeping wife and children, we know it is hard to give him up, but God is the ruler of the uni verse and does all things weli. We know he is at rest with God and the angels above, so we must hope and pray that when our work here is done we may be so fit to join' him in Heaven, where there will be no more weeping nor sorrow. We think the dear children are worthy of praise, for the father has reared them to be kind and obedient and we hope they will continue to be so. We know there is no other that fill the place of father and there is a vacant place in the h6me, in the church and among friends, but there is one more jewel gathered in Heaven. So dear mourners this is a great comfort to U3 after all. The darling husband and father lies so still. With quiet hands and closed eyes. It cannot be it is his will To let the bright hourfcslip away. Forsaking all his earthly work It is a strange and sad surprise. The darling husband and father sleep3 so deep. He does not list to call, He does not hear his wife and children weep, Nor hea>* the happy robbins sing, He takes no heed of anything. We cannot wake him up at all. The darling husband and father s eeps so long. The day and night to him are one. No eyening prayer or morning song Or ttippingfeet around the home. A kind and gentle voice is stilled. His labor here is done. Oh, husband and father still andcold, Fairer than'all the fair you lie This last hour in the dear home fold, And then your couch a low green bed With sweet flowers strewn above your head. Oh* darling husband and father, good by, good by. SOUTH’S COMMANDING POSITION IN THE COTTON MILL INDUSTRY Life Was a Misery Mrs. F. M. Jones, of Palmer, Okla,, writes: “ From the time t en tered into womanhood ... I looked with dread from one month to the next. I suffered with my back and bearing-down pain, until life to me was a misery. I would think I could not endure the pain any longer, and I gradually got worse. . i Nothing seemed to help me until, one day, . «. > I decided to TAKE The Woman’s Tonic “I took four bottles,” Mrs. Jones goes on to Bay, “and was not only greatly relieved, but can' truthfully say that I have not a pain. . . " It has now been two years since I tookCardui, and I am still in good health. . . I would ad vise any woman or girl to use Cardui who Is a " sufferer from any female trouble.” If yousufferpain caused from womanly trouble, or if you feel the need of a good strengthening tonic fo build up your run-down system, take the advice of Mrs. Jones. Try Car dui. It helped her. We believe it will help you. AH Druggists MRS. CAMPBELL PRAISES TANLAC Says Her Soil Had to Live On Milk, Eggs and Orange Juice “My son is so much better since taking Tanlac that be doesn't look like the same boy,” said Mrs. L. Campbell in refe rence to her eighteen-year-old son W. H. Qampbell, whose con dition of ill health has been the subject of great concern to his parents. Mrs. Campbell's hus- bantj is engineer for the Acme Building and Supply Co., of Me- redian, Miss., and the family re sides at 1417 Fifteenth street, that city. “Yes,” added the son, who had come in just in time to hear his mother’s remark. “I don’t feel like the same boy either, for I am gaining and feeling better everv day,” “He has had a bad form of stomach trouble for the past three years,” continued Mrs. Campbell, “and for several months the’boy was actually so bad off he had to live on milk and orangejuice and a few eggs. I He had a job with the street car company, but had to give it up on account of his condition, 1 | “He simply couldn’t eat any thing that would agree with him and he would suffer so much with-gnpingand pains thaf he’d have to be up and down all night, j . “We had several doctors to see him and they said a number of_ different things was the" trouble and advised us to send him to a hospital. He wasn’t able to do anything in the way of work and nothing seemed to do him any good un il we found out about Tanlac and got him started on it. | “He is now on his third bottle and he has improved so much that you’d hardly know hiir.. He sleeps well at night and gets up in the morning bright and cheer ful and all his old troubles have left him. It has been three years since he could do anything to help around the house, but now he cuts up the wood and kindling and can do just anything like that, “We are ail mighty proud of what Tanlac has done for my boy and we are glad to recom mend it.” Tanlac is sold exclusively in Douglasville by J. L. Selman & Son. (adv) Map of Southern Railway lines showing location of cotton mills, each dot indicating 10,000 cotton Bpindles. Washington, D. C.—(Special.)—The commanding position of the South with respect to the cotton mill industry is graphically shown by figures and a map presented in the annual report of ^Southern Railway Company for the fiscal year ended June 30th, 1916. “A notable feature of Southern manufacturing development," says President Fairfax Harrison in the report, 'Is the rate at which the consumption of cotton, one of the principal raw materials of the South, has increased In Southern mills. United States census figures show that in the twelve months ended July 31, 1910, the mills of the South consumed 3,520,787 hales, as compared with 3,020,909 bales last year, an increase of 499,818 bales, or 10.51 per cent. The mills of all other States consumed 2,809,185 bales in tho twelve months this year, as compared with 2,570,393 hales last year, an increase of 298,792 bales, or 11.0? per cent. Fully seventy-five per cent of the cotton Bpindles of the South are In mills along the lines of Southern Railway Company and ItR associated companies.” When In Doubt Go to Robison’s Furniture Store PRYOR ST. FRONTING HUNTER ST. OPPOSITE COURT HOUSE Atlanta Tho Talker*. Where one man wants to work his way to the top there are a dozen who hope to talk themselves In that gen eral direction.—Atchison Globe. Send Us Your Advertising Copy and Well Do the Rest Elegant House Furnishings Prices and Terms Moderate A Long List of Delighted Customers! Our Best References