Douglas County sentinel. (Douglasville, Douglas County, Ga.) 190?-current, May 11, 1917, Image 6

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DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL, DOUGLAS Vi Winds Vary, but Luzianne -Never! The Lnzunne Guarantee: If, after using the contents of a can, you are not eatJaded Jn every reaped, your gro cer will refund your money. You don’t have to be a magician to make two pots of coffee exactly alike when you use Luzianne. For Luzianne is unvarying in character, ever and always the same good-drink ing coffee. But—the only way you cap really know Luzianne is to drink it. And that 'suggests your buying a- can today. Bear in mind, you take no ' cHances with Luzis.hne. The guaran tee protects you to the very penny. So, get right to it and buy Luzianne now. Every sip will confirm your good judgment and our good faith. Ask for profit-sharing catalog. Foley's Honey and l ar HELPS COUGHS QUICKLY ^coffee The Reily-Taylor Company, .New Orleans Prince on fi tel ATL/ NTA, GA. 45-51 West Mitchell St ivith.n Half Block of Tedminal Station MODERN, C NVENIENT AND UP-TO-DATE ALL ROOMS HAVE >T AND COLD RUNNING WATER, astern heat, electric Hg/ts and telephone. New eleetric elevator. One hundred and f j ty rooms. One hundred with ppivate and con necting baths. M ern in its/ equipment and attractive Furnishings No expense has r spared to provide for the comfort and conven ience of our patrons. Europe n Plan. Rates,75c to $2. H- R. Cannon, Prop Close attention to work is the cause of much Pain and many Headaches. Obtain relief by taking one or two I DR. MILE.S’ AWFUL SUFFERING. "I sufforcrl untold agony with neuralgia. I thought I would go mad with na In. A friend of mine advised mo to take Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills. I did so and tho pain stopped almost at once. Then I commenced using Dr. Miles’ Nervine nnd bc- foro long I was so that I did not have these pains any more.’’ E. J. WINTER, 6G1 E. Platte Ave., Colorado Springs, Colo. ANTI-PAIN PILLS Then tone up the Nervous System by using Dr. Miles’ Restorative Nervine IF FIRST BOTTLE, OR BOX. FAILS TO HELP YOU, YOUR MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED. CALOMEL IS MERCURY! IT SICKENS! ACTS ON LIVER LIKE DYNAMITE Foley’s Honey and Tar take* right hold o! an obstinate cough and gives quick relief. It puts a healing coating on the in flamed membranes that line the throat and air passages. It stops the ticklyqj, loosens and raises phlegm easily. It is Just splendid tor bronchial and la t rippe coughs, and tight, wheezy rcathwg. Mrs. W. 8. Bailey, Lancaster, Ky. t couahed elmoat continuously day and nlsht, until the took Foley’s Honey and Tar. After taking ball s bottle, ber cough began to alow up, sad IfYca bottles entirely cured ber cough. Man. Without © A Country ® 0 Edward Everett Hale J. L SELMAN A SON SPRAINS AND STRAIN’ RELlgVfcfJ Sloan’s Liniment quickly takes tho pain out of strains, sprains bruises and all muscle soreness. A clean, clear liquid easely applied, it quickly pene trates without rubbing. Sloan’s Lini ment does not stain the akin or clog the pores like massy plasters or oint ments. For chronic rheumatism aches and p iins, neuralgia, gout and lum bago have this well-known remedy handy. For the pains of grippe and following strennous work, it giveB quick relief. At all druggists, 25c. BAD COUGH? FEVERISH? GRIdPY? You need Dr. King’s New Discovery to stop that cold, the soothing balsam ingredients heal the irritated mem branes, soothe the sore throat, the an tiseptic qualities kill the germ and your cold is quickly relieved, Dr. King's New Discovery has for 48 years been the standard remedy for coughs and colds in thousands of homes. Get a bottle to-day and have it handy in your medicine chest for coughs, colds, croup, grippe and all bronchial affec tions. At your druggist, 50c. “Dodson's Liter Tone" Starts Your Liar Better Than Calomel and Doesn’t i Salivate or Make You Sick. Listen to me! Take no more sick ening, salivating calomel when bilious or constipated. Don’t lose a day’s work! Calomel is niercifcy or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when it comes into contact vith sour bile crashes into it, breaking it up. This is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you are slug- f 'lah and “all knocked out,” if your iver is torpid and bowels constipated or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour juafc take a spoonful of harmless Dod* •on’* Liver Tone on my. guarantee. Here’s my guarantee—Go to any drug Btore and get a 50 cent bottle of Dod- B0 r,“ L, y«r Tone Take a spoonful to- night and if it doesn't straighten you right up and make you feel fine and vigorous by morning I want you to go Iwck to the store and get your money. Dodson s Liver Tone is destroying the sale of calomel because it is real liver medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore it can not salivate or make you sick. * guarantee that one spoonful of Dod son s Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean your bowels of that sour bile and constipated, waste which is clogging your system and mak ing you feel miserable. I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone will keep your entire family feeling tine for months. Give it to your children. It Is harmless; doesn’t gripe and they like its pleasant taste. CLEAR YOUR SKIN IN SPRING Spring house cleaning means cleaning inside and outside. Dull pimply skin is an aftermarth of winter inactivity. Flush your intestines with a mild laxa tive and clean out the sccuraalated wastes, easy to take, they do not gripe. Dr. King’s New Life Pills will clear the complexion and brighten voureye. Try Dr. King’s New Life Pilis to night and throw off the sluggish winter shell. At druggists, 25c. £##**************-£***■-;•.*■!<- 4 [No document in actual Amor- £ * (can history conveys a mere J J powerful.lesson of what citizen- j * ship In this republic means, none A 4 delivers a more searching appeal * 5 to loyalty, than this fanciful re- * ¥ sIV»T -ST «... Man Without a * * Country. Tfe® unTTapjjy erfaturo * I wtioae" living death It has graved J * Sr's Imagination. never a line am ne nave in reply in the gay deceiver. Tho other buys the garrison sneered at him, becmiti he sacrificed In this unrequited Kite ,• tlon for a politician tho time whirl they devoted to Mononguliola, sledge and high-jow jack. Bourbon, euchre and poker were still unknown. Bit. one day Nolan had his revenge. Th ’Ima Barr came down the river, nut t an attorney seeking a piaco for his disguised conqueror. v . the ac- * He had defeated I know not how many I t. outburst * district attorneys; he hod dined at 1 5 tfton the memory of mankind * aa attbrne; | wa. but a figure born of a writ- f ^J&f. 2 count Of Kla passionate * lmow not how many public dinners; he $ Vu h l‘ „ dr<> * dfU eXP J a ‘ m * had been heralded In I know not how S stirs the dulleet soul, ahf will J many Weekly Areuse8 ; an d It was ru in the ffih.oA w mored that he had an army behind him stirs the dullest soul, «>>0 * awaken emotion S of reader! of generations yet-uli- * nnd an emplre bcfore hlm . it was a { born. There can be no mors ar. ft. , at any—his arrival—to poor Nolan. * rooting tenon for the disloyal oi> S. - - d not been nt the fort an hour * tho hoedlen, no more Inspiring * "t for him. That evening 4 appeal to tho spirit of true Amer- S "f Pea - take him out In his 4 Icanism, than this memorable J ,ia ddKSd KwBA -brake or a 4 work of literary art and high- J skiff, to show him -a eon, _ 4 aouled patriotism.] ft cottonwood tree, ps he Said, Isussssssssssssasasasasat seduce him; Shd by the time the SSft} I **“******““*^w4>M’44iW# wag over, Nolan Was enlisted body find! J I suppose that very few casual SouL From that time, though he tM| ! readers of the New York Heruld of uot yet know It, he lived Us “A Mud] , 1 August 13th observed, In an obscure without a Country.’’ _ . I corner, among the "Deaths,” the an- What Burr meant to do I know nd" poqi^t^ment: .vi,,'.i< .■^av.-.xsa. , more than you, dear render. It is none “NOLAN. Died, on board U. S. Cor- of ouTbusIness Just now. Only, when vette Levant, Lnt. 2” II* S., Long. 131° the grand catastrophe came, and Jet- W., on the 11th of Muy, Philip Nolan.” ferson and the House of Virginia of I happened to observe it, because that day undertook to break on the I was stranded nt the old Mission- wheel al1 the Possible Clarences of the. house In Mackluac, waitiug for a Lake then Ho,,8e of York, by the great Superior steamer which did not choose trea8 ® n t rfal at Richmond, some of the to come, and I was devouring, to the leS8er fry in that distant Mississippi very stubble, all the current literature Tttlley ' whlch waa fftrtl ' er from us than I could get hold of, even down to the ^UK** Sound is today, Introduced the deaths and marriages In the “Herald." Uke novelt y 011 their provincial stage, My memory for names and people is and ’ t0 ' vhlle awa 5 r the monotony of, good, and the reader will see, as he the summer at Fort Adams, got up, for; r goes on, that I had reason enough to s P ec tucles, a string of court-martials; J remember Philip Nolan. There are °“ the offlcers there. One nnd anoth- . hundreds of readers who would have the colonels and majors were; ’ paused at that announcement. If the tried, and, to fill Out the list, little No-, officer of the Levant who reported It lan ’ agoln8t wliom ' heaven knows,; ( had chosen to make It thus: “Died, there was evldeace enough, that he, ( May 11th, ’The Man without a Couu- was slek of 0,e service, had been will-« try.’ ’’ For It was as “The Man with- to be false to it, nnd would have f out n Country" that poor Philip Nolan obeyed any order to march anywhlther, T had generally been known by tho offl- wlth “ nyone who would follow him,! I cers who had him In charge during had the order onIy beeD 8lg “ed, “By| some fifty years, as, indeed, by all command of His Exc. A. Burr.” The, —"STOP LEFT OVER COUGHS | |Dr. BalPalPine-Tar-Honey will stop that hacking cough that lingers from Januaiy. Tho soothing pine balsam loosens the phlegm, heats the irritated membrane, the glycerine relieves tne tender tissues, you breathe easier and coughing ceasss. Don’t neglect a lingering cough, it is dangerous. Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey is antiseptic and pleasant to take, benefits young and old, get it at your druggist to-day Formula on the bottle. 25c, Light and Water Notice To avoid delays and disputes, the following rule3 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, Clerk. 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^fsuit your taste and price. THE SENTINEL. the men who had sailed under them. courts dragge d on. The big flies es- ; I dare say there is mauy a man who enped, rightly for all I know. Nolan hns taken wine with him once a fort- was P rove d guilty enough, as I say; } night, in a three years’ cruise, who yct you and 1 would nevor bnve heard ^ never knew that his name was “No- bbn * reader, but that, when the inn," or whether the poor wretch had p , reslden , t the^court naked him at the I a f any name at ull , close, whether he wished to say any- There can now be no possible harm ' £!!&*? f ho ^ that he had always been In telling this poor creature's story. “ f United .States, lie cried | Reason enough there has been Ull ° “ flt ° f T . ■ f*| now, ever since Madison’s adminlstra- , . n tbe ^' Il lt ' d States! I wlsh H Uon went out In 1S17, for very strict ! 1 may aever bear of the Ualted States ■ secrecy, the secrecy of honor Itself, <| a 6“ lnI .5 among the gentlemen of the navy who * suppose he did not know how the have had Nolan in successive charge. wonte shocked old Colonel Morgan, -g And certainly it speaks well for the es- • was folding the court. Half tli^* prit de corps of the profession and the ! °® cers w ^° sa t in it had servo' personal honor of its members, that to through the Revolution, and theh| lives, not to say their necks, hod beenj risked for the very Idea which he soj Prepare to Be 8hocked. When a man says “I’m going to b« perfectly frank with you,” brace your self. He is going to tell yon some* thing unpleasant about yourself that he has h^d on his mind for some time. castor i A Yor Infaatd Child w-v, Qi IM Yoa Han Atop fynght the press this man’s story has been wholly unknown, and, I think, to the country at large also. I have reason to think, from some investigations 1 made In the naval archives when I was attached to the bureau of construcUon, that every of ficial report relating to him was burned when Ross burned the public buildings at Washington. One of the Tuckers, or possibly one of the Watsons, had Nolan In charge at the end of the war; and when, on returning from his crutse, he reported at Washington to one of the Crownlnshlelds—who was In the nuvy department when he came home —lie found that the department Ig nored the whole business. Whether they really knew nothing about it, or whether It was a non ml rlcordo, de termined on as a piece of policy, I do not know. But this I do know, that since 1817, and possibly before, no naval officer .has mentioned Nolan in his report of a cruise. As I say, there is no need for se crecy any longer. And now the poor creature Is dead, It seems to me worth while to tell a little of his story, by way of showing young Americans of today what It Is to be A MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY. Philip Nolan was as fine a young officer as-them was in the “Legion of the We3t,” as the western division of our army was then called. When Aaron Burr made his first dashing ex pedition down to New Orleans In 1805, at Fort Massac, or somewhere above on the river, he met, as the devil would have it, this gay, dashing, bright young fellow, at some dinner Irnrty. I think. Burr marked him, talked ti him, walked with him, took him a da; or two’s voyage la his flatboat, and In short, fascinated him. For the next year barrack life was very tame to poor Nolan. He occasionally availed of the permission the grea^j«~^^ cavalierly cursed la Ills madness, on his part, had grown up In the West-; of those day% In the midst of “Spnnlfch j plot,” “Orleans plot,” and all the rest | His education, such as It was, had been perfected in commercial expedij tions to Vera Cruz, and I think he tol - me his father once hired an EngUr" man to be a private tutor for a win! on the plantation. He had spent hall his yduth with an older brother, hunt-:,; tng horses In Texas; and, In a word, ton “I Wish 1 May Never Hear of United States Again!"