Newspaper Page Text
The Fish go
into the bag
NOT INTO THE NAME, IN
TRADE MAHH
O' Y*
"STEi
DOUGLASV
Uu'v
DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL, DOUGLASVILLE GEORGIA. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1920.
Legal Advertisements Victim of War Clings to Life
Only to See What’s Next
CITATION—DISMISSION FRO M
ADMINISTRATION
GEORGIA—Douglas County.
‘WJhereas, Mrs. L. N. Harding, Ad
ministratrix of W. C. M. Harding, rep
resents to the Court in her petition,
duly filed and entered on record, that
ahe has fully administered W. C. M.
JIarding’s estate:
This is, therefore, to cite all per
sons concerned, kindred and creditors,
to show c&usc, if any they can, why
said Administratrix should not be
discharged from her administration
and receive Letters of Dismission on
the first Monday in March, 1020.
This February 2nd, 1920.
.T. H. McLARTY, Ordinary.
EXECl TOR’S SALK
Chattahoochee River farm 537 acres,
for sale.—By virtue of authority
granted me under the will of Alfred
Austell deceased 1 will sell at Public
out cry before the Court House door
of Fulton County Georgia, Tuesday
March 2nd, 1920, during the legal
hours of sale, to the highest bidder.
The Austell farm consisting of 537
acres of land, in the eighth district
of Campbell County, Ga., and parts of
Land Lots 45, 40, 47, and 48 of said
Btate and County. Terms one fourtn
cash, and balance in equal payments,
one two and thrpe years, with six per
cent interest per annum.
W. W. Austell Executor, Estate of
Alfred Austell deceased.
This is one of the best farms ever
offered to the public in the .state
About 375 acres of River andcreek
firBt and second bottom. About 150 or
more acres in timber; some of it the
very best saw timber. The farm lies
about 15 miles from the limits of
Atlanta. For futher information see
'or write Wm. S. Ansley, 217 Atlanta
Nat. Bank Bid.
From .Hamilton Ohio Daily News
A certain customer upon recieving
a request to send a check to cover his
bill, sent the following letter:
“For the following reasons I am
unable to send you the check asked
for:
“I have been held up, held down
sandbagged, walked on, sat on, flat
tened out and squeezed. First by the
United States government for federal
war tax, excess profits tax, Liberty
Loan bonds, Thrift stamps, capital
I stock tax* merchant^]icense and auto
I tax, and by. every society and organi-
i zation that the inventive mind of man
can invent to extract what I may or
| may not posses.
| “I have ben solicited by the Soci
ety ofrJohn the Baptist, the G. A. R. ,
[the Women’s Relief, the Navy league,
the Red Cross, the Black Cross, the
Purple Cross, the Double Cross the
Children’s Home the Dorcas ' • • ty.
SHERIFF’S SALE
GEORGIA—Douglas County.
"Will be sold before the court house
door in said county on the first Tues
day in March, 1020. within the legal
hours of sale, to the highest bidder for
cash, the following described personal
property, to-wit:
One mare mule weighing nine hun
dred pounds and rive. ; id. Also
one cow, color ro.f, nr. ; v .! Bessie,
and giving mill: being Liar years old.
Three shouts weighing two hundred
pounds.
Said property levied on and to be
sold as the property of John Eov.v::,
under and hy virtue of ao execution
issued by the Clerk of the Superior
court of Douglas couniy. Georgia, on
affidavit forccioring mortgage on said
property^in favor of Morris & Aber
crombie, and against the John
Bowen, 11. A. Latham and Noah Vnn-
sant.
Said property levied on in the no-i-
sossion of the sjjid John Bowen.
This February 4th, 10.10.
A. S. BAGGETT,
Sheriff Douglas County, Ga.
the Y. M. C. A., the Boy Scouts, the
Jewish Relief, the Belgian Relief and
every hospital in town. Then on top
of it all came the Associated Charities
and Salvation Army. I
“The government has so governed
my business that I don’t know who
owns it. I am inspected, suspected, ex.
lamined, informed, required and com-
j manded, so I don’t know who I am, or
| why I am here. All I know is I am
I supposed to be an exhaustible sup-
| ply of money for every known need
| desire or hope of the human race.
| And because I will not sell all I have
j and go out. and beg, borrow or steal
money to give away, I have been
cu3sed, discussed, boycotted, talked
j to talked about, lied to, lied about,
(held up, hung up, robbed and nearly
j ruined, and the only reason I am
! .ringing to life if. to see what in the
j hell is coming next.”
OFFICIAL SERVICE
All makes Electric Starters, Gen
erators, Magnetos, Carburetors and
gniters repaired.
Store your car here while in the
city.
Southern Aulo and Equipment Co.
ill FORSYTH ST. ATLANTA.
40 PER CENT
PEOPLE
GEORGIA
ARE HALF SICK
John Pomeroy, Noted New Zealand ; to-day have digestive organs that are
Scientist, Says American People
Treat Their Stomach With Too
Little Respect
Forty per cent of the people of
Georgia are hall'-sickand luily ninety
per cent of these can attribute their
sufferings to the stomach trouoies.
Such are the main points in Pom
eroy s new theory which has stirred
Atlanta, Macon and other Georgia
cities where he had visited during the
past few weeks. “This is due, to
modern conditions.” he explained ni
Atlanta recently.
‘•'Ihtse people”, he went on, “have
run-down, overworked digestive or
gans, owing to too litlc exercise in the
fiesh air and too much nastily eaten
food. It isn’t kidney trouble, cvnerv-
ousness, or liver complaint, or dozen
of other diseases invented by their im
aginations.
••(.me niun called on me lust week
and started our conversation by say
ing: ‘My stomach is on the bum.’ t
could think ol a more elegant way to
describe the condition of modern
Americans, but none more accurate
or expressive. These half-sick peopb:
on the bum.’
"Sometimes when I see on the
street, a tired looking man or woman,
with dull eyes and sallow complexion.
1 feel like saying: ‘Say 1 know what’t
the matter with you. 1 can help you if
you will do as I tell you.’
“A sound digestive apparatus that
is doing its full duty in getting every
particle of vitality out of the food is
what makes gond health. Only keep
the stomach in condition and there is
likely to be litle sickness.
“It is the American tendency to
treat, the stomach with to kittle re
spect. Most people stuff themselves
with to much food, and then when the
digestie organs get out of order, are
half-sick all the time, don’t know what
is the matter with them. My me:! *
Puratone, restores misused or ‘out. of
whack’ stomachs to normal condiGen j
and destroys chronic co v't'pation |
Thousands of people say that this i*
the reason for my big sueess and ex- [
plains why l am now attractir;/ j
attention all
QIN DAY
After February 1st we will gin only one day in each
week-THURSDAYS
Connally & Kirkley Gin Company
an unusual amou
over this state.”
‘ P itone is s< •
Whitley’s. Prarnuu
ing druggist in ev
J. R. HUTCHESON
Attorney-at-Law
Office in Hutcheson Building,
R. H. Poole
C. V. V,pisant
DRS. POOI O
& VANSANT
Surgery and C!>
•onic Diseases ol
Womon'uiKl Chi
dren * Specialty
rhoiu * N»
1. 92 and * 137
Office over ;>el.
uni’s Dm ft Store
P-r -•
1 AX kkChlVLk’S ROUNDS
I will oe at Douglasville every first Tuesday from February 1st to Maly j
1st, ami every Saturday after the second Saturday in March tul May 1st.
FIRST ROUND
DISTRICT . -
Lithia Springs Feh. 0, 0 till 11 a. m.
Chestnut Log Feb. 9, l.tili 2 p. in. ;
I Chapel Hill Feb. 10, 10 till li a. mU
; CfOinbics Feb. 10, 2 till 3 p. m.
I Fair Play Feb. 11, 10 till 11 a. xu.
j Middle... %... .Feb. ii, 1 till 2 p. m. ;
j Conners Feb. 12, 10 till 11 a. m. j
I Douglasville Feb. 12, 2.till 3 p. in.
SECOND ROUND
Lithia Springs Mur. 8, 5) till 11 a. m. |
Hurt Farm Mar. 8, 12 ti'l 1 p. ia.
Ike Strickland’s Residence Mar. 8, 1 till 2 p. in. i
CHESTNUT LOG ., -
Ferguson’s MUi« ! Mar. 9, 9 till 11a. m. j
Greek man Place Mar. 9,12 ill l p. in. :
Court House Mar. 0, 2 till o p. m.
Chapel llill Mai*. 9 till 11 a. m.J
Coy Mar. 10, 12 till 1 p. m. i
mtiSh.
im.j r,c?v??r^
Ah I
Bill Arp.
Maxwell’s Store
FAIR PLAY
McWhorter
Hannah
l ourt House
MIDDLE
Will Hembree Residence....
Court House y
Darnell's Sto^-e
CONNHERS
Tidwell's Store.
Thompsons Store
Sulphur Mines
Is alley Farm
And Hurl In Sldo Of Hor Heed. Is Dei
filed By The Uso of ZIROM Iron Tonic.
After severe Illness, overwork, worn’,
.ef, accidents, etc., the greatest need
the weakened system is a tonic that
dependable strenglli. in
THIRD ROUND
Fat Winn's Store
Hurt Farm
Bell s Cross Roads
CHESTNUT LOU
Ferguson s Mill
Freeman's Clin
Court House
Chapel Hill
Joe Thompsons Mill...
CROMBIES
Bill Arp
Isaiah Smith’s Residence
Maxwell’s Store
FAIR'Play c
Tyre
... .Mar. 10, S till 10 a. m.
., Mar. 10, 11. till IT a. in; .
Mar. 10, _ till J p. in.
... .Mar. 17, il till 1(1 a. in. ;
....Mar. li, a till J p. m..
... .April 5, il till 11 a. ni. j
April o, in till 1 p. in. ;
. .April 0, 2 till 2:20 p. m. I
April 7, !) till 11a. m.
. .. .April 7, IT till 1 p. m.
....April 7, 2 till 6 p. m. i
April S, 9 till 11 a. in.
... .April S, 12 till 1 p. m. ;
es quick, dependable strong!
iuch cases, try Ziron Iron Tonic.
Ziron is a pleasant medicine, having
the strengthening effects of iron will',
other valuable building ingredients
Read what Mrs. Emma Manus, of Las-
cassas, Tenn., says about It:
“I was weak and run-down, not ab|c
to do tny work. My trouble was ad in j Court House
the Side of my Iter.a. 1 Itcard of Zirojt McWhorter
and got a bottle, and 1 am glad to say il j McWhorter
has clone me more good than anything, middle
Zlron isa splendid tonic.’ I Court House
TryZiron. It may be jus. the modi i punioll’s Store
fine you need. Zircn contains no habit-; T Stovall's
forming drugs. It is a safe, reliable tome. C0 NNERS
April 14, 9 till 11 a. n:
April 14. 11:30 till 32:30 p. i
April .14, 1 till 2 p. m.
„ W. Rutherford’ Store (Town District)
Will te in Douglasville April 26, 28, 29.. and TO
Please know the number of your land lots before giving in taxes, a-
requ'red hy law.
The books will close May 1st
J. W. JAMES
Tax Receiver Douglas County.
cult tivw.. - • • Uj. l. otuvii
forming drugs. It Is a safe, reliable tome C0NNERS
good for children, men and women. v,w ton
Sold by druggists on a money-back jY‘ R f y on j arm ,
.guarantee. ^ N12 Sheffield’s.
....April 0, 9 till 11 a. in.
April 9, 12 till 1 p. m. :
April 9, 2 tili 3 p. m.
April 12, 8 till 9 u. m.
..April 12, 10 tiil 12 a. m. :
April I till 3 p. in.
April 12, 1 till
... .Api i
IV. .April
....April 13, 2:30 till 3 p.
ibur Blood Needs
»* a
CIGARETTE
/^ET a package today. No-
tice the flavor—the whole
some taste of Kentucky Burley
tobacco.
Why do so many “regular
men” buy Lucky Strike
cigarettes? They buy them
for the special flavor of the
toasted Burley tobacco.
There’s the big reason—it’s
toasted, and real Burley. Make
Lucky Strike your cigarette.
A Gust
£s)L
Guerantend by
O (A)
O