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DOUQLAa COUNTY SENTINEL, DOPQLASVTLLE GEORGIA. FRIDAY. MAY 21, 1920.
Legal Advertisements
LIBEL FOR DIVORCE
GEORGIA—Douglas County.
Frank Morris vs Cassia Morris ..
No—Petition for Divorce.
Douglas Superior Court, September
Term, 1920.
To the Defendant Casaie Morris:
The plaintiff Frank Morris having
filed his petition for divorce against
Cassie Morris in this Court, and it
being made to appear that Cassia
Morris is not a resident of said County,
and also that she does not reside w ; th
in the State, and an order having been
made for service on her the said Cassie
Morris,, by publication, this in there
fore, to notify you, Cassie Morris, to
be at the next term of the Superior
Court to be. held in and for Dougin
County, Georgia, to be held on the
third Monday in September 1920. than
and there to answer this complaint.
Witness the Honorable F. A. Irwin,
Judge of the Superior Court Tal
lapoosa Circuit. This 20th day of
April, 1920.
T. L. PITTMAN,
Clerk Superior Court.
Douglas County Farm
Notes
K. N. Kemp, County Agent .
SHERIFF’S SALE
Below is a letter from one of the
extension workers from the college
who has just returned from ul confer
ence with Mr. B. R. Goad, government
ertomologist, of the Delta Laboratories
Tallulah, La., Mr. Tood thinks that
a greait many of the farmers"who use
calcium arsenate this year will* not
get satisfactory results because they
will not use it in the manner that
experiments prove is necessary to con
trol the weevil. • . I
Last year several companies sb3d
calcium arsenate thdtf contained 75
per cent water soluahle arsenic a9d
it ia possible that gome coih^anies may
try to do the same this year. In order
to get a chock on these companies it
is desird that parties buying calcium
aVsena.be send a small sample to the
Delta. Laboratories for'analysis. This
work will he dome without charge
and a copy of the analysis will be sent
to the party sending the material
within a few days after the sample is
received. Information cards that are
to be filled out and sent with the
sample, may be obtained from the
county agents.
It is likely that fanners using cal
cium arsenate will be inclined to wait
too long between applications. Poison
ing squares are being punctured. When
the work is the fields should
be poisoned at four day intervals un
til three applications*have been nuute.
Usually by thin time the number of
weevils will be so reduced that itwilfr
not be needhsary to poison again for
two or three weeks and in some cases
it will not be* neewuiary to pO:3on
again during that season: *"
The moot seridus propositions in,
the poisoning work are i‘rt connection
with the machinery f oi* applying’the
calcium arsenate, 'ftfost farmers ‘in
this state are planning to use hand
dusters, but the labor of using these
ia so irksome that' marly formers will
abandon the work after having begun
.. it. Very few farmers will be abb
(142). all being in the first district to use hand'dusters satis factory dy
and fifth section of originally Carroll, on morn than thirty five or forty
now Douelns County, containing 1300 acres of cotton on one fann.
acres, more or less, levied on as the | The most desirable type of power
property of ,T. T. Henley, defendant < machine is the two wheel cart
named .infi ,fa, property pointed out machine which derives its power from
wheel traction.
One of these machines operated by
GEORGIA—Douglas County.
Will he sold before the court house
door in said county on the first Tues
day in June, 1920* within the legal
hours of sale, to-wit;
The life estate of J. T. Henley, a
one eighth undivided interest in all
that tract of parcel of land lyinV and
being in Douglas County, Georgia*
known as the Henley place, and de
scribed as follows:
Land Lots No’s, one hundred and
twenty one (121, one hundred and
twenty two (122), one hundred and
twenty three (123). one hundred and
thirty eight (138), and one hundred
and thirty nine (139), and fractional
lots No s., one hundred and eighteen
(l-lSl, olio hundred and twenty seven
<127)* one hundred and forty one
(141), and one hundred and forty two
country would lie more desolate than
the awful ruins of Belgium.
“ But the farmer has always been
on the job.
“No matter whether prices were low
of high; whether wool was worth lit
tle and cotton less; no matter about
cost of fertilizer and seed and labor.
No ^natter whether there was a pro
fit in it or not, the farmers, all of
'them., kept right on the job every
• day in the year, and about every
1 daylight hour in the day.
j “And about all the appreciation .he
j has had for his faithful efforts has
been the bewhiskered pests of the
| cheap urban jokesmith and the silly
j slapstick slams of the ham actorette.
: “And yet the farmer has just as
! much right to strike as the city work-
i ‘‘And probably just as much excuse.
“Only the air of the fields and the
breath of the hills breathe a higher
sentitiment that do the .dockbound
city streets, and brazen doos of man
made temples to the great god Cash.
“The farmer, as a matter of course,
does his duty to those who depend
on him for their bread, just as he will
mortgage his home to buy feed before
he will allow even one aged nag to go
hungry.”—Exchange.
PEE GAMBLERS’*
I Those who saw Harry T. Morrey in
j “Honor’s Web” at the Kozytorium,
| Saturday night were loud in their
I praise—pronouncing the picture the
, best ever, but what is said to be his
I best of all, will be put on the screen
; Saturday night, when Mr. Morey will
1 appear in “The Gamblers.”
by plaintiff’s Attorney.
This May 4th. 1920.
A. S. BAGGETT.
Sheriff Douglas County, Ga
SHERIFF’S SALE
GEORGIA—Douglas County.
Will be sold before the courfo house
door of said county on the first Tues
day in June. 1920, within the legal
hours of sheriffs sales to the highest
and best bidder for cash, the follow
ing described lands to-wit;
Land lots numbers 888, 924, and
925 in the 18th D is t ri c t, and
2nd section of Douglas county, Geor
gia, containing 40 acres each.
Said lands to be sold by virtue of
an execution issued from Douglas
Superior Court in favor of E. L. Red-
wine and against Peter Love maker,
and T. J. Blair, endorser. The said
lands levied on by virtue of said ex
ecution as the property of the defend
ant Peter Love, maker, and to be sold
to satisfy said execution as against
aaid Peter Love, maker- and as his
property. Peter Love, defendant, in
fi fh found in possession and notified
of levy pursuant to law.
Terms of sale cash.
May 4th, 1920.
A. S. BAGGETT.
Sheriff,
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO
SELL LAND
Douglas Court of Ordinary. May
Term, 1920.
T. F. Brown, administrtor of the
estate of Mrs. V. A. Brown, late of
Douglas county, deceased- having duly
applied by petition for leave to sell
the lands belonging to said estate. .
Said application will be heard at
the regular term of the Court of
Ordinary for said county, to be held
on the first Monday in June, 1920.
This 3rd day of May, 1920.
J. H. McLARTY, Ordinary.
CITATION—YEAR’S SUPPORT.
GEORGIA—Douglas County.
To All Whom It May Concern n
Notice is hereby given, that the
appraisers appointed to set apart and
assign a year’s support to Mrs. H. A.
Dukes, widow of T. B. Dukes, and the
five minor children of T. B. Dukes, de •
ceased, have filed their award, and un
less a, good and sufficient cause is
shown, the same Will be made the
judgement of the court at the June
term* 1920, of the Court of Ordinary.
This May 12, 1920.
J. H. McLARTY
Ordinary Douglas County, Ga.
one man and a pair of mules should
poison 15 to 25 aoree a night.. Since
it is recommended that the work be
done at night .these ^machines aire
equiped with headlights.
The power machines distribute the
poison more thoroughly and more uni
formly and it bakes a great deal leas
man labor than when hand dusters
are used, lit is unfortunate that there
are so few power duster?: available
this • year.
* * * * *
A newspaper printed an editorial
under the heading “If Farmers Were
to Strike.”
A state university and college of
agriculture took a fancy to its tone
and ring and it reprinted on little
folders and enclosed it in all letters
sent, out. A copy.of it reached Rural
Welfare. It is good enough for our
readers. Here it la:
“City labor just now is exercising
constitutional rights by wholesalers
refusal to work.
“And while it ia tough on business,
and embarrassing bo city folks and all
that, still about everybody is getting
three meals a day, and the lxibies have
their eggs and milk and dad has butter
with his cake, and his throe strips of
lean bacon.
“But say. if the farmer tried the
general strike, there would be some
thing to worry over.
“Suppose Farmer .ToneR. 2,009,000
him, on May 1st said: ‘I have been
working 16 hows a day, and not much
more than breaking even. I am not
appreciated, I am going to rest,
awhile.
John, turn the pigs inito the
woods.
Bill, turn the horseH into the pas
ture. and let the calves run with the
cows.
““Mary, ( \et the hens steal their
nests, and never mind about the eggs,
and we won’t bother about milking
from now or\J
“ And the plow rusted in the furrow,
and ?the weeds took the grain, the
sheep were unshorn, and the beets,
and the cane kept their sweet juices
themselves, the fruit rotted on the
trees, and the trees decayed for lack
of sprays, and millions of devouring
insects that the farmer had kejA from
ruining the earth swept over the
ountry.
“Not only would the town and city
residents soon be hungry, but 'the
nation would suffer for years.
“Let the farmers strike f r ne har
vest season and cease teir incessant
flight against fungus, rodent, scab,
mildew, blight, insects and the fields
meadows, orchards and-f©rests of the
to heart talk
I T isn’t about golf or wed
ding bells-vit’s about
clothes.
A suit means quite an
investment these days. As
clothing merchants we’re
anxious to do all we can to
reduce your clothes costs.
The more we help you, the
more we helpjourselvs.
We’re not willing to sell
you low quality at any price
We know that high quality
and all-wool saves for you.
You get more wear, you buy
fewer clothes.
That’s why we say: “Get
Hart, Schaffner & Marx
clothes, they’re all-wool,
carefully tailored; styled
right.
They’re guaranteed to
satisfy you—money back
if they dont.
Pay
CASH
GILES BROTHERS
* N
. The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes
The One Price Cash Store
Pay
LESS