Newspaper Page Text
V
DOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL.
JULY 8. 1921
WANTED—Salesmen to sell tires
direct froili factory to user. Ex
ceptionally good commission. A 11
or spare time. Address Burr Oak
Cord Tire Co., Burr Oak, Mich. 2t
Colorado
Utah
Michigan
SOUTHERN
RAILWAY
Do
you
'mow why
it's
toasted?
To
seal in
the
delicious
Bur
ley flavor,
It’s
toasted.
r v
SYSTEM
FROM ATLANTA
Convenient Schedules
Attractive Service
Inquire
V. L. Estes, D. P. A., Broad &
Walton Sts., Atlanta, Ga.
Kathleen O’Connor
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
Passenger Train Schedules
For Atlanta and Points East
Lv. Douglasville 5:29 A.M.
« " 6:53 A.M.
“ “ 10:63 A.M.
“ " 9:38 P.M.
liter
1 $
Kathleen O'Connor, formerly a tele
phone operator In Toledo, O., winner
of a recent contest for the most beau
tiful telephone operator in that state,
always wanted to become a “movie"
actrees. Her ambition waa realized as
If by magic, the honor and opportunity
having been thrust upon her.
Even fbe Syrian name for the oleander
(rone laurel) Is rodyon. Greece pro
duced a Rhode, which has since come
to be a iuodfern name of wide vogue.
The first feminine names to be con
nected with the fragrant flower yelled
a rose were ltohuis and Itoesln, which,
curiously enough, are said to com©
from the French and Latin of hros,
meaning fume, rather tbuu from the
flower. England’s most famous Holm is
was the wife of Gilbert of Gaunt.
There were many Roeslas among the
De Boliuiis and De Veres and tlie wife
of Fulbert de Dover In the reign of
Henry 11 was so called.
Ireland adopted the English form
and changed it to Hose, whereupon it
found vogue in ull classes and is still
one of the most popular peasant
names. Germany took it and made
from it tin* diminutives, Rosi and
Kosehen. Kositn is n lyric form found
only in Heru, but is none the le*s
charming. Our own whim of Latin
izing our short feminine names, fol
lowing Die Kpanish-Americitn war, has
made Rosltn almost equivalent to
Rose; certainly every Rose has an
etymological right to call herself Rosi*
ta If slie so fancies.
• Everyone'is familiar with the Ros<s
of Tennyson’s “Gardener’s Daughter”:
Who has not hoard
Of Rope, the Gardener’s daughter? Where
T , , . J And. on this oilier hand, you have
government Is very simple, but th« s . lt i KriR . tl ™ knowing If you do
residents maintain » representative at,^ h((n( , M wol . k thnt you httv e
n labored to help seorek of others.
1
Home.
LQST—One White Bob-tail July
houml. If 10.00 reward offered for any
information leading to its recovery.
Buck Pope, Rle. 1. S
TIMBER WANTED
Wanted to buy timber suitable foi
cord wood, excelsior wood, saw logs
cross tics, etc. Will buy standing or
delivered at railroad siding. For in
formation apply at The Sentinel of
fice.
For Birmingham and Points West
Lv. Douglasville 6:53 A.M.
“ " 5:53 P.M.
“ 6:27 P.M.
“ •< 11:52 P.M.
N. B.—Schedule figures are shown
only as information and are not guar
anteed.
For further schedule information or
sleeping car reservations write V. L.
Estes, D. P. A., 48 North Broad St.,
Atlanta, Ga.
“What’s in a Name?”
By MILDRED MARSHALL
Facts about your name; Itshlltoryj mean-
tng; whence it was derived; significance!
your lucky day and lucky jewel.
y, f-o old at heart,
from his youth in grief,
forgot? The common
ROSE.
13 OSK by any other nnme would
K. still lie a rose, according to ety
mologists. The fortunate possessor of
one of the most popular flower names
has a charmingly fragrant origin. It
seems that all countries and languages
agree In expressing a rose by Its color
So blunt in mei
At such a distar
That, having m
mouth,
So gross to express delight, in praise ol
her
Grew oratory. Such a lbrd la Love,
And Beauty such a mistress of the world.
The mosw agate is Rose’s talisrnanic
atone. It Insures a bold heart ami
freedom from danger, if worn as an
amulet. Tuesday is Rose’s lucky day
and 2 her lucky number. The wild
ruse is her flower.
(Copyright.)
It is the Inck of recognition given
to the fart that we are all dependent
each upon the other that leads to our
greatest troubles. It is that that pits
npital against labor and labor against
capital. It is that that causes the v/dt
between classes and the wars between
nations.
If you fully recognized your indebt
edness to your fellow -man, you would
wYlnt to help him because by doing so
you would be indirectly helping your-
elf.
If everybody in the world set out
to gouge and Cheat everybody else In
the world, it would be only a short
time before there would-be utter chaos,
commercially, and morally.
It is because only a comparative
few try at one time to get nil they
c,-in regardless of methods or results
that keeps the world on an even keel
and society from toppling to destruc
tion.
I
Smallest State in the World.
Th'O-e are several very small states
tucked away in one port of the world
or nnnilu-v. i t!ni< >t of them all
is Tavnloru. a -■’•.mil Maud north of
Sicily and • • mi 1* <■' ' *: n» 1 >r: v\, whi.-l
has
The State Board of Health urges
yon to use typhoid vaccine: use U now.
The disease has increased over -100%
in the past 30 days. Clean up your
premises and watch your food and
water supply.
The protection of the girls of our
state calls for more rigid marriage
lavs. A bill to this end will be intro
duced in the legislature this session;
give it your support.
The more wo recognize that we must
roly and depend upon each other, the
higher consideration we have for the
good of the world as a whole and the
more nearly we come to being truly
civilized.
God ’in His wisdom made no one ab
solute. -Vf
'Plie only such power that has ever
booh bestowed has been placed and
recognized by subjects who thought
they needed to be ruled, which was a
conclusion not very complimentary to
themselves.
It is really worth while for you to
think for a few minutes on what nn
inefficient and incompetent being you
are when you divorce yourself from
ail outside aid. It will help you to
be meek and In the greatest, sermon
ever preached it was said, "Blessed
are tlie meek for they shall Inherit
the earth.”
(Cdpyrlght.)
BUSINESS OPPORUNITY
If you have had any unsatisfacto
ry dealings with stock brokers or in
stock purchases, communicate with
us Immediately. Everything confi
dential. MAE & CO., 80 Wall St.,
New York City. 4t-jl0
NEEDLES and shuttles for any
kind of machine aWoe C. McCarley’s.
Hundreds of the best physicians in
Georgia are planning to spend their
vacation in Atlanta this summer, in
attendance on the Institute-Clinic of
JEroory University, week of July 11th.
Some of the lending doctors of this
country will attend.
Professional Cards
J. R. HUTCHESON
Attorney-at-Law
Office in Hutcheson Building.
C. V. Vansant
R. H. Poole
DRS. POOLE & VANSANT
Surgery and Chronic Diseases of
Women and Children a Specialty.
Phones Nos. 24, 92 and 137.
Office over Selman’s Drug Store.
R. E. HAMILTON, M. D.
lies. Phone 78. Office Phone 73
Pisenses of Heart and Lungs a
Specialty.
Office in Hutcheson Building.
Something to
Think About
By F. A. WALKER
DEPENDENT ON OT1IER8.
D ID you ever slop to realize how
dependent you are upon the
thoughts and efforts of your fellow
men?
Did you ever try to Imagine just
what would happen to you if you were
left alone on this round globe with all
Its wealth, all its resources and nil its
possibilities?
It might teach you a lesson in
humility if you gave it the proper con-
iderntlon.
The money would he worth nothing
to you for there would he no person
from whom you could buy.
You could not even be charitable
and give It away for there would be
none to accept it.
What would happen to you then
happens in a lesser measure every
day now.
“No matter where they Jive there 'a
a neerby U. S, Dealer with hi a
nearby U. S. Factory Branch”
Let up suppose you are a million
aire with plenty of money and a desire
to spend it, we will say, for a beauti
ful home.
Suppose again that the masons and
the carpenters and the plasterers and
the hundred and one other artisans
whose handiwork go into a fine home,
refused to accept your money or do
your work. How would you get your
home?
You might by dint of hard work
build yourself a shelter, but it would
not be at all whet you wanted nor In
the least what you could afford.
You see, then, that although you
were a millionaire, you are dependent
for your home comforts upon the will
ing eff«fi*ts of others.
DR. D. HOUSEWORTH
Special attention to Surgery and
Diseases of Women and Children.
Phones: Office, 106; Res., 118.
Office in Hutcheson Bldg.
ASTOR MERRITT
Attorney-at-Law
Office in the Hutcheson Building,
Douglasville, Ga.
F. M. STQWART
Dentist
Office over Selman’s Drug Store,
Douglasville, Ga.
Suppose, on the other hand, that
•on are a poor man, not poverty-
stricken, but poor in the sense of mod-
»rn fortunes.
You have saved a few hundred dol
lars, bought a bit of ground and wish
to build yourself a home.
In order to do It you have to bor-
iw money. Suppose the hank, or the
building association, or whatever or
ganization you apply to jttsi plainly
and bluntly refuses to loan you a
penny.
You will liml yourself in the same
predicament that the millionaire was
in. You cannot have the kind of
home you want and can afford. You
; re dependent on others for that.
Who says that
'bargain* tires are
what the people want
Every morning when you eat your
breakfast you are eating, in part, the
labor of hundreds of men and women.
The clothes you wear, the shoes you
walk, in, the hat that shelters your
head, all the necessities, to say noth
ing of the luxuries, you enjoy are the
fruit of your dependence upon other
people.
If you could analyze your needs for
one day and count the human beings
that labored to satisfy them with
cither toil or money, you would find
that scores and scores of people had
M OST everybody knows the
easy-going sort of man who
never takes a tire seriously until he
gets a blow-out.
How long he will resist universal
tire education is a question.
But this is sure—
They pay a net price—not "some
thing off list” that may not mean
anything in the first place.
They get fresh, live tires, being
made and shipped while this mes
sage is being written.
More people are finding out every
day that between leaving things
to luck and getting real economy
there is a big difference.
Many a car-owner has come to
U. S. Tires because he couldn't afford
to keep on paying that difference.
Probably seven out of ten users
of U. S. Tires came to them only
after they’d had enough of “dis
counts”, “bargain offers”, “clearance
sales of surplus stocks” and other
similar appeals.
No matter where they live there's
a nearby U. S. Dealer with his
nearby U. S. Factory Branch.
One of the few tires of
which it may be said that
they deliver economy
year in and year out and
tire after tire.
The U. S. Chain Tread
gives sufficient traction
on all ordinary road sur
faces. It is probably the
handsomest, and by ail
odds the most popular,
of the whole U. S. Fabric
Tire lir.e.
U. S. Tires keep moving.
No opportunity to get old and
dried out. No shifting here and there
trying to find a market.
Every U. S. Tire a good tire,
wherever you find it anywhere in
the country.
United States Tres
are Good Tires
Because the U. S. policy is a good
policy that serves the car-owner all
the time.
They have found econoiny-
they stick to it.
•and
Doing the very best for him that
human good faith can do.
U. S. USCO TREAD
U. S. CHAIN TREAD
U. S. NOBBY TREAD -
U. S. ROYAL CORD
U.S.RED & GREYTUBES
United States Tires
United States @ Rubber Company
J. R. DUNCAN
m
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