Newspaper Page Text
HOUGLAS COUNTY SENTINEL
JULY 15 1921
RAILWAY
SYSTEM .
FROM ATLANTA
Convenient Schedules
Attractive Service
Inquire
V. L. Estes, D. P. A., Broad
Walton Sts., Atlanta, Ga.
Hundreds of the best physicians in
Georgia are planning to spend their
vacation in Atlanta this summer, in
attendance on the Institute-Clinic of
Emory University, week of July 11th.
Borne of the leading doctors of this
country will attend.
TIMBER WANTED
Wanted to buy timber suitable foi
cord wood, excelsior wood, saw logs
cross ties, etc. Will buy standing or
delivered at railroad siding. For in
formation apply at The Sentinel of-
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
Professional Cards
ASTOR MERRITT
Attorney-at-Law
Office in the Hutcheson Iiuilding,
Douglasville, Ga.
F. M. STEWART
Dentist
Office over Selman's Drug Store,
Douglasville, Ga.
Office in Hutcheson Building.
J. R. HUTCHESON
Attorney-at-Law
R. E. HAMILTON, M. D.
Res. Phone 78. Office Phone 73
Diseases of Heart and Lungs a
Specialty.
Office in Hutcheson Building.
K. H. Poole C. V. Vansant
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.
DR. D. HOUSEWORTH
Special attention to Surgery and
Diseases of Women and Children.
Phones: Office, 106; Ites., 118.
Office in Hutcheson Bldg.
FARM WANTED
1 want to hear from party having
farm tor sale. Give pri.e and de
scription.—E. B. Howard, Cham
paign, Illinois.
- LOST—One White Bob-tail July
hound. $10.00 reward offered for any
- .r—Vnd'ng to its recovery.
B kJo:-, Mr
rr averts
sealed in by kasTmi
SOUTHERN RAILWAY SYSTEM
Passenger Train Schedules
For Atlanta and Points East
Lv. Douglasville 5:21) A.M.
“ ' “ 0:53 A*M.
“ *• 10:53 A.M.
“ 9:38 P.M.
For Birmingham and Points West
Lv. Douglasville 0:53 A.M.
“ “ 5:53 P.M.
« “ 0:27 P.M.
“ “ 11:52 P.M.
N. P.—Schedule figures are shown
only a? 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.
WANTED—Salesmen to sell tires
direct from factory to user. Ex
ceptionally good commission. A 11
or spare time. Address Burr Oak
Cord Tire Co., Burr Oak, Mich. 2t
NEEDLES and shuttles for any
kind of machine at Joe C. McCarley’s.
DRUG FORMULAS
PUT IN CHINESE
Translation of United States
Pharmacopoeia Will Aid
Drugmakers and Scientists.
GERMANY TRIED TO GRAB IT
Attempted Before the War to Corner
Drufl Trade in China—Use of Dif
ferent Standards Has Been
Confusing and Dangerous.
Philadelphia. — The United States
Pharmacopoeia is being translated
Info the Chinese language, it has just
been announced by the Philadelphia
College of Pharmacy and Science.
Through the adoption of the American
standard formulas for drugs and medi
cines, which the pharmacopoeia will
give, it is expected American drug
manufacturers will benefit greatly.
Professors and alumni of the local
institution, according to the statement
it issued, are contributing more than
any other city or institution to the
work.
The statement follows:
“Germany, before the World war,
tried every means within her power to
have the German pharmacopoeia
translated into Chinese so that Ger
man manufacturers might export to
Chinn‘drugs of German standards. Tt
is understood that since the war Great
Britain has been trying to have the
British pharmacopoeia Introduced for
the benefit of British, manufacturers.
Praises Philadelphia Body.
"That, both of them have failed is due
not to the efforts of American drug
manufacturers, hut to the merit of the
work of the pharmaceutical labora
tories of the Philadelphia College of
Pharmacy pharmacopoeia! revision
committee, of which E. Fullerton Cook,
director of the pharmaceutical labora
tories of tlie Philadelphia College of
Pharmacy and Science, is chairman.
“The United States Pharmacopoeia
is a collection of official formulas of
standard • drugs and chemicals for
making various compounds or simple
preparations. It Is published by the
United States Pharmacopoeia! conven
tion. under the authority of ihe gov
ernment, and. under the national food
and drug act of TfiOfi, it provides the
legal standards of strengths, qualities,
proportions, etc.
Thirty Different Formularies.
“There are about thirty different
pharmacopoeias in the world, the most
important being the British, French,
Belgian, Swiss, German, Austrian and
Howard CadSo Eecoivses Chris
tian When Ha Receives
Warning From Doctor.
Today He Has a Six-Figuce Income,
Beautiful Homo, servants and
Everything—Spends Part of His
Time in Evangel.cal Work.
Indianapolis.-—-it you had “gone
| broke ’ and worked ais a purler in a
i silicon and on the “mop gang" of a
! janitor's force ami limn in u few years
had made a million dollars, how would
you enjoy itV
E. Howard Cadle id' Indianapolis is
tin* man who was the saloon porter
and the mop handler.
b'nn.eililng like live years ago Cadle
and his wife ami children were living
in poverty in Orleans, lnd. He was
the object of the rough humor of the
I men who patronized the saloon where
lie werked.
Today Cadle lias a six-figure income
j and u line home ami servants; and
already is planning how io spend the
coining winter.
He has decided to go on the road
with Gypsy Smith, the evangelist, ami
Mrs. Cadle will accompany him.
To Tell Life Story.
The Gypsy Smith meetings will he-*
gin at Omaha and Mr. ami Mrs. Cadle
will continue with the evangelist
throughout the winter.
“I will make all the necessary ar
rangements for the meetings and will
talk to overllow meetings, telling them
tin* story of my life,” says Cadle. Hi*
already lias been foremost in promot- I
ing Gypsy Smith meetings at Louis-
vijle and in Indianapolis.
After the Louisville meeting Cadle
bought ground and built a permanent
tabernacle in that city. On the wall
is a tablet bearing the following in
scription :
“Erected by E. Howard Cadle in
honor of his mother, whose prayers
saved him from a drunkard’s and gam
bler’s grave.”
Cadle was horn thirty-seven years
ago at Salem, lnd. He myrtle money
rapidly at Intervals, umrfoat it just
as rapidly.
His mania for gambling was so
strong, he says, that he would bet on
any chance. For Instance, with two
raindrops running down a board, he
would bet which would reach the bot
tom first.
He was receiving $8 a week for ids
work as saloon porter when n doctor
told him lie had only four months to
live. Cadle says this was his first
real awakening.
He went back to hltt mother’s home
and there he told her he had decided
to live a Christian life.
Becomes Auto Salesman.
After ups and downs, he sought em
ployment as an automobile salesman.
In this job he achieved the record of
selling a car a day for a year.
Finally, after he had paid off his
debts he had $200, and with this he
started in the shoe repair business.
After a little while he organized a
company, then found himself in dis
agreement with others In the company,
and It was necessary for him to get
out or buy the others out.
But he had nothing like the amount
of money required for the purchase.
He happened to think of James P.
Goodrich, whom he had seen when the
latter was governor of Indiana and
Cadle was on the Janitor’s force at
the statehouse.
He went to Goodrich and told him
of hifi predicament. Goodrich wrote
out a check to Cadle for $25,500. Cadle
1 lien became president of the company
and Goodrich vice president.
Today the concern has 10 establish
ments in the following cities: Chi
cago, Cincinnati, Louisville, Evans
ville, IihL, Terre Haute, lnd.. Colum
bus/O., Fort Waynfe, lnd., Indianapo
lis and Dayton.
It is not an easy Task for Cadle to
tell his life story. There are tears In
Ills eyes when bo frankly says that In
the old days he was not worthy the
unstinted devotion iiis wife gave him.
But the old days are gone and Mr.
arid Mrs. Cadle now are happy ip giv
ing their time and their money to the
cause of evangelism.
Cadle’s slogan befits his business:
“It’s never too late lo mend!”
X-RAY ROOMS ARE DANGEROUS
Doctor Reports Neighbors of Labora
tories in Paris Have Been
Injured.
Paris.—X-ra.vs pass through hriek
walls and have injured persons In
buildings adjoining laboratories, mem
bers of the Academy of Sciences have
just been told by Prof. Contremoulln,
a radiograph expert.
He advised that X-ray laboratories
be completely enclosed in lend sheet
ing a quarter of an ineb thick.
It has been found, Dr. Contremoulln
said, that rnvs sufficiently powerfuj to
be useful In treating cancer, have af
fected persons in rooms on other side
of thick walls and in apartments above
and below the radiograph room.
His Own Stepfather.
Martlnsburg, W. Va.—Charles Lentz
is his own stepfather and stepdaddy to
his five brothers and sisters. He mar
ried his stepmother, Mrs. Mary
Frances Lentz,
DOUGLAS COUNT SENTINEL j
Official Organ of Douglas County.
RALPH MEEKS, Pub.
MISS EULA KING, Man. Editor
Publislad Every Friday
SUBSCRIPTION $1,613 PEP, YEAR
Brookyn Communist Tells of Tor
ture in Russian Prisons to
Force ‘'Confessions.”
MEETS DEPORTEES IN JAIL
Found Twenty Men Shipped Out of
the United States in Various Pris
ons in Moscow—Many Promi
nent Men Also Prisoners.
Reval, Est lamia.—The worst phase
of imprisonment in Moscow is not the
possibility or probability of execution,
but the daily attempts made to wring
confessions from the prisoners, says
Dr. Morris Zuckor, a Brooklyn com
munist, who arrived here recently af
ter having served four months in. the
Russian jails.
Zijekoy was sentenced In New York
in 19H1 to fit) years’ imprisonment for
sedition, hut was deported instead.
Speaking of the life of the prisoners
in the principal political prison at Mos
cow, which Is called the “O. O. V.,” he
said, “the daily third degree to whi?h
prisoners are subjected if they are sus
pected of a serious political crime is
worse than .execution.
Torture Repeated Daily.
“These prisoners are taken every
day, if their captors think there is a
chance of wringing a confession from
them, into the questioning room
There, whether they have anything to
confess or not, they are commanded to
‘reveal the truth.’
“The commissar puts a revolver to
the prisoner’s head. 'Confess, or I’ll
shoot,’ he commands. The prisoner
waits frr the shot. He never knows
whether it is coming or not.
“This process is often repeated un
til the prisoner will confess rather
than undergo any further ordeals, iu
which case In* is shot anyway."
Meets Deported Radicals in Jail.
The mental condition of these prison
ers becomes such that they would pre*
'' ' 11 -*
'el* donth, said i motor Zuckor. The
Brooklyn communist says that he met
in the various prisms of Moscow 20 of
the radicals <je.uor!e.l from America and
that he could well understand why the
Bolshevik! arrested them, for they were
i-lilolly anarchists who did not believe
in any government, “particularly in a
.ovorniiTent so dictatorial ns that
maintained by ihe Ilolshoviki.”
Zuckor - aid he found in prison ul-i.
the president of the Turkestan soviet
republic. Mohammed Hndjiz; Gen.
Alex Gert.nr. mire romiimmler of tin
ihim-iun sum liv.fsi.i.ni front; eiu'i.i
members of the executive committee »>.
tin* right wing of the social revolution
ist party, three members of tin* execu
tive committee of the left wing ot
that, party, including Mayorleff, who
was commissar of agriculture, in 101*.
and also a former minister of ecclesi
astical affairs. M. Smiiami.
Zuckor described tin* summoning of
prisoners for execution in much tin*
same way as did Schwartz, the San
Francisco communist, who came out
of Russia snme months ago.
VIENNA BANKS GET IN JAM
Deposits Fail to Increase for Three
Months and Aid Is Sought
From Government.
Vienna.—Bank deposits here re
mained virtually stationary for three
months, thus forcing the hanks to
resort to emergency measures to meet
demands of large depositors for pay
rolls and Similar purposes.
They are depositing securities with
the government and having money
printed to order.
The curious situation is ascribed
principally to 11A• law governing de
positors, whi*h requires a complete
identification of the individual. Many
persons object to this, not wishing to
disclose their assets for taxation and
preferring to have many small bank
accounts under different: names. Tin*
cankers have asked for repeal of the
law.
Another explanation is that there Is
so little faith in the Austrian crown
that: the people spend it as fast ns
they get It for something of tangible
values
USE CURRENCY AS HANDBILLS
Criticisms of Berlin Government Are
Written on the Margins of Bank
Notes.
Berlin.—Widespread use has been
made of German paper money for
propaganda and political purposes and
tin* directorate of the Kelclis bunk has
decided that hereafter notes defaced
with inscriptions, caricatures or stick
ers may be cashed only at the bank’s
home office iu Berlin.
feiil v;an worik aiK ^ run-down,”
M relates Mrs. Eula Burnett, of
Dalton, Ga. "I was thin and
t/Jj just felt tired, all tlio time.
I didn’t rest well. I wasn’t
fo: ever hungry. I knew, by
this, I needed a tonic, and
Tie Woman’s Tonic I
... I began using Cardui,”
continues Mrs. Burnett.
“After my first bottle, I slept
better and ate better. I took
four bottles. Now I’m well,
feel just fine, eat and sleep,
my skin is clear and I have
gained and sure feel that
Cardui Is the best tonic ever
made.”
Thousands of other women
have found Cardui just as
Mrs. Burnett did. It should
help you.
At all druggists.
EL 87
Honolulu, T. IT.—rti'linbllltatlon of
the Hawaiian raw l>.v placing govern
ment lands at that people’s disposal
will go to congress In a new form, if
a eoncurrent resolution with concrete
proposals attached Introduced by Sena
tor John Wise weathers legislative
investigation and debate.
Rehabilitation proposals went to the
last congress! but languished In the
senate si Washington after passing
the house when strong opposition de
veloped from the landed Interests of
Hawaii.
The new plan would provide for the
creution of a Hawaiian homes commis
sion to father the project; the confin
ing of grants of land to Hawaiian*
Had half Hawalluns, Instead of to
those down to one thirty-second
Hawaiian, and an experiment with
pineapple lands of the Island of Molo
kai for live years before the scope
of the project Is enlarged to take In
other aereage.
T HE Buick Valve-In-Head motor car is interna
tionally recognized as the “first choice car.”
It has gained this unusual distinction through i
twenty years of dependable service.
Motor car purchasers have watched the perform
ance of the thousands of Buick cars in daily i
operation and they have witnessed their wonder
ful efficiency and endurance. Buick speed and j
power have proven to their satisfaction that
“there is no substitute” for the Buick Valve-In-
* Head, and these buyers are demanding the Buick
and patiently waiting for their local dealer’s
ability to deliver;
Each week and month this list of buyers steadily
increases—those who delay in placing their orders
early must expect a longer delay in ownership.
Prices f. o. b. Flint, Michigan
Model K-44 - $1595.00 Model K-46 - $2215.00 Model K-4» - $18f>5.00
Model KT-43 - $1585.00 Model K-47 - $2405.OH Model K-50 - $2885.00
Prizes Revised April J, 1S20
When better automobiles arc built, Buick will build them
PAUL D. SELMAN, Dealer