Newspaper Page Text
WEST GEORGIA FARMS
Are watered by the Dews of Heaven and the Springs of
The Earth. Altitude 1200 feet.
Pure Air. Best Water and Good Health.
u Z
x
h
O
h
<301 z
to < '? "X
tl oj .*
js5 i-
X H
Oi £
rt
^ fc,
Snatch this chance to get a Ga. Farm,
in a mild climate, among the foot-hills anil
be healthy and happy.
We folks are ‘Ratin’ to get good people
among us.—Come on Brother.
Branch Office
Powder Springs, Ga.
West Georgia Farms Are Cheapest
RIGHT NOW is the time to climb on the BAND WAGON and
buy a West Georgia Farm through tile
West Georgia Land Company
Douglasville, Ga.
DEALERS IN
LANDS, INSURANCE AND LOANS
Tell them your story, DO IT NOW, they’ll find what you want.
West (icorgi.i Farms arc* 1ILST
Take a Ride Out The Famous Bankhead Highway And See
Having Adopted The Slogan
“Cash Buys More”
Slaughter Barrow
Have Put On a Sale Of
Auto Accessories
That Merits Your Attention
Gas and Oil, Goodrich and Perfec-f
tion Tires. Bicycles and Parts,
Flash and Spot Lights, etc.
Cash Goes Farther
T R Y I T.
Slaughter & Barrow
McGOUIRK OLD STAND
CITY AND FARM PROPERTY
A b-room dwelling on 400 ft. square lot, in east end of
Douglasville, fronting on two streets. A very desirable place.
Terms.
Also in same section of Douglasville, a -t-room dwelling,
with all modern convenienses. This is a neat little dwelling,
and is for quick sale. Cash or terms.
One beautifully located dwelling, in desirable section of
Douglasville, together with 10 acres of land adjoining same,
This place will be sold soon, as the price is for puiek action.
A 77 acre red land farm, just east of Cithia Springs, Ga.
60 acres in cultivation, 17 acres in woods and pasture, on
which is located a good 5-room dwelling, good outbuildings
and orchard; one tenant house. Near city school. Cash or
terms.
A well located, 40-acre farm, just outside city limits of
Austell, Ga., on railroad; 00 acres in cultivation, rest in wood
land and pasture. Good dwelling and outbuilding, one tenant
house. $0,000.00. Cash or terms. »
A 100 acre farm, five miles south of Douglasville, in good
locality. 60 acres in cultivation, rest in original forest and
pasture. Two good dwellings, with good outbuildings; good
orchard; on two public roads. One of the best bargains ever
been offered in Douglas Qounty. Cash or terms.
We also have a number of other attractive offers in both
city and farm property.
Quick Loans on Real Estate.
WINN REALTY CO
Office (temporarily) in Bartlett Building
W. C. T. U. Activities
The Douglasville W. C. T. U.
met in a very interesting session
at the home of Mrs. E. M. Huffine
Monday afternoon, Jan. 9th, at
2:30 o’clock.
Mrs. D. S. Strickland, Superin
tendent of tlie department of
Child Weliare, had charge of‘the
program.
- A song, “Some Glad Day,” was
| the opening number, and was
followed with a prayer by Mrs,
A. W. McCarty.
In response to roll call, each
| member gave a Bible verse, per
taining to children.
A short business session pre
ceding the program.
The following topics were un
usually interesting, each being
presented in a very able manner.
“Sacred and Responsibilty of
Motherhood,”—by Mrs. W. M.
Hayes.
“Confidential Relations Between
Mother and Daughter”—Mrs. H.
M. Upshaw.
"Every. Child has a Right to be
Well Born,”—Mrs. T’ R. Whitley.
’’Every Child has a Right to be
Morally Safe-guarded,’’—Mrs. M-
E. Geer.
“Every Child has a Right to be
Well Educated,”—Mrs. F. M. Stew
art.
After the program, the hostess,
assisted by her sister, Miss Emma
Dorris, served a delicious salad
course.
The next meeting will be held
on Jan liSlrtl, at the home of Mrs.
J. R. Hutcheson, who will have
as joint hostess Mrs Huett.
All interested in this great work
ar cordially invited to be present.
Mrs. M. A. Maret, Secretary,
Mrs. A. W. McCarty, Bros.
LEGISLATORS SHOULD
MAKE INVESTIGATION
Will the l«*^r price of cotton and its
consufpiciiL rlepcdHsion of IniHinoHH in
our Hection of the country cause a
wave of ecoJ.o.'nY that lias potential
danger?
Tito matter of cm ting down expenses
Is one to which every community and
.every Individual shield give the clos
est attention. There is no Question
that we have I v living Beyond out
: means o»- beyond the point of sane
1 judgment. Our people nave had many
luxuries flint lin y were really not able
to afford. Tills recklessness iu llii
expenditure of money lu.f; r.ot he. n
confined to any spe -iai cia.sa: the rich
and the poor arc nlik • guilty. The tine,
for retrenchment is at hand, ami many
of us will wish '.Inn we had not spent
our money as we have. We must get
hack to our former methods of living
hut in doing so we must not begin
by curtailing approved methods of sani
tation or the eulting off of necessary
work iu tile preservation of the Indus
trial and community health. School
houses must lie built and along with
them sanitary closets; .Malaria must
be controlled so that another crop can
e planted and harvested; Typhoid Vac
cine must lie made and administered
Uiht this great scourge of our adoles
CoTit life may be averted; flies must not
l)e allowed breeding places and screens
must lie put in to prevent the spread
of diarrhoea and dysentery. Proper j
■well ha I a need diet must he had to keep
iU> .the resistance power of the inrii
viduals ami especially to avoid an in
crease in peliagru.
It is a very poor procedure to do
anything that will Invite disease. The; [
least lilt of lowering of our efforts to
supervise or do sanitary inspection or
construction is had; the cutting off ot
public money in the municipality, coun
ty or state at tills time would lie a great
; calamity. The curtailment of work of
! commissioners of health for want of
funds under the guise of economy
would he very poor judgment; in fact,
as the necessary curtailment of home
and public expenditures is sure to in
crease the incidence of disease we
should have larger, much larger, ap-
propiMations for health work; the prob
lems are going to he more extensive.
The people are not going to he able
financially to lose the time from their |
work to lie sick, and the loss to the|
community cannot lie afforded during!
the financial depression, therefore wej
urge ail Interested to see that all health
work is continued; see that your own
home Is sanitated, your water supply
properly protected. See to it that your
neighbor does his duty to liis family I
and yours; see to it that your board ‘
of health for county and city function
and that all hoards of health have am
ple funds; this is one year that we
cannot afford to be sick.
Our whole entire stock to
go regardless of cost.
J. Groodzinsky
STOLEN, OR DID SHE EAT ’EM? (
Woman Claims Ho3t Took False Teeth
—She Swallowed Them,
He Says.
New York.—The disappearance of
u set of false teeth owned by Mrs. j
Julia Hrown and her summoning of
John Mnyorowlta, on the charge of:
having stolen them when she was n '
guest at Ills house, gave Magistrate
Pouras a busy half-hour in the Essex j
Market court.
Mnyorowltz told the magistrate lie
knew nothing of the teeth, but ho-1
Moved Mrs. Hrown had swallowed |
them. He said lie was willing to pay j
for an X-ray photograph to prove it. i
Magistrate Pouras asked Mrs. [
Hrown if she would submit to being i
photographed as Mnyorowlts suggest
ed. She declared very positively that
| she would not, whereupon the case
was dismissed. Magistrate Pouras
advised Mrs. Hrown to bring a civil
suit against MnyorowiU.
Left $1,500 Estate to His Cellmate.
Fort Madison. In. — Friendship
formed inside tlie walls at the state
prison caused one prisoner to beiiueiith
Ills life savings of $1,500 to a fellow
convict. The iienetfclary was desig
nated in tlie will by his prison num
ber.
Man Used Washing Machine as Still.
Kansas Oily.—The family washing
madiInc was used hy Philip Cooper
us a still and the wringer ns a raisin
press. The concoctions produced test
ed 44 per cent, alcohol. Cooper paid
a fine of $1100 and is spending <*o duy.s
in jail.
Do you realize that the wrong
glasses might ruin your eyes,
while the right ones will strength
en and improve them. Our op
tometrist will fit you with the
kind you need. He will be at
our store again Monday, Jan. 23.
J. L. SELMAN & SON.
Don’t forget the date, i
Monday, Jan 23. Our ex- |
pert optometrist from the:
Chas. A. Green Optical Co.,
Atlanta, Ga., is to he here
again.
J. L. Selman & Son.
To Our Advertisers
He who finds he has some=
thing to sell
And goes and whispers it
down a well,
Is not so apt to catch the
dollars
As he who climbs a tree
and hollers.
■-Author Unknown.
Free for 25 Trade-Marks
Lickety-Split
School Outfit
Free for
25
Trade-Marks
Free for
25
Trade-Marks
Oh! Girls! Oh! Boys! Look! Lickity-Split School Outfit for nothing!
Whole box of black and colored pencils, erasure, rubber bands, penholder
pen, ’n everything. And you can have ’em without paying any money!
Giant penholder — big yellow one -good, easy writing pen. Fits your hand
fine. Hard leads and soft leads. Purple leads and red leads. Rubbers in
the ends of the pencils.
And ail free for only 25 trade marks taken
from any of these soaps: Grandma’s White
Naphtha, Export Borax, Grandma’s White
Laundry, Grandma’s Powdered Soap, Oval
Pearl Soap, or any other Globe Soap Company
soaps. If your mother doesn’t use these soaps
now, tell her you want her to use them so
The Globe Soap Company,
IT {HI \w3VAJL
you can get this fine Lickity - Split School
Outfit. It’s great for a Christmas present.
Just collect trademarks. Mail them to us and we
will send you at once the
Lickety spiit School Outfit.
Be sure to write your name
and address plainly.
Cincinnati, Ohio
PEARL
Vhire
A Good Yellow Laundry
Soap — a Wonderful
Wether. Sc.
BUY THIS SOAP AT
The N. B. & J. T. Duncan Co., Mozley Bros. A. T. Brittain