The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, April 12, 1917, Image 12

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Assets, 563 Millions Organized 1858 The Equitable oi New York Offers a Sew Policy 6. Anew policy tinder which double the amount of the insurance is paid in the event of death from accident. This policy also provides that if the person whose life is insured becomes totally and permanently disabled the follow ing special advantages will result: tat. Thereafter the Equitable will carry the insurance —The In sured will have nothing further to pay. (b) The Equitable will then pay the Insured an annual income /or life equal to one-tenth of the face of the policy. (c) Upon the death of the In sured the full amount of the insur ance will be tiaid to the Benefic iary (or double the amount if death is due to accident) without •deduction on account of the in come paid to the Insured while living WHAT IS LAX-FOS LAX-FOS IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA A Digestive Laxative CATHARTIC AND LIVER TCNIC Lax-Fos is not a Secret or Patent Medi cine but is composed of the following old-fashioned roots and herbs: CASCARA BARK BLUE FLAG ROOT RHUBARB ROOT BLACK ROOT MAY APPLE ROOT SENNA LEAVES AND PEPSIN In Lax-Fos the Cascara is improved by the addition of these digestive ingredi ents making it better than ordinary Cas cara, and thus the combination acts not only as a stimulating laxative and cathar tic but also as a digestive and liver tonic. Syrup laxatives are weak, but Lax-Fos combines strength with palatable, aro matic taste and does not gripe or disturb the stomach. One bottle will prove Lax-Fos is invaluable for Constipation, Indigestion or Torpid Liver. Price 50c. Eiuvre ,LY INVITED i I ztz OUR GUEST i 1 i ' tl. TO a P- M. 11 ►ut There will be more than a million bottles of ro- CHERO-COLA served free to visitors of the en many CHERO-COLA Bottling Plants on this —— m. date-—April 18th. L—- tan a hundred thousand merchants I 1 1 | ill have their stores decorated with 1 ! Z display advertising matter for this / - I 1 Lsumers who appreciate CHERO- I—- ry Package” idea will again welcome 7 —- lie to see for themselves the modern -—i n, cleansing and re-filling employed Plants throughout the country. ; 0- National Chero-Cola Day, you will note, is an 1 ■ j n- educational feature of our advertising campaign. I * A We want the public to know what CHERO- ter COTA is. e want the public to know why it is ot- served only in bottles. We want you to visit 1 i of our plant and see for yourself—at the same time | act receive booklets telling the whole story. Don t | { fail to come—April 18th. j | \\w Cos., carTe^ville“g! 2 OBITUARY MRS. GEORGE M. MONTGOMERY. .Mrs George M. Montgomery died at Per home in St. Louis Saturday night, March 31st, and her remains were : rought to Cartersville and interred M Oak Hill cemetery the following Wednesday morning. .Mrs. Montgomery, as a maiden, was Miss Willie Stalling and was born in f hatooga county itt 1864, the daughter of Capt. and Mrs. John W. Starling, who w - ere prominent citizens in that day and time. In 1883 she married George M. Montgomery, the son of Gol. and Mrs. J. G. M. Montgomery who came to Cartersville in 1867 and rook high rank among the leading and most highly esteemed citizens of Bar tow county. Mr. and Mrs. Montgomery's early tarried life was s]>ent in Carters ville, ! but for the past fifteen years their j icme has been at St. Louis, where Mr. Montgomery holds a responsible and lucrative position with ot;e oi the • 'eading department bouses of ilia' '■ city. Mrs. Montgomery L survived by her husband and by one son. Robert S. Montgomery, of Richmond, Va., and by,one daughter, Mrs. Wii’iam Lucas, f Wichita, Kansas; also by her moth er, Mrs. Mary E. Starling, of Sanford, ’/la., and two brothers, Mr. B. .1. Star ling, of Sanford, Fla., and Mr. C. H. Starling, of Decatur, (la. The- death of Mrs. Montgomery j brought a wave of sorrow into the homes of many relatives and friends who through the years have held her in loving remembrance. These met to pay their last tribute upon the arrival r.f the remains here and an impressive service was conducted by Rev. John G Logan, pastor of the Sam Jones Memorial church, at the grave. Among those attending the funeral from a distance, besides the husband and son were: Mrs. John H. Cleghorn, of Summerville; Mrs. Ennis and Miss Piuma Ennis, of Rome; Mrs. Chidsey, of Rome; Mr. W. A. Wheeler, of Mar ietta. Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days Your druggist will refund money if TA7O OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind,BleedingorProtruding Piles in 6tol4days. The first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c. THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CAR -ERSVILLE NEWS. APRIL 12, 1917^ it is within the power of each and every individual, man, woman and child in America to be a soldier at this time. The government has the power to DUt a sufficient number upon the field of battle, but it needs also scldicrs who will resolve to raise food products to keep us from starvation ?nd to maintain our armies in the field. The boys are doing their part with their corn clubs, the girls are do irig their's in their canning clubs, and another class are doing their’s with their pig clubc. Let every adult, mars and woman, turn his or her hand to ward something that means food pro. dtiction. These are the soldiers that are needed now. Influence Of County Agents’ Work By J. Phil Campbell, Director Of Exten sion, State College Of Agriculture Much has been written about the county agents’ activities in agricultural development. Great progress lias been made ui the state of Georgia in in creasing the output per acre, and con sequently the total out-put of our vari ous farm crops and five stock. What per cent of this increase is due to county agents’ efforts can not always be determined. Neither does the coun ty agent wish to claim everything in the way of agricultural improvement that has been accomplished. Prof. J. Phil Campbell, I Dear Sir: Last January in Athens 1 spoke to you about Mr. Ross M. Gridley doing some hog demonstration work in my county this year. You told me to take it tip with you by letter when 1 came home. I have been so unusually busy this spring that I have forgotten it on office days, but. I am very anxious about the matter. if Wayne county ever shipped out a, car load of hogs until lasi year 1j have not been able to learn anything' about it. During the past season one buyer has shipped two carloads of hags • besides the other stock. The cold storage plant which I was instrumental! in having built has long ago destroyed their advei : sing matter because they did not have room for additional meat They will double the capacity of the plant this year. They had as much as sixty tons of meat on hand at one time. This gives you an idea of the interest that is being aroused along that line. One of our wealthiest citizens told | me recently that my activities along I that line had been worth far more to 1 the county than my services had ever ! cost the county, but 1 need help. How about it? Very truly yours, j p. SHEDD, County Agent. The above private letter asking for lido gives one little instance of what a county has done under the agent’s direction. Similar instances can be found in every county in the state. Uountv agents have been employed in more than one hundred counties of t} )e state and district agents and spe cialism have been at work in every county. Some line of extension activ ity is carried on in every part of geor gia The persistent call from various ources for the production of more food crops and live stock is being met. I• rakes time to make any change worth while. In the end, we shall find Georgia producing cotton as a surplus crop. Orchard Notes For April T. H. McHatton. Prof. Of Horticulture, Ga. State College Of Agri. The fertilizer as recommended last month should be applied by this time. The orchard should also have received j ; ls plowing, and cultivation should be j continued throughout April. The or- j ebard should he gone over completely ai least twice with a spring tooth or i ?pi lie tooth harrow. The trees need j a lot of moisture at this time, and j everything should be done to conserve : it for them. The spraying for Curculio and Cod- ; ling Moth, as well as for some other ; insects and diseases, should be per formed this month, as recommended in another column. Grapes should be sprayed this month with Bordeaux mixture, which is made as follows: 3 pounds of copper sul pha’e dissolved in 25 gallons of wa ter, 6 pounds quick lime, slaked and i made up to 25 gallorfe with water. The two materials should then be poured together through a fly-screen, making r,o gallons Bordeaux mixture. This material should be applied to grapes every three weeks from the time be fore they hi om until a month or six weeks before the fruit is ripe. By fol lowing this system, grapes can be grown most free from rot. Sweet Potato Growers Should Plan Far Storing Grops M. C. Gay, Field Agent in Marketing, Ga. State College Of Agriculture If the producers will look into the market for sweet potatoes they will he convinced of the necessity of a more rational method of handling the crop than the cne followed by the av erage grower. According to the government cr:p rc'iort, Georgia produced 7,520,00.) bushels in 1916. The best authority on the subject estimates that 25 to 40 per cent of the sweet- potato crop in the South spoils each year, and that the remainder is badly damaged. Ex periment?. with storage houses built according to the government plan show conclusively that sweet potatoes can he kept any winter and till late in the spring with very little loss, thus enabling the producer to get a much greater return for his crop. In our investigations we have not found a sin gle instance in which the potatoes stored in houses were being sold for less than $1 a bushel. In some in stances they have brought $1.25 f. o. b. shipping point. Just now yellow pota toes whieh have beAi kiln dried, grad ed and carefully packed are quoted as high as $2.25 on some of the larger markets. Bulletins and other information on this subject may be had by writing the State College of Agriculture, Athens, Georgia. Stomachic | Cne Dose of Mayr’s Wonderful Rem , edy Drives Them Out —Ends Torture. i Stomach poisons breed millions of i germs that eat into your vitals, caus ing Gas Pressure, Indigestion, Consti pation, Torpid Liver, Auto-In/toxica ; tion, Yellow Jaundice, Gall Stones, Appendicitis, Cancer and Ulcers of the Stomach aird Intestines, etc., etc. Thousands of sufferers have been re stored by Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, among them Justice of the Supreme Court. Congressmen, Doctors, Law yers, Bankers, Ministers, Nurses, Farmers, Mechanics —persons of- ev- cry class —probably your own neigh bors. Stomach troubles are due most ly to catarrhal ]>oison Mayr’s Wonder ful Remedy removes that poison, thoroughly cleanses the system, drives out the disease breeding germs, al lays inflammation and ends suffering. Unlike any other remedy. No alcohol nothing to injure you. One does con vinces. FREE book on Stomach Ail ments. Write Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist, Chicago, or obtain a bottle of Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy from Young Bros. Drug Cos., or any reliable druggist, who will return your money if it fails. — (advt.) WHEN EASTERTIDE COMES ’ROUND we generally think the time for using very much coal is over, but there will be a good many days yet when a fire will feel good, so don’t let your coa! supply run out. We will deliver you coal in any quantity, and get it to you promptly, for we always have a large supply on hand. Send us your order. L. F.Shaw& Sons Cos. All parties holding or having in their pos session Ba. tow Coun ty (Ga.) Warrants of 1915 issue will please AT ONCE present them to the County Treasurer for pay-, ment on sight. Don’t delay. Interest on them discontinues after this notice. 1 G. H. GILREATH, ; County Treasurer and Clerk. This March 8,1917 ■ . ■I in lhis Sun.l , t .r H n puliiftir thu >i-.- \■> C Sj t JyifeOO, commit iCi ./ ' uy * iijotor—7 lorv.- u t ; ■ ff ti 1 1 - j % ■. • .•'■ *- . - ...A-;. ~- ,;, v • J