Newspaper Page Text
Helps
! Sick I
I Women j
| Cardui, the woman's !
I tonic, helped Mrs. Wil- I
iiam Eversole, of Hazel j
Patch, Ky. Read what
I she writes: “1 had a
general breaking-down j
' of my health. I was in
| bed for weeks, unable to 1
get up. I had such a
weakness and dizziness,
I ..and the pains were
, very severe. A friend
told me I had tried every
thing else, why not
Cardui ?.. . 1 did, and
soon saw it was helping
me ... After 12 bottles,
I lam strong and well.”
' TAKE
The Woman’s Tonic
Do you feel weak, diz
zy, worn-out? Is your
lack of good healtlf caused
from any of the com
plaints so common to
women? Then why not
give Cardui a trial? It
should surely do for you
what it has done for so
many thousands of other
women who suffered—it
should help you back to
health.
Ask some lady friend
who has taken Cardui.
She will tell you how it
helped her. Try Cardui.
All Druggists
J. 67
FOR SALE —A few more 35-piece
Aluminum Sets. G. M. JaCkson & Son.
Good Bread Is Half the Meal
Then make that Half
a Surety by using
jlsf
baking success. You can not fail when
you use RISING SUN FLOUR.
The select Soft Winter Wheat, the pure ingredients, the
sanitary scientific mixing, all go to set the high standard
for Rising Sun Flour. Ask your grocer for it.
Prepared only by flic. famous RED MILL, Nashville, Tenfi,
COCOTONE
SKIN WHITENER
25c BOX FREE
A Skin Bleach or Whitener for dark or brown skin, removing all
blemishes and clearing swarthy or sallow complexions and causing the
skin to Grow Whiter. Don’t envy a clear complexion use Cocotone
Skin Whitener and have one.
WHAT USERS THINK OF COCOTONE
Macon, Ga.
‘ ocotone Cos.
Dear Sirs: Send me by return mail
a l>oxes of Cocotone Skin Whitener
ud three cake® of Oocotone Skin
' ia P. They are fine and Ido not care
u> be without them. Enclose is money
order for $1.25.
Yours truly,
CLARA M. JACKSON,
Waycross, Ga.
Cocotone Cos.
Dear Friends: Your Cocotone Skin
Whitener te the finest thing I ever
w - My skin was very dark and the
* rst box has made it many shades
'ightei l , and my friends all ask me
•'hat I have been using. Enclosed you
1 find $2.00. Please send me six box
’ Whitener and two cakes of
soap.
Your® truly,
ANNA M. WHITE.
PRESIDENT WILSON MIKES APPEAL •
TO THE FARMERS OF THE COUNTRY.
My Fellow Countrymen:
The entrance of our beloved
country into the grim and terrible
war for democracy and human
rights which has shaken the world
creates so many problems of na
tional life and action which calls
for Immediate consideration and
settlement that I hope you will
permit me to address to you a few
words of earnest counsel and ap
peal with regard to them.
We are rapidly putting our navy
upon an effective war footing and
are about to create and equip a
great army, but these are the sim
plest parts of the great task to
which we have addressed our
selves. There is not a single sel
fish element, so far as I can see,
in the cause we are fighting for.
We are fighting for what we be
lieve and wish to he the rights of
mankind and for the future peace
and security of the world. To do
this great thing worthily and suc
cessfully we must devote ourselves
to the Service without regard to
profit or material advantage and
with an energy and intelligence
that will rise to the level of the
enterprise itself We must realize
to the full how great the task is
and how many things, how many
kinds and elements of capacity
and service and self-sacrifice, it
involves.
These, then, are the things we must
| (to, and do well, besides fighting—the
| things without which mere fighting
| would be fruitless:
We must supply abundant food
for ourselves and for our armies
and our seamen not only, but also
i for a large part of the nations
with whom we have now made
j common cause, in whose support
and by whose sides we shall be
fighting.
We must supply ships by the hun
dreds out of our shipyards to carry to
the other side of the sea, submarines
or no submarines, what will every day
be needed there, and abundant ma
terials out of our fields and our mines
and our factories with which not only
j to clothe and equip our own forces on
| land and sea but also to clothe and
j support our people for whom the gal
! lant fellows under arms can no longer
| work, to help clothe and equip the
! armies with which we are eo-operat-
Rising Sun
Flour
(Self-Rising and Ready Prepared)
All the ingredients already mixed
for you in proportions that assure
Montgomery, Ala.
Cocotone Cos.
Dear Sirs: I find that Cocotone Skin
Whitener is the best preparation I
have ever used to clear the skin, and
wish you would mail me two boxes at
once.
(Signed) MRS. C. P. JOHNSON.
Do not accept substitutes or imitations,
CUT THIS OUT
THE COCOTONE CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
I have never used Cocotone Skin
Whitener, but if you will send me a
25c box free, will be pleased to try it.
I enclose six 2c stamps to cover cost
of mailing, packing etc.
Name
Address
AGENTS WANTED.
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS, APRIL 26, 1917.
ing in Europe, and to keep the looms
and manufactories there in raw ma
terial; coal to keep the fires going in
ships at sea and in the furnaces of
hundreds of factories across the sea;
steel out of which to make arms and
ammunition both here and there; rails
for worn-out railways back of the
fighting fronts; locomotives and roll
ing stock to take the place of those
every day going to pieces; mules,
horses, cattle for labor and for mili
tary service; everything with which
the people of England and France and
Italy and Russia have usually sup
plied themselves but cannot now af
ford the men, the materials, or the
machinery to make.
It is evident to every thinking
man that our industries, on the
farms, in the shipyards, in the
mines, in the factories, must be
made more prolific and more
efficient than ever and that they
must be more economically man
aged and better adapted to the
particular requirements of our
task than they have been; and
what I want to say is that the men
and the women who devote their
thought and their energy to these
tilings will be serving the country
and conducting the fight for
peace and freedom just as truly
and just as effectively as the men
on the battlefield or in the trench
es. The industrial forces of the
country, men and women alike,
will be a great national, a great
international, Service Army, —a
notable and honored host engaged
in the service of tin nation and
the world, the efficient friends and
saviors of free men everywhere.
Thousands, nay, hundreds of
, thousands, of men otherwise liable
to military service will of right
and of necessity be excused from
that service and assigned to the
fundamental, sustaining work of
the fields and factories and mines,
and they will lie as much part of
the great patriotic forces of the
nation as the men under fire.
I take the liberty, therefore, of
addressing this word to the farm
ers of the country and to all who
work on the farms: The supreme
need of our own nation and of
the nations with which we are
co-operating is an abundance of
supplies, and especially of food
stuffs. The importance of an ade
quate food supply, especially for
the present year, is superlative.
Without abundant food, alike for
the armies and the peoples now at
war, the whole great enterprise
upon which we have embarked
will break down and fail. The
world’s food reserves are low.
Not only during the present
emergency but for some time af
ter peace shall have come both
our own people and a large pro
portion of the people of Europe
must rely upon the harvests in
America. Upoxi the farmers of this
country, therefore, in large meas
ure, rests the fate of the war and
the fate of the nations. May the
nation not count upon them to
omit no step that will increase the
production of their land or that
will bring about the most effectual
co-operation in the sale and dis
tribution of their products? The
time is short. It is of the most im
perative importance that every
thing possible be done and done
immediately to make sure of largo
harvests. I call upon young men
and old alike and upon the able
bodied boys of the land to accept
and act upon this duty,—to turn
in hosts to the farms and make
certain that no pains and no labor
is lacking in this great matter.
1 particularly appeal to the
farmers of the south to plant
abundant food stuffs as well as
cotten. They can show their pa
triotism in no better or more con
vincing way than by resisting the
great temptation of the present
price of cotton and helping, help
ing upon a great scale, to feed the
nation and the peoples everywhere
who are fighting for their libertie
and for our own. The variety c*.
their crops will be the visa hie
measure of their comprehension
of their national duty.
The government of the United
States and the governments of
the several states stand ready to
co-operate. They will do every
thing possible to assist farmers in
securing an adequate supply of
seed, an adequate force of labor
ers when they are most needed,
at harvest time, and the means of
expediting shipments of fertiliz
ers and farm machinery, as web
as of the crops themselves when
harvested. The course of trade
shall be as unhampered as it is
possible to make it and there
shall be no unwarranted manipula-
tion of the nation’s food supply by
those who haudle it on its way to
the consumer. This is our oppor
tunity to demonstrate the effic
iency of a great democracy and we
shall not fall short of it!
This let me say to the middlemen
of every sort, whether they are hand
ling our food stuffs or our raw mater
ials of manufacture or the products
of our mills and factories: Tho eyes
of the country will be especially uiion
you. This is your opportunity for sig
nal service, efficient and disinterested.
The country expects you, as it ex
pects all others, to forego unusual
profits, to organize and expedite ship
ments of supplies of every kind, but
especially of food, with an eye to the
service you are rendering and in the
spirit of those who enlist in the ranks,
for their people, not for themselves.
1 shall confidently expect you to de
serve and win the confidence of people
of every sort and station.
To the men who run the railways of
the country, whether they be manag
ers or operative employees, let. me say
that the railways are the arteries of
ti e nation’s life and that upon them
rest the immense responsibility of see
ing to it that those arteries suffer no
obstruction of any kind, no inefficiency
or slackened power To the merchant
let me suggest the motto, “Small prof
its and quick'service;” and to the ship
builder the thought that the life of the
war depends upon him. The food and
the war supplies must be carried
across the seas no matter how many
ships are sent to the bottom. The
places of those that go down must he
supplied and supplied at once. To the
miner let me say that he stands where
the farmer does: the work of the
world waits on him. If he slackens or
fails, armies and statesmen are help
less. He also is enlisted in the great
Service Army. The manufacturer does
not need to be told, I hope, that the
nation looks to him to speed and per
fect every process; and I want only
to remind his employees that their
service is absolutely indispensable
and is counted on by every man who
loves the country and its liberties.
Let me suggest, also, that every
one who creates or cultivates a
garden helps, and helps greatly,
to solve the problem of the feed
ing of the nations; and that every
housewife who practices strict
economy puts herself in the ranks
of those who serve the nation.
This is the time for America to
correct her unpardonable fault of
wastefulness and extravagance.
Let every man and every woman
assume the duty of careful, provi
dent use and expenditure as a
public duty, as a dictate of pa
triotism which no one can now
expect ever to be excused or for
given for ignoring.
In the hope that this statement of
the needs of the nation and of the
world in this hour of supreme crisis
may stimulate those to whom it comes
and remind all who need reminder of
the solemn duties of a time such as
the world has never seen before, I beg
that all editors and publishers every
where will give as prominent publica
tion and as wide circulation as possi
ble to this appeal. I venture to sug
gest, also, to all advertising agencies
that they would perhaps render a very
substantial and timely service to the
country if they would give it wide
spread repetition. And I hope that
clergymen will not think the theme of
it an unworthy or inappropriate sub
ject of comment ad homily from their
pulpits.
The Supreme Test of the Nation has
come. We must all speak, act, and
serve together!
WOODROW WILSON.
NIGHTS OF UNREST
No Sleep, No Rest, No Peace With a
Lame or Aching Back.
Weary the lot of many a kidney
sufferer.
Pain and distress from morn to
night.
Get up with a lame back.
Twinges of backache bother you all
day,
Dull aching breaks your rest at
night,
Urinary disorders add to your mis
ery.
If you have kidney trouble,
Reach the cause—the kidneys.
Doan’s Kidney Pills are for the kid
neys only—
Have made an enviable reputation
in Cartersville.
J. R. Trippe, farmer, 108 Carter St.,
f artersville, says: “Backache troubled
me and it was pretty severe at times.
Nights when I l2y down, my back
pained and ached and in the morning,
when I got up, I w-s sore. Doan’s Kid
ney Pills strengthened my back and
caused the kidney secretions to be
come natural.”
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t
simply ask for a kidney remedy—get
Doan s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mr. Trippe had. Foster-Milburn Cos.,
Props., Buffalo, N. Y. —(advt.)
Opened Under New Management
Sanitary Bakery
Fresh bread, rolls, pies and
cakes baked daily.
Birthday and Wedding Cakes
a Specialty.
GIVE US A TRIAL
Telephone 28 Cartersville, Ga.
\jp VT rr ~ -f /-*
ell That IS
“*&**- Coffee”
, IUZS ASKS
IX' "T £sx
' I
j I
thcßeMy-rdViorCy
The Luzianne Guarantee:
If, after using the contents
of a can, you are not satisfied
in every respect, your gro
cer will refund your money.
BIZIAMNE co ff ee
The Reily-Taylor Company, New Orleans
SONGS OF
VICTORY
THE REVIVAL AND SUNDAY SCHOOL SPECIAL
Will send sample copy to superintended:, minister •
or gospel singer for only 15c. A trial is all we ask.
Price 25c. 2:50 per dozen special rates in quantities.
THE VICTORY MUSIC CO. ATLANTA. GA.
GROCERIES
Staple and Fancy
You want the best—you want
the freshest.
When you buy from Matthews’
you arc sure to get the best and
freshest, and at prices that cannot
be duplicated.
For Honest Goods and a Square
Deal Try
F. E. Matthews
Notice is hereby given that the Commuta
tion Tax for the year 1917 is $3.00.
All persons subject to street tax may pay
this amount or work ten days upon the
streets of said city as provided by law.
The books are now open for collection
of this tax and all persons failing to pay
will be served with notice to work. By
order of the Board of Commissioners.
This March 28th, 1917.
W. W. DANIEL, City Clerk.
It’s got the smell and the smack that
make you say, “Set ’em up again.”
For it’s always fair weather when
good folks get together over a cup of
steaming, staving-good Luzianne. You
don’t buy a pig in a poke when you
buy Luzianne Coffee. No, Ma'am. It
clearly states that if it doesn’t meet
your idea of a better coffee, you’re
entitled to your money back and get
it. Buy a can of Luzianne and re
adjust your ideas of what good coffee
must be. Ask for profit-sharing catalog.
NO. 2