The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, May 17, 1917, Image 7

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Ii GASOLINE dealers TO SELL FOR CASH ONLY. u the undersigned agree from May ;,i7, will sell gasoline only for ( A RTERSVILLE XJARAGE, By Geo. C. Tinsley. I MPKIN hardware CO. renfroe garage, ,;.erl H. Renfroe, Prop. , • n; VULCANIZING & SERVICE STATION, By L. A. Jenkins, i,'NIGHT MERCANTILE CO\ Nt 1 a wagon? Let ns talk to you : a ] ;o i • rhe MITCHELL line. See W. H. Field, Agent. MRS. KERN’S ADVICE Xo Weak, Nervous, Run-Down Women So. Cumberland, Md.—“ For a long time I suffered from a nervous break down. I could not eat or sleep and was go weak I could hardly walk. My hus band heard about Vinol and got me to trv it. Now I have a good appetite, elecp soundly and am well and strong. Every nervous, weak, run-down woman should try Vinol.”'—Mrs. D. W. Kerns We guarantee Vinol to create healthy appetite, aid digestion ; build up weak, run-down women, ’ cate children and feeble old peo. - Gilreath-Champion Drug Cos. FOR SALE —A few more 35-p!ece Aluminum Sets. G. M. Jackson & Son. Clear Your Complexion with This -f I Old Reliable f I Remedy — NN^HaNCOCK Sulphur Compound For pimples, black-heads, freckles, blotches and tan, as well as for more serious face, scalp and body eruptions, hives, eczema, etc., use this scientific compound of sulphur. Asa lo tion, it soothes and heals; taken internally— a ! • drops in a glass of water—it gets at the rout of the trouble and purifies the blood. F ,lcians agree that sulphur is one of the i; . t effective blood purifiers known. Re member, a good complexion isn’t skin deep —it’s health deep. Be sure to ask for HANCOCK SULPHUR COMPOUND.' It has been used with satis factory results for over 25 years. 50c and $1 the bottle at your druggist’s. If he can’t supply you, send his name and the price in stamps and we will send you a bottle direct. HANCOCK LIQUID SULPHUR COMPANY Baltimore. Md. I H. ti Sulphur Compound Olnt r —25 and 50c—forjiu with tht / 1 Compound. v A-... ' U 8 W Tit WWWW For Vtfeak Women In use for over 40 years! Thousands of voluntary letters from women, tell ing of the good Cardui has done them. This is the best proof of the value of Cardui. It proves that Cardui is a good medicine for women. There are no harmful or habit-forming drugs in Cardui. It is composed only of mild, medicinal ingredients, with no bad after-effects. TAKE CARDIN The Woman’s Tonic You can rely on Cardui. Surely it will do for you what it has done for so many thousands of other women! It should help. “I was taken sick, seemed to be ... ," writes Mrs. Mary E.Veste, of Madison Heights, Va. “1 got down so weak, could hardly walk . . . just staggered around. • . . I read of Cardui, and after taking one bot tle, or before taking quite all, 1 felt much better. I took 3 or 4 bottles at that time, and was able to do my work. I take it in the spring when run down. I had no appetite, and I commenced eating. It is the best tonic I ever saw ” Try Cardui. All Druggists I. TO DIXIE HIGHWAY MAKING PROGRESS. It is confidently expected that the report which will be made at the an nual meeting of the Board of Directors of the Dixie Highway Association in Chattanooga, Monday, May 21, will give assurance of a travelable high way along the eastern division be tween Cincinnati and Chattanooga by November of this year. The progress, it is understood, has been highly grat ifying to the members of the executive committee who have been in close touch with the various details of the work. The report of President'Allison to the board will show that the mile age of ungraded and unsurfaced road along the highway has been reduced more than forty per cent to less than 10 per cent of ungraded road and less than 20 per cent of unsurfaced road. From reports received from 115 coun ties of 171, the mileage of the highway which has not been graded will not ex ceed eight per cent and the mileage of unsurfaced road will not go beyond 15 per cent by the close of this year, ac cording to definite plans made or work under way for this year. Only a small portion of this unsurfaced mileage will be on the eastern and western divis ions of the Dixie Highway from Chica go and Detroit to Jacksonville. As it has been impossible for the tourist of the past season to observe the progress which is being made on such gaps to through travel as be tween Richmond, Kentucky and Kftox ville, Tennessee and between Nash ville and Chattanooga as well as on sections of the highway in Michigan and Florida, where extensive work is being carried .on, it will no doubt be difficult for them to appreciate how much has been accomplished. The members of the Hamilton Coun ty Dixie Highway Council of Cincin nati and the Cincinnati Automobile Club will have an opportunity of see ing for themselves May 18th, some thing of the progress made on the highway between Cincinnati and Berea, Ky., and at the meetings In Berea and Richmond will hear from the Fisdal Courts of the progress which has been made in the counties of Rockcastle, Laurel, Knox and Bell in Kentucky and Claiborne and Union in Tennessee. Cars from Lexington and other points between Cincinnati and Berea will join in the run. PLACES ORDER FOR NEW -LOCOMOTIVES. The Nashville, Chattanooga t St. Louis Railway has placed an order with the Baldwin Locomotive Works for ten new Mikado type freight lo comotives, and while these engines are of practically the same type as engines purchased a little more than a year ago, increasing costs of mater- j lals will make these engines cost-tire road approximately twice whaUJie same engines cost a year ago—and de- ; li\ery cannot be made before Novem- | ber. j The locomotive order is cited merely | to show that while the railroads are j forced to pay materially increased prices for equipment and practically everything else that enters into the operation "and maintenance of the road, that the price of the only thing the railroad has to sell —service —has remained the same. It is these mounting costs that have prompted the heads of the country’s great transportation systems to ap peal to the Interstate Commerce Com mission for authority to increase their rates. The “conscientious objector” cry that the railroads have enjoyed a pros perous year and that their earnings have been something “tremendous.” It is true that the reads have had in creased revenues, but these increases have not been in proportion to the increasing costs in operation, and while the railroads of the country made a splendid'showing last year in earnings, statistics show that they earned less than 6 per cent on the cap ital invested in these great properties. g jn| AYhite KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT ForMens.^w THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS, MAY 17, 1917. Professional Cards HOWARD E. FELTON, M. D. Office 2 1-2 West Main Street, (ever Yeung Bros. Drug Store Office Telephone No. 33 Residence Telephone No, 175 SAM”M. HOWELL, M. D, Office over Soheuer Bros. Residence Telephone No. 255 DR. C. H GRIFFIN, DENTIST Office in Walton Building CARTERSVILLE, GA. Iffice Phone 191, .Residence Phone 241 CLAUDE C. PITTMAN LAWYER Represents National Surety Company, ‘The Largest and Strongest in the World.” J. H. WHITAKER Attorney-at Law Office in First National Bank Bldg. Honey to loan on improved farm lands at 6%; prompt service. Cartersville, Georgia H. W. CALDWELL, Veterinary Surgeon At Jones & Oglesby Stable Uay Phone 143. Night Phone 388. Calls will receive my prompt atten tion. £ GEO. H. AUBREY, AMorney-at-Lavv, Fire Insurance. Cartersville, Georgia. - 1 We Carry a Complete Line of Coffins, Caskets and Robes. G. M. JACKSON & SON, Cartersville, Ga. W. W. PHILLIPS Civil Engineer County Surveyor Surveys of all kinds — Maps, Profile Specifications Furnished. Phone 430 Cartersville, Ga. Finley&Henson 4ttorneys=at=Law Loans Negotiated on Real Estate, Improv ed City Property and Farm Lands at 6 per Cent Interest. . . . Carters vi lie, :: Georgia Call 244 or 246 for Tip-Top or But ter-Nut Bread. Money to Lend At Low Cost Paul F. Akin i Cartersville | Lodge No. 142 I. o. O. F. Regular meetings, first and third Thursday nights of each month at 8:00 o’clock. FARMERS KNOW 6ESI 10 PLANT. Editor Tribune-News- Dear Sir; In your recent issues I have read with a great deal of interest, your suggestions on raising food and garden products and 1 think your articles are more tkgn timely. The only thing that I could add is this: Every farmer in Bartow county knows ten tunes as much about rais ing cotton, corn, or wheat as you'or I and it would be useless to try’ to tell them anything along these lines. My experience has been that the of ficials tell us to diversify, but don’t tell us how or when to plant, how to cultivate and how to harvest. I have found that there Is not a plant or fruit that will mature in pay ing quantities in this section except for a very short season unless handled in some unusual wav. We have peaches here all the way from .May 20, to October 10, but I have never seen one that would ripen in any other month but July that did not have some draw back which prevent ed it from being profitable, bad qual ity, poor shipper or shy bearer. I have been forced at different times to dig up over ten thousand trees on this re count that wqre represented to me to J be all O. K. by the nurserymen. I 1 As an example, I have been planting j Valentine beans, one of the best, all my life, but have never made my seed back on any planted, later than the 15th of May. I have never made any coilards planted earlier than the 15th of August, as a bug gets- mine. This is nearly always the case when we try something new. I hear men say that they have tried this or that and made a failure when they have planted at the wrong time or not cultivated right and they say that there is noth ing in it. . One reason that this has never been noticed is that we plant a little of ev erything in our gardens and get a lit tle all summer for our table use and do Hot take note as to whether it pro duces in sufficient quantities to can or | store in winter. Tomatoes will bear here ami ripen all the way from July 1 until frost, but only get a paying crop from July 1 15 to August 15, and the plants should j not be set out later than the 15th of I May. I have been planting fall toma toes and experimenting with them for twenty years, and have only found out i within the last five years how to raise good fruit in paying quantities to ripen j in September and October. It would j take half a column in your paper to | give full instructions as to how this' is done. My idea is that som practical farm er in this county has experimented carefully with some, one product of fruit, or produce in nearly every line and could tell us how to raise it better, or even out of the regular season, Just as I could tomatoes. I think that it wbuld be very harm- ; ful for the peop!e_tp make a failure on any product, that could be made to pay here if properly handled. . Now, in view of what I have said, I suggest that when one contemplates the fact that he is making a failure in the cultivation of any one crop go and talk to one who is successfully produc ing the thing desired and if something it to be planted that has not before been raised by the one who intends to try it, likewise consult the man who has been raising that thing. W. A. There i more Catarrh In this seltlon of the country than all other diseases put together, ami until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by I^ 1 J. < heney & Cos., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only Constitu tional cure on the market. It Is taken Internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspooufnl. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of Ibe system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it falls to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio Sold "by Druggists, 75c. Take Ilall s I- ipmlly Pills constipation. COCOTONE SKIN WHITE NER 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. I WHAT USERS THINK OF COCOTONE Macon, Ga. Cocotone Cos, Dear Sirs: Send me by return mail two boxes of Cocotone Skin Whitener and three cakes of Cocotone Skin Soap. They are fine and I do not care to 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 Is the finest thing I ever saw. My skin was very dark and the first box has made it many shades lighter, and my friends all ask me what I have been using. Enclosed you will find $2.00. Please send me six box es of Skin Whitener and two cakes of soap. Yours truly, ANNA M. WHITE. Low Round-Trip Fares for Everybody —Offered By— SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY CO. TO Atlanta, Ga. —International Association of Rotary Clubs, June 17-21st. Dallas, Tex. —General Assembly, Presbyterian Church in U.*S. A., May 17-31st. New Orleans, La.—Southern Baptist Convention, May 16-23rd. Washington, D. C. —27th Annual Reunion, United Confederate Veter ans and 22d Annual Reunion, Sons of Veterans, June 4-Btb. For specific rate, schedules or other information, call on nearest SEABOARD Agent or write, C. S. COMPTON, FRED GEISSLER, T. P. A., S. A. L. Rwy., Asst. G P. A., S. A., Rwy„ Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. '<! ‘0 f~ MANLY BROTIiLRsT I MU*""-: , mui ■ i.n ,-t-tp .i.t -- , --- I| ANNUAL SINGING AT ATCO. The annual singing at Ateo, Georgia will be held on the third Sunday, May 20. We extend a cordial invitation to everybody, and a special invitation to singers and directors of music. Ar rangements will be made to take care of ali visitors, and will try to make the day pleasant to all who will come. The singing will be in the auditorium. W. B. B. CARD OF THANKS. The Stilesboro Improvement Club w ishes to thank the ladies of the com munity for the milk and n trrd whf'h thgy donated to the club. For Astor and Salvia Plants call Miss Clyde Galt. For Rent, Barn. Well located for sale stable, corner of Leake and Erwin streets, In the heart of the cotton market. With slight changes this barn could be used for other purposes. See or phone W. H. Field at the warehouse. Just received a car load of cane bot tom chairs. Price for cash 65c each. G. M. Jackson & Son. 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. 'F. JOHNSON. Do net 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. WHAT IS LAX-FOS LAX-FOS IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA A Digestive Laxative CATHARTIC AND LIVER TONIC 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 i9 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-Foj 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. Field’s Special Meadow Ground Meal is just as good as ever and a differ ence of a few cents per bushel should not keep you from enjoying the best corn bread.