The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, June 07, 1917, Image 3

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County Home Demonstration Department By MISS JESSIE BURTON. .RESIDENT A. M. SOULE AP PEALS TO BOYS AND GIRLS. Xo doubt you taavje heard and read ich about the great war iu Europe, i which our own country has at last become involved. No doubt your im -i nation has been fired by the deeds valor which have been recorded. STOMACH TROUBLE Mr. Marion Holcomb, of Nancy, Ky., says: “For quite a long while I suffered with stomach trouble. I would have pains and a heavy feeling after my meals, a most disagreeable taste in my mouth. If I ate anything with butter, oil or grease, I would spit it up. I began to have regular sick headache. 1 had used pills and tablets, but after a course of these, I would be constipated. It just seemed to tear my stomach all up. I found they were no good at all for my trouble. I heard THEDFORD’S BUCK-DRAUGHT recommended very highly, so began to use it. It cured I keep it in the house all the time. It is the best liver medicine made. Ido not have sick headache or stomach trouble any more.” Black-Draught acts on the jaded liver and helps it to do its important work of throwing out waste materials and poisons from the Sys tem. This medicine should be in every household for use in time of need. Oet a package today. If you feel sluggish, take a dose tonight. You will feel fresh to morrow. Price 25c a All druggists. ONE CENT A DOSE a „ Notice is hereby given that the Commuta r: tion Tax for the year 1917 is $3.00. Allpersons subject to street 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. . „ V*,. ♦ • X • )••• y* *' ' \ ;/>. •V'A ' • "x \,v; jl ___ ; A\., I High 5 ’ all the lime when you Af i drink w "'. ■' | ' •;. i- ; < JFm | Chero'Cola A Vlk V I 4v, ~, 1/ / \ \v “Inabotth— v,**#'; _ * -J / Through a straw ’ ’ XAv ' it 9 ***** / \A3kAo;-- ■ l i REFRESHING jJ / \ With no had after effect ' Aliy only in bottles? We are determined /•'/ CHERO-COLA shall be pure. We are de ‘vifUmsJSSxfflmll termined it shall be clean and sparkling. Wft We are determined it shall be free from substitution. We are determined it shall be uniform in quality. i I robablr you have had a secret ambi tion to take part in this great struggle and have regretted that vour years I debarred you from participation in it I as a soldier or a nurse, cr in some other capacity in which you might ren | der your country an acceptable ser vice. If this be true, it is my great privi j lege to point out how you can per ! form a most important and necessary i service work at this time which will aid the country you love to perform its part in this great world war with hon or and distinction. We have read that this was to be ] a war of science and of machinery. It THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CAR TERSV'LLE NEWS, JUNE 7 1917 was believed by those who organized it. that, human nerves could not stand the shock of the -12 centemeter gun or the inexpressible honors of the gas attack. But they were mistaken, as the record of the great war shows. So, instead of being able to destroy the French and the English and the Rus sians in la few weeks or months, as they # had anticipated, the war has n w reached that stage where the de cision is to be won not by the employ ment of such unholy forces of des truction, but through the ability of the nations concerned to feed them selves and their soldiers adequately. The greatest war in history has de generated into a struggle for food, and the boy or girl who wields the hoe and cultivates even .a few leet of ground becomes a patriot of the highest order and is serving his country to the best possible adanitage. The president of the [Jnited States and the officers of his cabinet ♦ave repeatedly staled that the man who tills the soil and helps, to feed one of our soldiers or the soldiers of some of our allies, is doing as much and is performing as real and honorable a service the man who is assigned to the defense cl the front line trench in the very face of the enemy. What a splendid and glorious thing I it is, therefore, that every boy and girl in Georgia may take an active part in the great world struggle now going on and which is to decide whether the liberty which the citizens of the United States have enjoyed in the past and the ideals for which our civilization stands are to be maintain ed or to be superseded and dominated by the abominable conception which seems to have taken root and flourish ed in the minds of the German gov ernment. The south has been importing $600,- 000,000.00 worth of food per. year, chiefly from the west, and the presi dent of the United States and the of ficers of his cabinet have asked that the people of the south feed them selves this year. This is to be the great patriotic contribution of the south to the cause of struggling civ ilization. Georgia's share of this task is to produce $85,000,000.00 worth of food this year. This means that we must grow $30.00 worth per capita. F.emember that this is no small task. It will call for the application of our best effort and energy to its solution. We must immediately attack the prob lem with all the vigor and skill which we can command. Thirty dollars worth of food, however, can be produced under intensive cultivation on a piece of ground 100 feet square. A quartet of an acre of relatively poor land will yield $30.00 worth of food and one-half acre but carelessly tilled should pro duce this sum. Georgia has millions or acres of unoccupied land. There are vacant lots and waste places about every city and town and village. Will you not be one of thousands of Geor gia boys and girls to take this mes sage as a personal command to you to fhculder the hoe and the garden rake and till and plant a small part of the earth that you may discharge your full duty as a citizen of the United States, in thi crisis and emergency which contronts our beloved country? lu doing so you will be performing a patiiotic service of ihe highest char aeta r and magnitude. You will be do ing your bit’ not only in. keeping the home fires burning, but in feeding the sbldieis at the front. Can you do less for the man who is willing to give his life that you may continue to eujoy ihe honors, the privileges and the rights which our forefathers fought for and which we have assiduously maintained for more than 300 years? To do less than this appeal calls for would indicate that you are a slacker raid that you lack patriotic devotion, that you are unappreciative of ser vice, that you are unwilling to make a sacrifice at the time when the who’e of the civilized world is called on to give of their all without restraint or stint for theacause of freedom and the maintenance of democratic ideals throughout the world. I feel that the boys and girls of Georgia who read this message and who appreciate the privilege and cfl>- portunity it, brings to them will re spond to this call with an enthusiastic vigor and determination of purpose that w ill enable them to discharge the duty and obligation of the hour in a thoroughly satisfactory manner. My dear Boy: Our Country is at war. Do you know' what Wiar means? I am sure you can not, without having experi ence, know r all the horrors, all the hardships and privations, and like wise all the opportunities for service to our homes ami our country in time 1 1 war. But you may soon learn. Uncle Sam lias already said that we are in this war to the last man, the last dol lar the last bullet aud the last ounce of food. And the food, he says, is go ing to be the winning factor. Not the men, nor the dollars, nor the bullets, but the FOOD. Therefore, our government is cal - ing on you to support Old Glory by helping to raise something to feed our boys who are on the battle line. Are you going to do your part? If Uncle Sam calls on you to don the uniform and Join the army, will you go? Would srou5 r ou like to be a member of ji <com 'pany erf volunteers? That opportunity is before you. But the .uniform Uncle Sam is asking you to put on is a pair of overalls, the weapon is' a hoe and the battle front is garden and field. Yhere are boys in the towns and cities whom our govern ment is calling to join this army. If you will be one of this number who is willing to produce something, ask jour teacher to enroll your name and kelp you to decide ou the spot of ground you will till %r the piece of work you will do. May you be one of Uncle Sam’s dependable j r oung men and although you will not be actively j engaged in the trenches you will be a J soldier, a producer, a patriot. J. PHIL CAMPBELL. FERTILE EGGS COST THE \ FARMER $15,000,000 A YEAR. $500,000 worth of eggs spoil in Geor gia each year due to the fact that the male bird runs with flock. Farmers lose $15,000,000 annually from ba<l methods of producing and handling eggs. One-third of this loss is preventable, because it is due to the partial hatching of fertile eggs which have been allowed to become warm enough to begin to incubate. The rooster makes the egg fertile. The fertile egg makes the blood ring. You can save the $15,000,000 now lost from blood rings by keeping the male bird from your flock after the hatching season is over. The rooster does not help the hens tc. lay. He merely fertilizes the germ of the egg. The fertile germ in hot weather quickly becomes a blood ring, which spoils tjie egg for food and market. Summer heat has the same effect on fertile eggs as the hen or incubator. Infertile Eggs Will Not Become Blood Rings. After the hatching season cook, sell, or per your rooster. Your hens not running with a male bird will produce infertile eggs—quality eggs that keep best and market best. Rules For Handling Eggs on the Farm. Heat is the great enemy of eggs, both fertile and Infertile. Farmers are urged to follow' these simple rules, which cost nothing but time and thought and will add dollars to the poultry yard returns: 1. Keep the nests clean; provide one nest for every four hens. 2. Gather the eggs twice daily. 3. Keep the eggs in a cool, dry room or cellar. 4. Market the eggs at least twice a week. 5. Sell, kill, or confine all male i QMakesToast IgWAjS A*** I I L COFFEE - “Sorter's oroastef* 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. The Peily—Taylor Company, JVew Orleans B)MES to the ' | OF THE MAN I \NS TO MAKE I THERS HAPPY' I JOY pierces the heart of the man who is planning happiness for others. We get a lot of joy out of life because we succeed in giving every patron of this store a big, honest money’s worth of merchan dise. “What Steinberg Says is so” SALE NOW OIN STEINBERG’S 12=14 Wall Street Cartersville, Qg. EAT WHAT YOU BUY. BUY WHAT YOU EAT FROM Matthews. Phones 1 2 and 1 3. birds as soon as the hatching season is over. Notice. Valuable published information on the raising and care of poultry and eggs and individual advice on these subjects may be obtained by writing to the Bureau of Animal Industry, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Wash ington, D. C. A. D. MELVIN, Chief, Bureau of Animal Industry. Approved: D. F. HOUSTON, Secretary of Agriculture. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot •each the seat of the disease. Catarrh Is a blood >r constitutional disease, aud In order to cure it rou must take internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, aud acts directly upon the biood and mucous surfaces. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was pre scribed by ouo of the best physicians In this country for years and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the beet tonics known, com bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Ingredients Is what pro duces such wonderful results in curing catarrh, Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, price 78c. Take Hall’s Family Tills for constlpatles. j Crisp, crunchy toast done to a golden brown, spread with rich, creamy butter —that and a cup of good, old Luzianne. There’s a breakfast in itself that’s hard to beat —mighty hard. You buy a can of Luzianne today. If it doesn’t go better and farther than any other coffee at the price, your grocer will refund your money, without question or quibble. Ask for profit-sharing catalog. FEEL LIKE GIVING UP? Many Cartersville People On the Verge of Collapse. A bad back makes you miserable ail the time— Lame every morning; sore all day. It hurts to stoop—it hurts to straighten. What with headache, dizzy spells, urinary weakness, Xo wonder people are discouraged. Who do not know the kidneys may be the cause of it all. Give the weakened kidneys needful remedy. None endorsed like Doan’s Kidnev Pills. W. N. Howard, N. Railroad St., Car-. tersvllle, says: “I used Doan’s Kidney- Pills for backache, brought on by be ing on my feet so much in the store. -It was no time before my back stopped aching.” Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—gee Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Howard had. Foster-Mllbum Cos., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. —