Newspaper Page Text
OVERWORKED MOTHER
Finds Health In Our Vinol
( Ilinsville, IJI. —“I suffered from a
, TOUS breakdown and terriblehead
aches and was tired all totally
v out and discouraged, but as I had
i r 'e family I had to work despite my
• T rin?. 1 saw Vinol advertised and
V iJed to try it, and within two weeks
T - , f iced a decided improvement, agd
' jnm a well woman.” —Mrs. Axa
Deckkr.
We enarantee Vinol, our non-secret
1 '"to strengthen and build up
, \ run-down, overworked mothers,
u te children and feeble old people.
ireatb-Champion Drug Cos.
i STOP IN ATLANTA
11 HOTEL EMPIRE
r,os!te Union Depqt.sn-Pryor
Renovated and reVtiaiishe'd
rougbout. Reservations mhde
#* in application. Hot and cold
■ ter, private baths, electric
its and elevator. First class
6 ommodations at modsrats
Bj prices.
Rooms 50c T
h. KDMONDHOX, Prep.
Plies Cured in 6 to 14 Days
, r druggist will refund money if PA7.O
~; fMENT fails to cure any case of Itching,
. Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 tol4days.
The first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c.
LOSES S4O ON HIS COFFEE.
ntleman in Cartersville a few
ago, after saving 10c a week for
1 weeks on the coffee he uses,
; : ; having better coffee to drink, dis
covered that in the last 8 years he had
lost 540.00 or spent SIO.OO too much
cn his coffee because he had failed to
take The Bartow Tribune during that
time. It seems rather strange tjiat his
local paper should affect his finances
to such extent but thereby hangs a
tale.
In commenting on the quality of, and j
the economy in the use of the coffee i
he now uses, and being informed that i
he could have gotten it all the time 1
that way for the past 8 years and that
the coffee and the price had been kept
before the public all that time in The
Tribune, he said he did not take npr
read The Tribune, hence his loss. The
coffee referred to is the 4A roast cof
fee sold by Hardaway at 20c a pound
like others sell at 25c, and as the gen
tleman above referred to, says, is bet
ter than other coffee selling at 30c a
pound. More than $5.00 a week Is
saved on that coffee by Hardaway’s
customers. About $2.50 a week Is sav
ed on Coats thread by his customers.
About S3.QO a week is saved by his
customers on Octagon, Ivory and
Sweetheart soap and washing powders
and soda. Many times that much is
saved by his customers on dry goods,
notions and household goods as that is
the difference in the price they paid
Hardaway for these goods and the
price they would have paid elsewhere
or that others did pay elsewhere for
the same quantity and quality of
goods.
A few weeks ago dozens of women
in this county saved 5c a yard on 600
yards of Lonsdale bleaching by getting
17c quality from Hardaway at 12%c
a yard. For the next few weeks dozens
of women and men all over the county
will save 5c a yard on 15c 40 inch pa
jama checks by getting at 10c from
Hardaway, and 25c each on the Jack
son C. C. corset by getting it at SI.OO
from Hardaway and others will get
the 65c one for 50c from Hardaway
and a lot of 20c batiste dress goods
at - 10c in short pieces and 15c and 20c
'white lawns at 10c in short pieces and
''ill save from 5c to 8c a yard on pep-
Perell 9-4 and 10-4 sheetings. Some
l'f ole are inclined to blame and criti-
Cize ufher merchants for getting more
th an Hardaway does but they don’t
seem to realize the fact that every bit
| of that difference In price, which is
j a!,o t 25 per cent, goes to pay the
i l-eeper and pay for the goods
n t on credit and never paid for,
' ■ h only leaves the other merchant
what Hardaway got for his goods.—
WHAT IS
UX-FOS
LAX-FOS IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA
A Digestive Laxative
CATHARTIC AND LIVER TONIC
Lax-Fos is not a Secret or PatentMedi
nu / ut -' s composed of the following
a ‘fashioned roots and herbs:
CASCARA BARK
BLUE FLAG ROOT
rhubarb ROOT
BLACK ROOT
MAY APPLE ROOT
SENNA LEAVES
and pepsin
'iu OS ascar a >s improved by
‘ l }\ on pi these digestive ingredi
c, nakmg it better than ordinary Cas
0. „ an< i t*n fhe combination acts not
, "> stimulating laxative and cathar
§ , 80 as a digestive and liver tonic.
f '.. lXatlves are weak, but Lax-Fos
r es strength with palatable, aro
,, iste and does not gripe or disturb
’ r' One bottle will prove
, 'S 13 invaluable for Constipation?
• ’lion or Torpid Liver. Price 50c.
Better Farming in the South
Pushing Crops Up To Maximum Yields
Best Way to Increase Food Crops of the South Now Is to Cultivate Thor,
oughly arsd-Make Side Applications of Fertilizers.
By J. N. Harper, Director Farm Service Bureau, Atlanta, Georgia.
the acreage devoted to food crops as
practically all of the land has been
planted, but large yields can be ob
tained just the same, provided good
cultivation is given and fertilizers are
liberally applied as side applications.
Potatoes have advanced 250 per
cent, com 100 per cent, hay 33 per
cent, beef and pork 100 per cent,
whereas the cost of fertilizer has ad
vanced only 25 per cent.
The wheat crop this year Is short,
and it has been estimated that 300,-
000,000 bushels of the 1917 wheat crop
has been bought by European coun
tries for future delivery. Uuless the
corn crop of the South is a “bumper,”
bread will be a luxury instead of the
staff of life.
The farmer is being advised on ev
ery hand to increase prbduction, but
he is limited in his credit and he finds
it hard to obtain sufficient labor. The
best way to increase the production
of corn and other food crops, as well
as cotton, Is to cultivate thoroughly
and often and make side applications
of fertilizers. If the farmer hasn’t the
money to hire labor, under present con
ditions, it will pay him*to borrow
money on his crop to pay sufficient
labor to cultivate and fertilize his
crops adequately. After each rain a
dust mulch should be made with the
cultivator. We need not expect a
bountiful harvest unless the soil mois
ture is conserved. Asa general rule,
the amount of com produced is in di
rect proportion to the amount of wa
ter conserved in the soil by thorough
cultivation.
Hon. J. A. Wade, Commissioner of
Agriculture of Alabama, In a circular
letter Issued to the farmers makes
this statement, —"It Is evident that the
acreage planted to com in the State
of Alabama has been increased 40 to 50
par rest and the farmers are to be
congratulated for taking such a wise
step. A large yield of corn is greatly
a abided and is probably the most profit-
BETTER SANITATION NEEDED
IN RURAL SCHOOLS.
In tlie interests of efficiency and
health there is increasing necessity
for the application of scientific medi
cal and sanitary knowledge to the ad
ministration of the public schools, in
the opinion of the Public Health Ser
vice.
In general, the faults observed in
rural schools, the annual -report of
the service declares, are due to a lack
of skilled advice, especially in regard
tc the location, construction and equip
ment of school buildings and disre
gard of sanitary principals governing
water supplies, the disposal of sewage,
ventilation, temperature, illumination,
and the arrangement of school desks
and blackboards. During the past fis
cal year surveys have been made in
rural (Jistricts of several states and
niany thousand school children have
been examined. These examinations
have included thorough testing of the
eyes by competent oculists, tests of
mental capacity, and the effect of san
itary environment ton school progress,
as well as inspections for the custom
ary physical defects.
The conclusion is reached that there
is great need tor improvement in ru
ral schools and that communities
themselves will benefit if conditions
are bettered, *he schools serving as
object lessons for surrounding sec
tions. Conditions in country districts
have been found below those in the
cities and it is apparent that organ
ised health work has largely been con
fined to the latter. Considered frolti a
sanitary standpoint alone the Public
Health Service is in favor of the con
solidation of rural schools, since it
must eventually result in the provid
ing'of better buildings and the organ
ization of systems of efficient sanitary
inspections.
NOTICE.
There will be divine service in the
church of the Ascension (Episcopal
church) next Sunday morning, com
mencing at eleven o’clock. Everybody
is very cordially invited to worship
with us.
.T THOMAS MURRISH, D. D„ Ph. D.
Priest in Charge.
NEVER NEGLECT A COLD
A chill after bathiing, cooling off sud
denly after exercise and drafts, give
the chid germs a foot-hold that may
lead to something worse. Safety re
quires early treatment. Keep T)r.
King’s New Discovery on hand. This
pleasant balsam remedy allays In-
soothes the cough and re
pairs the tissues. Better be safe than
sorry. Break up the cold with Dr.
King’s New Discovery before it Is too
: late. At your druggist, sfc, SI.OO.
(advt.)
Not a day pass
es that the farmer,
is not reminded of
the vital necessi
ty of producing
more food crops,
and he is urged to
put forth his best
effort in doing his
“bit,” but the
Question is
“How?”
It Is now too
late to increase
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS, JUNE 7 1917
able crop that can be grown under the
present food and feed emergency. A
great part of the increased acreage is
poor upland which will make a prof
itable yield only by the use of com
mercial fertilizer. it has always paid
me to apply 200 or 300 pounds of fer
tilizer around my corn the second or
third plowing, of when the -corn was
between one and three feet high.”
The corn crop is the bread of thb
South, and its yield should be increas
ed to the limit. This fall and next
winter the southern people should eat
more corn bread and less wheat
bread.
Our farmers must not fail to pro
duce all the hay possible, and it will
pay to fertilize a patch of sorghum
and peas with a fertilizer containing
from 10 to 12 per cent phosphoric acid
and 1% to 2 per cent nitrogen.
Cotton is not generally recognized
as a food crop, but the country must
not overlook the fact that an acre of
cotton that will produce a bale will
yield almost as great a food and feed
value in the seed as the same land
planted to corn. Therefore, an in
creased yield in that crop means in
creased food and feed products.
Fertilizers are used for the plant
food they contain, and it vriil be im
possible to produce profitable yields
without ample plant food. Just what
fertilizer to apply and how much to
use as a side application will aepend
on the soil type, the crop planted, and
the kind and amount of fertilizer used
at the time the land was prepared.
On Piedmont soils and clay soils wo
would recommend Jrom 200 to 300
pounds of fertilizer for cotton and
corn .analyzing 6 to 8 per cent phos
phoric acid and 2 to 4 per cent nitro
gen. For field crops in the coastal
plain, we would recommend from 300
to 400 pounds of a fertilizer analyzing
from 4 to 7 per cent phosphoric acid
and from 4 to 6 per cent nitrogen.
This fertilizer should be applied to
coni when it is from knee to waist
high and to cotton at the time the
first squares are forming.
For the silt loams in Alabama, Lou
isiana and Mississippi, we would rec
ommend for cotton or corn 100 to 200
pounds of a fertilizer analyzing 12 per
cent available phosphoric acid and 2V6
per cent nitrogen. This is to be ap
plied to the com when about knee high
and to the cotton when squares begin
forming. Under most favorable con
ditions a pound of fertilizer means
three pounds of seed cotton. From
this we can see that SI.OO Invested
in fertilizer at thi6 time means from
$6 to $8 next fall, and a badly needed
commodity is brought into existence
SECOND METHODIST CHURCH
SUNDAY SCHOOL NOTICE.
We are stall endeavoring to pay for
our piano, which we purchased about
a year ago. Payments amounting to
something over a hundred dollars have
been made. We still owe seventy-five
dollars, of which amount thirty dol
lars is now due.
In order to meet this payment we
will have an ice cream festival
Thursday night, June 7, on the lawn
at Mrs. J. B. Jenkins on North Doug
las street. The city has kindly offered
to 'light the lawn for us, so all who are
interested <in this worthy cause, please
come out and co-operate with us.
We hope that this festival shall be
a social as well as a financial success.
Any contributions, cash or other
wise, will be fully appreciated.
Everybody is cordially invited to
come and spend a pleasant evening
with us.
ERNEST W. RAY,
Sunday School Superintendent.
WONDERFUL STUFF!
LIFTS OUT YOUR CORNS
Apply a Few Drops Then Lift Corns
or Calluses off With Fingers—
No Pain.
No humbug! Any corn, whether
hard, soft or between the toes, will
loosen right up and lift out, without
a particle of pain or soreness. 4
This drug is called freezone and is
a compound of ether discovered by a
Cincinnati man.
Ask at any drug store for a small
bottle of freezone, which will cost but
a trifle, but is sufficient to rid one’s
feet of every corn or callus.
Put a few' drops directly upon any
tender, aching corn or callus. Instantly
the soreness disappears and shortly
the eorn or callus will loosen and can
be lifted off with the fingers.
This drug freezone doesn’t eat out
the corns or calluses but shrivels them
without even irritating the surround
ing skin.
Just think! No pain at all; no sore
ness or smarting when applying it or
afterwards. If your druggist don’t have
freezone have him order it for you.
(advt.)
SINGING AT PETTIT.
There will be an all day singing at
Pettit next Sunday, June lOtln It is
the annual singing day at Pettit and
an invitation is extended to all
For Rent, Barn,
Well located for sale stable, corner
of Leake and Erwin streets, in the
heart of the cotton market.
slight changes this barn could be used
for other purposes. See or phone .H.
Field at the warehouse.
SINGING CONVENTION TO BE
HELD AT CARTERSVILLE.
The Seventh District Singing Con
vention of (! Df. i:i will tfe held at the
t.vbernacie in Cartersville the third
-.a urday am! Sunday in June. Many
prominent 6inge-.-< from all parts of
.• °rh Georgia re expeqted, and we
expect a gr at least of song. The an
nual July dngiua will be held with
the convention so everybody cotne
ajpl nel i nm 0 the singing better.
J. M. HENSON, Seety.
Sloan tirnent for Rheumatism.
The j am roe.- so Quickly after you
apply Sioan’s Liniment for rheumatic
pains, neuralgia, toothache, lumbago,
sprains, ami its s0 easy to use. It
quickly penetrates and soothes with
out rubbing and is far cleaner and
n;ore effective than massy plasters or
ointments,
K. ep a bottle in the house and get
prompt relief, not only from all nerve
pains but from bruises, strains,
sprains, over-exercise and all external
aches. At your druggist, 25, 50c, SI.OO.
(advt.)
SNOW SPRINGS.
Mrs. J. F. Davis and little daughter,
Claudio, of Snow Spring, spent the
week-end with her radugter, Mrs. Wil
lie Chitwood, of Sugar Valley,
Mr. Tom Everette spent Sunday
with Mr. B. P. Davis.
Mrs. Mollie Sutton spent Sunday
afternoon with her daughter, Mrs.
Estell Burley. . t
Mrs. Josie Chatman spent Friday
and Saturday wiith her mother, Mrs.
Rice.
Call 244 or 246 for Tip-Top or But
ter-Nut Bread.
For Rent, $25.00 Per Month.
No. 200 South Erwin street Seven
room house, all conveniences. This
house now occupied by Dr. Roy D.
Stone. Can give possession April Ist.
See or phone W. H. Field at the ware
house.
COMPARE!
Hear every make of machine talking machine on sale in
your town, then come to our store and hear
THE NEW EDISON
You will then realize why we say “The NEW EDISON is not a talking
machine . ... .
This new invention of the world’s greatest inventor cannot be termed a
talking machine. Talking machine reproductions are purely mechanical.
They appeal only to the sense of hearing. Edison Re-Creations appeal to the
emotions. All the emotions. All the emotions that respond to the art ol
living artists respond equally to the New Edison’s Re-Creation of the great
voices of the world. It is human sympathy, magnetism, personality, or w hat
ever you may call it, that makes the great difference between talking machine
reproductions and Edison Re-Creations.
We do not ask you to take our word for it. We wans you to make it a point to hear the New Edison.
Only when you hear this wonderful instrument will you realize all that Music’s Re-Cieation means to the music
lover. _
HEAR THEM ALL
Remember, before you hear the New Edison visit every store in your town where talking machines are on
sale. Give them all a fair hearing, then come to us for a demonstration of Music’s Re-Creation by the New Edison.
Turn a deaf ear to high-sounding claims. Let REAL MUSIC, the music of living artists, be the standard
by which you will judge all sound-reproducing devices, and the New Edison will be YOUR choice.
You owe it to your love of music to come and see (and hear) if what we say is not true. You are
Welcome though you may not have the remotest idea of ever owning a New Edisn. We want you to absorb the
spirit of Music’s Re-Crefftion. Will you come, today?
Young Brothers Drug Cos.
What } s behind the Screen?
What’s in hiding behind your front screen door ? Is a weatherbeaten,
shabby, out-of-date door hiding there, waiting to be uncovered so that
it can spoil your home with its forlorn, run-down appearance?
Don’t give this door another chance to mar yopr whole
house. Replace it with one of the new designs of beautiful
MORGAN Front Doors
which add value to your house and give that homelike, hospitable air.
l f E
—---
C O C O TO N E
SKIN WHITENER
2Sc BOX FREE
A Skin Bleach or Whitener (or dark or brown skin, removing all
blemishes and deating swaithy or sallow complexions ar.d causing the
skin to Grow Whiter. Don’t envy a clear complexion use Cccotcne
Skin Whitener and have dtie.
WHAT USERS THINK OF COCOTONE
Macon, Ga. Montgomery, Ala.
Cocolone Cos.
Dear Sirs: Send me by return mail
two boxes of Cocotone Skin Whitener
and three cakes of Cocu.tono Skin
Soap. They are iiue and 1 do not care
to be without them. Enclose is money
order for $1.25.
•Yours truly',
CLARA M. JACKSON,
Waycros; , Ga.
Coootoue Cos.
Dear Friends: Your Cocotono Skin
Whitener is the finest thing I over
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.
MANLY BROTHERS
-
Let us show you what
satisfying results these
Morgan Doors give.
We’ll gladly mail our booklet
“Adding Distribution to the
Home” upon request. It con
tains some valuable sugges
tions for inexpensively im
proving your home. Call for
one or ask us to send it.
It’s free.
Rhyne Bros,
Cocotone Cos.
Dear Sirs: I find that Cocotone Skia
Whitener Is the best preparation 1
have ever used to clear the skin, and
wish you would mail me boxes at
once.
(Signed) MRS.’C. P. j6hNSON.
Do not accept substitutes or imitations,
CUT THIS OUT
THE CQCOTONE CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
1 have never used Cocotone Skin
Whitemr, bui 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.
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