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COLORED PEOPLE DELIGHTED
WITH NEW DISCOVERY
TO BLEACH THE SKIN
Atlanta, Ga.—Says that recent tests
have proven without doubt that swar
thy or sallow complexions can be
made light by anew treatment re
cently discovered by a man In Atlan
ta. Just ask your druggist for Coco
tone Skin Whitener. People who have
used it are amazed at its wonderful
effect. Rid your face of that awful
dark color or greasy appearance in a
few minutes. It costs so little that you
can’t afford to be without it. Just
think how much prettier you would
look with that old dark skin gone and
new soft, light skin in its place. Men
and women today must care for their
complexions to enter society.
If your druggist will not supply you
with Cocotone Skin Whitener, send
25c for a large package to Cocotone
Cos., Atlanta, Ga. —(advt.)
TRAIN SCHEDULE.
Arrival and departure of S. A. L.
Ry, Company trains at Cartersville,
Ga., daily:
No. 311 depart 6:50 a.m.
No. 323 depart 4:00 p.m.
No. 322 arrive 11:15 a.m.
No. ;ii2 arrive 7:35 p.m.
EVER SALAVATED BY
CALOMEL? HOB(UBLE!
Calomel is Quicksilver and Acts Like
Dynamite on Your Liver.
Calomel loses you a dayl You
know what calomel is. IL’s mercury;
quicksilver. Calomel is dangerous.
It crashes Anto sour bile like dyna
mite, cramping and sikening you.
Calomel attacks the bones and
-hould never be put into year sys
tem.
When you feel bilious, sluggish,
constipated and all knocked out
and believe you need a doge of dan
gerous calomel just remember that
your druggist sells for 50 cents a
large bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone,
■which is entirely vegetabie and
pleasant to take and is a perfect
substitute for calomel. It is guaran
teed to start your liver without stir
ring you up inside, and can not sali
vate.
I>on’t take calomell It makes you
sick the next day; it loses you a
day’s work. Dodson’s Liver Tone
straightens you right up and you
feel great. Give it to the children
because it is perfectly harmless and
doesn’t gripe.
WANTED —-To sell ray fi cylinder,
7 passenger, 60 horse Cole automobile
at $1,000.00 for cash or will trade for
small farm or city property. Machine
has been run less than 5,000 miles,
(hod as new. W. 11. Field.
For Rent, $15.00 Per Month.
No. 300 South Erwin street. Seven
room house. Can give immediate pos
session. See or phone W 11. Field at
the warehouse.
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.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot
•each the beat of the disease. Catarrh is u blhod i
it constitutional disease, and In order to eure It
rou must tako Internal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure Is taken internally, and acts directly upon
the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh
cure is not n quack medicine. It was pre
scribed by one of the best physician's In this
country for years and is o regular prescription.
It is composed of the best tonics known, com
hiueil with tho best blood purifiers, acting and!
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.. Trops., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, price 750.
Take- Hall’s Family Pills for constipatiom.
EASY TO TAKE NO PAIN OR
; r ACHE.
ft’s no longer necessary to bear the
weakening sickness and terrible nau
sea that always follows a dose of cal
omel.
LIV-VER-LAX cleanses the torpid
liver, and livens up the whole systen
by of the clogging poisons
Yet it works so gently and pleasantlj
that you hardly know you’ve taken It
LIV-VER-LAX, being purely vegeta
bie, is absolutely harmless, and does
not tear up the system like calomel
And It’s guaranteed to be satisfactory,
or the druggist will return your money.
For sale at 50c and $1 at Grlffln Drug
Cos. —(advt.)
If you dou’t know who handles Tip-
Top and Butte- Nut Bread, excuse
your neighbor when he laughs In your
face. If not, Its because you have not
tried Butter-Nut Bread.
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove’s
The Old Standard Grove’s Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic properties of QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Build, up the Whole System. 50 cents.
THE LIBERTY LOAN.
(Au address b v lion. W It. McAdoo,
secretary of the treasury, delivered at
a meeting of business men and bank
sis of lowa, in Des Moines, May 21,
1017.)
Mr. Chairman and fellow citizens, I
am delighted to be here to join you in
i discussion of the ve;y v ital problems
before the country. I am particularly
glad tiecanse it is the first time that 1
have ever bad an op|K>rtunitv to stop
upon the soil of lowa ttnd me>-t some
t! its representative men face to face.
I am always pleased when I come to
the West —and i do no! say this in the
language of idle compliment; 1 say it
because 1 mean it, because 1 like the
spirit of the West. There is something
in your handshake that means sin
cerity and friendship: it means vigor;
it means that sturdy Americanism,
that courage, and that valor which are
essential now if you are going to car
ry your country through the perils
that confront it.
The Nation's Chief Danger.
And so it is, my friends, that I am
glad to be here and to talk to you
about matters that concern your very
lives and the future of your country;
more than that, that concern the
\ ery foundations of the civilized
world, because it would be impossible
for a truthful man to exaggerate the
gravity of the situation which now
| confronts the civilized world.
In all democracies there is one ser
ious defect, and that is the difficulty
:f arousing the people promptly In
cases of emergency to the dangers of
the situation. The chief danger con
fronting us today is the fact that in
this great republic of UK),000,000 pop
ulation it may be difficult to get the
people aroused quickly enough to en
able them to strike the initial blows
effectively enough to end this war as
quickly as it, ought to be ended and
as it can be ended if the right sort of
organization can be effected. I have
left Washington at this time, when
my shoulders are tremendously over
loaded and when I ant needed there
on other grave and pressing problems
it the treasury department, to meet
■ome of the American people face to
face and to attempt, to tell them some
of the things they ought to know if
they do not already know them. I am
going to talk to you perfectly frankly
about the situation.
War Unavoidable.
In the first place, gentlemen, let it
be understood now that this war was
just nnescapable for the American
people as it is to escape the rising of
tomorrow's sun. Your great president,
a; whose side I have had the privilege
and the honor of serving for the past
four years, has done everything that
mortal man could do to keep this
country honorably at peace. I know
how his soul has been wrung with the
very anguish of the man whose whole
thought was of humanity when he lias
had to face the terrible problem of
'eading this peaceful nation into war.
But there is a power above that of any
human being, wlych, in these momen
tous. crises that arise from time to
time in the world’s life, directs action
and against which fallible man is pow
erless to assert himself. This is one of
those crises. We are in the midst of
one of those great upheavals of civil
i’-ation, one of those cataclysmic times
cut of which great events are born,
gieat events that are going to pro
foundly affect tlte whole future of the
human race for centuries, perhaps;
and it is because the omnipotent Gad
has seen in this country the greatest
leader of democracy, the greatest
champion of liberty in the civilized
world, the instrument, to restore to
suffering humanity the blessings of
peace—stable peace based upon justice
through the destruction of military
autocracy—that we find ourselves
forced into this struggle.
Whatever the differences of opinion
may have been about peace or war
heretofore—and I am quite sure that
there were honest differences of opin
ion as to whether or not America
should have entered this war—l am
perfectly willing to respect the opiu
iens of the men who thought differ
ently from me upon that great issue—
i this is no time to talk about, that. The
die has been cast, the representatives
of the people of the United States, af-
ter being informed by vour president i
the situation, have, by almost un I
'animous vote, said that America must
go into this fight. Now that she is in
this fight, her duty to God, to herself,
and to humanity is to win as quickly
as possible in order to stop this horri
ble slaughter upon the battle fields of
Europe that threatens to destroy the
very soul of the civilized world. We
are just as Tnuch interested, my
friends, in stopping the slaughter of
Germans as we are in stopping the
slaughter of Englishmen and French
men and Serbians and Belgians and
Russians and Italians. We are just as
much interested m stopping the
slaughter of every human being as we
are in stopping the slaughter ot Airer-
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS. JUNE 14, 1917.
lean-. But let me say here that in this
great service to which God has called
t. 1 -, to wh ch the voice of stricken hu
n unity cries out, if it be necessary to
d-ain the hst drop or American blood
i. orn the veins of every freeman in
Mb, country in order that civilization
it.ay he reestablished upon the ba e
of stable peace and justice in the
world, we must be prepared to make
that sacrifice.
Our Foe German Military Autocracy.
What are we fighting? We are not
fighting the Gernian people. My
Ft iends, this is the most extraordinary
war of all time. Here we find onr
sehes, a great people, without enmity
oi hostility to another great people,
engaged in a war with them. We are
not fighting the German people; we
n re fighting the German military au
tocracy which is trying to enslave the
uotld, America in the bargain. And
once we succeed in the destruction of
that, military autocracy, self-governed
peoples may in the future rest in se
curity, because, my friends, do you
realize that the one grave menace to
the peace of the world for the last 40
years has been the military autocracy
o! Germany? We are striving for the
destruction of that autocracy, not only
to sa\e America for the future, but we
aie, strange as it may seem, fighting
■i- order that the German people may
ht diseuslaved. We are trying to help
them get self-government in order
that thev may in the future be able
to enjoy the same blessings that the
people of this great republic have en
joyed, that they may shake off the
shackles of this military system which
has enslaved them till these years.
When that is accomplished, and we
have succeeded, as I pray God that
wc may, in extending self-government
to all the responsible peoples of the
world, then and then only, my friends,
have you got the guaranties of that
stable peace which is founded upon
justice; and unless peace is founded
upon justice you will never have stable
peace in this world.
Do you real ze how ,profoundly the
ideals of this great republic have mov
ed the world in the last five years?
Do you realize that the greatest, in
one sense, of all autocracies in the
matter of sovereign power—that is,
the despotic power of the sovereign,
Las crumbled by the very example of
this great republic? I speak of the
Chinese Empire, which is now one of
the great republics, ami whose suc
cess and whose power to sustain it
self today rests, largely upon the
friendship of this great nation. We
have been able to extend substantial
friendship, 1 am glad to say. in every
manner that it was possible for us to
extend it. We were among the first of
the great nations of the earth to rec
ognize the Chinese republic.
Sined this war broke out, another
powerful military autocracy has dis
appeared, and upon its ruins has been
established another great, republic,
Russia, io whose people we have just
extended recognition and the right
hand of fellowship, and to whom 1
have, in the exercise of the powers
conferred upon me by the congress,
just extended a credit of $100,000,000.
We want them to • understand that
America's professions of friendship
and support are not lip service,, hut
that, we intend to put behind every
nation lighting with us for the cause
ef liberty throughout the world what
congress, in its resolution declaring
a state of war between Germany and
the Fnited States, expressed in this
noble language: "We pledge the eu
tire resources of the people of the
Fnited States for tills great object.”
World Dominion, the Kaiser’s Aim.
There is one remaining military au
tocracy left, a military autocracy the
l‘ke of which the world has never
known, headed by an autocrat of limit
less and lustful ambition, whose covet
ous eyes rest upon the whole world.
His purpose today is world dominion.
Never since the days of Alexander the
Great ha- such an audacious scheme
of world conque-t la-eu detibei ately
conceived and remorselessly organiz
ed by am nation. That is the thing
! that threatens the liberties of man
kind; that is the thing that makes if
necessary for America to get into this
: fight as the champion of liberty
j throughout tho world, and to see that
j that colossal crime, as it would be if
(successful, is’ not perpetrated upon
I the human race.
We Are Fighting In Liberty’s Cause.
I like to feel, my friends, when 1 i
thiifk about this war, that it is the
cnly kind of a war in which this greet
republic could afford to engage. We
v\ould not go into any war for material
ends. We would not lift a finger to
take oue square inch of the soil of ary
other nation upon the face of the
earth. We do not seek to make sobject
any other races upon the face of the
earth We do not want any indemni
ties or any compensation for what we
do in this war. We are fighting for an
'■deal, which is the only thing that
make.; any nation great, whether it
has material tesources or not, be
f.) !- ■ny nit on with material re
our ccs aod no idea s will in time be
come the prey of the conqueror. We
Po net intend- to b j drawn at the
chari. I wheels of any militaiy auto
crai, a- p: or, stricken, bleeding Bel
gium has been fir the past three
.years, and as horribly devastated Ser
bia has been for the same time. We
intend to assert the power of free
America with such effect upon these
battle fronts in Europe that it won’t
be long before the slaughter of all
kinds of human beings will be stopped.
And when America sits at that coun
cil table of peace—and that is one of
the things about this war that is such
a noble and inspiring thing, a thing
upon which I like to let my imagina
tion dwell —when America sits at that
council of the great nations she must
bear upon her brow the crown of jus
tice. the crown of disinterestedness,
and in her eyes must shine the clear
light of liberty and love for humanity;
she must seek nothing for herself;
she must use her benevolent powers
for the purpose of seeing that even as
between these belligerents, enemies
and'friends alike, justice is done; that
the bases of peace shall be founded
upon a fair adjustment of all of the
complex questions involved; that no
cancerous sores shall be left to fester
and disturb the peace of the world in
the future; that all may have the as
surance that, because the treaty is
based upon justice, the new peace may
for centuries survive with pregnant
blessings to mankind!
The First Necessity—Money.
That is the problem now. What
must America do to meet it Wars
can not be fought without money. The
very flm. step in this war, the most ef
fective step that we could take, was
to provide the money for its conduct.
The congress quickly pasted an act
authorizing a credit of $5,000,000,000,
and empowered the secretary of the
treasury, with the approval of the
president, to extend to the allied gov
ernments making war with us against
the enemies of our country, credits
r.ct exce ding $3,000,000,000. Since
that law was passed—it was only
passed on the 24th of April, less than
a month ago—the financial machinery
of your government lias been speeded
up to top notch to give relief to the
.allies in Europe, in order that, they
might be able to make their units in
the trenches, their machinery which
L- there on the ground, tell to the ut
most, and tell, if possible, so effec
tively that it might not be necessary
to send American soldiers to the bat
tle fields. Asa result, we have already
extended in credits to these govern
ments—Great Britain. France, Italy,
Russia, and Belgium—something like
$745,000,000, and we shall have to ex
tend before this year is out, if the war
lasts that, long, not $3,000,000,000 of
credits, but probably five billions or
six billions. But it makes no differ
■ nee how much credit we extend, we
are extending it for a service which is
essential, as I said before, for your
own protection, if no other grave is
sues were involved in this struggle.
This initial financing was not. an
easy thing to do. The congress author
ized the secretary of the treasury to
issue, in addition to bonds, $2,000,000,-
000 of one-year debt certificates. Their
purpose is to bridge over any chasms,
so to speak, so that if the treasury is
short at any time, because of extra
ordinary demands, we can sell these
temporary certificates, supply the
need, and then sell bonds to take up
these certificates. We have been sell
ing temporary debt certificates in an
ticipation of the sale of these Liberty
Bonds. The first issue of bonds —$2,-
000,000,000 —lias not been determined
by any arbitrary decision or judg
ment; it has been determined by the
actual necessities of the situation. It
Iz the least, possible sum that we can
afford to provide for the immediate
conduct of the war. We are trying to
spread the payment for the bonds
over as lar.gr>- a period as possible, so
that there shall be no financial dis
turbance, and we arc going to redte
posit the proceeds in the banks upon
some equitable plan so that there
shall be no interference with business..
This money is not going to be taken
out of the country. AII of this financing
is largely a matter of shifting credits:
it is not going to "frivolve any loss of
gold; ii is not going to involve any
loss of value*,. These moneys are go
ing tos he pnt back into circulation,
put lack promptly into the channels of
business and circulated and recircu
lated to take care of the abnormal
prosperity of the country, a prosperity
that -will be greater in the present
year than ever before in our history.
As we sell these bond's we take back
from the foreign governments, under
the terms of the art. their obligations,
having practically fhe same maturity
a; ours, bearing the same rate of in
terest as ours, so that as their obliga,
Hons mature the proceeds will be em
ployed to pay off the obligations is
sued by this government to provide
them with credit. Sc> you can see, fel-
fotv citizens, that in extending credit
to our allies we are not giving any
thing to them. So far as that is con
cerned, for the purposes of this war,
I would be willing to give them any
thing to gain success, but they don’t
ask that. They are glad and grateful
<9 gi Monev
Bnck if you
- say so
~ POuMD
.iUZIANNE
I
frROASTEHS
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 Reily—Taylor Company, .New Orleans
ASK YOUR MERCHANT
-FOR
SPECUtt
JfEASGRTGROUND
jr nri m COM
The Meal that has a strong
guarantee
r SPECIAL
MEADOW GROUND
H HEU* I
§-£/48Um. IHU& J"'
fr MAXUrACTVZUu j
We do custom Grinding. 13 ring
us your Corn
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that fax
Assessors Books for the year 191 ~ will
open on June Ist and close at six o’clock
p. rn. June 15th. All complaints of as
sessment must be made in writing set
ting forth location of property and
grounds for complaint and filed with
the City Clerk|before six o’clock P*
on June 15th, 1917.
By order of the Board of Commis
sioners ot the City of Cartersville, Ga.
W. W. DANIEL,
City Clerk.
that the American gove-n
ng to give them tf e i,,.
natch less credit, a credit ...
stronger than any nation m*!?
of the globe. We give them
(•Continued on page three
Luzianne has nothing up its sleeve
No, Ma’am. You yourself are g 0 3
to be the judge of whether this fine
old coffee has a right on your family
table or not. If you are not satisfied
that Luzianne goes farther and tastes
better than any other coffee at anywhere
near the price, your grocer will g j ve
you back every penny you paid. Stop
grumbling about your present coffee.
Give Luzianne a chance to show y ou
just how good a coffee can be. Ask
for profit-sharing catalog.