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MAYR’S
Wonderful Remedy for
STOMACH trouble
One dose convinces.
YOUNG BROS. DRUG CO.
a other reliable druggists.
wHV SMITH’S FAMILY LIVES
Better thaN jONES ' family ‘
some it always seems funny
t Smith saves so much money
j ile working for the same pay
hat Jones does by the day,
, j o nes hardly ever has enough
r 0 even buy his necessary stuff
While Smith with cash can pay
, his family’s needs every day;
smith's family is more by one
i , ui Jones’ wife, daughters and son.
v ; ',.y comforts to Smith’s family come
l h;,t can’t come to Jones’ home
iause Jones helps clothe each dead
beat
\. 1 pays for what they eat,
, giving a 4th of each dime
H, spends where they sell on time,
"While Smith for no bookkeeper pays
N,,r helps dead beat on his ways.
Smith’s quarter got six thread
While Jones’ for six spools 30c paid.
Smith’s quarter bought 5 Sweetheart
soap,
j oU es paid 30c for the same dope.
Smith for oil cloth 25c spent.
Tones for same quantity 30c spent.
Smith’s 10 yards calico 80c cost,
Jones paid SI.OO with 20e lost.
For white poplin 20c Smith paid,
Tones’ poplin cost 25c he said.
Smith’s 4A coffee ccst 20c a pound,
.Tones paid 25c for his unground.
Smith paid $1.20 for indigo overall
Where Jones trades $1.50 to all.
Jackson corset SI.OO Smith’s price,
Tones’ $1.25 got one as nice.
Mrs. Smith paid 10c for undervest,
Mrs. Jones paid for similar vests.
Smith paid 30c for men’s undervests,
Jones paid 35c and no less.
Smith's Balbriggan drawers 30c cost,
Jones’ cost 35c, another 5c lost.
Everytime Jones one dollar spent,
T'c of it for his family went,
But 25 per cent of the amount
Made good some one’s unpaid account.
Where Smith trades nothing unpaid
stands,
Tor cash was paid by all hands.
That is always the main reason
Why Smith has money every season,
While Jones is always in need
se many others he helps feed
By buying from credit stores always
While Smith buys his at Hardaway’s.
Nothing added there for lost accounts,
Nor bookkeepers different amounts,
i costs credit stores large per cent
<) ill that’s in them spent
T pay bookkeeper* all they get
Jud Insure accounts paid yet.
hat’s why men of Jones kind
Who trade there are always behinit
Smith’s kind patronize a cash store,
Always have money to buy more.
1 Hardaway's cash prices you pay.
ou have money for another day.
If at credit store prices you buy.
v ou always have to pay so high.
That many goods you would use
Aon can’t get, but must laose. —(advt.)
WHAT IS
LAX-FOS
LAX-FOS IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA
A Digestive Laxative
CATHARTIC AND LIVER TONIC
Bax-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
n Lax-Fos the Cascara is improved by
ae addition of these digestive ingredi
nts making it better than ordinary Cas-
ARA,and thus the combination acts not
my as a stimulating laxative and cathar
c but also as a digestive and liver tonic.
Hip laxatives are weak, but Lax-Fos
mbines strength with palatable,*aro
dic taste and does not gripe or disturb
v stomachs One bottle will prove
is invaluable for Constipation,
• gestion or Torpid Livei. Price 50c.
Mr. Merchant:
We have a good
s tock of white corn
racked in even weight
b ags for the feed
trade.
Let us fill your or
iers at market price.
Field Milling Cos.
£ r uyeist* refund and ! ,orka ° a t:, “ Cold.
M w - GROVES . Woßey ,l lt fai,s > cure.
uvfis signature -on each boa. 25c,
Crop Acreage For
One-Horse Farm
Andrew M. Soule, President Georgia
State College of Agriculture.
Field and Food Crops.
On the average one-horse farm in
the South there should be planted in
1917:
5 acres in corn and velvet beans.
5 acres in cowpeas for hay, to
be followed by winter oats.
5 acres in cotton.
6 acres in peanuts to be crushed
for oil or grazed down by hogs.
l 1 acres in sweet potatoes to be
followed by winter cover crops.
l 1 acres in alfalfa or crimson clo
ver, cowpeas or soy beans.
1 acre in rape, oats, vetch, cow
peas or soy beans.
1 acre in truck crops followed
by hay or grazing crops for hogs.
10 acres should be set aside for
pasturage for cows and hogs.
% acre in orchards.
% acre in garden.
Total cultivated land, 26 acres.
Animals Which Should Be Maintained.
1 good horse or mule (work
stock).
2 milk cows.
1 calf.
1 yearling (slaughter for meat).
2 brood sows.
50 4iens.
57 —Total.
These should be maintained on ev
erv one-horse farm in order that the
family may be properly supplied with
the necessary milk. butter, meat,
chickens and eggs.
This plan should be adjusted or mod
ified by t lie proper committees having
the food supplies in charge.in the re
spective states to meet local condi
tions.
World’s Food Supply Deficient
J. P. Campbell, Dir. of Ext., State
Col. Of Agri., Athens, Ga.
The following statement by David
Lubiii, American Representative to
vhe International Institute of Agricul
ture, is of vital concern to the Ameri
can people, and Georgia farmers
should do their share to relieve the
tense situation.
Associated Press Dispatch.
Rome via Paris, April s'.
“For the first time in many years
there exists a deficit in the supply of
corn, wheat, rye, barley and oats, esti
mated at a total of 130,000,0(H) bushels
less than the normal requirements
for countries open to trade. The
situation is worse than was expected
last October.”
Who is going to feed Georgia this
year?
The West has been feeding the~
State to the extent of about $85,000,-
000 per year.'
Congress has declared that a state
of war exists with Germany. This
calls for an army of a half million
to a million men who must be fed.
The Western supply which has been
.coming to Georgia will necessarily be
diverted to feed-our army as well as
the army of the Allies
The following statement by Asst.
Secretary Vrooman of the United
States Department of Agriculture be
fore the Cattlemen’s Association in
Atlanta, Georgia, April 5, is emphatic:
“The most important question con
fronting us is this: Feeding our ci
vilian population, our army and navy
and the armies of our allied powers.
Unless the South grows food crops in
abundance, in greater quantities
than this section has grown at any
time in its history, the South-i—like
Geimany,— faces starvation.”
It may be a little late—but not too
ia'e- for the farmers to consider se
riously more crops for food and feed-
StlifiS.
flie boys and girls should be en
couraged to join corn, pig, canning
poultry and other agricultural clubs.
Conserving products raised, es
pecially J canning and .preserving
perishable fruits and vegetables.
Save the breeding stock, as these
will be at a premium, not only during
the interval of the war, but immedi
ately afterwards.
Help your neighbors to secure
planting seeds and fertilizers.
Farmers should undertake to feed,
not. only themselves, but their city
neighbors. City folks should buy the
local farmers* products in preference
to imports.
This is a Patriotic duty as well as ,
a necessity.
We have the authentic information
from the U. S. Department of Agricul
ture, that wilh the western supplies
diverted, there is a possibility of
Georgia suffering from hunger be
fore Christmas.
Unless we meet the emergency,
Georgia will be a weakness to the na
tion in this war.
It is also pointed out by President
Soule that it may be impossible dur
ing the progress of the war to secure
the transportation of cotton to the
eastern markets. Consequently, the
United States could manufacture only
about seven millions bales and the
price of cotton would likely drop to
a low rate.
Call on the county agent when he
can be of service to you in suggest
ing what, when and how to plant
many garden*and field crops.
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS, JUNE 21 1317
Upland Hies
R. R. Childs, Scientific Assistant Cereal
Investigations, U. S. Den 1 , of Ayr.,
Co-operating with Geoigia
St. Col. of Agriculture
Owing to the inevitable shoriage of
food stuff caused by the war, the peo
ple of Georgia are urged to make
their farms self-sustaining bv growing
B ott crops.
While rice is best grown on irri
gated soils some good yields have
been made on lands that vvere not ir
rigated and there are many farms in
the state on which this crop can be
profitably grown under present con
ditions.
According to the census . of IS>lO
Georgia grew 148,698 bushels of rice,
7,982 bushels of which were grown
without irrigation. Thirty-two differ
ent counties were represented, these
counties being scattered- through all
sections of the state. On most of
these areas the yields ranged from
20 to 50 bushels Per acre.
For the culture of rice without irri
gation, the best soils are drained
ponds or moist bottom lands. The
rice is usually planted in rows just
wide enough to permit cultivation.
The seed are dropped in hills from
6 to 12 Inches apart* several seed being
dropped in each hill. Several cultiva
tions and hoeings are usually neces
sary to keep down weeds and grass.
In some sections of north Georgia,
the rice is sowed broadcast or with
a grain drill, the natural spring rises
of the rivers being depended on to fur
nish irrigation.
The rice can be harvested and
thrashed in the same manner as the
other grain crops. The rough rice
must be milled to remove the outer
husk before it is suitable for food.
There are a number of small mills
for this purpose in the state, but if
none is available the hull can be re
moved by placing the rice in a trough
made by hollowing out a log and
pounding it with a maul.
This rice will not be as highly pol
ished as that found on the market,
but the dark unpolished rice is more
nutritious than the pure white rice
found on the market as the outer lay
ers of the latter, which are very rich
in protein, are removed in the polish
ing process.
Beans
T. H. McHatton, Professor of Horti
culture, State College of Agri.
Beans, cowpeas and like legumi
nous crops should be extensively
grown on the Georgia farms this
year. From ten to twenty bushels
ot' dried beans can be expected from an
acre of ground, and these food stuffs
will partially take the place of meat,
as beans contain a great deal of pro
tein. This #crop is easily grown and
easily stored, as the weevils can be
controlled through the simple fumi
gation with carbon bisulphide. We
are not a bean eating people. We are
however, great moat eaters, and the
present conditions existing in this coun
try are, going to necessitate the pro
duction of food stuff's at home. We
cannot produce meats as rapidly as
they will.be consumed, therefore, we
must fall back on the various legumi
nous crops, such as lieans and peas,
to take the place of meats.
CHECK THAT COLD QUICK
As every cough or sneeze distrib
utes millions of germs, we only need
a draft, chill or fatigue to lower ihe
body’s resistance and start a cold. At
the first sign, take Dr. Bell’s Pine-
Tar-Honev and don’t let a “summer
cold” become deep seated. The pleas
ant balsam qualities in Dr. Bell's Pine-
Tar-Honey cut the phlegm, relieves
congestion and allays inflammation.
Children like it, used with success by
singers and public speakers. 25c at
your druggist.—(advt.)
Farm, Town or City
''~ f i A
OTIS & HOLLIDAY
Flatiron Building Atlanta. Ga.
Save time and money by writing us. De
scribe properties.
LOAN CORRESPONDENTS
PAN-ACTCAN LIFE INSURANCE CO.
We also ropresen i capital desiring
to finance:
ladustriatTAnts Offices
P ’Ctory Buddings Hotels
Mercantile Oatiuitigs Theatres
Warshouis# Apartments
Farm Loans; Especially
Desire
YOU’LL LOOK 10 YEARS YOUNGER
Rid yourself of constipation and be
anew man or woman. Take Dr. King s
New Life Pills and expel the poisons
that weaken your system, foul your
blood and make you old before joui
time. One or two at night will clear
your complexion, brighten your e>es
and give back the springy step of
youth. For health and happiness let
Dr. King’s New Life PUD do for you
what they have done for thousands.
25c. —fadvt.)
Tti.l 214 or v If or Tip-Top or But
ter-Nut Bread
Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days
OINTMENT fill". 1 refun<l ""’’’ey >f PA7O
Silk* n, \ r 1 ,U ** cure nnve. e of Itching,
The fir S tTnn’ K '; r . Protr : Udio i n 6tol-ldays.
lhe first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c
Dress Up Your House !
Put a pair of up-to-the-minute MORGAN French Doors in
place of that old-fashioned front door. Another pair will fit
very nicely in the space occupied by those heavy folding doors.
1 f
IP !
ffi®* -1 ■ ■
" " =as
--r; ~-■■■ -... 7-.
V/Ni,' 1 ♦-■assfr^y
Austria | InsugS^
Your responsibility to your children does not end with
your death. The Prudential Monthly Income Policy
enables you to provide steady, unfailing support for wife and
family after you are gone Ask me about it. It is my busi*
ness to help you—-let me do it
J. B. HOWARD, Agent, Cartersville, Ga.
Mascot Range
Here Is a Range" So Good We Say
AT OUR RISK
fjv 'v&m' Es&sgS
Hi m&J
iTiitl ßf •
ATCO STORES CO.
“THAT COTTON MILL STORE”
Retailers of Everything and Buyers of Produce
We are the only distributors of Jhis Range in this territory.
WANTED Agents to sell liberal
up-to-date Accident afid Health Poli
cies. Business conditions in this line
have never been better. Part time
satisfactory. National Casualty Cos.
Detroit, Mich.
This improvement will dress your house up
wonderfully—make it more attractive,
lighter, cheerier and more pleasant
a real home.
You don’t have to spend much money to
have Morgan French Doors, and they will
add mqre than their cost to the value of
your house.
Our interesting booklet “Adding Distinction to the
Home,” contains many other suggestions for beautify
ing the home at small cost. Call for a copy or ask us
to send it. It’s free.
Rhyne Brothers
THE PRUDENTIAL
Insurance Company of America
Home Office, NEWARK, N. J.
Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System
The Old Standard genera! strengthening tonic,
j GROVE S TASTKI.ESS chill TONIC, drives out
Malaria.enriches the Mood, and buildsnpthe sys
-1 tem. A true tonic. For adults and chiW'tfß. 50c,
■—i iMW ■■ H i
FOR SALE A few' more 35-piece
| Aluminum Sets. G. M. Jackson & Son.
If you could try out
any Ordinary Good
Range for a week in
your own kitchen and
then try out the MAS
COT for one week,
you’d find such a differ
ence and distinction in
favor of the MASCOT
that'you wouldn’t give
the ordinary range a
second thought.
We know the MASCOT
will give you greater* service,
doing your baking and cook
ing much better, and last long
er—but you, yourself, don’t
know this, so that’s why we
make this remarkable
SPECIAL OFFER
Order a MASCOT, put it in
your kitchen. Try it out thoroughly
on your baking and cooking. If it
doesn’t prove better than any range
you have ever used, and you
decide within thirty days you
don’t want to keep it, notify us
and every cent will be refunded.
Could anything be more fair?