The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, June 28, 1917, Image 2

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Life Was a Misery Mrs. F. M. Jones, of Palmer, Okla., writes: “From the time 1 en tered into womanhood ... I looked with dread from one month to the next. I suffered with my back and bearing-down pain, until life to me was a misery. 1 would think ] could not endure the pain any longer, and 1 gradually got worse. . Nothing seemed to help me until, one day, . . • ] decided to TAKE CM The Woman’s Tonic “1 took four bottles," Mrs. Jones goes on to say, “and was not only greatly relieved, but can truthfully say that I have not a pain. . . “ It has now been two years since I tookCardui, and 1 am still in good health. . . I would ad vise any woman or girl to use Cardui who is a sufferer from any female trouble." If you suffer pain caused from womanly trouble, or If you feel the need of a good strengthening tonic I tobuildupyourrun-down I system, take the advice | of Mrs. Jones. Try Car- | dui. It helped her. We | believe it will help you. I AD Druggists I J.m I Ir. Merchant: i We have a good i rock of white corn icked in even weight ags for the feed ade. Let us fill your or )rs at market price. ield Milling Cos, To Cure a Cold In One Day e LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. It stops the {h and Headache and works off the Cold, agists refund money If it falls to cure. V. GROVE'S signature on each bon. 25c. Farm, Town or City LOANS OTIS & HOLLIDAY latircn Building Atlanta. Ga. ave time and money by writing us. De ! :ri'oe properties. LOAN CORRESPONDENTS AN-AMERICAN LIFE INSURANCE CO. i We also represent capital desiring to finance: ’, idustrial Plants Offices ictory Buildings Hotels crcanßlc Puddings Theatres • Vvehousea * Apartments A *" arge Farm Loans Especially Desired. ANTED — To sell my 6 cyllndef, ssenger, 60 horse Cole automobile ■ ill trade for small farm or city erty. Machine cost $2,850.00 and been run less than 5,000 miles. I as new. W. H. Field. For Rent, $15.00 Per Month, i. 300 South Erwin street. Seven < house. Can give immediate pos l on . See or phone W. H. Field at 1 warehouse. jj ,r SALE CHEAP —One second 1 roll top desk, second hand oil second hand sewing machines, range, one dresser, three dining s. G. M. Jackson & Son. ______ r. SALE--A few more 35-p!ece Sets. G. M. Jackson & Son HOW TO CAN IN THE SOUTH Home Methods As Taught by the U. S. Department of Agriculture in the Southern States. Can Surplus Food But Use Jars and Cans Wisely. Don’t have an empty preserving jar in your home next fall. Reserve regular tight-sealing containers for canning foods. Concentrate products so that each jar or can will hold as much food and as little water as possi ble. Put ug jams, jellies and pre serves in wide necked glasses seal ed with cora or paper and paraffin. Pack fruit juices in ordinary bot tles. Don’t can anything that can be kept just as well dried or in other forms. Dry navy and mature Lima beans for winter use. Produce in your garden lots of cabbage, potatoes, and root crops that can be kept for winter with out canning.—U. S. Department of Agriculture. It is ntore important than ever this year that none of the surplus products of the garden should go to waste. The country needs food now and it will need food next winter, not only for itself but for the allies. Home canned products ma-y never leave the house in which they are made, but their con sumption at home will mean so much more food available elsewhere for those who need it. It is imperative al so that the canning be done carefully as well as energetically In order to preserve the more perishable products. In the method taught by the special ists in the U. S. Department of Agri culture to the members of the canning clubs in the south, the first step is to see that all the necessary prepara tions are made before the vegetables or fruit are picked. “One hour from the field to the can’’ is a motto that every canner should have in mind. This is impossible If one has to pre pare utensils and wash and scald cans after the fruits and vegetables have been brought into the house. The con dition of these is a prime factor in de termining the quality of the finished product. Unless they are absolutely fresh, crisp, and clean when they are put into the cans, a high grade article is Impossible. Preparing the Product for the Can. In case of tomatoes the fruits should first be graded and all defective ones rejected. They should be lowered Into boiling water for one minute; then plunged Into cold water and peeled promptly. A slender, pointed knife should bo used to cut out the core, care being taken not to cut into the seed cells. The next step for nearly all fruits and vegetables is blanching. This con sists of plunging the prduct into boil ing water in which it is allowed to re main for a time that varies with the state of maturity. Blanching gives a more thorough cleaning than ordinary washing, removes the strong odor and flavor from certain kinds of vegeta bles, improves the texture, insures a clearer liquor, shrinks the article aiid .makes it, more flexible,, and in this way facilitates the putting up of a full pack. A wire basket or cheesecloth square should be used for tbe purpose. After blanching, spraying fruit with cold water will make it firmer and it is also sometimes desirable to puTveg etables into cold water for an Instant in order to make them crisper. (To be continued next week.) GIRLS! LEMON JUICE IS SKIN WHITENER how to Make a Creamy Beauty Lotion for a Few Cents. The juice of two fresh lemons -strain ed into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most re markable lemon skin beautifler at about the cost one must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Care should be taken to strain the lemon juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lo ! tion will keep fresh for months. Ev ery woman knows that lemon juice Is used to bleach and remove such blem ishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whiten* er and beautifier. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra grant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. —(advt.) OWNERS OF STOCK ASKED TO CO-OPERATE. Nashville, Tenn„ June 27.—Owners of stock throughout the territory trav ersed by the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, are asked to co operate with the road in its efforts to reduce the damage to stock along its ' lines. This appeal is based on patriotic THE BARTOW TRiBUNE-THE CAR TEP.SV.LLE NEViS JUNE 25^1917 .ues .n view of ibe numerous re quests of the government authorities for food conservation at this time. The right-of-way of the railroads is private property and stock should not be al lowed to trespass upon it any more than human beings. From an economic standpoint, the loss of stock, especially cows, at this time is decreasing the available food supply bv just such amount as Is killed, for cattle killed by trains are not eaten. It is paid for, but It takes just that much food from the coun try’s supply. That the public may have some idea of what this amounts to in dollars and cents in the course of a year, the fol lowing figures are submitted: For the year ended June 30, 1914, the.damage to stock on the N. C. & St. I. was $64,289.14. For the year 1915 the amount was $59,803.94, and in 1916 the road paid out $60,808.67 in stock claims. This is an average of over $61,000 a year for the past three years. Ot course, much of this stock was paid for above the market price, but at present values it can readily be seen that thousands of dollars worth of food would be conserved and saved for human consumption if the owners of stock would only meet the road half way. With the co-operation of the public the N. C. & St. L. feels that this cam paign will result in the saving of thousands of dollars and the reduc tion of litigation, and at the same time will have the beneficial effect of sav ing to the country a tremendous amount of food CALOMEL SALIVATES AND MAKES YOU SICK tots Like Dynamite on a Sluggish Liver and You Lose a Day’s Work. There’s no reason why a person should take sickening, salivating cal omel when 50 cents buys a large bot tle of Dodson’s Liver Tone—a per fect substitute for calomel. It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid which will start your liver just as surely as calomel, but it doesn’t make you sick and can not saliva/te. Children and grown folks can take Dodson’s Liver Tone, because it is perfectly harmless. Calomel is a dangerous drug. It is mercury and attacks your bones. Take a dose of nasty calomel today and you will feel weak, sick and nauseated tomorrow. Don’t lose a day’s work. Take a spoonful of Dod son’s Liver Tone instead and you will wake up feeling great. No more biliousness, constipation, sluggish ness, headache, coated tongue or sour stomach. Your druggist says if you don’t find Dodson’s Liver Tone acts better than horrible calomel your money is waiting for you. IN MEMORIAM. J. RANCE HAWKINS. The one remains, the many change and pass; Heaven’s light forever ‘shines, earth’s shadows fly; f.ifq, like a dome of many colored glass, Stains the white, radiams of eternity, Until death tramples it to fragments. J. Ranee Hawkins was horn at Stiles,boro, Ga., January 3, 1885. Death came to him May 29, 1917, at Albu querque, N. Mexico. It is needless to enumerate all the virtues of his character. They are-well known. Yet two of them seem to tow er in their lofty beauty above the rest —the winning of friends and unselfish ness —as we pay the tribute of love. The heart-power ever radiated from his life. With it, he made friends with children, youth and age, alike. The pageants and the triumphs of the world fade with death; hut the worth of a character like his illumin ates immortality. We have loved thee, Ranee, and shall continue to love thee. Thy char acter was fairer than a flower, and of more fragrance. Thou art gone in tby youth like a beautiful drenm. And yet tliou dost still abide with us, like sweet strains of music echoing in the halls of memory. By having known thee, we arc wooed to a higher life. Just as thou didst leave us in the beautiful after-glow of the sun-set, so we still have a vision of the more beautiful after-glow of thy life. We shell miss thy bright smile, thy kind words, thy loving personality, but. thy memory hallows the past. And we feel thy soul beacons us to the un known. Rest in peace, unselfish heart, for thou didst live, like the Christ, for ethers. Thy soul was purified by long suffering 'till it was all gold with no dross. “And I heard a voice from heaven saying unto me, write, blessed are the dead which die in the Lord from henceforth; Yea, saith the Spirit, that they may rest from their labors, and their words do follow them.” ONE WHO LOVED HIM.~ ROWLAND SPRINGS. Messrs. C. J. and R. L. Smith visit ed Mr. Edgar Roberts, of Cherokee, last Saturday. Mr. Harlin Bramblett, of Norfolk, Va is visiting homefolks this week at Rowland Springs. Mr. Lee Shinall and family and Mr. Jeff Mullins and family have moved to CartersvUle. *Mr. Wofford, of Cartersville, was visiting his sister, Mrs. R. J. Donahoo, last Sunday. Mr. Clyde Love and family have moved to White. The singing at the home of Mr. Charlie Simpson Sunday night was greatly enjoyed. Mr N’ewnan Bramblett was the guest of Mr. Marion Qualls, of Bolivar, Saturday night. Miss Lillie Bramblett, who has been spending some time with her sister, Mrs. Willis, at Ladds, returned home last Saturday. If you don’t know who handles Tip- Top and Butter-Nut Bread, excuse your neighbor when he laughs In your face. If not, Its because you have not tried Butter-Nut Bread. 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. You Can Save Money Here Bp*¥**-■-* - WWIB Wiwww..,- rt^n,T—yrrry] 1.1 a,M-| Buy a “K. K.” Cast Iron Range at the Old Price $59 A Car* Just in For THis Sale. ATCO STORES CO. “THAT COTTON MILL STORE” Retailers of Everything and Buyers of Produce We\are the\only distributors oflthis Range in this territory. AtcOj • • •if • • Qeorgici ■ COFFEE . t thcß cl lyTay4orC* "'porters &• roasters 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. HmANNEcoffee The Reily-Taylor Company, .New Orleans THE PRUDENTIAL Insurance Company of America Home Office, NEWARK, N. J. ‘lt Shorely is Good’- Start the day with a cup of good, old Luzianne. There’s cheer in its very aroma —spunk and gO - in every swallow. You'll like Luzianne. Buy a can today and, if you don’t agree it goes farther and tastes better than any other coffee at the price, tell the grocer and he will give you back exactly what you paid for it, with out argument. You simply can't go wrong on Luzianne. Ask for profit-sharing catalog. Don’t Wait for the New Ad vance Prices Which Are Sure To Come —Place Y our Order Now. We Will Deliver Any Time. Come In Now. Don’t Wait. Why You Should Buy a ‘Kitchen Kumlort” Range Study the six points—'they are NEW. 1. Fire goes entirely around oven when baking. 2. Boils and fries evenly on all 6 covers. 3. No shifting of pans necessary when baking. 4. Bakes bread in 3 to 5 minutes — browns top and bottom alike. 5. Patented hot blast and flue con struction saves one-third of fuel. 6. Quickest water heater on record.