The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, July 19, 1917, Image 7

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Edited by EUNICE GINN red cross. Have vou not an old table cloth or , , hat is too good to discard and vet not ,T ood enough for use? If so, will vou not give it to the Red Cross Cliai : r t hat napkins and tray cloths nay be m ade for which there is great de ii;;inil jn the hospital supply- depart ment? It you should want to help, and, al most" every one does, and can not at •emi t he Ked CrOSS classes your help Jr, making these napkins and tray ilotlls w m be appreciated. Each must br neatly hemmed and the napkins men sure H inches square; the tray t l' ot bs 1. r >x22 inches. Or if you cannot j ike the napkins and cloths and will ,'jv, sonie linen please telephone Miss \iaybelle .Tones, number 112, and it will be sent for. Will you not look over your linen immediately and help in this great nork? always in the lead DIXIE THEATRE K. W. GOTTLD, Mgr. Phone 411 Cartersville, Ga. Monday, duly 23ci WE PRESENT EtHel Clayton —IN “Yankee Pluck'’ By Willard Mack. Tuesday, duly 2-4tln We Present Mme. Petrova —ix— |‘The Undying Flame” By Emma Bell. ■Wednesday, July 25 tH We Present Peggy Hyland IN 1 “Babette” A DRAMA. Thursday, duly 26th We Present I Louise Muff arid Jack Pickford I “FRECKLES” By Marion Fairfax. Friday, duly 27th We Present Viola Daria I —IN— I “Lady Barnacle” I K 'lni Kdgar Franklin’s story. ■ ■ |l Saturday, duly22Hth I We Present j Hud Fisher’s I Comedy Creations | “Mutt and Jeff” E§ have caused more laughs than ■ > her one comedy act ever staged. I Charles Murray in II HER TAME AND SHAME” 1 latest War Pictures 1 ADMISSION 10c TO ALL. I Yov DON’T HAVE tLv'i Y|||; ITO GET ONTO THE IS* [| Curves of a II SQUARE MAN ! jM[\ xi|| | N efx^&e-u^c. lOL^ ■ T I ' a pleasure to do business with a him or a man that gives ■ ■ ! ’i a good squaie deal. If you want that each penny, nickle E 1 lmc °l y°ur money should serve you propedy ycu’ll find it a a?ure to do business with us. I FOR THIS WEEK ONLY. Ladies Wash Dresses at Vsc ■° n s $2.00 Straw Hats at 95c I STEIINBERCj’S | M A all Street CartersviHe. <;*. \\ r hut Steinberg Says is So* DIXIE PROGRAM. Saturday the patrons of the Dixie are to have the pleasure of seeing Fatty Arbuckle in "The Rough House ” He appears as chef in the Rough household making bread as it should not he made. There is sure to lie a hearty laugh in this new film of Fat ty’s for each movie fan. On Tuesday, the 24th. Mad ame Petrova will be seen at ihe Dixie in ’The Undying Flame.’ The Oriental belief in reincarnation forms a promi nent element in this mystic picture of Romatic Egypt. As the Egyptian girl of Pharaoh s reign Madame Petrova is gloriously beautiful in her pagan jewelry, sandals and queer filmly gar ments and then as a daughter of a century later in the person of Grace Leslie she proves the same fascinating wonderful actress* "The Undying Flame" is a striking and unusual play with its thrilling tale of world obi .ove and is decidedly one cf the be t of tlie latest pictures to be produced. DANCE. On Tuesday evening the boys of the Etowah Club entertained at a dance at the club room. The music was fur nished by Tobby's Orchestra from At lanta. The chaperons were, Mr. and Mis. Levi Reeves. -Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay Forrester, Mr. and Mrs. Madison Mil am and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hebble. Among the out-of-town guests-were Miss Parham, of Gainesville, Misses Christine Blair, Catherine Dupree, Vir ginia Boston, Julia McNeal and Lucile Morris, of Marietta: Messrs. Malcolm! Whitlock. Onlsow Milam, Richard 1 Montgomery and Dave McNeal, of Marietta. ' ROME RED CROSS. - - "■ ■ On a recent visit to Rome I had | occasion to spend a morning in the work room of the Rome Red Cross. [ Classes for the different phases of the 1 work were held each day under the ! instructions of a trained nurse. The old and young alike were en- j thusiastic over the course provided. The spirit of “Doing Your Bit” seemed to me to be the unspoken motto of the work room. With minute care the in structions were carried out in making the surgical dressings and each mem ber seemed to realize that their best was all too small to give when others were so bravely offering their lives to the cause. The Rome Red Cross organization is a very alive body awake to the'pres ent needs and opportunity before them. The classes have enrolled a number cf women and girls whose, know ledge gained here will lie a ben- j efit to them their entire lives. Every ! girl in Cartersville who lias several ! hours of spare time each day could | put it to no better pur|>ose than help-. ing to organize the classes here and j then taking the courses provided. In Honor of Visitors. On Thursday evening at their home at Stilesboro Mrs. Haygond and Miss Willie Bell Cannon entertained for their house guests, Miss Corine Few, of Madison, and Rev. B. S. Pint, of At lanta. The color scheme of green and white was carried out in the ice cotitse. About twenty guests w re invited. Miss Margaret and Isabelle Wilker f,on, who have'been visiting relatives ir Atlanta, have joined a house party being entertained by Mrs. ,T. W. Sta-n --foid at Cartersville. They will return home the first of the week. —Rome Tribune-Herald. THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CAR TERSVILLE NEWS, JULY 19, 1917. WOMAN’S PAGE PERSONALS. Miss Alice and Miss Rachel Keiih. of Chnton, have been the guests- of Mrs. Amos Keith for the |ast week. Mr. and Mrs. Artie Small, of Macon, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Levi Reeves. Do you want to save money? Go to Steinberg’s. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Ham and Wil bur, Jr., left Thursday for Jackson, Ga. Mrs. p. (’, Klein Ister and daughter, Mary Trammel, are gnestj} of her par ents in Tunnel Hill. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE—Good, gentle harness horse and rubber tired phaeton. G. H. Aubrey. Miss Nancy Irick is in Atlanta at St. Joseph’s Hospital where she had an operation for appendicitis. Mr. Joel Fite, of the officers train ing camp in Atlanta, spent Sunday with his parents. Money goes a long wav when you trade at St< inberg’s, and "what Stein berg says is so." Air. and Mrs. Ed McClain, of Rome, i a>e guests of Mrs. Wallace. Mrs. T. R. Garlington, of Cedartown, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Claude Brown WANTED- —Cow fresh in milk. Phone 2722. Mrs. Georgia Ttunlin. Mrs. Gordon Cassels left Tuesday 1 lot her home in Savannah. She was I accompanied by Iter mother, Mrs. | George Gilreath, who will later join i Airs. Ed Cole and children at Chick | Springs before returning home. “A stitch in time saves nine.” Buy your dress goods at Steinberg's. Mrs. V. J. Ngel, Miss Elizabeth Vaughan and Miss Loui e Dodd left Thursday for Blue Ridge, Ga. .Miss Evelyn Garwood, with her guest, Miss Florine Turk, of Reynolds, will leave Friday foT Macon where they will spend a few weeks. We believe in small profits and quick sales. Steinberg. Miss Alice McEwen, of Nashville, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. McEwen. Mrs. Robert Pouche lias returned from a delightful visit to Mr. and Mrs. Sproull Fouche at Valley View.—Rome . Tribune-Herald. A fair and square deal in every re spect at Steinberg’s. Jfev. Walt Holcomb, of Nashville, Tenn., arrived in the city Tuesday morning, and is the guyst of Mrs. Sam P. Jones, whom his wife and children have been visiting for several weeks. Go to Steinberg’s for your children’s diesses. They are certainly cheap. Mrs. Abda J. Collins and children, who have been in St. Augustine, Fla., for several weeks visiting Mrs. Col ons’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. .Mas ters, have returned to the city. Miss Helen Colee, of St. Augustine, also ar rived with Mrs. Collins and will lie her guest here for awhile. Miss Colee L a niece of Mrs. Collins. X( \v tali hat;--, just received at Steinberg's. The very latest models. President .John Howe Peyton, of the Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway, was in the city Tuesday morning in his private car. Mr. Peyton came to this city on an inspection tour of the Western & Atlantic division and from here he made a trip over the track toward the south in a motor car which was especially designed for his use. L'FT YOUR CORNS OFF WITH FINGERS Tells How to Lorsen a Tender Corn or Callus so it Lifts Out Without Pain. You reckless men and women who art- pestered with earns; and who have at least once a week invited an awful death from lockjaw or blood poison are now told by a Cincinnati authority P use a drug called free/one. whieh the moment a few drops are applied t any corn the soreness i relieved and soon the entire corn or callus, root and all. lifts off with the lingers. Freestone dries the moment it is ap p’ied., and simply shrivels the corn or callus without inflaming or even irri ; fating the surrounding tissue or skin. : A small lrottle of freezone will cost ; very little at any of the drug stores, but will 'positively rid one's feet of every hard or soft corn or hardened callus. If your druggist hasn’t any i freestone he can get it at any whole sale drugs bouse for you- —fsd'vt.t MAMMA! DON’T YOU SEE YOUR CHILD IS SICK, CONSTIPATED Look at Tongue! Move Poisons From Liver and Bowels at Once. Mother! Your child isn't naturally cross and peevish. See if tongue is coated; this i s a sure sign its little stomach, liver and bowels need a cleansing at once. When listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn't eat, sleep or act naturally, has stom ach-ache, diarrhoea, remember, a gen tle liver and bowel cleansing should always be the first treatment given. Nothing equals ‘‘California Syrup of Figs” for children’s ills; give a tea spoonful, and in a few hours all Ihe foul waste, sour bile and fermenting food which is clogged in the bowels passes out of the system, and you have a well and playful child again. All children love this harmless, delicious “fruit laxative,” and it never fails to effect a good “inside” cleansing. Direc tions for babies, children of all ages and grown-ups are plainly on the bot tle. Keep it handy in your home. A lit tle given today saves a sick child to morrow, but get the genuine. Ask your druggist for a r>o-cent bottle of “Cali fornia Syrup of Figs,” then look and see that it is made by the California Ftg Syrup Cos.” —(advt.) 'vvveswf’nmii^ ['hlwM J 1 1 Ti 11, I,L/ l i AW' iVMwJiJFiM D v /j JR i tl L bi ii V 1 uHlIu 11 im mmt 1 2 tj . ii j MpifM mmmm f j s \\\S Vyr Brings oirffheAi k/beaufy of flic wood vj EVEN the rarest hardwood ■ requires coloring in *■ II order to secure perfect 1| j| results. 7 ---p I | I |DYSTAIN n Produces beautiful stained ! I| effects and is used w ith equal ■ success on hard or soft wood. || It colors the wood just right H without raising the grain, II leaving a perfectly smooth surface for finishing. y Pee Gee DYSTAIN comes in | 12 natural wood colors [1 Peaslee-Gaulbert Cos., Inc. Louisville, Ky. || Lumpkin Hardware Cos. s Cartersville, Ga. f ; ENDORSED AT HOME. Such Proof as This Should Convince Any Cartersville Citizen. The public endorsement of a lo -al citizen is the best proof that can be produced. None better, none stronger can i>e had. When a man comes for ward and testifies to his fellow-citi zens, addresses his friends and neigh bors, you may be.sure he is thorough ly convinced or he would not do so. Telling one’s experience when it is for ihe public good is an act of kindness that should be appreciated. The fol lowing statement given by a resident of Cartersville adds one more to the many cases of Home Endorsement which are being published about Doan's Kidney Pills. Read it. J. H. Morn's, Sr., merchant, 311 Moon St., says: "I had some troub'e with irregular passages of the kidney secretions. Doan's Kidne: \Piil; .o n icm vel tlie disorder and I didn't have to take them long either. A iff kidneys i w ac‘ all righl and I have no need of Doan's Kidney Pills.” Price .">oc, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidnev remedy- get Doan’s Kidney Pills -the l same that Mr. .Minis had. Fo• fer-.Milburn "Cos; Mfgrs., Buffalo, X. Y.— ladvt.t DOST—A .Masonic wat h charm, with compass and square on both -ides. The finder will be liberally re warded if returned or for information. John R. Young. Real Estate and Ren tal Agent. Children's dresses at Steinberg's at vcur own price. AX APARTMENT FOR REXT— Three rooms and private bath, with gas, electric lights and screens. Mrs Henry Harvey, Phone SCO, 221 Xorth Erwin Street. Have you seen those straw hats at Steinberg’s for men and boys? They ate worth $2.00, but they are closing them out for 9.7 c. I Have Bought lor you 2160 Mason Fruit Jars, 1000 Jelly Glasses, 1700 Mason Jar Tops, To can your fruit and vegetables. SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY. V Matthews. Exclusive agents for Votan line. J i —J—| Flies Breed ‘ \ b —fhen come into your Korno JPILTH MEANS DISEASE and flies are born in nhh, Lwd r,n filth * and carry filth with them wherever they alight. Flies hatching today in an outhouse, etablcyard or in gar! age, may brr.:g distress to your family later on in the cummer. They may bring tvphoid frver, summer complaint, consumption, uia’ar;-.-., or perhaps in.ar.tilj paralysis. The tly is almost the exclusive conveyer cf diarrhoea anJ dysentery among children and babies. Cats FSSth an# This wonderful Lyo cats rp filth r.r. 1 '/ nothin;? -'or i'.'vz . to feed on < r 1 re-d J 1 r.pri. ’ . .’. or'3 r ' .vivo n week irt the privy or outhousa. L Cr- • v Uncourap j your neighbor t; clean his out-houaa -.u: i -r > good for hit. RED DEVIL LYE u t : p’y '.vrr.darLl f'r tttahinj soap, con ditioning hog3, and for l— compost for Lr.i.i z::. RED DEVIL LYLLBc’.d l ycl! . 3arrr-:l Hie. cans. One dime c-i contains more than two r.ic’.:-J cans. . =o, ~ - C-pn WM. SCHIELD MFC. CO., 61G G. Ssvi CT. Hog:HTmO. Pale Faced Women lake Phosphates to Make Rosy Cheeks and Beautiful Forms. Men Need Phosphates to Make Strong, Healthy, Vigorous Bodies. Atheletes increase their strength, energy and endurance 200% or more by simply taking a few weeks treatment of Argo-Phosphate. Atlanta, Ga. Ur. F. A. Jacobson says that Phosphates are just as ess*entiul to any man or woman who tires easily, is nervous, or irritable, worn out, or looks haggard and pale to make a strong, robust, vigorous healthy body, as they are to cotton to make it grow. The of Phosphate is the cause of ail enemic conditions and the admin -1 ration of 5-grain Argo-Phosphate chiefs will the stt’W*g!h and endurance of weak, nervous, care worn men and women 300 per cent, in two or three weeks time in many instanc es and their continued use will build p the whole nervous system, and give new life, vim, vigor, and vitality to the whole body. 1 always prescribe Argo- Phosphate to patient- who are pale ar-d colorless, and it is surprising to ee how quick'y a few weeks treat ment will transform a pale face 10 a rosy cheeked beauty. There can be no rosy cheeked, healthy, beautiful wo men, without their system is suffic eutiy supplied wi:h Phosphates In -ooent interviews with physicians on he grave and serious consqueirces of i deficiency of Phosphates in the blood n American men and women. I have strongly emphasized the fact that doc tors should prescribe more phosphates hi the form of Argo-Phosphate for weak, worn out, haggard-looking men and women. When the skin is pale, and flesh flabby, it is a sign of anema. When the phosphates go from the blood, the pink- cheeks go too. The Telephones 3605 or 304 The Quinine That Does Not Affert The He* tecause of its tonic amt laxative effect I.AXA. riVK BROMO QOININK is better than ordinary Quinine and does not cause nervousness no; login* in head. Remember the full nameatu tolc for the signature ol 1.. \V. ttKOVH. 2So. muscles lack tone. They become ner vous, irritable, despondent, melan choly, the brain fags, and the memory fails. Therefore if you wish to pre serve your youthful vim, vigor and vitality, to a ripe old age, you must supply the deficiency of Phosphates lacking in your food by using Argo- Phosphate, tli/ form of Phosphates most easily assimilated. NOTICE: Argo-Phosphate which is recommended and prescribed by phy sicians in all enemic cases is not a secret or patent medicine, but one that is sold and recommended by well known druggists everywhere, and phy sicians are daily subscribing the con stituents contained in it. Being entire ly unlike many other Phosphates, it is# easily assimulated and will be found effective in the treatmeru of indiges t'on and stomach troubles, as well as fer care worn, nervous conditions. The manufacturers of Argo-Phosphate wilt forfeit to any charitable institution *200.00 if they cannot treat any man O’* woman under 63 who lacks Phos phates, and increase their strength and endurance from 100 per cent, to 300 per cent, or more in one month’-* time, if they are free from organic trouble. It is dispensed by all reliable druggists. If your druggist will not supply von. send SI.OO to the Argo laboratories, 10 Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga., and they wiP send you a two weeks’ treatment bjf roturn mail. . M ,