The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, July 19, 1917, Image 9

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Mr. Merchant: We have a good stock of white corn sacked in even weight bags for the feed trade. Let us fill your or ders at market price. Field Milling Cos. To Cure a Cold !n One Day . r 1 vaTIVE BROMO Quinine. It stops the acd Headache and works off the Cold. L refund money if it fails to cure, j VV GROVE’S signature on each box. 25c. How’s This? We (Ter One Hundred Dollars Reward for any jJe .'f Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall a CtaiTli Cure. t’HENEY * CO., Toledo. O. w.. the undersigned, have known F. 1. * i . >r the last 13 years, and believe hliu SSeV.lv honorable in all business transact on. JSJ finiini ially able to carry out any obligation. ja.de by his firm. BANK QF COMMERCE. Toledo, Ohio. H.ll’s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces oj fd" ~ ; ™. Testimonials sent free. Price T. feats per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Tike Ilall’* family Pills for coustipatiou. KEEP A BOTTLE OF C. C. C. ON YOUR MEDICINE SHELF FOR " DIARRHOEA AN DYSENTERY 25c A BOTTLE AT YOUNG BROS. DRUG CO. WANTED —To sell my 6 cylinder, 7 passenger, 60 horse Cole automobile or will trade for small farm or city property. Machine cost $2,850.00 and has been run less than 5,000 miles. Good as new. This machine is for sale at a real bargain. W. H. Field EASY TO TAKE NO PAIN OR ACHE. It'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 torplc liver, and livens up-the whole system by ridding it of the clogging poisons Yet it works so gently and pleasant!) that you hardly know you’ve taken It LIV-VER-LAX, being purely vegeta ble. 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 saie at 50c and $1 at Griffin Drug Cos ladvt.) STOP IN ATLANTA AT HOTEL EMPIRE Opposite Union Depot on Pryor St. Renovated and refurnished throughout. Reservations made on application. Hot and cold water, private baths, electrio lights and elevator. First class accommodations at moderate prices. Rooms 50c am'dup JOHN r,. KDMONDSON. Prop. SArjfW Rats&Mi^g For Sale by: Wholesale Distributors CARTERSVILLE GROCERY CO., Cartersville, Ga. Retailers: F. E. MATTHEWS, * Cartersville, Ga. Clear Your Complexion \\\ with This I -f I Old Reliable V r I Remedy— julfhur Compound anj 4n TP i l ' J? !a ch-heads, freckles, blotches and bo-'i? 5 - !lasfor , n ' < >r* serious (ace, scalp this sc , J, 1 ut,tions ' hives, eczema, etc., use tlon ,> - compound o( sulphur. Asa lo ate* dr*2!i! ■ an , c * heals; taken Internally— roo* ,< . h ps ,' n a ; ? ,as * 0< water—R sets at the pi °* the trouble and purifies the blood. ■ost efi'r, STe ui* ha ,' su, P hnr •* OR e of the tnem'i.i i i ve i 3 ootl P ur| fiers known. Re nt 5 haith complexion isn't skin deep COv!p(H°v a ? k n r HANCOCK SULPHUR factory reVn'rc < ** **** keen USC( * wit ** ****** v rcsuit * for over 25 years. j 50c and $1 the bottle II “ad n ’ 1 supply you, ■ oc pJr!? UID *uLPHut * Company ■ Self aore, Mi. mth tin County Home Demonstration Department By MISS JESSIE BURTON. As the demonstrations in canning have been held over the county in can ning without fail each time some one has told of the cold water method ad vocated by the department at Wash ington. Of course we can uot keep beaus, [teas, etc. in this way. In the fust place there is no reason in it. The bacteria cause fruits and vegetables to spoil and some method must be em ployed whereby they are killed. Below is a letter just received from the Washington office in regard to this information coming from there: "To All Agents: ‘‘There has been seme confusion due to a lack of system in the Department o,f Agriculture in sending out bulle tins from other divisions than the of fice of Extension Work in the-south on the subject of canning. We have had a definite understanding that only instructions prepared by this office should go into the southern territory, but for some cause or other a number of copies of Bulletin No. 830, ‘Home Canning by the One-Period Cold-Pack Mehtod,’ have been circulated in the south. Without criticism of Bulletin No. 839, we would say that the instruc tions given therein are not suitable for the southern territory, and the amateurs will find difficulty in keeping peas, beans, corn and okia under this method. We are sending under separate cov er copies of Farmers" Bulletin No. 854, 'Canning,’ prepared by this office. Please understand that this is the cor rect information on the subject of can ning and wherever possible substitute this bulletin in (dace of Bulletin No. 839 in the hands of persons who may have received it from the department or other sources. Bulletin No. 839 was not designed for southern conditions. “Very truly yours, "BRADFORD KNAPP, Chief.’’ Please note what is said in this and in this time of high priced foods let us not waste our food in this way. Demonstrations to be Held. Thursday, July 19, at Cartersville, at court house grounds. Tuesday, July 24, at Ransom. Wednesday, July 25, at Mt. Pisgah, (regular meeting). Friday, July 26, at Rogers -Station. More calls have come for demon strations and help than can be an swered at once. Please follow the di rections that you can get from the ones who eun successfully and from (lie bulletins you can secure from this department and conserve every hit of your surplus prducts. Be Canny. Get that canning impulse. Make your hoe this summer keep your can opener busy nest winter Get ready for canning season now. Regrets are the only things ever can ned in tlie jars you foi'got to order. Can nothing that can be kept with out canning. Dry such vegetables as corn, string beans, navy beans, ma ture Lima beans, okra, etc. You can brag about your garden all winter if you have your canned evi dence on the dinner table. Concentrate products, especially sou]) mixtures, so that each container will bold as much canned food and as little waiter as possible. Reall.v there is nothing to canning fruit and vegetables except care, clean liness. fresh products, jars and heat. Secretary of Agriculture Urges Every Household to Can and Dry Sur plus Fruits and Vegetables. Every, housewife this year should re store to her home the often overlook ed home industries of canning, pre serving, pickling, and drying of per ishable fruits or vegetables. The large number of new backyard gardens which—have been planted this year shortly will begin to yield their extra hai vest of beans, peas, carrots, beets, sweet corn, and tomatoes. The regular supplies also will reach the markets and, as happens each summer, the lo cal supply at times will exceed TRiraed inte consumptive capacity. Xot to cor. serve much of this surplusage of val uable food would he sinful wa&le. The present food and labor situa tions are such that no household i justified in looking to others to release it wholly from Individual responsibil ity and constructive action in saving and conserving food All any home should expect of others is to supply those foods which can notjae produced effectively by its own members. The' railroads will he burdened with the transportation of staple foods and civil and military necessaries from locali ties of production and manufacture to districts incapable of supplying their own needs It follows that all locally produced foods, conserved bv home methods, lessen the winter pressure on transportation agencies and also re lease similar products of factories for other purposes. I urge every household, therefore, to can all surplus perishable products for which they have containers and to dry THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS JULY 19, 1917. and.keep in pai>er any additional sur plus suitable tor such preservation. Canning calls for no special skill and for little equipment beyond a wash boiler and jars. Fresh products, cleanliness, and heat are the chief re quirements, as even sugar is not es sential for canning fruits under mod ern procedure. Fruits and vegetables, moreover, can be dried efficiently in the sun, over a range or gas stove, or before an electric fan.* Homemade shallow trays of wood or heavy wire screen are the chief equipment re quired. Drying is a time-tried home in dustry; conservation of food by dry ing is largely a matter of restoring to the home great-grandmother’s method of seeing that her family had good food in winter as a relief from a mon otonous diet of root vegetables. Can ning and drying can be practiced as effectively in a city house or apart ment as on a farm or in a suburban dwelling. Canning, of course, already is a j profitable industry for women and I children in thousands of homes and I I trust will become almost universal i this season. To aid the home conserva i ticn movement, the Department of Ag riculture has issued anew Farmers’ Bulletin on home canning and another on home drying of fruits and vegeta ble. These free pamphlets should he read and followed in every household which wishes to translate patriotic im pulse into concrete service. D. F. HOUSTON. EVER SALAVATED BY CALOMEL? HORRIBLE! Calomel is Quicksilver and Acts Like Dynamite on Your Liver. Calomel loses you a day! You know what calomel is. It’s mercury; quicksilver. Calomel is dangerous, ft crashes into sour bile like dyna mite, cramping and sikening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be put into your sys tem. When you feel bilious, sluggish, constipated and all knocked out and believe you need a dose of dan gerous calomel just remember that your druggist sells for 50 cents a large bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone, which is entirely vegetable 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. Don’t take calomel! 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. * ************ SNOW SPRINGS. * ************* Rev. Chas. K. Lee, of Armuehee, Piled his regular appointment at ibis place Saturday and Sunday and de livered two very interesting sermons. Mr. and Mrs. Willie Chitwood, of Sugar Valley, spent the week-end with the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. James F. Davis. Rev. and Mrs. Lee spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. S. .T. W. Hood. Miss Corbin, of Armurchee, was vis iting at this place Saturday and Sun day. Mr. D. F. Holcomb and daughter, Miss Mattie, of Gordon county, attend ed preaching at Snow Spring Sunday. FREE OF CHARGE. Any adult suffering from cough, cold or bronchitis, is invited to call at rhe drug store of Young Bros Drug Cos. nnd get absolutely free, a sample bot tle of Boschee’s German Syrup, a -oothing and healing remedy for ali lung troubles, which has a successful record of fifty years. Gives the patient a good night’s rest free from coughing, with free expectoration in the morn ing. Regular sizes, 25.and 75 cents. For sale by all dealers in civilized coun tries. Young Bros. Drug Cos. —fadvt.) TURNIP SEED. TURNIP SEED. TUR NIP SEED. WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED $150.00 WORTH AND EXPECT TO SELL THEM ALL FOR IT’S NOTHING MORE THAN WE HAVE DONE BE FORE. YOUNG BROS. DRUG CO. ************* v STILESBORO. **** * ******* Mrs. Joel Marcellus Conyers enter tained about thirty of her friends at her lovely home “Aden View near Stilesboro at a progressive rook par on last Monday afternoon in honor of Miss Blanche Cunyiis, of Atlanta. Af ter the game a delightful ice course was served. The many friends of Rev. and Mrs. Truloek will be glad to learn they have leturned from Rome where Mrs. "Un lock underwent an operation at Har bin’s hospital for appendicitis. The recent guests of Mrs. Bob H. McGinnis were, Misses Vera McGin nis, of Avon Park, Fla; Elva Davis, Taylorsville; Gladys and Zeta White, of Cartersville. The Racccon Creek Baptist church lecently completed was dedicated on the second Sunday in July. An all day service was held, Rev, L. E. Roberts, of College Park, preaching the dedi cational sermon at eleven a. m. Capt. H J- McCormick read the history of the church from its earliest infancy to the present time. A special musical Men ’who cherish steady H nerves and clear eyes f' drink ( j MfJ Jr “In a bottle—Through a straw yM/ EAO AFTEE EFFECT. Health is more precious than all the gold of ~ Croesus. Do not jeopardize it. Be refreshed— / drink pure, unadulterated CHERO-COf A from the original sanitized bottle, through a straw. pm! Ifpr You Can Save Money Here Don’t Wait for Jjjr pQi * ypl 1. Fire goes entirely around oven HHf/ 'BgL when baking. when baking. Buy a "K. K.” Cast Iron Range at the Old , 4 „!?“ b T? !” 3 to ,f, m,n " les - J browns to {3 and bottom alike. Pricp 5- Patentecl hot Mast and flue con struction saves one-th!Td of fuel. A Car .Just ill For This Salts. 6 ' Qnlcllest water heater ° n rMOrd - ATCO STORES CO. “THAT COTTON MILL STORE” Retailers of F.verything and Buyers of Produce We'are the only distributors of this Range in this territory. Atco, . . . , , Georgia program was arrarfged for the occas ion. Mr. and Mrs. K. B. Hargis and young son. Robert,, Jr., spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Phillips in Cartersville. • Under the chairmanship of Mrs. Hob H. McGinnis quite a sum has been realized in our community for Red Cross work. Rev. Frank Pirn, of Atlanta, spent I several days last week with Mr. and ! Mrs. J. O. Cannon. Quite a number motored over to Borden-Wheeler for the day Sunday. Mrs. C. N. Patterson, who has been the guest of Mrs. Marion Colbert, left Saturday for a month’* stay in Ash ville, N. C. The friends of Miss Susie Williams* are glad to see her out after several weeks’ illness.