The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, August 02, 1917, Image 3

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Health About Gone Many thousands of women suffering from womanly trouble, have been benefited by the use of Cardui, the woman’s tonic, according to letters we receive, similar to this one from Mrs. Z. V. Spell, ofHayne, N.C. “I could not stand on my feet, and just suffered terribly,” she says. “As my suf fering was so great, and he had tried other reme dies, Dr. had us get Cardui. . . I began improving, and it cured me. 1 know, and my doctor knows, what Car dui did for me, for my nerves and health were about gone.” TAKE CARDIN The Woman’s Tonic She writes further: 4, 1 am in splendid health ... can do my work. I feel I owe it to Cardui, for I was in dreadful condition.” If you are nervous, run down and weak, or suffer from headache, backache, etc., every month, try Cardui. Thousands of women praise this medi cine for the good it has done them, and many physicians who have used Cardui successfully with their women patients, for years, endorse this medi cine. Think what it means to be in splendid health, like Mrs. Spell. Give Cardui a trial. AD Druggists J7i Bn the District Court of the United R States. for the Northern District of ■ Georgia. In re- J. R. Comb, Bankrupt. No. 838 I In Bankruptcy. I A petition for discharge having been Jle,' in conformity with law by above lamed bankrupt and the court having rdered that the hearing upon said pe- Ition be had on September Ist, 1917 It ten o'clock A. M. at the United Itates District Court room, in the city If Atlanta, Georgia, notice is hereby liven to all creditors and other per sons in interest to appear at said time lid place and show cause, if any they lave, why the prayer of the bankrupt I discharge should not be granted. J. C. PBJNTUP, Deputy Clerk. 0. C. FULLER, Clerk. I ’'osquito nets, large double bed |ze. $3.00. We hang them free. J. W. langhan & Cos. f TRAIN SCHEDULE. I Arrival and departure of S. A. L. I Company trains at Cartersville, l> daily: I "n depart 0:50 a. m. 13 depart 4:00 p.m. I 322 arrive 11:15 a. m, I 312 arrive 7:35 p.m. *** ' I \our responsibility to. your children does not end with I>ur death. The Prudential Monthly Income Policy Babies you to provide steady, unfailing support for 'ufe and ■tiily after you are gone Ask me about it. It is my busi ■ss to help you—let me do it 1 B. HOWARD, Agent, Cartersville, Ga, THE LIBERTY LOAN A NATIONAL FORCE The Liberty Loan of 1917 already constitutes an Important factor in our national life. It has given anew direc tion to thought among the people and anew impulsion to popular aims. The effects of the loan on the government, on the body of the people and on the individual citizen of the United States are sure to be great and manifold. The four million holders of Liberty Loan Bonds will look with more care and attention on financial legislation by congress than heretofore. Much of the national indifferene to alleged ex travagant and unwise legislation will vanish so far as they are concerned. The direct, individual, financial inter est which every bond holder has in the government’s finances will make each an active and effective agent for economy in administration and for wise legislation. The Liberty Loan is going to create anew voting force in the body politic —a civic force in which partisanship and extravagance are to be subordin ated to better and wiser things. The Liberty Loan’s influence for good, in another way, is going to be largely effective through its influence on the individual bond holder. To thrift for one's own sake there has been added the incentive for thrift for the nation’s sake. Thrift for the na tion’s sake will benefit the individual and combine two strong motives— patriotism and self-interest. Economy like extravagance is more or less infectious. We are just passing through an era of extravagance and entering on a period of economy. The Liberty Loan furnished an inspiration and an opportunity for economy and saving. As the intolerable humiliation of owing to Germany the war indemnity in 1870 made the French people a na tion of savers and government bond buyers, so the great Liberty Loan of 1917 with its call upon the patriotism of Americans will make this nation more a nation of Savers than ever be fore. The number of subscribers to the loan and the amount subscribed make the two billion dollar loan more than a success. It was a triumph and its effect on the people of America will be far reaching and lasting. The Liberty Bonds and the Farmer. It has been repeatedly pointed out that in. purchasing Liberty Ixian Bonds the farmers of the United States were furnishing the means to their best customers to purchase the products of their farms. Much of the proceeds of the Liberty Loan, both that used by the United States gov ernment and the amount loaned to the Allies, is to be expended in pur chasing food and supplies for their armies from the farmers of the coun try. There are other reasons however that make the Liberty Loan Bonds es pecially desirable investments for farpiers. A safe Investment is particularly suited to a farmer because he is in most instances at a distance from bond markets and not in position eith er to know of or immediately act upon information of matters affecting the value of bonds. The Liberty Loan are invincibly safe, backed as they are by the resources of the richest nation in the world and the faith and credit of a people who have always respected their obligations, and they are of stable value and liable to little oi no fluctuations in market value. The farmer is a busy man and often has neither the time nor the oppor tunity to study the questions of finance and bond values. The Liberty Txian Bond being a bond about which there j can he no question, he can rest as- THE PRUDENTIAL ■ ■■■ w iibh 11 mi ii i ~ i nnirrrr Insurance Company of America HomeSOffice, NEWARK, N. J. THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS, AUGUST 2, 1917 sured always that he has made no er ror in judgment. The farmer often feels the need of ready cash before the harvesting of his crops. The Liberty Loan Bond puts in his hand a security on which he cun always borrow money and at a rate as low or lower than he could borrow on any other security and with less trouble. There is another aspect of this in vestment in Liberty Loan Bonds that will appeal to every true American. He is supporting the government; he is supporting our soldiers in France and he is doing as a citizen when he invests in Liberty Loan Bonds. GIRLS! LEMON JUICE IS SKIN WHITENER —m How to Make a Creamy Beauty Lo tion for a Few Cents. The juice of two fresh lemons strain ed into a bottle containing three ounc es of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most remarkable lemon skin beautifier 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 lotion will keep j fresh for months. Every' woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. Just try it! Get tnree ounces of or chard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly' fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. —(ad.) RECORD YIELD OF RYE IN TENNESSEE. What is regarded by agricultural experts as a record yield of rye in Tennessee is reported from a field in the demonstration farm of the N. C. & St. L. railway at Tullahoma. The yield for this twenty-five acre field was ?9.38 bushels or a total of 734.5 bush els for the twenty-five acres. Fifty-five acres of new ground, treated only with commercial fertilizers, produced 415.5 bushels, or an average of 7.55 bushels per acre. The total yield for the 80 acres was 1,150 bushels, or an average of 14.37 bushels per acre. From figures given in “Statistics for Tennessee” published by the Bureau of Census of the Department of Com merce in 1914, the average yield of rye in Tennessee is G. 19 bushels per acre. The average yields for a few of the richer counties of the state range around 9 bushels per acre. The average yield for Coffee county, in which t’he demonstration farm is lo cated, is 6.41 bushels per acre. Joseph H. .Tudd, special agricultural ■ agent of the company, who is 'in 1 charge of the demonstration farm work, believes the record of the Tul lahonpa farm is the highest production of any field in the state. Mr. Judd says the results obtained have been due to the use of ground limestone and the turning under of winter cover crops. WONDERFUL STUFF! LIFT OUT YOUR CORNS. Apply a Few Drops Then Lift Corns or Calluses off With Fingers— No Pain. No humbug! Any corn, whether hard, soft or between the toes, will loosen right up and lift out, without a particle of pain or soreness. This drug is called freezone and is a compound of ether discovered by a Cincinnati man.' Ask at any drug store for a small bottle of freezone, which will cost but a trifle, but is sufficient to rid one’s feet of every corn or callus. Put a few drops directly upon any tender, aching corn or callus. Instant ly the soreness disappears and shortly the corn or callus will loosen and can be lifted off with the fingers. This drug freezone doesn’t eat out the corns or callus but shrivels them without even irritating the surround ing skin. Jnst think! No pain at all; no sore ness or smarting when applving it or afterwards. If your druggist don’t have freezone have him order it for you. (advt.) CARE OF CHICKS DURING WARM WEATHER IMPORTANT. Ihe care of growing chicks during the summer is one of the most import ant factors in poultry raising. The chicks may be hatched from strong, vigorous stock and carefully brooded; but unless they receive the proper at tention during the warm months their growth may be retarded. In other words, they should be so managed that they will mature into Weil-devel oped fowls. Proper Housing. Growing chicks should be provided, with a house that will give them a place to stay in bad weather and at night. N’o particular style of house is recommended, but it should be, so built that it will provide the ciiicks with ample ventilation, dryness, sun light, freedom from drafts, and be so Arranged that it can be cleaned easily and frequently. The lumber from piano and dry goods boxes can be used in building such a house, and when covered with ordinary roofing paper so as to keep cut the rain, will make desirable quar ters. It is suggested that such houses be built on the colony plan, so that they can be moved from place to place, thus providing the chicks with fresh ground to range over. Elevating sucJ a house 6 inches above the ground will assist in keeping the floor dry, by means of the circulation of air, and such space will also provide shade for the chicks. In placing the chicks in their grow ing house for the first time, it is best to confine them for several days by erecting a temporary yard wherein they can run for 5 or 6 days, until they learn where to return when the fence is removed and they are allowed their liberty. Care should be taken not to crowd the chicks by placing too many in any one house. When the chickens cover the greater part of the floor at night, it is an indication that they are too crowded. At such a time they should be thinned out and placed in another house. Feed, Water and Shade. Feed for growing chicks may he di vided into three classes—grain feed, dry mash, and green feed. In addition to the grain feed that the chicks are likely to find when on free range, a grain mixture should be given them morning and evening. The following rotations should produce ■good results: Equal parts of cracked corn and wheat; as the chicks increase in size, oats may he added. To cheapen this ration, it may be changed to two parts cracked corn and one part wheat. When one part of oats is added to this mixture, as the chicks increase in size, the ration may he changed to three parts cracked corn, one part wheat, and one part oats. In addition to the above feed, a dry inash should be fed in a hopper to which the chicks have access at all t'mes. The following mixtures are sug gested : 2 ]>ounds corn meal * 1 pound middlings. 4 pounds oatmeal. 3 pounds wheat bran. 2 1-2 pounds beef scrap. * * 2 pounds corn meal. 1 pound middlings. 2 pounds wheat bran. 2 1-2 pounds beef scrap. * * * 3 pounds wheat bran. ? pounds middlings. 3 pounds corn meal. 1 pound crushed oats. 1 1-2 pounds beef scrap. Charcoal, grit and oyster shells should be provided so that the chicks can help themselves whenever they want to. If a continued supply of sour milk can be obtained it may be fed separ aiely in a pan in the aimve rations re duced one-half. Sour and sweet milk should not be fed alternately, as such practice is likely to cause bowel trou ble. Whenever it is possible, growing j chicks should be allowed free range, j they may obtain as much natural i green feed as they need in addition to I bugs ami worms. When green feed can ! not be obtained or range, such feed as sprouted oats, cut clover, mangel wurzel beets, etc., should be’ fed daily. The importance of clean, fresh wat er for chicks can not be overempha sized. In very hot weather fresh water should be given to them twice a day. Whenever jrossible the pan of wafer should be placed in the shade to keep cool. The water pan should be cleaned e v ery day before fresh water is added. Plenty of shade should be provided for growing chicks. When allowed to range ip an orchard or cornfield they will not. only find ample shade and green feed but will benefit the trees or corn as well as themselves by des troying bugs and worms. Sometimes sunflowers are grown for shade. Art!* fcial protection against the sun’s rays may be obtruged by supporting frames covered with burlap a fewjfeet above the ground. Cleanliness—Freedom From Lice. Every effort should be made to keep the coops and houses clean and sani- tary. Disease most frequently starts In unclean, poorly ventilated houses. The house should be cleaned at least once a week. Sand or litter of some kind should scattered over the floor of the bcuse, so as to assist in keeping it clean. When chicks are confined to a limited range, the ground should be spaded up at frequent intervals, so as to provide fresh ground for them to scratch in. Chicks should lie examined frequently to see if they are infested with lice. When lice are found, every effort should lie made to get rid of them by applying a small portion of a mixture of equal parts of vaseline and lard to the top of the head and around the* vent. General Management. As soon as the cockerels are of broiler size those not intended to be kept as breeders the following year should be marketed. Where the cocker els begin to annoy the pullets the sexes should be separated. Weekly News Letter. Cartersville Lodge N°- 142 Regular meetings, first and third Thursday nights of each month at 8:00 o’clock. Eurka Tile & Cemnt Company John R. Young & Cos., Proprietors W. J. Burdett, Manager. Office and Shop on Market Street, East of Grand Opera House Building CARTERSVILLE, :: :: GEORGIA WE will contract to furnish material at lowest cash prices and do any kind of concrete work, such as tile and cement walks, street paving, bridges and culverts, cemetery walls, steps, cement brick and all kinds of building blocks, and furnish the best of references as to responsibility, work manship, etc. “THE MODERN METHOD OF DECORATING, WALLS”—ILLUSTRATED BOOK FREE Tn planning the interior decorations of your home, this beautifully illustrated booklet will prove to you and your dec orator of unquestionable value. It con tains instructive articles on art in the home, color harmony, concrete informa tion regarding the artistic finishing of your walls and ceilings. All suggestions and practical advice come from experienced decorators. A great many color plates designed by leading artists vividly show attractive ly decorated rooms. You can plan your home from these Illustrations and arti cles from bathroom to parlor. You will also learn of tbe modern Flat OH Faint for walls and celling— Lumpkin Hardware Cos. Cartersville, Ga. “mau i p 1 ' FOR PEACE OR WAR£ Th. .re wan never so urgent a demand by our Government and our various Indus triea for neaw ; o have been trained to think scientifically ard to work eTiciently. And this demand must continue when the world is again at peace. Tha Georgia School c! Technology 13 preparing young men for positions of higher sery.ee eithe. in peace or m war. Coutscs. including beta general and technical training. are offered in Mechanical. Electrical, Civil, Chemical and Textile ENGINEERING, ARCHITECTURE, AMD COMMERCE The national reputation of this institution ia based on the successful careers cf its graduates. It3 aims are summed up in the equation: CHARACTER + CULTURE + EFFICIENCY—EDUCATION Applications are now being received for the nest cession, which opens Fept. 13. For catalog, address. K. C, fKATKESON, President. Atlanta. Ga. (jEORGI A SCHOO L OrfaNOK A STITCH IN TIME Cartersville People Should Not Neg lect Their Kidneys. No kidney ailment is unimportant. Don't overlook the slightest backache or urinary irregularity. Nature may he warning you of approaching dropsy, gravel or Bright's disease. Kidney dis ease is seldom fatal if treated in time, but neglect may pave the way. Don’t neglect a lame or aching back another clay. Don’t ignore dizzy spells, head aches, weariness or depression. If you need kidney help begin using the re liable, time-tried remedy. Doan’s Kid ney Pills. For 50 years, Doan’s have been found effective. Endorsed by Car tersville people. Mrs. E. J. Swanson, 502 Douglas St., Cartersville, says: “1 was feeling run down and my kidneys acted in such an irregular way I knew they needed at tention. The relief 1 received from Doan's Kidney Pills gave me faith in them so I don't hesitate to recommend them.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Swanson had. Foster-Milburn Cos., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.—(advt.) FOR SALE—Two good milk cows. Apply to W. H. Lumpkin. KEEP A BOTTLE OF C. C. C. ON YOUR MEDICINE SHELF FOR DIARRHOEA AN DYSENTERY 25c A BOTTLE AT YOUNG BROS. DRUG CO. PEE-GEE FLATKOATT. It comes in 24 rich, deep, velvety colors, which are easily combined into the most charm ing color schemes. Aside from its: beauty and durability, PEE-GEE FLATKOATT sets anew standard in economy and sanitation. Walls and ceilings are easily cleansed with a moist sponge or cloth, thus saving the expense and inconvenience of frequent redecorating. Write today to Peaslee-Oaulbert Company, Incorporated, Louisville, Ky., for illustrated 48-page book, “The Modern Method of Decorating Walls.” In the meanwhile call at this store for color card, folder and any informa tion you may desire. j_4