The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, August 16, 1917, Image 6

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EASY TO TAKE NO PAIN OR ACHE. It's no longer necessary to bear the neakening sickness and terrible nau sea that always follows a dose of cal ,nrel. LIV-VER-LAX cleanses the torpk liver, and livens up the whole systen by ridding it of the clogging poisons Yet it works so gently and pleasantlj 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 sale at 50c and $1 at Griffin Drug Co— (advt.) If you don’t know who handles Tip Top and Butter-Nut Bread, excuse ycur neighbor when he laughs in your face. If not, its because you have not tried Butter-Nut Bread. pr.sfw J*atssMi££ For Sale by: Wholesale Distributors CARTERSViLLE GROCERY CO., Cartersville, Ga. Retailers: F. E. MATTHEWS, Cartersville. Ga. Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System The Old Standard general strengthening tonic, GROVE’S TASTEI.ESS chill TONIC, drives oui Malaria.enriches the Mood,and builds up the sys tem. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c. FOR SALE —Second hand, double seated, rubber tired surrey, in good condition, for less than half price. Can be seen at N. A. Bradley’s shop. W. E. Smith. Need a wagon? Let us talk to you about the MITCHELL line. See W. H. Field, Agent. TRAIN SCHEDULE. Arrival and departure of S. A. L. Ry, Company trains at Cartersville, Ga., daily: No. 311 depart 6:50 a. m No. 323 depart 4:00 p.m No. 322 arrive 11:15 a.m. No. 312 arrive 7:35 p.m. Call 244 or 246 for Tip-Top or But er-Nut Bread. KEEP A BOTTLE OF C. C. C. ON YOUR MEDICINE SHELF FOR DIARRHO&A AN DYSENTERY 25c A BOTTLE AT YOUNG BROS. DRUG CO. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Y(Air druggist will refund money if PAZO OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching Blind, Bleeding or Prof ruding Piles in 6 to 14 days The first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c 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. What is LAX-FOS LAX-FOS IS AN IMPROVED CASCARA A Digestive Liquid Laxative, Cathartic and Liver Tonic. Contains Cascara Bark, Blue Flag Root, Rhubarb Root, Black Root, May Apple Root, Senna Leaves and Pepsin. Combines strength with pala table aromatic taste. Does not gripe. 50c 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. FOR RENT —After September Ist. one good eight room house on South Erwin Sireet, with all conveniences. | Apply to Buck Patterson at Young B'qs. Drug Store. Fine “arm For Saie or Exchange. Fine little red land farm just out ride of Atlanta, for sale, or will ex change for other property. Value $4,000. J. A. HALL. Decatur, Ga. Wanted=Second hand grain bags in good condition-W.F. Field. J. HARRIS 10 OPPOSE HARDWICK By John Corrigan, Jr. Washington. D. C., August 11- —The iiritation felt here as wed ts in Geoi gia over Senator Thomas \V. Hard wick’s course of hostility to President Wilson and his persistent opposition to all measures advanced by the ad ministration as essential to the suc cessful conduct of the war with the Imiterial German Government, seems to have crystallized sentiment against I the re-election of Mr. Hardwick. The primaries which will settle the question of who is to be the next United States senator from Georgia are less than a year off, and the cam paign to select Senator Hardwick’s successor may be said to be fairly started. William .1. Harris, of Cedartown. Ga„ chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, is believed here to have definitely decided to enter the ace. While he has made no public declara tion of his intention, but is giving hi time to the imporant work in connec tion with government p ice fixing lodged with the Federal Trade Com mission, he is daily in receipt of hun dreds of letters from personal friends ir all iiarts of Georgia definitely pledging him supiiort. The weekly press almost unanimously and a large majority of the daily papers, are al ready advocating his election as the logical man to succeed Mr Hardwick. I it is a-matter of universal knowledge that he is closer to the president than either of the Georgia senators. He has been outspokenly in favor of ad ministration measures where they have opposed them. He is constantly being called upon by Georgians who want things done in Washington, and who would ordinarily call upon the senators from the state, and never fails to respond to 'their requests. With no enemies to punish, he is con stantly at work extending the circle of his political friendships and prob ably has a greater personal following than any of the several men whose names have been mentioned in con nection with ihe senatorship. His relations with the members of the Georgia delegation in the national house of representatives are very cor dial, and he is constantly co-operating with them in matters of interest tt Georgia and Georgians. President Wilson has called twice within the last month on Chairman Harris at his office for a personal chat and to discuss the important govern-* | ment work which the Federal Trade Commission is carrying on. The task of the commission is to find a fair basis for prices of various commodi ties needed by our own and foreign governments for making war mater ial. It is investigating production costs of coal and coke; steel, iron and wire; copper; tin. zinc; aluminum; lead; cement; lumber, and petroleum products. On the occasion of his first visit. J the president learned that Mr. Harris ! was to address the Georgia weekly j editors at the convention In Thcmas- ■ ville. He wrote a letter which Mr. ! Harris read to the editors thanking 1 them for their loyal support of the ■ :m‘ministration in ;' i- trying hcu:'. r>-m j assuring them that but for their cor dial friendship "1 would not have known how to Int rpret ihe cutimem of Georgia,” The interpretation put upon this statement by ail who knew the situa- MOTHER! GIVE CHILD ‘‘SYRUP OF FIGS” IF TONGUE IS COATED If Cross, Feverish, Sick. Bilious, Clean Little Liver and Bowels. i Children love this “fruit laxative,” and nothing else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely, A child simply will not stop playing i to empty the bowels, and the result Is, they become tightly clogged with i waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sours, then your little one becomes cross, half-sick, feverish, don't eat, ; s>eep or act naturally, breath is bad. system full of cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or diarrhoea. Listen, j Mother! See if tongue is coated, then ' give a teasiK) infill of ‘‘California , Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the constipated waste, sour bile and , undigetsed food passes out of the gys ■ tern, and you have a well, playful child again. Millions of mothers give 'California Syrup of Figs” because it is perfectly harmless; children love it. and it nev -1 r fails to act on the stomach, liver and bowels. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot tle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. Get the gen uine, made by ‘‘California Fig Syrup Corveanv.” Refuse any other kind with contempt.—-( Jvij THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CARTERSVILLE NEWS, AUGUST 16,1917 Lon was that ihe •little group of wil ful men” who had been hampering acd obstructing the president found little sympathy for their course among the grea: mass of Georgia dem ocrats. j No two candidates have ever gene 1 before the people in a race for the United States senatorshlp with more clear cut and divergent views. The overshadowing issues will be supj>ert of the administration and of prohibi tion measures. | Senator Hardwick has opposed the j administration mere vigorously and persistently than almost any man in either house of congress, while Mr. | Harris has supported the president on ‘ every proposal he has put forward. ! The former is one of the best debat j or-- in congress, but the latter is one of ihe hardest workers in official life. ! and while not a member of congress, has found other means to aid the pres ident in getting through administra tion measures. As to prohibition. Senator Hardwick has stated repeatedly that his views are well known. He is a county local optionist and is opposed to both state wide and nation-wide prohibition. Mr Harris has been a prohibitionist all his life and is an ardent supporter of the Sheppard amendment for national prohibition. Senator Hardwick was finally nomi nated for the senate at the Macon convention in September, 1914. on his [■'edge to stand by the administraiion. His supporters told the people his election would mean "that the admin istration would have in the senate a democrat who could be depended upon to support it.” Since his election he has piled up 1 the following record of hostility to •-. -> the administration: 1. Opposed the ship purchase bill. ' which the administration advocated j and finally had passed as a measure to ! bring down extortionately high ocean \ freight rates on cotton and other com- j roodities which we send abroad. Sena tor Hardwick not only fought this bill j but bolted the democratic 'caucus | which made it a party measure. Al- j though he has denounced bolters in j Georgia more than any man in official life, he himself turned bolter and de- 1 laved the passage of a measure which | it is believed will go far to keep our ; Allies from starvation and to help win | the war. 2. He fought the amendment to the army bill appropriating $20,000,000 for • an air nitrate plant in the southeast I which the cotton farmers advocated ; as a measure to reduce the cost of commercial fertilizers and to make the ! nation independent of a foreign source 1 of supply in Chile. In reply to peti- ! tir.ns from the farmers that he support J the nitrate provision, Senator Hard- 1 wick answered that he would not vote for it "if every farmer in Georgia ■ urged him to do so.” .”>. After voting for the resolution j which put the United States into the j war against the Imperial German Gov | eminent, he voted against the selee- j ! five draft [dan of raising an army and ; I ha- done everything in his power to i Inrevent its being put into effect. He 1 lias recently offered a bill to repeal I that law, and make it impossible for the United States to raise an army. 4. He held up and finally voted j against the appropriation for a great | aviation service to protect the Ameti | can army and its Allies from the at- I tacks of German aviators and bomb dropping Zeppelins. A great air fleet which the United States with its in v< -stive genius is confidently expected ] to -end to the European battlefields, is I . ... _ counted upon to furnish the final punch that may end the war. Lacking these invaluable instruments of war tare (he Allies are at a disadvantage, their cjties exposed to attack and f he disposition of their troops under con stant observation by enemy airmen. 5.. In opposing the army draft and all pr..visions for raising an artnv ex cept by the volunteer system, Senator Hardwick has fought the only possible plan for raising any army at all, and has been charged on the floor of con gress with giving aid and comfort to the enemy because f his attitude. 6. He fought the parcel post sys tem, which has brought the farmer and the city consumer closer together and enabled the producer to get high er prices for his products by cutting our some of the middlemen's profits. 7. He was aligned with the opposi tion to the Federal Reserve Act, which is now recognized as one of the great outstanding accomplishments of the present administration. By remodeling our outworn currency system and making available the credit f the country in emergencies, this act has practically made impossible the re currence of a panic in this country. X. Senator Hardwick can always he counted upon to aid the opposition to any appointee of the president whose name must go before the senate for confirmation. '' He has blocked for nearly a year ‘he president’s fill the va cancy in the southern judicial district caused by the death of Judge Wallace He refused to let the ap pointment go to Judge Frank Bark of | the St cond Georgia District, and ha. | succeeded in having the senate reject j the non nations of Judge t . \ . t\hip * pie of Corde'e, ad Judge William E. I Thomas of Valdosta. ' 10 Mr. Hardwick’s latest outbreak aga’nst - h- administration was mea-- ures has been directed against the ’ Food Control Bill He w\.s one of thtee democrats to vote fianliy against thu | mrasur- Consf-ration ot fod -tuff j during the war is generally recognized as one of the prime essentials cf the • successful conduct cf the wc.i. It. has i been stressed by all the visiting mis sions from foreign countries. Nepolean said "An army fights cn its stomach.” | Without food the armies in the field will collapse, and the endurance of ! the civil population will be broken, i thus making the collapse of the Allies ; inevitable. On the contrary, an abund ant food supply for the United States and its Allies will hasten the end of Germany. Senator Hardwick, being against war, was naturally against food conservation. William J. Harris, whose name is j most prominently mentioned as a can didate against Senator Hardwick, has | been an outspoken supporter of the 1 president in season and out of season. i He was one of the original Wilson men | in Georgia, fought for him at the Bal timore convention, and has since done everything he could to advance the administration’s program and promote its policies. His admiration for Pres ident Wilson is as pronounced today as it ever was. He says the great lead er of the democratic party was raised up by providence to lead the nation in this critical hour of trial. Probably no other man in the south has received more honors at the hands of the administration than has Mr. Harris. He was first named director of the census, and while holding that position was appointed acting secre tary of commerce in the absence from the city of Secretary Redfield, and discharged at frequent intervals the duties of this cabinet member. When the Federal Trade Commission was created he was made a member, and upon the resignation cf Edward E. Hurley, succeeded him as chairman. If -Mr. Harris is elected to the sen ate from Georgia, it will not be as if anew man was sent here. Because of his influence ai the White House, and his personal friendships with cabinet members and other government of ficials, he will begin his term of ser vice with an equipment that ano.het man would requite years to secure. The legislative arena will not be new to him,. Just after he left college he was for several years private sec retary to Senator A. S. Clay and this close association gave him a good insight into national affairs. Senator Clay predicted when Mr. Harris was a young man that he had the qualities which would inevitably land him in the United States senate. Mr. Harris thus early developed a strong liking for the political arena and has been remarkably successful in this field. He wrnild bring to the senate a great er experience of national political life than any other Georgian has had in many years. On account of his intimate know ledge ho has gained of business prob lems of the country as a member of the Federal Trade ‘"‘Commission, Mr. Harris would be invaluable as a mem ber of the senate in helping the read justment of business problems aftei I the war. DON’T WORRY. THE LITANY OF THE FRENCH SOLDIER. Of two things one is certain: Either J you’re mobilized or you’re not mobi lized. If you’re not mobilized there is no j need to worry; if you are mobilized, jof two tilings one is certain: Either you’re behind the lines or you’re on | the front. , i If you’re behind the lines there is !no need to worry; if you’re on the front, of two things one is certain: E ther you’re resting in a safe place or you’re exposed to danger. If you’re resting in a safe place there is no need to worrjf; if you're exposed t,o danger, of two things one is certain: Either you’re wounded or [ you’re not wounded. If you're not wounded there is no need to worry: if you are wnundetj, of two things one is certain: Either you’re wounded seriously or vou’re i wounded slightly. If youYe wounded slightly there is : no need to worry; it' you’re wounded ! seriously, of two things one is eer ! lain: Either you recover or you die. If you.recover there is no need to worry; if you die you can’t worry.— Exchange. SIOO Reward, SIOO The renders of this paper will be pleased to earn that there is at feast one dreaded disease hat science has been able to euro lu all lta Itaees. and that is Catarrh. Ilall'a Catarrh Cure s ihe only positive cure now known to the uied /eat fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional lisease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting directly npon the blood and mucous surfaces of tile system, thereby destroying the foundatl r nf the disease, and giving the patient strength by building np the constitution and assisting su ture hi doing its work. The proprietors havt so much faith In Its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any ease that 1! fait,, to cure. Send for list ..of testimonials. Address y. J. CHEKEY * CO . Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggist*. 75e. Tike Hall's l ainily HSI for cqaatiraucm. WHENEVER YOU HEAR THE WORD DIARRHOEA OR DYSEN TERY THINK OF C. C. C. COREA CHOLERA CORDIAL. IF YOU DONT BELIEVE IT THE BEST AND MOST HARMLESS REMEDY FOR THESE DANGEROUS TROUBLES A 25c BOT TLE WILL CONVINCE YOU. YOUNG BROS. DRUG CO. FOR SALE CHEAP A NICE AND WELL FIXED 64-ACRE FARM One mile from Folsom, on Folsom and Pine Los; Road, from 40 to 45 acres in cultivation. No rocks or stumps. Running water in pasture. Land lies well. Good 4-Room House Smoke House and Cellar. New Barn built last vear. Ccme and see or address, B. M. Aaron, Rt. 3 Adairsville, Ga. ED COWLEY will be at Herman Leake’s Stable Saturday to buy MULES from four to ten years old. I KEEP YOUR *i sh ° es neat white Cake lOc. m mjr ■ ■ ■ tamm mmm white Liquid ioc. mJ mm LJ ■ ■ ~ WOMENS SHOE ~ s DRESSING j: F.F.DALLEY CO. OF NEW YORK INC.,BUFFALO NY. Phone 244 E. Main St. Try paying cash —FOR— GROCERIES Thanks Awfully, JIM SHAW Money to Lend On good security, Bartow County Farms given preference. Loans will be closed without any delay and rates and terms will be made satisfactory, J. T. NORRIS FOR SALE Two good servicea ble old Mules at bar gain. W. H. FIELD