The Bartow tribune. The Cartersville news. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1917-1924, August 30, 1917, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

cone GOT so high CARTERSVILLE. ■ (> ie lot of people about here ' ), 'lining about the high price lU vbing in Cartersville, and o far as to say that prices h , m Cartersville than else ' Whether that be true or not, | . certainly one class of people , county that are not paying . prices for what they buy that 'her • d>le are paying. - ' Th articular class of people right only paying 75c each for the , iched bed sheets that others { [ug SI.OO for and they don’t " ’ vV 25 for the largest $1.50 bed >, ; ,nd they pay only 50c for 75c ' , is that sold two years agq , iiul they are only paying 10c rge buck and Turkish tow ,! iliers pay 15c for, and used ;.ip and 15c even two years instead of paying 7c like ], rs for Octagon soap they ,c a bar. They arp the only .-.in get Sweetheart soap and ivders' for a rtickle, and no i bem can get six spools oid for 25c and 6 spools O. N. T. san silk and cro ' for 25c. They are the peo !..■ ve found out where the one , Partersville is that sells‘all :ngs at the 'prices named. •togo to Hardaway's to find that price and the reason he lint way, is because he don’t , add on a big profit for book expensive delivery system, iake up for lost accounts sold i ilit an,d never* collected. i lawav is still old fashion enough i ii Jackson C. C. $1.50 corsets at : <ld price of SI.OO and 75c corsets the old price of 50c each while up I, and modern houses have to Iw ;p to date and modern prices of ■r.c and $1.50 for them. And if you ■' i't object too much to being old ■adroned you can still buy for the I’d fashion price of 25c a yard the If-t oil cloth that sells at 30c a yard. Ini ni can get some more summer I; dcnwear for both these old Idii m prices from Hardaway if you Ire not ashamed of old fashion low ■'ices. Some people are now reaping I harvest by getting their outings and ■niton flannels from Hardaway 3c to I cheaper than they can get them Itswhere, and later on. Also a whole I; of white goods and domestics ■reaper than the present wholesale lice. So if you don’t mind being a ■tile bit old fashioned and economical ■ >me on and save your bit by buying Bom Hardaway.—(advt.) WOK ?SALE—Several lecond hand wagons, •Hat a bargain. See H. Field. * |VER SALAVATED BY CALOMEL? HORRIBLE! lalomel is Quicksilver and Acts Like Dynamite on Your Liver. I Calomel loses you a dayl You ■now what calomel is. It’s mercury; luicksilver. Calomel is dangerous. I crashes into sour bile like dyna |ite, cramping and sikening you. laiomel attacks the bones and lould never be put into your sys lin. I W hen you feel bilious, sluggish, ■on.'tipated and all knocked out I' i believe you need a dose of dan- ■ f cous calomel just remember that ■our druggist sells for 50 cents a | bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone, ■hich is entirely vegetable and ■leasant to take and is ’a perfect Idjstitute for calomel. It is guaran- ■ 1 and to start your liver without stir ■ng you up inside, and can not sali ■ate. ■ i ( i;! take calomel 1 It makes you B fl \ the next day; it loses you a IH > work. Dodson’s Liver Tone ■ r nghtens you right up and you l f 1 great. Give it to the children B; cau f e it is perfectly harmless and ■oesn t gripe. ■ ! 0I ‘ —After September Ist, ■ ‘ good eight room house on South B, In Iree t, with all conveniences. B'' t 0 Buck Patterson at Young B os Dr g Store.. A BOTTLE OF c o c B' 1 ’OUR MEDICINE SHELF FOR D|arr hoea AN DYSENTERY 25c A BOTTLE AT B BROS. DRUG CO. MSS** RatsMi££ For Sale b ? ; ' Who,esa| e Distributors GROC£*V CO., Cartersville, Ga, Retailers: F - E. MATTHEWS, ' , Carter6yine,-Ga, t peanuts bring high PRICE WHEN STACKED I Vme ® R [ pcn formally And Give a Bnght, Nutritious Hay Equal To Cowpea Vines * Instead of small, wrinkled nuts and poor quality hay, as results from sun cured peanuts, stacked peanuts ripen normally and develop heavy nuts of excellent quality along with a bright, nutritious hay equal to cowpea hav for reeding purposes, says Mr. •Tabor of he State College of Agriculture. To stack peanuts select a stout pole eight to ten feet high, set firmly in the ground and nail two cross pieces about a foot above the ground. The peanut vines should be gathered be forelthey dry out and piled about the pole. The first vines are placed on the cross pieces with the nuts toward the pole and the stack should be one vine thick as measured front the pole. The stacks are made as high as one on conveniently reach and the tops capped with grajss to keep the birds from the nuts at the top of the stack. Five to six weeks is generally long enough to allow for curing, though the peanuts will keep longer in the stack if other farm work is pressing. When peanuts are to be hauled to the picker, the poles are loosened and the stacks loaded without tearing them up. In unloading grasp the poles below the cros's pieces, and shake the enijre stack on the picker or thresher. The acreage of peanuts in Georgia has increased according to crop esti mates, 220 per cent this year. Mills in southwest Gee-H i crashing cotton seed have arrang . to taka care of all the peanuts offered and it is thought that a considerable amount will be crushed. SEbuiiE hutiE G; SLED OA iS yJICKLY Owing to the fast that the major portion of the oat crop was winter killed this year and that the. supply of seed is very short, farmers are urged by Mr. Childs of the United States Department of Agriculture and the State College of Agriculture to se cure home grown seed oats as soon as possible from those counties, in south Georgia, where fair yields were ob tained. Most of the seedsmen and a number of individual farmers have a limited supply on hand at present, and farmers are therefore urged to secure their seed for fall planting as soon as possible, inasmuch as the supply of native grown seed is limited. Many inquiries have been received as to the use of Texas and Oklahoma grown Red Rustproof oats for seeding in Georgia. These oats will not do so well as our native seed, even though they can be purchased cheaper. Most of the oats in that section of the coun try are grown for spring seeding, while we want- to seed them in the early fall. If home grown seed can not be obtained, the Texas crop is the next best source, but when seed are secured from that section the buyer should satisfy himself that pure win ter grown Rustproof seed are secured and that they are free from such ob noxious seeds as Johnson grass. According to reports from Texas and Oklahoma the corn crop of those sections is practically a failure, due to recent drought, and it is likely that a large part of the oat crop will be fed unless purchased soon for seed. LEGHORNS PROVE BEST FOR EGG PRODUCTION Because they lay more and eat less Leghorns produce eggs cheaper than hens of the general purpose breeds — Plymouth Rocks, Wyaudottes, Rhode Island Reds and Orpingtons—says the United States Department of Agricul ture, and the Georgia State College of Agriculture. Feeding tests have shown that the feed cost of a dozen eggs for one of the Leghorn pens was T:34 cents in 1913, while the average cost of all the pens of the general-purpose breeds was 10.6 cents. In 1914 the feed cost of a dozen eggs for the same pen of Leghorns was 8.7 cents as against an average cost of 15.1 cents for the sec ond laying year of the general-purpose pens. During their third laying year the cost of a dozen eggs was 8.8 cents compared to 18.6 cents for the general purpose fowls. The total value of eggs per hen over feed cost in the Leghorn pen for three years was $6.84 against $4.30 for the general-purpose hens. The highest egg production ob tained in any of the feeding experi ments up to 1915 was by a pen of Leghorns, which laid 157.6 eggs per hen, at a feed cost of 6.7 cents a dozen. The value per dozen of the eggs produced by the Leghorns was from 1 to 3 cents less each year than the eggs of general-purpose hens. This difference is due to the fact that the general-purpose breeds are better win ter layers than the Leghorns, while the latter give a higher production in the spring and summer. Very few Leghorns become brood*, which prob ably materially affects their egg yield as compared with the general-purpose breeds. Better fertility in the eggs, especially with stock confined to the yards, is more often secured with Leg horns than with the general-purpose or .any of the heavier breeds THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CART ERSVILLE NEWS. AUGUST 30 1917 SOUTH GEORGIA CROPS BEST IN YEARS. # Soeth Georgia farmers will reap the richest harvest on record this year. Corn crop will be largest i>erhaps ful 1> 25 per cent bigger than the normal crap of last year. Cotton, while the Maud is poor, will produce very nearly a- many ba!e> as last year. The cane crop is excellent. The acreage is great er and the condition of plant was nev er better at this time of the year. There is an enormous acreage in ‘sweet potatoes, and a big yield is as sured. Storage houses are bnildiftg in n any localities to save the crop, v liich makes certain a satisfactory P’ice —because they can be marketed graduallj* Then, too, the army camps will take barge quantities of syeet po tatoes, as long as the war lasts. Pigs and peanuts go well together, and there is good reason —peanuts thrive better in coastal plain section cf South Georgia than any other part of the south, and is the cheapest and best hog when harvested by Mr. Hog hlm-elf. The acreage in Georgia this year is many times great er than ever before planted. There are moat packing plants in operation, or building at Moultrie. 1 WaycroFs, Tiftort, Jacksonville,, At- ! kmta nd other poi ■*- •. Thw. packing houses provide a market every day in '! e year for live hogs, and are paying very high prices for good stuff. \* South Georgia is the best place on earth for the email former to make a -tort in life. There are many who will inoke enough on this year’s crop to buy and equip a small farm, and have enough left to run his farm and fam ily ’till another harvest. Tf you are interested and want more information about farming opportuni ty - in South Georgia, drop a card to W. W. CROXTON, care A. B. & A. Ry., Atlanta, Ga. A CHILD’S TONGUE SHOWS IF LIVER OR BOWELS ARE ACTIVE If Cross, Feerish, Sick, Bilious, Give Fruit Laxative at Once. ’ Every mother realizes, after giving her children “California Syrup of Figs, 1 ’ that this is their ideal laxative, because they love its pleasant taste and it thoroughly cleanses the tender I’ttle stomach, liver and bowels with out grilling. When cross, irritable, feverish or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue, Mother! If coated, give a teaspoonful of this harmless “fruit lax ative,” and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undi gested food passes out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful chiltf again. When its little system is full of cold, throat sore, has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, colic —remem- ber, a good “inside cleansing” should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers keep “Califor nia Syrup of Figs” handy; they know a teasipoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for a 50- cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of all ages and grown-ups printed on the bottle. Beware of coun terfeits sold here, so don’t be fooled. Gel the genuine, made by “California Fig Syrup Company.”—(advt.) Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days Your druggist will refund money If PAZO i OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Blind, BleedingorProtruding Piles in 6tol4days. The first application gives Ease and Rest. 50c ' Jk '"When the temperature is high 1 Mf- . h s&CS ■ 311(1 you’re feeling hot and dry—” te'fm-i. Wf" \ Drink * ■ 1 p® •, ■BB \ 19| K Hg 2 ! g ■ *■ llfeS. \ Chero-Cola ■ I “In a bottle — Through a stravo” fc REFIfESfimG ’yf f Chero-Cola Bottlers take every precaution to insure Juj^U^L \ cleanliness. Before filling, bottles are sterilized in a V. strong caustic solution heated to a high temperature. mmg MgjaT' J Each hottle is hermetically sealed and inspected The Bartew Rural H|h School THE SCHOOL WITH A PURPOSE OFFERS: Practical High School Training Special Courses for Teachers. Strong Faculty. Wholesome Dormitory Life. Ideal Location. Reasonable Cost. Fall Term Begins September 3. For full particulars apply to HENRY MILAM, Cartersville, Ga., Route 1. THE PRUDENTIAL insurance Company of America b Home Office, NEWARK, N.J. 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. 2 MULES MULES 1 will be at Herman Leake s Stable Mil SEPTEMBER Ist To buy Mules from four to ten years old. ED COWLEY