Newspaper Page Text
County Home
Demonstration
Department
By MISS JESSIE BURTON.
y r- to the members of the Can
, an( j Poultry-Club show that much
has extended throughout the
▼ear.
S\'e feel that we will have the larg
. ~n <j best, exhibit from the clubs
„ bare ever had.
Let the older people encourage the
fcevs aud girls in the finishing up of
.• work.
* * *
POULTRY CLUB SONG
(Tune oi “Dixie”)
* is by .Mary J. Stone, Tallapoosa,
Georgia.
T ;e Poultry Club’s the club for money,
It's both for daughter and for sonny,
Join away, join away, loin away,
girls and boys.
i( we set our eggs ere flowers are
swaying,
i n early fall young hens are laying,
Set away, set away, set away,
girls and hoys.
Chorus:
And I wish I had a chicken, hooray,
hooray,
In Georgia land I’d take niy stand
And join that jolly poultry band,
hooray, hooray,
Ld win or try with poutry.
Poi its winter eggs that we are after,
To set by March fifteenth we have to,
Work away, wofk away, work
away, girls and boys.
We dust and spray and grease and
powder,
(ticks grow fast and hens sing louder,
Dust away, dust away, dust away, girls
and boys.
We weigh and feed and keep our
re co id,
Though our career may be some
checkered,
Write away, write away, write
away, girls and toys.
I Autumn to the fair we'll hie us,
GIRLS! HAVE A MASS
OF BEAUTIFUL HAIR,
SOFT, GLOSSY, WAVY
W* cent Bottle* Destroys Dandruff and
Doubles Beauty of Your
Hair.
Within ten minutes after an appli- ,
•ation of Danderine you can not find a 1
,ngle trace of dandruff or falling hair
•ad your scalp will not itch, but what 1
will please you most will be after a
few weeks’ use, when you see new
hair, fine and downy at first —yes —but
really new hair-—growing all 'over the
•calp
A little Danderine immediately j
doubles the beauty of your hair. No !
difference how dull, faded, brittle and j
•craggy, just moisten a cloth with
Bander in e and Carefully draw it
ifcrough your hair, taking one small j
•trand at a time. The effect is amaz
es—your hair will he light, fluffy and
wary, and have an appearance of
•Ibunadnce; an incomparable lustre,
•oftnesis and luxuriance.
Get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Banderine from any drug store or toil
et counter, and prove that your hair
is as pretty and soft as any—that it
has been neglected or injured by care
less treatment—that’s ail —you surelv
can have beautiful hair and lots of it
rf you will just try a little Danderine.
—fadvt.)
Notice of
Election
An election will be held in
the City of Cartersvilie, Ga. on
October 12th, 1917; PUR
POSE, THE ADOPTION
OF A NEW CHARTER for
the CITY OF CARTERS
VILLE, AS ENACTED BY
THE GENERAL ASSEM
BLY OF 1917.
W. W. DANIEL,
CITY CLERK
There to win a prize we’ll try us,
Try away, try away, try away,
girls and boys.
* * *
CANNING club song
Make the Best Better.
J hose '.here are who cannot, and
those there are who can;
Can we can? Yes, we can and we
know it!
And were willing to conf(’ss\we’ve
already won success,
And to cheerful, steady plodding
work we owe it!
There's a scientific way, you don’t
learn it in a day,
And it calls for lots of patience to
win out;
And the aim we have in view is to
win results for you,
So we’ll live up to our motto and
we’ll shout, shout, shout!
Chorus:.
Make the ttest-better; our motto true;
Make the best better, in all we do;
Make the best better, posterity our
debtor,
And we'll can, can, can, can, can, for
you.
Those who think they cannot, must
envy those who can;,
Can we can? Yes, we can, and we
love it!
And we're careful for our rep, mount
ing not a single step
Without reaching for another step
above it;
So we can’t afford to flop, for there’s
victory on top,
And we’ll wear the laurel togs you
can het!
Fur perfection is our. aim, and we’re
bound to play the game,
And surpass the highest record we
have, set, set, set!
Don't confess you cannot, but join the
ranks who can;
Can you can? Yes, you can, if you'll
try it!
And there’s satisfaction sweet, when
you know that what you eat,
Proves a sanitary, scientific diet.
| Won’t you have your name enrolled,
and be numbered with the fold?
We are here to stay for keeps be
yond a doubt!
You’ll no longer be a dub when you
the Canning Club,
And you’ll live up to our our motto
and you’ll shout, shout, shout!
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
B. Y. P. U. PROGRAM,
GROUP NO. 1.
Miss Eula Wheeler, Deader.
Song.
Prayer.
Introduction —By Leader.
We owe it to our own state to seek
Ibe highest good of the citizens —Miss
Mae Butler.
Evangelizing the lost—Miss Eva
Dodd.
Teaching the saved —Miss Roslyn
Wheeler.
Developing the forces in the church
es—Miss Evelyn Lewis.
Church building and pastorial sup
ply—Mr. Lucius Bishop.
We owe it to our own state to pro
l vide adequately and systematically for
the financial needs of our state mis
sion work —Miss Josie Smith.
The word pf God —Talk by Mr. Me-
Ginty.
Meet at 6:30. Visitors welcome.
MAYME LUE SORRELLS, Cor. Sec.
Drives Out Malaria, Builds Up System
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic,
GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC, drives out
Malaria.enriches the blood,and bui Ids upthe sys
tem. A true tonic. For adults and children. 60c
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE.THE CART ERSVILLF. NEWS, SEPT, 27, 1917.
ENDORSED AT HOME.
Such Proof as This Should Convince
Any Cartersville Citizen.
The public endorsement of a local
citizen is the best proof that can he
produced. None better, none stronger
can be had. When a man comes foi
ward and testifies to his fellow-citi
zens, addresses his friends and neigh
bors, you Pipy he sure he is thorough
ly convinced or he would not do so.
Telling one’s experience when it is for
the public good is an act of kindness
that should be appreciate.!. 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. Morris, Sr., merchant, 311
Moon St., says: “I had some trouble
w ith irregular passages of the kidney
secretions. Doan's Kidney Pilb soon
removed the disorder and I didn’t
have to take them long either. My
kidneys now act ail right and 1 have
no need of Doan’s Kidney Pills.”
Price GOo, at all dealers. Don't
simply ask for a kidney remedy—'get.
Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that
Mr. Morris had. Foster-Milburn Cos..
Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y. —(advt.)
In the District Court of the United
States, for the Northern District of
Georgia. .
In re- .T. H. Hester bankrupt. No. 86S.
v In Bankruptcy.
A petition for disch irgu having been
filed in conformity with law by above
named bankrupt and the court having
ordered that the hearing upon said pe
tition he had on October 27, 1917 at
ten o'clock A. M., at the United States
District Court room, in the city of At
lanta, Georgia, notice is,hereby given
to all creditors and other persons in
interest to appear at said time and
place ahd show cause, if any they
have, why the prayer of the bankrupt
for discharge should not be granted.
O. C. FULLER, Clerk.
J. C. PRINTUP, Deputy Clerk.
EAT WITHOUT FEAR
OF INDIGESTION OR
SOUR, ACID STOMACH
Instant Relief! “Pape’s Diapepsin”
Ends Your Stomach Distress.
Try It!
Wonder what upest your stomach —
which portion of the food did the dam
age—do you? Well, don’t bother. If
your stomach is in a revolt; if sick,
gassy and upset, and what yon just ate
has ferinehted and turned sour; head
dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids
and eructate undigested food; breath
foul, tongue coated —just take a little
Pape’s Diapepsin to help neutralize
acidity and in five minutes you won
der what became of the indigestion
and distress.
Millions of men and Women today
know that it is needless to have dys
pepsia. A little Diapepsin occasionally
keeps the stomach sweetened and
they eat their favorite To ids without
fear.
If your stomach doesn’t take care of
your liberal limit withoift rebellion; if
your food is a damage Instead of a
help, remember the quickest, surest,
most harmless relief is Pape’s Diapep
sin. which costs only fifty cents for a
large case at drug stores. It’s truly
| wonderful —it stops fermentation and
I acidity and sets things straight, so
gently and easily that It is really as
i tonishing.—(advt.)
i W V. - r A \
y ' '.V:?*, •
In the heated season, everyone craves
i a cooling and refreshing beverage. "" ~ o# and . and WlSk
\ c ° ■- v \;
i 1 'v | w
I IJnnk
II #
gs _ Chero-Cola
| nil In a bottle —Through a straw f J.
I ill REFRESHING A '% 'll
I ls*&P w.u ~*r rr U v.✓ A W* ■ ✓
With no bad after effect
Sold and served only in sealed sanitary .
111 Mmjk (ybottles. Absolutely dust and germ proof. VC
]|WM' |y | . ■
KiF'-'j '' "Nv % , | ...
pp p— I. .
L OBi , T AR\ |
w. M. RHODES.
\Y. M. Rhodes one of, the oust
known railroad men in Cartersville,
and a native .of Bartow county, tjjed
Saturday, September 22, at his home
on Douglas street, after an illness of
several weeks.
Mr. Rhodes was horn .">2 years ago at
Folsom in this county and has lived
hi Cartersville about-twelve years, lie
was a locomotive engineer and a mem
ber of the Brotherhood, to whose in
terests he was devoted. He was a
faithful employee of the railroad and
a thoroughly efficient engineer. He
had a wide a-xiuaintance and a large
circle of personal friends. ‘'Mac”
Rhodes, as he was familiarly called
by all who knew him, had a Compan-
Icnble nature and a sunny disposition
which attracted all who came In asso
ciation with him.
Mr. Rhodes was a member of the
Baptist church and to this denomina
tion he gave loyal supi>ort and fur
nished a consistent Christian life.
Surviving him are his widow and
two daughters, Addie Emma and
Gladys.
The funeral services were conduct
ed at the Bast Side Baptist church and
congregated there on Sunday after
noon were hundreds of friends, the
church auditorium being unable to
hold all who came to pay tribute. Rev.
A. F. Smith conducted the services,
assisted hv Rev. .McCollum and by
Lev. Bond, and the remains were in
terred at Oak Hill cemetery.
HARRISON SMITH.
We print below a clipping from Hie
Atlanta Constitution giving an account
of the death and burial with military
honors of Harrison Smith, a brother
of Mrs. Lindsay Forrester, of Carters
vilie. The many friends of Mrs. For
lester extend sympathy.
“Harrison Smith, the seventeen
year-old Atlanta boy, who, last June,
while a wireless operator aboard the
ili-fated steamship “Olympia” won a
hero’s laurels by gamely sticking to
his post of duty sending out “S. O. S.”
calls long after his boat had been
wrecked, was laid to rest in the nat
ional cemetery, Washington, D. C.,
Saturday. v
“He was the son of Professor J. H:
Smith, well known in Atlanta, and
head of the English department of the'
Commercial High school.
“Young Smith was taken ill with
pneumonia several days ago, and car
ried to the naval hospital at Brook
lyn, N. Y., where he died last Thurs
day. His father reached his bedside
before death.
“The funeral was conducted with
military honors at Brooklyn, many of
young Smith’s shipmates turning out
to do “last honors’’ to their oom\ade.
“News of his death reached Atlanta
Saturday by telegram from the
father.”
If you don’t know who handles Tin
Top and Butter-Nut Bread, excuf*
your neighbor when he laughs in you>
face If not. its because you have no
tried Butter-Nut Bread
For seed wheat, oats, rye. barley—/
H e Knight Mercantile Cos.
Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days
Your druggist will refund money if PAZO
OINTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching.
Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in6tol4days
The first application fives Ease and Rest, t’, ,
jO Cet\bur
Grocer’s
Opinion
• j ~i
I POuM
, J f|2 A NjNE He knows coffees —has mixed them
<and sold them for years. He knows
Luzianne. Ask him what he thinks
Ju'toHT jLVk of it. Ask him what most of his
customers think of it. Luzianne will
U stand or fall by this test. If the re-
Reity-TAY^’ 1 ’ I '' port is favorable, take home a can and
fgftOASTER^
try it yourself. Make up a pot, ac
cording to directions. You have
The Luzianne Guarantee: nothing to lose, for the guarantee
if, after using the contents assure s your mohey back if you don't
of a can, you are not satisfied J j j
in every respect, your gro- like Luzianne. Buy a can'"today,
c.r Will refund your money. Ask for profit-sharing catalog. '
lKlA*fE>ffee
'The Reily-Taylor Company, New Orleans
Need a WAGON?
W. H. FIELD, Agt,
Phone 244 E. Main St.
■■ ■ - **
I hollered Eggs; I got Eggs.
I norv say BUTTER. I]
Why not bring some in.
Thanks Awfully,
JIM SHAW