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IHEBARTQW TRIBUNE
The CARTERSVILLE NEWS.
Published Weekly on Thursday
TRIBUNE PUBLISHING CO.
(incorporate*))
Subscription Rates:
$1.50 per year. 75c for six months.
10e for three months.
Advertising rates furnished upoa
implication.
Proper notice of deaths will al
ways be published without chargt
u soon as we learn of them, but
formal obituary notices sent in later
will be charged for at regular ad
vertising rates. We reserve the
•ight of editing all items published.
Entered as second-class matter,
February 17, 1910, at the post office
at Cartersville, Ga., under the Aet
a# March 3. 1879.
FOOD CONSERVATION.
This is Food Conservation Week.
Have you signed the pledge to help
your Nation in this great conflict by
helping to conserve food? If you have
not, you should do so at once.
Conserving food does not mean eating
less; it means eating less of some
things and more of others:
Eat less wheat; more rye. corn and
oatmeal.
Eat less beef and i>ork: more fowl
and eggs.
Eat less animal fat; more vegetable
oils.
Eat more of our abundance of per
ishables, eat more potatoes and vege
tables; save wheat, meat, fats and
sugar, so that we may ship more to our
soldiers and Allies.
Buy no more than you need —elimin-
ate waste.
Food, supplies and men—success in
war.
We have men.
We have supplies.
We have food—for ourselves, but the
supply of our Allies is short. We must
help feed them, for if they fail, we fail.
Food will win this war—you can help
in providing the food.
All the nations of Europe are short
of food. The nation whose soldiers and
whose people are not adequately fed
cannot fight at its best. If we supply
the food shortage of our Allies, they
will have a tremendous advantage over
their enemy and ours. To the extent
that we do not, we hurt our chances of
a speedy and successful conclusion to
this war.
Following is a reproduction of the
Fledge Card which it Is desired to have
every family in the United States sign.
It is an original of the card which will
be taken to all homes during this
week.
TO THE UNITED STATES FOOD
administration:
1 pledge myself to use the practical
means within my ''power to .aid the
Food Administration in its efforts to
conserve the food supplies of the coun
try, and, as evidence of my support, I
wish to be enrolled with yourselves as
a volunteer member of the Food Ad
ministration.
Name
Street •
City State
There are no fees or dues. We want
your help, in the form of both your
personal efforts to economize food
and your influence with others to
v ard food economy and wise control
of our national supply. If you will
give this help it will be a direct serv
ice to your country.
>
Every stockholder of the Bartow
County Fair Association should be
present at the meetinjj of the company
next Wednesday afternoon. And every
other citizen interested in the Fair.
The children of the county have been
aided in theirNvork and entertained to
their pleasure. A better recommenda
tion could not be given an institution.
EVER SALIVATED BY
J* CALOMEL? HORRIBLE!
Calomel is Quicksilver and Acts Like
Dynamite on Yobr Liver.
Calomel loses you a day I You know
\vbat calomel is. It’s mercury; quick
silver. Calomel is dangerous. It
crashes into sour bile like dynamite,
cramping and sickening you. Calomel
attacks the b i;e and ‘hould never he
put into jrottr system.
Wh°fi you feel bi' p’t*, sluggish, coa
st ipaUi . ami al kii -eked out and be
lieve you-need a ti-e of dangerous cal
omel just 'remember that your druggist
sells for a few cents a large bottle of
Dodt- n s Liver Tone, which Is entirely
vegetable and pleasunat to take and is
a perfect substitute for calomel, it is
guaranteed to start your liver with-it
stirring you up inside, and can not
salivate.
Don’t take cal m-1! it makes you
sick ;be next day; it loses you a day’s
work! Dodson’s Liver Tone straightens
you right up and you feel great. Give
i< to the children because it is perfect
ly harmless and doesn't gripe.—Advrr
SAVE POOD AI HOME
FOROURBOYSATFRONT
•
To All Patriots of the Home:
In ihese stirring days when our
country faces the most .colossal task in
it--' entire history, the spirit and de
termination with which every man
does his bit may prove to be the turn
ing ]>int of the war. Nothing should
be left undone to save our bays who
are going to the front. On the o her
hand, there is net a boy who is going
t(, the front that will not give all that
he has, even life itself, to preserve the
honor and integrity of the nation under
whose banner he fights.
What kind of boys are we sending to
the front? We expect to send one mil
lion brave boys. Most of them are just
approaching manhood, —fillled with
hopes and aspirations, and who little
dreamt that they had been preparing
themselves to defend the country they
love against the most highly organized
foe the world has ever known. The re
sponsibility which rests upon them
calls for a courage, determination
and a patriotism almost sublime. That
these boys will meet the responsibility,
meet it bravely and victoriously, none
of us entertain the slightest doubt.
Not long ago at a great college re
gatta a dozen crews were lined up on
the Hudson for a four-mile race. In
every boat were eight men, clean mor
ally; physically perfect. The banks of
the river were lined with thousands of
people waiting to cheer their favorite
crew along to victory. The signal was
given. At that instant almost a hun
dred oars touched the water, and with
perfect rythm these crews shot down
the river. Toward the end of the race
one eight-oar shell took the lead and
I finished a few inches in advance of the
others. As this boat took the lead
thousands of people remarked upon the
rythm of the stroke and the grace with
which the men rotted. There was no
hesitation, no flinching, no easing up
on a single oar.
After this boat crossed the line, the
crew rowed over to the dock and every
member of the crew except one stepped
out. What had happened to him?
Early in the race a brass screw had
worked loose in the foot-rest and had’,
during the race, gradually worked
through the thin sole of his shoe, pen
etrated the skin, entered the flesh
and finally embedded itself in the
bone of the boy’s heel. He bad to ;
'Ranked loose from the boat. Imagine,
If you- can the pain be suffered during
the four-mile race and yet not once
Billy Sunday Will Soon Have ’Elm
\ “Hitting the Trail” in Atlanta
V * w
Get The Daily Georgian and
Sunday American and you “hear”
and “see” EVERYTHING.
Every- sermon will
be printed in full in
The Georgian and
American.
Churches, Societies,
Sunday Schools.
Lodges, Etc., desiring
to raise funds write
for our special offer,
for circulation work.
JOHN O. KELLY, Agent 301 South Ave.,
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE-THE CART ERSVILLE NEWS. NOV. 1, 1917.
did he fall to throw all his power into
the stroke that was to win the race.
This boy is not an exception; he is
one of a million young men who are go
ing to the front. Every one of these
fellows will stick whether he faces ma
chine guns or the cold steeh of the
bayonet. But this is not the important
question. We have undertaken a task
in this enrollment campaign. Our task 1
is to seetlrat every other person sticks
to this task, which is to .supply these
fighting boys of America with suffi
cient wholesome food to enable them
tc fight as we know they can fight and
will fight, providing they are loyally
backed by the people at home.*
The campaign is'almost here. Tlii'
is the time when every person is going
to make his great drive. This is the
time when we are going to know just
how many American families are go
ing to back the boys at the front. This
is the time when we are going to find
out who sticks and who quits.
Let us assume our resposlbllity, not
in part, but in full. Let us see to it
that every family in our country or
city enrolls. No matter what our en
gagements, no matter what the
weather may be, no matter how much
money we might earn during the time
that we will have to give up to this
work, let everyone be a true patriot
and join the ranks of those who
pledged the ms e'l vies to stick; to see it
through; to fight it out and not quit.
Reports from all through the South
and Central West and the Northwest
indicate that this is going to be one of
the greatest national campaigns in the
history of the country. Your State has
furnished its proportion of young men.
Yur State will pleldge its full propor
tion of families committed to food con
servation. There is no apathy in your
part of the country, and we know that
you do not want it. You are called to
duty, you are going to respond for your
country and for your boys.
Yours sincerely,
U. S. FOOD ADMINISTRATION.
By O. B. Towne.
Next Wednesday afternoon at one
thirty the stockholders and all others
interested in the Bartow County Fair
Association will meet at the Court
House. Come and be one who will
manifest an interest in the future de
velopment of this great and worthy en
terprise.
What is LAX-FOS
LAX-FOS IS Ml 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
and thousands of Southern folks will go to
Atlanta to hear the world's most famous
evangelist.
There will be thousands of others who
can not go, but for
15c a week
The Atlanta Georgian
and Sunday American
will bring Billy Sunday to them every day.
And “Ma” Sunday, as she is affectionately called, will be
with him—for Mrs. Sunday is now writing an article which ap
pears exclusively in The Atlanta Georgian every day.
Dudley Glass, conductor of the “optO” Car” and‘‘Up and
Down Peachtree;” 0. B. Keeler, the “Old Bill” of the
sport pnyos; Polly Peachtree, who sees all the world from a wo
man's viewpoint—these are SOME of the writers who will make
you see Billy Sunday in The Georgian and American, as clearly
ns though r< ti liad a front seat in the tabernacle.
" “Spane.” the artist, who says more with a pen stroke than
mam writers can crowd into a column, will sketch Billy Sunday
and his crowds at tin* Sawdust Trail.
Then, too, photographers will photograph it all.
Subscribe today, through your local agent or carrier, or mail your
subscription direct, by "tearing off and sending this coupon NOW.
The Daily Georgian THE GEORGIAN AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA.:
and Sunday j inclose $ , lor which send me The Daily Georgian
American,
Every Day, Includ- and Sunday American for months.
ing Sunday, *
2 Months $1.30 Name ;
J** 0 ” 1 ? 5 £* Street or Bon
6 Months $3.75
1 Year .. $7.50 Town State
SELECT SEED CORN
enough for two years
FOR |o|B PLANTINGS AND TO INSURE ADAPTED SEED FOR 1919
WHERE?
In the field from standing stalks of
a variety that has ‘ made good” and
become locally adapted.
HOW?
Pick best ears from plants showing
best yields in fair competition with
neighboring plants. Storm-proof plants >
with hanging ears give best seed, i
Long ears with large, uniform kernels
are the best. Avoid sappy ears heavy
with water.
INSURE A RIGHT START FOR YOUR NEXT TWO CORN CROPS BY
SAVING AMPLE SEED NOW.
For Further Information Ask Your County Agent, or Write for Farmers’
Bulletin 415, “Seed Corn.”
Good Bread Is Half the Meat
Then make that Half
a Surety by using
|rjV
tdoi^
f-- *
baking success. You can not fail when
you use RISING SUN FLOUR.
The select Soft Winter Whedi, the pure ingredients, the
sanitary scientific mixing, all go to set the high standard
for Rising Sun Flour. Ask your grocer for it.
Prepared only by the famous RED MILL. Nashville, Tenn,
Whenever Yon Need a General Tonic
Take Grove’s.
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic properties of QUININE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enrichea the Blood and
Build# up the Whole System. 60 cents.
Phone 168 Cartersville, Ga.
M
WHEN?
As soon as ears are ripe and hard—
before heavy frosts or autumn rains in
jure the kernels for seed. The day the
ears are selected they should be hung
where they will become thoroughly
dry in a few days.
WHY?
It pays. Field selection of seed corn
is one of the surest and best paying
operations on the farm. Proper care of
J seed corn pays well. Tests show that
properly cared for seed corn has
yielded eighteen bushels more
l than crib-stored seed from the same
( field.
Rising Sun
Flour
(Self-Rising and Ready Prepared)
All the ingredients already mixed
for you in proportions that assure
sw
Quick-Easy Shines
Tan-Bleck-Whlte
SOLD 111 Tig TOST STORES |
E-Z
CLFANE.fi
DRESSINGS
Tbo perfect
OSS balance.
makes f t makes
■whiles'/ Vyolks
Professional Cards
HOWARD E. FELTON, M. .
•io* 2 1-2 West Main Strset,
(ever Yeung Bres. Drug stere
Office Telephone No. 33
Residence Telephene Ne. 175
SAM M. HOWELL, M. D,
Office over Scheuer Bros,
Residence Telephone No. 255
DR. C. H GRIFFIN,
DENTIST
Office In Walton Building
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
Office Phone 191. Residence PhoieW
CLAUDE C. PITTMAN
LAWYER
Represents National Surety Company,
“The Largest and Strongest In the
World”
J. R. WHITAKER
AUorney-at Law
Office in First National Bank BMf,
Honey to loan on improved fan
lands at 6%; prompt service,
Cartersville, Georgia
H W. CALDWELL,
Veterinary Surgeon
At Jones Sc Oglesby Stable
Day Phene 143. Night Phone Hi
Calls wiH receive my prompt •tte*’
tion.
- GEO. a AUBREY,
Attoraey-at-Law,
Fire Insurance.
Cartersville, Georgia.
We Carry a Complete Lin* *f
Coffins, Caskets and Robe*.
G. M. JACKSON A SON,
Cartersville, Ga.
W. W. PHILLIPS
Civil Engineer County Surveyor
Surveys of all kinds —Maps, Profile-
Specifications Furnished.
Phone 430 Cartersville, Gt
Cartersville
Lodge No. 142
Regular meetings, first and thm
Thursday nights of each month at
7:30 o*clock.
FOR SALE—One No. 10 Remington
typewriter in good condition, and on®
roller top desk. Will be sold at a
gain. Apply at Tribune office.
A few high class pi? s
for sale.
W. H. Field
To Cure a Cold in One Bay.
Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine. 11
Cough and Headache and works on
Druggists refund money if t9 ' ls h ,jm
E. W. GROVE’S signature on eacH oo*-
Finley& Henson
\ttorneys=at=La"
Loans Negotiated on
Real Estate, Improv
ed City Property ond
Farm Lands at 6 p&
Cent Interest. . • •
Cartersville,