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think they’ve never lost their first bloom.
SHks will stand many trips to the Capital City, because
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Capital City Dry Cleaning & Dye Works
ATLANTA, GA.
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P. S.—By the way, we still have 36 feet of good rope
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INTEREST TO YOU
Discuss Article
On Ex-President
Lansing’s Expose Viewed Differently in
Washington—Wilson Is Still Popu
lar—Heflin Says He Will Live as
Long as the Stars Shine.
Washington, D. C., April 7—When
asked to discus- the attack of former
Secretary of State Lansing against for
mer President Woodrow Wilson, Sen
ator Medill McCormick, of Illinois, dis-
Somethin! Of
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4 Per Cent Interest on Time Certificates
First National Sank
Cartersville, Georgia.
THE TRIBUNE-NEWS, CARTERSVILLE, GA„ APRIL 7, 1921.
missed the subject with this declara
tion:
The world has already forgotten Dr.
Wilson."
Senator George Moses of New Hamp
shire, in a brief response to the interro
gation of newspaper men, intimated an
opinion that Mr. Lansing had been en
tirely too mild in "exposing" the short
comings of the former president.
Such statements, however, proved the
exception. Senator Lodge, who has a
deep personal grievance against Mr.
Wilson, declined to comment. Certain
other Republicans declared that if
Lansing, while in Paris, knew of the
great "danger" confronting this gov
ernment, he was negligent of his duty
when he failed immediately to return
to the United States and inform the
senate Democrats, as a rule, made no
comment. Senator Hitchcock declares
that Lansing's personal feelings ren
dered him unable justly Vo judge the
former president; and Senator Heflin,
of Alabama, concluded a brief tribute
with the statement: "Will live as long
as the stars shine."
Continued Loyalty Proven.
Mr. McCormick’s contention that the
world has already forgotten "Dr. Wil
son" was not regarded as serious
enough to provoke anyone to sharp re
joinder. Not even Washington has for
gotten the former president. When,
after the inauguration of President
Harding, Mr. Wilson repaired to his
private residence, he found an innu
merable crowd of people gathered about
his property. It was a cheering, en
thusiastic crowd, and one which ob
viously desired to prove its continuous
loyalty.
When quite recently the report star
tled the city that Mr. Wilson had suf
fered a relapse, and what was eventu
ally diagnosed as indigestion was
thought to be a more serious malady, a
score of little groups, quiet, unostenta
tious, serious almost to tears, stood on
the pavement at the front of his res
idence.
In these groups, women with chil-
I dren in their arms and at their heels,
| were conspicuous.
Commencement At
White Begins Friday
Evening, April Bth
Mr. W. 11. Padgett, principal of the
White school, was in Cartersville last
Saturday, and while here announced
I the following program for the com
mencement season at the White junior
high school:
We wish to announce to the people
of Bartow county that the annual com
mencement exercises or White junior
high school will be held at the audito
rium Friday, Saturday and Sunday,
April 8, 9 and 10. The program is as
follows:
Friday Evening, April 8.
Children’s and Juniors' Program.
"Welcome" (by eight girls.)
Flag Song.
Concert recitation.
Primary recitations.
Daily games and drills (primary).
Burlesque doll drilj.
Chorus, "Bubbles."
Recitation, Stella Ashingback. -
Dolly show.
Pantomime and march, “Yankee Doo
dle.”
"Who's Crazy Now?" (Junior play.)
Sunbeam drill.
"How He Had Him."
Recitation, Lola Stephenson.
“Axin’ Her Fader." (Negro farce.)
Interrupted recitation.
Pantomime —Star-Spangled Banner.
Saturday Morning, 10:30.
Address and jokes by Prof. N. E. W.
Stokely
Saturday Evening, April 9.
Tambourine drill.
Play, “The Poor Married Man."
Recitation, Miss Ruth Conyers.
Pantomime, “Battle Hymn of the Re
public.”
The Poor Married Man has some
very natural experiei ces with a mother
in law. The play is dangerous to long
faces and loose buttons. Don’t come if
you can't laugh.
The characters follow:
Prof. John B. Wise Mr. Bush
Dr. Matthew Graham Ernest King
Billy Blake, a cowboy Harris Barron
Jupiter Jackson, a black trump
E. C. Goode, Jr.
Mrs. lona Ford, some mother-in
law Maggie Chappell
Zoie, her charming daughter
Marie Tierce
June Graham, a little Freshman-.
Mary Hamrick
Rosalind Wilson, a college reporter
Eva Boston
A small fee of 15c and 25c will be
charged for this performance.
Sunday Afternoon, 3:00 O’clock.
A sermon. Rev. L. Elmer Dutton.
Everybody cordially and specially in
vited to attend every exercise. You
will hear some of the best string music
the county can afford. Don’t miss it.
SEVERE PRUNING OF ROSE BUSHES
NECESSARY FOR FINEST BLOOMS
Cut-Flower Roses Need Clean Cultivation, Severe Pruning,
and Special Care—Plant by Themselves in Secluded Beds
—Not Suitable For Beautifying Grounds.
11IIE ROSE has been a fa vorite from
earliest times. So deep a hold has
it on the affections of the people tl\at it
is often spoken of as the “queen of
flowers." It has figured in the litera
ture of all ages and all nations. People
In al! stations of life yield homage to
its beauty of form and color and to its
delicious fragrance. It is loved by poor
and rich alike. It is grown in the door
yards of the least pretentious cottages,
where often the occupants are stinted
jn food and raiment, as well as on the
grounds of large estates, where abound
the choicest things that money can buy.
It is also grown in immense quantities
under glass and is the most popular
winter cut flower for all occasions.
Cut-flower roses should have the
ground entirely to themselves. They
should not be set among other plants
nor have other plants between . them,
not even pansies or other low-growing
herbs. They need clean cultivation
throughout the season every year.
How to Secure Finest Flowers.
For the production of individual
blossoms of greatest perfection, as well
as to secure a succession of bloom, se
vere pruning of the rose bush must be
practiced, say landscape gardeners in
the United States Department of Ag
riculture. When a large number of
blooms of small size is the aim, the
pruning is less severe. When dormant
bushes are set in the fall, one-half or
more of the wood should be removed.
I” the spring cut back the branches still
more, leaving only two or three stems
with four or five eyes on each. The
stems will then be six inches or less In
length. When dormant roses are set
in the spring they should be pruned at
the time of planting, leaving four or
live eyes on a stem, as above recom
mended. In regions where there is no
danger of injury from frost or dry
winds, the final pruning, as described
for spring, may be made in the fall.
After the first year, prune as soon as
freezing weather is over. In regions
where roses never suffer from cold the
work may be done in the fall. Remove
all weak wood and crossing branches
every year. For fine specimen blooms
on hybrid perpetuals shorten the re
maining shoots to four or five eyes, but
for the greatest mass of bloom only one
third to one-half the length of the
shoots should be cut away.
Prune Tea Rotes After Growth Starts.
In regions where cold sometimes in
jures roses, teas and their hybrids
should be trimmed later than the other
classes, or about the time growth starts.
Trim in the same manner as the hybrid
perpetuals. Because of their usually
more delicate growth they will look
much smaller when the work is done,
however. The strongest growing roses
should not be cut as short as the weak
er ones. AVhen overpruned, the tend
ency of the plants is to grow wood
rather than to bloom. • A few varieties
will not stand the extremely close
pruning described. When pruned for
specimen blooms the teas and hybrid
teas will be only six inches to one foot
high. China, Bengal and moss roses
should be treated the same as the teas
and hybrid teas, except that it is not
desirable to cut them quite so closely.
Bourbon roses should have only half
the length of the shoots removed. Sum
mer pruning i® desirable.
When a flower is cut from a tea rose
or other perpetual bloomer, only two or
three strong eyes of the current sea
son's growth of that branch should be
left on the plant. This will give the
roses very long stems. It may seem
like destroying the bush to take so
much off, but if the object is the pro
duction of roses, the cutting away of
the surplus wood will attain the desired
end.
The greatest temptation to leave
wood is where there are two or more
buds on one branch, some being small
when the terminal one is open. This
temptation to follow a bad prictice can
be avoided by pinching off all side
COMING MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 11
GRAND OPERA HODSE
Georgia Tech
Glee Club
35 ~A R TIS TS— 35
One of the best trained Glee Clubs ever organized
is coming to the Opera House Monday night. Tech has
sent out her premier entertainers—you can’t afford to
miss this rare treat—the first time in several years.
Curtain 8:30 P. M. Admission, Adults, sl.lO
Children, 85c; Balcony 25c to all, which
includes the tax.
shoots after a bud lias formed on the
end of a branch, This prevents the for
mation of two <)(• more T>ud on one
stalk, and will encourage additional
blooms on varieties which bloom more
than once a year.
WHO 18 THIS NEW
ATLANTA ASSAILANT
OF STATE OFFICIALS?
For the information of those who
have read an article sent out from At
lanta to the press of the state, over
the signature of L. N. Huff, assailing
the integrity of the members of tire
Railroad Commission of Georgia, also
the public' utilities of the state; and
so that the public may'draw its own
conclusions as to the reliability and
responsibility of L. N. Huff, below is
republished a card which originally ap
peared in the Atlanta Journal.
The absence of Floyd Woodward
from Atlanta at this timo is unfortu
nate for the advocates of Municipal
Ownership. He would probably also
advocate the abolition of the Criminal
Courts as well as the Railroad Commis
sion:
Atlanta. Ga..
Jan. 26th, 1921.
"Editor,
The Atlanta Journal,
“In your issue of January 16th you
published a card from Dr. L. N. Huff
about the recent gas rate hearing be
fore the Georgia Railroad Commission
of Georgia.
“Any one who was present at this
hearing would not recognise the case
from Dr. Huff's newspaper presenta
tion of it. Asa matter of fact, it was
perfectly plain to alt those present that
neither Dr. Hutf nor his lawyers had
any understanding of the case, and his
card tries still further to fool the peo
ple of the State. Huff didn’t put up
any witnesses, but the questions his
lawyers asked the Company's witnes
ses displayed such a total Ignorance of
the subject matter as to make Dr. Huff
the butt for the ridicule of the audi
ence.
“I am surprised to see Dr. Huff in his
card, making pretensions of public de
cency,’ Probably he thinks that the
people of this town have forgotten his
crlmlnsljrfind other court record in At
lanta. Why doesn't he tell them about
a suit that J. Kahn brought against him
in the Superior Court of Fulton County
In August, 1919. Kahn accused Huff of
conspiring with Hogsed and another
party, to defraud him in a gambling
game; that in pursuance of this con
spiracy they invited him to a room in
the Princeton Hotel on August 29th,
1919, and gave him a drink of liquor,
which he alleges had been drugged, and
that he was made drunk and sick and
mentally irresponsible; that while he
was in this condition they got him to
Join In a game of craps and took all
the money that he had; that L. N. Huff
got about 1200.00 of his money. L. N.
Huff was found guilty in the Criminal
Court of Atlanta and fined $250.00 for
his part In the crap game, and In addi
tion to that, L. N. Huff paid J, Kahn
the sum of $200.00 in settlement of the
suit above mentioned, which was the
full amount Kahn claimed that Huff
got away from him. On this record I
don’t think that Dr. L. N. Huff has any
license to talk about public decency,
for certainly he doesn’t know what It is.
“Yours very truly.
“H. M. ATKINSON,
—adv. “Chairman.”
MRS. COOPER SAYS
IT’S SIMPLY GRAND
Nashville Woman Over
came Troubles by Tak
ing Tanlac Years Ago
—Still Feels Fine.
"About five years ago I gave a tes
timonial about the good Tanlac did me,
and as I have enjoyed the best of health
ever since I want everybody to know
what a wonderful blessing the medicine
has been to me all this time," said Mrs.
i Emma Cooper, of 1610 18th Ave., North,
I Nashville. Tenn.
“When Tanlac first came to Nashville
; I had been in a nervous, run-down
j condition for a long time. My health
i was so poor that I could not get out of
the house and had to spend most of my
I time In bed.
I “Well, Tanlac soon relieved my trou
bles and built me up to where life was
worth living again and it has been my
standby ever since. I keep Tanlac in
the house all the time, and when I feel
myself getting a little run down it Boon
has me feeling right again. It always
invigorates me and keeps me feeling
fine. I will always bless the day this
grand medicine came my way. It rap
idly restored my strength and energy
after I had the ’flu’ two years ago. I
honestly believe It is the greatest med
icine In the world."—adv.
PUT DOWN EGGS
FOR WINTER WHILE
THE PRICES ARE LOW
There is nothing mysterious in the
business of egg preserving, and no
great labor. Eggs are comparatively
cheap this spring, a condition which
should eneouruge thrifty housewives to
put down a supply for use next winter
when prices will rise again.
Rules for keeping eggs in water glass
arc given by the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture. To be preserved
properly eggs should be put into water
glass when absolutely fresh. The eggs
should be clean, but It is better not to
wash them. Eggs with dirty shells can
be used for immediate consumption and
the clean eggs preserved. Cracked eggs,
or those with thin Or weak shells,
should never be used for preservation-
The cracked eggs will spoil and ruin
the other eggs in the jar also.
Water glass Can be bought by the
quart from the druggist or poultry
supply men. It is a pale yellow, odor
less, slrupy liquid. It should b diluted
in the proportion of 1 part of water
glass to S parts of water which has
been boiled and allowed to cool. Earth -
eiiware crocks or jars are the best con
talneis, since .they have a glazed sur
face, and are not subject to chemical
action from the solution. The crocks
or cans should be scalded for perfect
cleanliness and allowed to cool before
they are used. A six-gallrn contains''
will hold 18 dozen eggs, and will re
quire about 22 pints of solution. To
large containers are not desirable, since
they Increase the liability of breaking
some of the eggs. Half fill the contain
er with the water glass solution, put
the eggs in it and add more from day
to day as they are obtained, until the
container Is filled. Be sure the eggs
are covered with about two inches of
water-glass solution. Cover the con
tainer and place it in a cool place,
where it will not have to be moved.
Use wax paper under the cover to keep
the Jar tight. It should be looked at
every two pr three months to see that
the water has not evaporated so that
the eggs are too near the surface. If
there seems to be any danger of this,
sufficient cool boiled water should be
added to keep them covered.
Remove the eggs from the solution
as desired for use. and rinse them clean
in cold water. Before boiling such eggs
prick a tiny hole in the large end of the
shell with a needle, to keep them from
cracking. As the eggs age the white
becomes thinner and is harder to beat.
The yolk membrane becomes more del
icate, and it is correspondingly difficult
to separate the whites from the yolks.