Newspaper Page Text
It Certainly
Feels Good
—— =• &
these “warmish” days to slip out of the V.
old he ivy winter suit and into a fresh, /iW/ AY
crisp Sprin? Suit, changing from high /A'w '
to low shoes and again donning the /J;/- ' i
comfortable B. V. D’S. / \ \jjj§
And*-The Best Part of it is--
that it costs no more io have your Spring A
suit tailored than it docs to buy one fi< m
“thera.'k." And must important, when kj
/blf
we tailor for you—you get a real fit. w*
Come in—freshen up-it will do you good to see the wonder
ful variety of patterns for Spring.
MADISON MILAM CLOTHES SHOP
“Makers of Fine Clothes for Men”
to individual measure.
UPSTAIRS OVER SODA FOUNT
WILL NOW COLLECT
SPECIAL CIGAR AND
CIGARETTE TAXES
Tax on Undertakers
Will Also Be Collected
—Tax For Two Years
Is Now Due.
Between $1,500 and $2,000 in special
taxes will be collected by Tax Collector
James D. Pittard from cigar dealers
and undertakers.
Tile order from Comptroller Gen
eral Wright reached Cartersville gat_
urday and the tax collector will imme.
BIG BARGAIN
--CLUBBING OFFER--
CAN BE OBTAINED WITH THE
Tribune-News
These new clubs the sensation of the season. Publications at rock-bottom prices. Note the real value.
The saving to you is remarkable. SEND IN YOUR ORDER TODAY to The Tribune-News, Cartersville.
EXTRA SPECIAL
$1.60 sl-95
Both a whole year for T 4 * VV Both a whole year for
These Offers Hold Good For a Limited Time Only
THE TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year) and THE SOU
American Magazine (1 year) $4.60
Christian Herald (1 year) 3.40
Etude (Music) (1 year) 2.35
Pictorial Review (1 year) 3.10
Radio Broadcast (1 year) 4.35
Woman’s Home Companion (1 year) 3.60
Tribune-News, Cartersville, Ga.:
Enclosed find $ for which send me your clubbing offer
No.
Name ;
R. F. D Post Office ! State
dlately begin the collection. The tax
is SSO for wholesalers and $lO for re
tailers of cigars j and S2O for under
takers.
The tax will be collected for two
years. The law passed by the legisla
ture over two years ago was fought
by the tobacco dealers and carried to
the supreme court before a final de
cision was rendered. Now the court
has ruled inat the law is constitu
tional, and the tax for the past two
years, or since the passage of the bill,
will be collected.
There are about fifty wholesale and
retail cigar and cigarette dealers in
the city limits and three undertakers.
The only two places in Bartow county
where the tax is collectible are the
incorporated cities in the county. The
law does not apply to the county dis
CLUB No. 14
TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year)
Southern Ruralist (1 year) ~
McCall’s Magazine (1 year)
Hearth and Home (1 year) ~
The Gentlewoman (1 year)
Household Guest (1 year) ”11
CLUB No. 6
TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year)
Southern Ruralist (1 year) _ __ __l~
Pictorial Review (8 months) I_IZZI_ZI IZIIIII
CLUB No. 17
TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year)
Southern Ruralist (1 year) "HI ~
Mother's Magazine (1 year) _ " "
Weekly Alabama Times (1 year) I •_ I
Gentlewoman Magazin e (1 year)
Park’s Floral Magazine (1 year)
/ CLUB No. 4
TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year) __
/Southern Ruralist (1 year)
j Weekly Commercial, Appeal (1 year)” ’
! Park’s Floral Magazine (1 year)
McCall’s Magazine (1 year) I
CLUB No. 11
TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year)
Southern Ruralist (1 year)
Tri-Weekly Constitution (1 year) I
Weekly Commercial Appeal (1 year) IIIIIH
Home Circle Magazine (1 year)
CLUB No. 12
TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year)
Southern Ruralist (1 year) _I
Tri-Weekly Journal (1 year) ~ZZ
Weekly Commercial Appeal (1 year) I_l
Home Circle Magazine (1 year)
CLUB No. 16
TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year)
Southern Ruralist (1 year)
Southern Poultry Journal (1 year)
(The brand-new Poultry Paper of the South. Get it)
CLUB No. 15
TRIBUNE-NEWS (1 year)
Southern Ruralist (1 year)
The Pathfinder (1 year)
Every week from the Nation’s Capital.
THE TRIBUNE-NEWS, CARTERSVILLE, GA. APRIL 5, 1923.
tricts, being applicable only to cities
'of certain populations.
GRAND OPERA, ATLANTA
April 23-28, 1923
SEABOARD announces for this oc
casion fare and one-half for the round
trip. For selling dates and limit see
nearest SEABOARD Ticket Agent, or
write
FRED GEISSLER,
/yst. Gem. Fass’r Age'., S. A. L. Ry,
Atlanta, Ga.
Education.
Instruction ends in the schoolroom,
but education ends only with life. And
education is to unfold nature; to
strengthen good and conquer evil; to
give self-help; to make a man.—Fred
erick \V. Robertson.
THERN RURALIST (3 year*) WITH
Boys’ Magazine (1 year) $2.60
Delineator (1 year) 35,,
Modern Priscilla ~ZZZZZZZ III" 3.65
People’s Home Journal (1 year) ZEZ__ 2.85
Today’s Housewife (1 year) ~~ZZTZ Z Z 2^60
Youth’s Companion (1 year) 4.10
MANY FAILURES IN BRITAIN
t
Report for Year of 1921 Shows Rec
ord in Bankruptcies—Wages
Are Lower.
London.—The year 1921 was a rec
ord bankruptcy year, in England and
Wales, the number of failures being
2,824 In excess of the 1920 total. When
compared with 1920, the figures show
an increase of liabilities of £15,034,005
and In assets of £5,849,200.
There was a notable decrease In the
number of companies registered in
England and Scotland during 1921, the
figures being 6.834, with a nominal cap
ital of £107,214.586, against the 1920
figures of * 10.783 companies with a
nominal capital of £587,484,721. Of the
0,834 companies registered 6,291 were
private enterprises. 2,918 went Into
liquidation and 1,684 were removed
from the register on the ground they
were no longer carrying on business.
Since the beginning of 1922 the
changes in rates of wages reported to
Ihe ministry of labor have resulted In
a net reduction of nearly £4,200.000 in
the weakly full-time wages of nearly
7.500,000 workers and a net Increase
of nearly £11,500 in the weekly wages
/f nearly 75,000 people.
MAN LIVES FIVE DAYS IN BOX
Plans Clever Scheme to “Beat” Way
to Orient, but Loneliness Is
His Undoing.
Honolulu. —Ira Oolver Sparks of
Peru, Ind., carpenter, figured out a
stowaway scheme that he thought
would get him to the Orient at an
expense of only a few dollars, but the
scheme didn’t work and Sparks is In
the hospital here and due to be re
turned to San Francisco as soon as he
Is able to leave.
Sparks was taken from the steamer
Tayo Maru after having lived for five
days In a box of 31 cubic feet dimen
sions. He hud built the box himself,
shipped It to himself at Honolulu and
obtained a bill of lading. At San
Francisco, he ordered the box taken
to the steamer. He then climbed In
side, nailed the box cover down and
started his voyage.
For five days, he said, he lived on
tinned goods and water, which he car
ried In oil cans. He finally came out,
he said, because of loneliness. He
suld he had Intended to go to Bombay,
via Hongkong, where he planned to
work In the holy land.
AH Six Only
$2.50
All Three Only
$2.35
All Six Only
$2.35
AH Five Only
$2.40
AH Five Only
$2.60
AH Five Only
$2.60
AH Three Only
$2.35
AH Three Cfnly
$2.35
EXTRA SPECIAL
CLUB NO. 1. CLUB NO. 2.
Tribune-News (1 year) ~ Tribune-Newe (1 year) F?
Southern Ruralist (1 year) Hu | *■*( 1 TriWeekly Constitution (1 year) Hu I
Both a whole year for A V/V Both a whole year for
1 These Offers Hold Good For a Limited Time Only
PRINTED
COTTONS,
GINGHAMS,
CREPES
VOILES
THOSE “DIFFERENT'’ FROCKS
yOU KNOW THE ONES, those that seem dis
tinctive. Very likely they’ve been design
ed at home and especially planned to flatter the
wearer’s particular charms. Your frocks may
be just as typical of you—the Fabric Section is
full of Inspiration!
OUALITY!
\. t
SERVICE
Big policemen with brass buttons do not protect
money if thieves want to steal. Surprise examination of
books, steel bars and time locks are unavailing if men
determine to be dishonest. The church implants the
desire to do right. No morality can long exist apart
from religion.
If you would support the best interests of this
community, relate yourself to the churches. Why not
adopt a church home now?
NOW IN HOME FOR AGED
VS '5*L. . S. t
\lm ! ' "jHa
s So quietly has misfortune •rertakea
Johannes S. Gelert, aged Dsns, Chat
It will Ik n surprise to aisny who hafi
admired the sculptor, to lean that ha
celebrated his seventieth birthday an
niversary recently In the Danish homo
for the aged. The public was un
aware w hen the aged Danish sculptor
deserted his home In South Oran :e.
N. J., and went Into serb's'.on in the
Brooklyn home. But he cllams he Is
perfectly contented In his present sur
roundings. His works draw the ad
miration of thousands In many parts jf
the country. Photo shows Johannes
S. Gelert. the Danish sculptor, ns he
appeared on his seventieth birthday.
. 'j'-
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J.WVauShan^Co.
iiurrrr quality firstsihce 1590. rrmur
Lay not up for yourselves treasures
upon the earth where motfi and
rust consume .... but lay up for
yourselves treasures in heaven.
Matthew 6:19
“Hlaij 1 Borrow
$1,000?”
The bankers of this town are
able to loan money for worthy
enterprises because the banks
have kept safely various sums
you and I have deposited. But
the church is the real custodian
of the funds of every bank.
GOUT NOW ALMOST EXTINCT
London Physician Declares That
Change to Temperate Habits Is
Responsible.
London. —Gout, the age-old disease
with which so many members of the
aristocracy used to be afflicted, is now
nearly extinct, according to Sir William
Wilcox, prominent physician, who de
clared In a recent lecture that he had
not seen a case of primary gout—that
Is, gout attacking a person for the first
time —for several years.
He attributed Its disappearance to
more temperate drinking habits and
the modern tendency to get away from
the fancier foods and return to the sim
pier and more wholesome dishes.
FLOWERS FLOWERS
For All Occasions
For Weddings
For Parties
For Funerals
We are so close, and our service so prompt, it’s like
having a florist in Cartersville.
Deliveries quickly made by mail and bus to points in
this section,
A trial will convince you-
MRS. HENRY MINERT, Florist,
Marietta, Ga.
Prompt Deliveries made to Cartersville and
This Section.
You will find the saleswo
men in the Fabric Section
glad to suggest attractive
ways of combining plain with
patterned fabrics, to give es
* \
timates on the amount of ma
terial required and to assist
in the selection of a pattern.
Long Distance Radio
Friends in this section of Rev. J. D.
Harling will read with interest the fol.
lowing story taken from a recent issue
of the Sherman (Texas) Daily Demo
crat:
Rev. J. D. Harling had the pleasure
of listening to a program at a late
hour last night given by radio WSB
of the Atlanta Journal, Atlanta, Ga., in
which his nephew, E. L. Harling, Jr.,
took a prominent part. The program
was received quite clearly.
“At a still later time Rev. Harling
states he heard a lady sing from a ra
dio station in Los Angeles, Cal., the
song ‘Home, Sweet Home.’ He de
clares it was the best rendition of that
old song he has ever heard, and before
she had finished his eyes were filled
with tears.
“Joseph Neill, the oldest son of Rev.
and Mrs. Harling, built this receivinig
set, and all those who have listened
over it declare it is unsurpassed in the
clearness it gives the programs coming
from the different stations of our coun.
try.”
A Farmer Cured of Rheumatism.
“A man living on a farm near here
came in a short time ago completely
doubled up with rheumatism. I handed
him a bottle of Chamberlain's Lini
ment and told him to use it freely,”
says C. P. Rayder, Patten Mills, N. Y.
“A few days later he walked into the
store as straight as a string and hand
ed me a dollar, saying, give me another
bottle of Chamberlain s Liniment; I
want it in the house all the time for rt
cured me.”—adav. 4t
CONFEDERATE REUNION
New Orleans, La.
April 10-13, 1923
SEABOARD announces special rates.
Selling April 7, 8, S, 10, limited April 30.
Stopovers allowed. For rates, Pull
man reservations, etc., see nearest
SEABOARD Ticket Agent, or write
FRED GEISSLER,
Asst. Genl. Pass’r Aot., S. A. L. Ry.,
Atlanta. Ga.
$
OUALITY
v
H IS %
ECOHOMY