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We Can Fix It
No matter what trouble you are
having with your Car, we know
we can fix it. So if your engine
does not run as smoothly as it
should, or if you seem to lack
power to make hills on high as
you should, drive in and let us
look “Her” over.
Some slight adjustment may be
all that is necessary—but what
ever the trouble, we will tell you
what it is and how much it will
cost, work.
LOW PRICES ON ACCESSORIES
Pettit Brothers
Welding Exide Batteries Wrecker Service
If you have t ouble on the road, phone us.
Innocent Darling.
While grandpa was dozing on tha
couch baby Mildred tried to awaken
hint by pulling his eyelashes with her
•mail fingers. Orandpa scolded her
for disturbing him. “1 was only try
ing to open your eyes by the atwlngs,
dranpa," she said, tearfully.—Boston
Evening Transcript.
Savages Made Use of Wigs.
The wig is older than civilization,
for the savage wore one to make him
appear more formidable on the field
of battle.
IHNOUMGEUIMT
I
Now is the best time to build, considering the wea
ther. Carpenters can turn out more work these long
days. Houses are in demand in Cartersville.
To encourage more building, we announce a reduction
of 10 per on all Lumber Prices, effective
July 1,1923
BUILD NOW—IT WILL PAY YOU
L. F. Shaw & Sons Cos.
Phone 245
Expensive Accessory.
“I am conlideut our plan will go
through," said the first lobbyist. “Sen
ator Sklnnuiu will lend bis influence
to It." “Bm when Senator Sklnnum
lends his Influence he charges a mighty
high rate of Interest,” suggested the
second lobbyist.
Easy Method of Fishing.
Bolivian natives living on the east
ern slopes of the Amies scatter the
Juice of a certain tree on streams
to render the fish insensible so they
can he caught by hand.
THE TRIBUNE-NEWS, CARTE RSVILLE, GA., JULY 5, 1923.
CO-OPERATIVES WILL
COMBINE ALL FORCES
Eleven Farmers’ Associations Set
Up Information Headquar
ters at Ithaca, N. Y.
Eleven farmers’ co-operative asso
' clatlons, organized In the New York
| State Co-operative council, huve set
< up a central heudquarters at Ithaca,
j N. Y„ where Information concerning
all phases of co-operative marketing
will be gathered with the purpose of
perfecting the co-operative distribu
tion of farm products In New York
and decreasing the spread between pro
ducer and consumer. The Informa
tion collected by the council, which
will work closely with state and fed
eral agencies, will be made available
to farmers seeking help In setting up
co-operative associations.
H. E. Babcock, general manager of
the Grange League Federation ex
change, is chalrmun of the council, and
E. V. Underwood, secretary of the New
York Farm Bureau federation, is sec
retary.
"The co-operative type of marketing
organization Is still new, und even .
those closely associated wljh the
movement are uninformed on some
phases of It,” Mr. Babcock, chairman 1
of the council, pointed out. “Some co
operatives have been get up with in- |
sufficient knowledge and no experi
ence us a backgrbund. Learning their
organization’s weakness has been very
expensive. It Is to eliminate so far
as possible these errors In the future
that the council lias been set up.”
The council represents farm busi
ness in New York state of netfrly SIOO,-
000,000 a year; having as Its members
all the big fumiers' business co-opera
tives in the state.
The president and mannger of the
following organizations make up the
council: Co-operative Grange League
Federation exchange; Dairymen’s
League Co-operative association, Inc.;
Maple Producers’ Co-operative asso
ciation, Inc.; New York Cunning Crops
Co-operative association, Inc.; . New
York Co-operative Seed Potato asso
ciation, Inc.; New York State Co-oper
ative I’outry Certification association;
the New York State Guernsey Breed
ers’ association. New Y’ork State Hol
st eln-Frleslan association; New York
State Sheep Growers Co-operative as
sociation, Inc.; Empire State Potato
Growers’ Co-operative association,
Inc.; Western New York Fruit Grow
ers Co-operutlve Packing association.
PLAN SALES AGENCY
FOR DAIRY PRODUCTS
Organization Being Built on Ideas
Submitted by Committee at
Milwaukee Conterence.
The establishment of a national co-
agency for dairy prod
ucts is under way. The organization
Is being built on the plan submitted by
the committee of nine selected at the
Co-operative Dairy conference In Mil
waukee, Wls. E. 11. Henton, director
of dulry marketing for the American
Farm Bureau federation, Is In charge
of the organization campaign.
The report of the committee of nine
was divided into three sections. In
the first section the purposes for the
establishment of the central agency
are clearly defined. The second sec
tion details the method and form of
organization, while a third Ims to do
with the organization campaign Itself.
Standardization of products, crea
tion of national brands, marketing of
products, increasing of consumption
of n’lllk through advertising, and the
maintenance ef publicity and statis-
tlcal departments were chief among the
purposes given for creating the na
tional sales agency.
The control of the agency Is very
definitely fixed in the hands of the
members on the basis of one vote
per member, but on derpand of one
third of the members all shall recast
their votes on the basis of an advisory
vote cast directly or by mail on the
basts of one vote for every ten or
major fraction of patrons or producer
members actually delivering milk to
the plants of the member associations
on the first day of the month of Jnne
of each year; or if no record exists for
the first day of June, as determined by
the board of directors of the central
agency. This rule shall apply to any
federation except where, by arrange
ment with its own locals. It may choose
to have the local associations do di
rect voting on a similar basis. The
member associations as such shall
elect directors and determine any mat
ter of policy on which they choose to
Instruct the directors.
The executive control was vested In
the board of directors composed of 35
members and an executive committee
to be selected by the board of di
rectors composed of seven members
Including the president, three vice
presidents and three other selected
members.
The directors shall be elected by dis
tricts on the basis of the number of
patrons, each district to contain ap
proximately the same number of pa
trons as each other district; the ter
ritory to be redistricted from time to
time, without overlapping on states, If
avoidable.
PRAISE FOR MISS ARNQUIST
Assistant State Agent of lowa to Take
Team of Club Girls to France
This Summer.
“The Lady From America” Is prob
ably what Miss Josephine Arnqulst,
assistant state agent, in charge of the
girls’ clubs in the state of lowa, will
be called by the French people during
her visit to that country this coming
summer.
It was Miss Amquist’s teani of club
girls, Katherine Bolihaugh and Beulah
Kodgcrs of Eddyville. lowa, who were
x ;■ •
~ V .£<
' . *’ _ *
Miss Josephine Arnquist.
America’s champipn canning girls at
the last International Boys’ and Girls’
clubs exposition at < ’hlcngo. They will
tour France this summer to demon
strate domestic science projects in the
devastated regions, the trip being
awarded by the American Committee
for Devastated France. The lowa team
will be accompanied by the Colorado
teum which placed second.
I
SORRY FOR TEACHER
Teacher —Now, Johnny, tell me what
kind of clothes pussy wears?
J ohnny—Clothes ?
Teacher—Yes. clothes. Does she
wear wool? Does she wear feathers?
Johnny—You poor lady. Ain’t you
never seen a cat?
Phone 75
Groceries
We have This Week for Special:
FRESH ROASTING EARS
GREEN BEANS
NEW IRISH POTATOES
Phone us for your Eats.
EACH ORDER GETS A SQUARE DEAL AND PROMPT
ATTENTION
Dupree & Cline
14 WALL ST. CARTERSVILLE, GA.
Church Members Object to Oil Wells
Members of the congregation of the little country church at Tonkawa,
Okla., ore up In arms against oil prospectors who have drilled wells In the yard
of the church property, as pictured. The oil well operators assert their lease
on the property permits them to drill wells in the churchyard and cemetery,
and seek to have the courts sustain their claims. Members of the congrega
tion are on guard at all times, and seek to prevent the operators from drilling.
They have refused thousands of dollars offered for the property, which lr one
of the richest oil centers In the state of Oklahoma.
Aged Sisters Get Together Again
After sixty-six years three sisters had a get-together in San Francisco
when Mrs. Rebecca Guyer Marsh, eighty-three, and Mrs. Lucy B. Guyer
Thomas, seventy-eight, went from the Yakima valley in Washington to San
Francisco to call upon Mrs. Elizabeth Guyer Hyland, ninety-one, who had not
seen her sisters since 1857, when she left the family home at Carroll Springs,
0., for California.
Making Berkeley a “Signless City”
Berkeley, Cal., a spotless and “dry” town —even before Volstead—now pro
claims Itself the nation's only "signless city.” Members of the real estate
board removed all their “For Sale” signs, a house was built of them, and then
the house of signs was burned to the ground, amid wild cheers. The photo
graph shows the conflagration. k
HIS RETORT
“You should work for something
besides money.”
“If you can tel! something besides
money that my grocer and coal man
will take, I’ll be glad to work for it.”
Flattering Daddy.
A bachelor never realizes how Im
portant a man can feel when the wife
says: “Be quiet, children ; your father
Is talking.”
A HUMMER
“Wonder why the bee was selected
as a model of industry.'*
“I suppose because business with
the bee is always humming.”
SURE, HE CAN SHOOT
After decorating five army nurse3
with the Distinguished Service Medal,
General 'Pershing was asked by a
movie to do a little shooting and
he ground out a few feet of film reg
istering the heroines he had Just dec
orated.
OBLIGING TEACHER
Aunt Maude —Were you a good boy
today, Willie?
Willie —Yep! The teacher let m
stay with him an hour after school
was over.
BEYOND REPAIR
Jim —Yes, he was a wild bird. But
he began to reform in his old age.
Jam —Well, well, and that was about
as futile as putting a bad egg in cold
storage.
SAVED SOMETHING
igg
Judge—You say you carried a load
ed revolver and you let the thief take
everything off you?
Mr. Pin —Yes, he took everything
but the revolver. He didn’t find that.
A BOMMERANG
“My son, the early bird catches
the worm."
“Yes, pa, and brings it home to
his children. Isn’t it a lesson for
you 1”
SHE’S RIGHT
He: You must be one of those
girls who take plenty of exercise,
Judging from the fine color you have.
She: No, i have a quicker way,
that method is too slow.
LIVELIHOOD
The world owes you a living son,
By methods clean and right
Sometimes by work it may be wos
Sometimes you’ve got to fight
s: ~
A ROMANCE
Bug—Ah how romantic, Miss Lady
Bug, to meet you here on the “great
white way.”
Stop a Cough Quick
take HAYES’ HEALING HONEY* a
| cough medicine which stops the cough by
I healing the inflamed and irritated tissues.
A box of GROVES O-PEN-TRATE
W SALVE for Chest Colds, Head Colds and
l Croup is enclosed with every bottle of
i HAYES’ HEALING HONEY. The salve
i should be rubbed on the chest and throat
. of children suffering from a Cold or Croup.
The healing effect of Hayes' Healing Honey in
side the throat combined with the healing effect of
Grove 3 O-Fen-Traie Salve through the pores of
the skin soon stops a cough.
Both remedies are packed in one carvm and the
cast of tie combined treatment is 38c. ,
Just ask your draflgiat for HAYES'
■EALING HONEY.