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Take
SEWELL’S
LIVER
CAPS
„ For Your Liver
Sewell’s
BITTER TONIC
For Strength
Sewell’s
Q-RITONE
For Stomach Troubles
Phone 43
SEWELL
DRUG COMPANY
Tonight-
Tomorrow Alright
NR Tablets stop sick hsadschos,
rslisvs bilious attacks, tone and
regulate tbs eliminative organs,
make you fool fine.
“ Better Than Pill* For Uvor Ilia”
Colds Cause drip and Influenza
LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets remove
the cause. There la only one "Bromo Quinine.'
E W. r'JiOVE S signature on boa. 30c
Save on Groceries
If you’ll buy your groceries from a Rogers
Store, you will most certainly save money on
eah purchase. The following prices should
interest you:
LIBBY’S
APPLE JELL!
ASSORTED FLAVORS
lie
Wesson Oil _
Pint 25c
Sugar Crisp Corn
Flakes, 3 Pkgs . . <&UC
Broken Sliced Pine- „ _
apple, No. 2 1-2 Can SZc
Octagon Washing
Powder, a pkg. , . 4c
RIDG WAY’S TEA
1 lb. pkg. Orange Pekoe $} 93
1-2 lb. pkg. Orange Uckoe 54c
1-4 lb. pkg. Orange Pekoe 28c
1 lb. pkg. Silver Label 97 c
1-2 lb. pkg. Silver Label 49 c
1-4 lb. pkg. Silver Labe! 27c
1 lb. pkg. Orange Label 81c
1-2 lb. pkg. Orange Label 42 c
10c pkg. Orange Label 9 C
Rogers Quality
Bread, 13oz. Loaf 5c
There’s a ROGERS Store Near You
ROGERS
Where Satisfaction Is a Certainty
ADAIRSVILLE
By BELL BAYLESS
Staff Reiaresentative
Adairsville, July 12. —(Special)—Mrs.
K. D. McCollum, of Marietta, and Mrs.
Lucille McCollum Weaver, of Atlanta,
spent laßt week with Mr. and Mrs. E. F.
Herndon and Mr.and Mrs. J. W. Payne.
Among those attending the Fourth of
July celebration In Cartersville were
Silases Ruth and Claudie Payne and
Mr. Claude White.
Mrs R. D. Jackson entertained with
a delightful six o’clock diner Saturday
In honor of Miss Mary Trimble's visitor
Miss Shattuck. of I-a Fayette. Covers
were laid for Miss Annie Laurie Shat
tuck, Mr. Augustus Noland, of Atlanta,
Miss Mary Trimble, Miss Mary Pav
lovsky, Mr. William Trimble and Mr.
and Mrs. R. D. Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Noland and Miss
Clara THmble motorel to Dalton Sat
urday and remained oyer Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Scott and children
of Macon, are spedlng some time with
their sister, Mrs. Layton Trimble.
Miss Mary Josephcne Trimble left
Sunday morning for a ten days visit to
friends in LaFayette.
The Junior B. Y. P. U., gave a picnic
at the pumping station Tuesday after
noon. Twenty four were present and
enjoyed a variety of games and a
bounteous lunch.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Biddy moved hack
to their home on Society Hill Tuesday.
Mr. Elbert Noland having bought the
Bidy farm near Mineral Springs. Their
old neighbors are glad to welcome them
home once more after a years absence.
Mr. Julian Frisk and Mr. Hamilton
Grant of Rome, spent the week-end
with Mr. Frisk's uncle, Mr. Lowell
Johnson.
Mr. O. B. Bishop drove to Chat
tanooga Sunday and brought Mrs.
Bishop and the children home with him
that afternoon. They were accom
pained by Mrs. Bishop's sister, Mrs. W.
A. Mattlce, who will remain for a short
visit.
The Misses Franklin, of Cleveland.
Tenn., are guests of their uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Franklin.
Mrs. W. A. Palmour and the Misses
Gladys and Margaret Palmour rae
guests of Mrs. W. W. Bibb.
Rev. H. B. Gober returned fron*
Kingsland, Camden county, Monday,
after conducting a series of meet
THE TRIBUNE-NEWS, CARTERSVILLE, GA.. JULY 12, 1923.
WANTS TO HELP
OTHER WOMEN
Grateful for Health Restored
by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Chicago. 111.—“ I am willing to write
to any girl or woman who is suffering
Miiiiiiiiiniuiiilli’ l from the troubles I
! [llUlullj 111 had before 1 took
I Lydia E. i’inkhain’a
JHF'WU Vegetable Com
■SpiJV jKiund. My back al
■P m wa y s ached, so I
**' ■ C ou!d not go about
n my housework, and I
|Jm ,j| had other troubles
.||| from weakness. I
MU ’S*. ‘''ll was this way for
J years, then my sister-
JL In-law took the Veg-
___i2EJetable Compound
and recommended it to me. In the time I
have been taking it and it has done won
ders for me. I keep house and am able to
do lots of work besides.’’—Mrs. Hft.en
Sevcik, 2711 Thomas St., Chicago, 111.
Women suffering from female trou
bles causing backache, irregularities,
pains, bearing-down feelings and weak
ness should take Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound. Not only is the
worth of this rp!*ndid medicine shown
by such cases as this,but for nearly fifty
years this same sort of experience has
been reported by thousands of women.
Mrs. Sevcik is willing to write to any
girl or woman suffering from such
troubles, and answer any questions they
may like to ask.
; lugs in the Baptist church of that
• pThce. These meetings were quite
1 successful and resulted in five addi
tions to the church. Rev. Gober will
leave Saturday for Griffin, where he
win conduct another revival.
A series of cottage prayer meetings
is being held by the Adairsville Bap
tists, three at the homes and two in
the church every week. Tuesday the
meeting was with MYs. George Hays
and Mrs. Charles Maxwell; Friday
night will be with Mrs. Ab Price.
Miss Ethel Mostetler is attending the
t’niversity in Athens, where she will
receive her A. B. degree this summer,
She expects to return to her school in
New Jersey in September.
Messrs. Bethel and Smile Tatum, of
Miami, Fla., who came to the burial of
their brother, J. H. Tatum, were enter
tained by their cousins, Mr. Lowell
Johnson, Mrs. Luella Davis and Misses
Inez and Berta Johnson, wh'le in
Adairsville.
Dr. nnd Mrs. R. S. Bradley returned
from Florida Thursday, going on to
Dalton for a brief visit to their daugh
ter, Mrs. Burrell Bandy, and bringing
Miss Lurllne Bradley home with them.
Dr. Bradley has decided not to build
his Florida home until a later date.
Mrs. Joe Morion and little daughter
Polly will leave for Knoxville, Tenn.,
Thursday where they will reside. En
route they will visit Mr. Morton’s pa
rents. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morton, of Al
bertville, Ala., former residents o, Lin
wood.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Koheiey tire ex
pected home Thursday, having visited
in Chattanooga and Birmingham while
on their wedding journey. They have
rented Mr. Tom Bryant’s cottage,
where they will be at home after
July 26.
Mrs. R. M. Muse, formerly Miss Mary
Hays, died at her home on the Charles
Shaw farm Friday, and was carried to
Wesleys chapel for burial Sunday at
3 p. m.. Rev. R. M. Green officiating,
and W. P. Whitworth being in charge
of funeral arrangements. Mrs. Muse
was 59 years of age. She is survived
by four sons and three daughters, all
grown.
E. D. Veach has just cut 290 bushels
of wheat off of seventeen acres of lund.
and says the quality is good. He also
cut 200 bushels of rye from twenty-five
acres.
Jasper H. Payne has had threshed
391 bushels of oats from fifteen acres
and 111 bushels of wheat from four
teen acres. Off five acres of clover,
the first cutting he got nineteen big
loads, at least a ton per load. He has
corn enough in his crib from last year
to last till next year. This year’s crop
of corn is very late, as are other grow
ing crops, owing to late plantings. But
since the recent rains all growing
crops appear to be doing well.
These two gentlemen complained of
a plague of rats. Mr. Payne says
something had killed the cats on his
place. Whereupon Mr. Veach advised
poison, “Elkay rat and roach poison”
mixed with sweet milk, which proved
satisfactory on his place, dozens of
rats having been destroyed.
Bob Burns was displaying some fine
Irish Cobbler potatoes Tuseday —27
potatoes which ha dug from one hill,
the combined weight being 5 pounds 7
ounces, which at present prices would
make the crop worth 30c per hill.
Somebody had scoured these potatoes
till they were as clean as the small
hoy's Sunday face. Mr, Burns says his
wife deserves most of the credit for
raising them.
Mrs. J. W. Franklin returned from
Norwood Tuesday night, where she
was the guest of Mrs. T. N. Ray.
Mrs. Robert Keith and son, of Cedar
Bluff Ala., are spending the week with
Mrs G. W. Brock. Mrs. Otto Igmg
ford. of Calhoun, was also Mrs. Brock's
guest Tuesday.
Miss Avis Sabine, a graduate nurse
of Newell's Sanitarium, who had been
nursing Mr. W. A. McCutchen. has re
turned to Chattanooga. Miss Sabine is
an exceptionally capable nurse and
does everything possible for the com
fort of her patients.
Hughie, the month-eld Infant of Mr.
and Mrs. S. A. James, died Tuesday.
The little one was buried the fallow
ing day.
The osttage prayer meetings In
Adairsville are growing. Everyone is
urged to attend. Mr. M. W. Mosteller
filled the place of his master on Sun
day night of July 8. He declares he is
no preacher, but is willing to confess
his Lord in every way. His call to the
Christian to keep away from the en
emy's fire, and to get their enthusiasm
or energy from the fire that God has
placed in the churches, will be long
remembered.
R. L. Franklin came up from Sparta
Monday, returning Tuesday morning.
Ben Jackson left for Nashville, Tenn..
Tuesday, after spending his vacation in
Adairsville with,his yparents, Mr. and
Mrs. W. R. Jackson. Mr. Jackson was
formerly employed by Tbd Tribune-
News. hut is now working for the
Nashville Banner and also attending
the school for linotype operators.
Mr. Harry I. McCollum, who has
been visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
K. L. McCollum, left Tuesday to re
sume his out.'es as traveling salesman.
SMALL TOWN HUMOR
AND PHILOSOPHY
By BUCK CAMPBELL
The cannon that Is never dis
charged makes no noise.
—♦ —
The lead horge of the team
is nut expected to pull much of
the load.
When a man tells a girl why
his wife doesn’t understand him
it usuully is because his wife
dqes.
—♦ —■
When a girl who takes dicta
tion marries her boss she be
comes the boss and lie takes dic
tation.
— 4 —
If the Lord has no more use
for the old grouch than we do
here he will have a hard time
passing the portals of heaven.
—♦ —
You may not be able to lead
a man to water who would fol
low you around the block a
dozen times for your home
brew.
MIN'S LIGHTNIN6
BRINGS THUNDER
Rains as 2,000,000 Volts Flash
in Remarkable Experiment
m Laboratory.
Pittsfield, Mass. —From manufac
tured clouds over a miniature *lage
artificial lightning of 2,000,000 volts
was produced In the high-voltage en
gineering laboratory of the General
Electric company's plant here. This
feat was said to surpass any previous
accomplishment In high voltage.
Lightning flashed from the make-be
lieve clouds, striking the village
church steeple, the country store, and
occasionally both at once. The sound
of the thunder was realistic. In some
tests even rain was produced. Heavy
blocks of wood were splintered. A
realistic and breath-taking electrical
storm was manufactured before the
eyes of a score of newspaper men and
engineers.
The Pittsfield laboratory, said to be
the most powerful in the world, has
pioneered in the development of power
transmission since the construction of
the first 15,000-volt lines was super
vised here In 1891.
Use 100 Miles of Wire.
Transformers of a standard design,
built here, were used “to step up” a
current of about 2.000 volts one thou
sand times. In the million-volt trans
former more than 100 miles of wire
was used. This was wound in such a
way that enormous voltages were pro
duced. experts said, without the turn
of a wheel.
The laboratory in which the tests
were conducted is a large brick build
ing lined with steeh In these tests It
Is determined, according to the experi
menters, that a tubular transmission
cable 614 Inches in diameter mould be
of sufficient size to retain this enor
mous current.
Travels Like Light.
Despite the fact that lightning travels
at the velocity of light, 186,000 miles
per second, engineers at the Pittsfield
plant have been able to measure the
shape of tfie flash and determine its
pressure. It was to reach a better un
derstanding of these problems that the
miniature village and artificial light
ning were designed. F. W. Peek, Jr.,
In charge of the high-voltage research,
issued a statement explaining the pur
pose of the demonstration.
“A million volts may never be nec
essary for power transmission,” he
said, “but if the time comes we will
be prepared.”
Pigeon Visits Church
Each Sunday Morning
Springfield, O. —A pigeon which at
tends church here every Sunday Is re
ported by Rev. C. E. Byers, pastor of
the church, who asserts that the bird
has scarcely missed a Sunday service
during the last three years.
The pigeon arrives about the time
the first hymn Jg sung, coming In
through an open window, alights on
the pulpit, sits in the desk while the
sermon is being preached and at times
on the Bible itself, looking up into the
face of the preacher. At times it win
Jump to the shoulder of the pastor or
even attempt to perch on his hand. It
makes no difference who the minister
Is, as the bird’s actions are generally
the same.
The only absent period was when
the bird was injured by an automo
bile. Since its recovery, Mr. Byers
said, the pigeon attends the Sunday
services regularly.
The bird Is now accepted as a mem
ber of the congregation and attracts
little attention when It arrives.
Lonesome for Jailed
Pai, Insists on Arrest
New York.—So fond are Gerry
Smith, Garrison, and Ward Pann of
each ether’s company, It was disclosed
when they were arraigned in court,
that when Smith was locked up In
Poughkeepsie, Pann voluntarily went
to the police station and Insisted that
he be arrested too. He was accommo
dated and the two defendants held a
mutual admiration party In Jail.
Smith Is employed on a big contract
to improve the New York Central rail
road near Garrison. He went to
Poughkeepsie and was arrested as dis
orderly.
Later, Dann became so lonesome he
went to the police station and asked to
be housed there along with his
“buddy.” So he was held on a charge
of safe-keeping and given an adjoining
cell to that occupied by Smith.
YOU WILL APPRECIATE AN AC
COUNT WITH THIS STRONG BANK
WHEN YOU READ THE FOLLOWING
HEALTHY STATEMENT:
REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Of CARTERSVILLE, GA.
JUNE 30, 1923.
RESOURCES
Loans $561,648.49
Ovedrafts 352 93
Federal Reserve Bank
Stock 4,650.00
U. S. Treasurer 2,500.00
U. S. Bonds 50,000.00
Real Estate 3,075.00
Bonds and Stocks 54,065.00
U. S. Certificates of
Indebtedness 101,692.00
Cash in Vault and
Banks 160,341.62
TOTAL $938,325.04
Cleaning Off Of
Pine Log Cemetery
Set for August Ist
The annual cleaning off day at Pine
Log cemetery and Camp-ground has
been set to occur qn Wednesday, Ist
day of August.
Everyone who is at a Il interested,
or have loved ones buried here, are
asked to help with this work either
with their labor or with funds to hire
the work done.
It is necessary to do this work a
little earlier this year on account of
the Sunday School Institute which will
he held at the Camp Ground on
August Cth to 12th. And Camp meet
ing 18th to 26th of .flfgust.
ATCO.
Well you did not hear from us iast
week we will tako another shot this
week, we are all back on the job again
*fter five days rest we had a nice
Fourth of Jsly.
Rev. K. C. Baker filled his regular
appointment last Sunday and Sunday
night.
The health of our village seems to be
some better at this writing.
Misses Annie and Lula Bell of Cal
houn were the week end guest of Mrs.
Pearl Alford last week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Glanton were
visiting at Summerville and Chattanoo
ga last week.
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Hawkins and
family were visiting at Summerville
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Mose Looaev and family
spent Saturday afternoon and Sunday
at Armuchee.
Mr. and Mrs, W. J. Hart spent the
week end near Ac worth.
. Well the measles and swimming pool
seem to be the go now.
Mr. and Mrs. D. Abernathy spent the
week end at Chlckamooga, they report
a nice time.
Me. and Mrs. L. A. Davis spent the
week end with relatives near center.
Miss Ruby Day was visiting in At
lanta last week.
Business Is Mutual,
If You Succeed, We Prosper
THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
WORKING STAFF:
Jos. S. Calhoun R. A. Shaw
O. W. Haney Jolly H. Kennedy
J. B. Howard Hiss Bessie Shaw
Being a
RESERVE^*
SYS
Gives Us Strength.
Everywhere-Royal Cords
United StatesHres
are Good Hres
an idea of how many c-ur H* S*uM.
owness there are who wa at /;/
the best tire money can buy. / VSfi
There weren’t near enough Ljjt tfyfiW and tgM
Clincher koyaistc go around f
Jjj This year—even wi*h fhi jJI 3
hip! production more than dou'o- ‘ - !*■?*.s' # Bj
rjl 'll led—you can best be sure cf /.* ®rf
, !|,rt them by taking them at the I'Jj;!* 7 ?
/J§
Where to buy ilSjfnss
J. M. Hamrick, White, Ga.
J. B. Weimorts, Pine Log, Ga.
G. T. Black Acv’ Cos., Cartersville, Ga.
LIABILITIES
Capital Stock $100,000.00
Surplus 55,000.00
Undivided Profits 9,533.48
Circluation 47,800.00
Deposits 719,991.56
Dividend No. 54 6,000.00
Rediscounts NONE
Borrowed Money NONE
TOTAL $938,325.04