Newspaper Page Text
Here is Full List of
Books for Local
Public Schools
\
Book List For First Grade
Holton Curry Primer - $ .56
Tablet and Pencil .10
Book List For Second Grade
Holton Curry Second Reader • $ .65
The Common Word Speller, Eook 1 .50
Applied Arts, Book I__ .25
Writing Package .25
Book List For Third Grade
Holton Curry Third Reader : $ .69
The Common Word Speller, Book 1 ,50
City Arithmetic 1 .52
Carpenter’s Around The World .63
Jeschke’s Beginner’s Language .52
Applied Arts, Book 2 .25
Writing Package . .25
Book List For Fourth Grade
Holton Curry Fourth Reader $ .73
City Arithmetic, Book 4_L .52
The Common Word Speller, Book 1 .50
Frye’s New Geography, Book 1 .83
Sanford, Brown and Smith’s Language and Literature, Book 1 .36
Applied Arts, Book 3 .25
Writing Package .35
Book List For Fifth Grade
New Elson’s Reader, Book 5 _2. : , $ .76
Mace’s Primary History , 1.03
City Arithmetic, .52
Sanford, Brown, Smith Language, Book 1 * .36
Frye’s New Geography, Book 1 .83
The Common Word Speller, Book 2 .52
Applied Arts, Book 4 .25
Writing Package i .35
Common School Dictionary.-* .85
Book List For Sixth Grade
New Elson’s Reader, Book 6 $. 80
Mace-Tanner’s Old Europe and Young America .61
Sanford and Brown’s Grammar Book 2 .46
City Arithmetic ! .52
The Common, W T ord Speller, Book 2 ‘ .52
Tarr & McMurry’s World Geographies, Book 2 1.00
Applied Arts, Book 5 .25
Writing Package .35
Common School Dictionary * .85
Book List For Seventh Grade
Elson-Keck’s Junior High School Literature $1.21
Sanford-Brown’s Composition and Grammar .46
Tarr and McMurry’s New World Geographies, Book 2 1.00
The Common Word Speller, Book 2 * .52
City Arithmetic -52
Winslow’s Healthy Living -65
Mace’s American School History 1.38
Applied Arts, Book, 6 -25
Writing Package -85
Coni-uon School Dictionary i j. -85
HIGH SCHOOL BOOK LIST
ENGLISH
First Year, Bolenius’ Adv. Lessons in Everyday English $ .87
Second Year, Lockwood & Emerson’s Comp, and Rhetoric 1.21
Third Year, Halleck’s New English Literature 1.48
Fourth Year, Long’s English and American Literature 1.48
Required Classics each year.
MATHEMATICS
First Year, Wentworth-Smith’s Academic Algebra $1.28
Second Year, Wentworth-Smith's Academic Algebra 1 1-28
Third Year, Slaught and Lennes Plane Geometry 1.10
Forth Year, Wentworth’s Solid Geometry 1.07
Fourth Year, Review of Arithmetic
HISTORY
First Year, Hill’s Community Life and Civics . $1.21
Second Year, Robinson-Breasted’s History of Europe 1.70
Third Year, Robinson-Beard’s Our Own Times 1.70
Fourth Year, Ashley’s American History 1.90
Fourth Year, Mgruder’s American Government 1.40
LATIN
First Year, Smith’s Elementary Latin $1.07
Second Year, Allen & Greenough’s Caesar 1.14
Third Year, Allen & Greenough’s Cicero___ 1.17
Fourth Year, Greenough & Kittredge’s Virgil 1.90
Second and Third Years, Pearson’s Latin Prose 1.05
Second, Third and Fourth Years, Allen & Greenough’s New
Latin Grammar 1-88
SCIENCE
First or Second Year, Caldwell & Eikenberry’s General Science
Revised $1.28
Laboratory Manual for above -63
Third or Fourth Year, Millikan & Gale’s Practical Physics 1.41
Laboratory Manual for above . -70
■.'ll
HOME ECONOMICS -
First Year Course, Greer’s Text Book on Cooking :_sl.3S
Second Year Course, Note Books
SPANISH OA
' First Year Course, DeVitis Spanish Grammer $1.30
Second Year Course, DeVitis’ Spanish Reader 1.30
All High School Pupils Will Need at Least Two Loose Leaf Note Books.
TRIBUNE-NEWS PRINT, CARTERSVILLE, GA. AUGUST 23, 1923.
MISS KE2IAH A. McKEYVEY
Miss Keziah A. McKeivey passed
away at her home in Cass Station
on Thursday morning, August ,16th.
j She was more than seventy years of
■ age, and was a native of Bartow Coun
! ty, where she had lived her long and
I useful lie.
The funeral was conducted at
the residence at ten o'clock Friday
morning, Rev, W. A. Simmons, of
Kingston, being in charge. .G. M. Jack
son & Sons, of Cartersville. Interment
took place in Oak Hill cemetery.
The following gentlemen acted
as pall bearersr Messrs. William
Walton, Frank Walton. Charlie Cox,
T. Q. Richardson, A. C. Jolly, and
George Gaines.
The deceased is survived by the fol
lowing brothers and sisters: Mrs. J. T.
Rollins, of Chattanooga, Tennessee;
Mrs. C. M. Pulllian, of Cass Station:
Mrs. W. N. Burns, of Chattanooga;
Miss Verta McKeivey. of Cass Station;
Mrs, Tom Greer, of Cassville; Mr. J. ,
N. McKeivey, of Kingston, Mr. Tom,
McKeivey, of Cass Station, and Mr.!
Charlie McKeivey.
The bereaved family is receiving the;
sympathy and condolence of their |
many friends.
STUDIES METHODS
OF USING OVERSIZED
SWEET POTATOES
Methods of using sweet po
tatoes or “jumb" sweet potatoes, which
are produced in large number when
the growing season has been unusually
good, constitute one of the problems
with which the United States Depart
ment of Agriculture is concerned. The
small or standard market sizes of sweet
potatoes U. S. grade No. 1 and U. S.
grade No. 2 find more ready sale be
cause they are suitable for storing,
canning and shipping to distant mar
kets.
When good growing conditions pre
vail upYo harvest time, oftentimes as
much as 40 per cent of the crop is com
posed of overgrown potatoes, and the
development of profitable methods for
converting them into useful products is (
therefore of great importance. Sweet (
po.atoes rank second in importance of
all vegetables grown in the United
States, and are richer n carb.vhydrates,
especially starch, than any other veg
etable commonly grown. For this rea
son they are a possible source of many
products containing or derived from
starch, such as potato flour, dehydrate
ed potatoes, starch, sirup, alcohol, vin
egar, breakfast foods, and various kinds
of feeds. All of these products havs
been prepared but at present no sweet
potatoiby-products industry on a com
mercial scale exis s in this country.
A metho,j for the commercial man
ufacture of sweet potato" sirup, based
on laboratory and plant experimental
work, has been developed by the Bureau
of Chemistry of the United States De
partment of Agriculture. While this
work has shown, that the use of this
sirup is limited by its cost of manufac
ture as compared with that of other
commonly used sirups, in any emergen
cy, when the price of sugar and sirup
is greatly increased, it might be possi
ble t 0 manufacture this sirup profitably
and to the benefit of American agricul
ture. If a method for manufacturing
it more cheaply could be devised the
sirup from sweet pc? atoes has distinct
commercial possibilities.
198 Babies Born
To Mothers of 15
Years, or Under
Authorities place the child-bearing
period from 15 to 45, and state that
women do not reach sufficient matur
ity to enter this period until after tii'
twentieth year without endangering
their health. *
There were 198 children born to
mothers 15 years of age or under in
1922, according to the records of the
State Bureau of Vital Statistics. These
records show 159 mothers 14 years old;
36 as 12 years and three as 12 years.
There were ten mothers that gave their
ages as 50; five as 51; three as 52; two
as 53; three as 54; three as 55; one as
58; three as 59, and one as 60 years of
age.
Of the 69,615 'children born in 1922,
36,092, or 52 per cent, were born to.
mothers between 20 and 30 years of
age; 26 per cent to mothers between
30 and 40. and 4:5 per cent to mothers
over 40 years of gae.
The records of births show three
white mothers 13 years of age: 42 at
14, 147 at 15; 582 at 16; 1,103 at 17;
1.839 at IX, and 2,069 at 19. or 5,785
\vh te mothers under 20 years „f age.
In the negro race 153 mothers wore IE
years or less; 5.561 be.ween 15 in,] .0
Of the W'hite children 65.9 were non :o
mothers under 25, while the records in
dicate that 73.8 per cent of all negro
mothers were under 25.
Governor Signs
Tobacco Tax Act
Atlanta. Ga., August 16th. The
Milner bill providing a ten per cent
sales tax on cigars and cigarettes be
came a law of Georgia Wednesday
when Governor Walker signed it after
its successful passage by both houses.
Passage of the bill by the Senate
Tuesday afternoon was a ilrai.Jitic
event, marked by a lengthy debate
that reached i:s climax when (fcorge
Carswell, president of the Senate,
went upon the floor to denounce what
he said was a lobby working in op
position to the bill.
It was President Carswell who a
few minutes afterward cast the vote
that decided the passage of ,Jhe bill.
The ballot stood 25 to 15 when his
name was called, a constitutional ma-
LOVELY HOME RECENTLY PURCHASED BY
MR. WILBUR J. HAM, ON CASSVILLE STREET
■ .. ; "
‘ ■ ; V ■•' ' So •• * ,
if ''■A. ,\
v * '.; .•' r '' ' • , ’r- ~ : 'H .*
- ~ ... _
One of the most interesting
real estate transactions made
in recent months in Cartersville
vvus the purchase by Mr. Wil
bur J. Hr.m of the lovely home
on assv lie street, pictured
above.
For several years this home!
was owred and occupied by I
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar T. Peeples, j
Later they sold it to Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Strickland, Jr., who I
jority of 26 members being necessary
for the passage of the bill. He voted
for it.
Of the money to he derive,] from the
tobacco tax, the act provides $500,000
shall go to mprovement and extension
of the tubercular sanatorium at A.to,
Georgia, and the balance toward sums
due Confederate Pensioners, An esti
mate of $2,500,000 total revenue from
operation of the measure Inns been
made.
WON POPULAR VICTORY
Miss Antoinette Folta of Michigan
City, lnd„ who copped tiie beauty pr'ze
in the state of Indiana, which is noted
for its beautiful women. She was
awarded the prize at the tri-state
aquatic convention held in Michigan
City, and fifteen thousand people sec
onded the selection of the Judges by
vociferous applause.
Financial Hint From Kansas.
About the only way to get some men
to pay any attention to a hill is tc
send them one they don't owe.—At
chison < Hobo
Just Received For
Fall Wear
Snappy in
Saturday is positively the Last Day of our sale.
Your Opportunity to Save Money
STEIN’S
Burton-S&s'srus’ Old Stand. Cartersville, Ga.
disposed of it to Mr. an i e;
O. C. Omer. They retained
ownership for some time n oe
orcnri'od b'- Mr. and Mrs.
John Fletcher Fowler.
Recently it was sold by the
Orners to Mayor Warren Tins
iey, who disposed of his hand
some home on North Irwin
street, in the deal, the latter
property now being owned by
Mr. and Mrs. Omer.
After owning it for a short
French Hangar of a New Type
Anew epoch construction is
at Orly, near Fontainebleau. France,
world when finished, and Is made
measure some 200 feet high and 300
now under construction. The above
immense structure * Its partly-completed state. ,
-v .- . Bust rAusso^ni
Mrs. Nancy Cox MeCfirmack, a sculptor of Chicago who Is winning much
praise in Italy, is shown beside the bust of Premier Mussolini which she has
just completed.
Kingston Local Notes
Mr. and Mrs. John Henck and their
handsome little son spent last week
with friends in Atlanta
Mr. Regare Walpole, of Char eston,
S. C, was he guest ot h s brother-in- |
me Mayor Tinsley sold his
Jassville street property to Mr.
and Mrs. Wilbur J. Ham. They
vill improve it, and during the
next iew weeks occupy it as
.he r home.
This is considered on e of the
handsomest homes in Carters
ville. and occupies a large and
perfectly elevated lot, whidh
commands a view second to
none in all this section.
marked by the nearly completed hangar
This hangar will be the largest in the
entirely of steel and concrete. It will
feet long and Is to be used for dirigibles
photograpli gives an excellent idea of the
law, Mr. James P, Gaines. Wednesday.
Mr. John L. Davidson, of Quitman,
was shaking hands with old friends
Wednesday.
Mr. W; C. Johnson, Miss Ella John
son. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Irby motored
to Atlanta Wednesday,