Newspaper Page Text
i Whew, it's Hot!
Let’s go end get some good old
I molj
you’re hot and tliirc ( ~ ■
In or just for fun, there’s noth- l |y
ing comes up to it for delicious- S.
'
Demand the genuine by full name — w j/k
nicknames encourage substitution. j, 4,4 4 ' / ‘/p
THE COCA-COLA CO.
BERKSHIRE HOGS
h’or all purposes and under all conditions the Berkshire Hog
is the most satisfactory. They have stood the test of time.
Every hog in my herd is well bred and a good individual.
Voung stock as well as matured breeding animals for sale
at all times.
RUOHS PYRON
Meadowview Farm Cartersville, Ga.
2#SHOE polishes 1
/* 3, wjj&K 7 Preserve the leather and make
/ I' i I II your shoes wear longer. They
hi /Ur A ' Contain no acid and will not
I I \ crack the leather. Easiest to use
.■> K ifHr' 38// ; 7 c. and their shine lasts longer.
KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT
THg F F.OALLE.Y CO.. LTD. BUFFALO. N.Y.
MM— I I, —I— I 1. 1
We sell “Tater” Slips
Porto Rico and Nancy
Halls now on hand.
Express Shipments Received
Every Week
Atco St a■( s C
“That Cotton Mill Store’’
Retailers of Everything and Buyers
of Produce.
Phone 316 ATCO, GA.
I
Your responsibility to your children does not end with
your death. The Prudential Monthly Income Policy
enables you to provide steady, unfailing support for wife and
family after you are gone. Ask me about it. It is my busi.
ness to help you—let me do it.
J. B. HOWARD, Agent, Cartersville, Ga.
THE PRUDENTIAL
Insurance Company of America
Home Office, NEWARK, N. J.
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE, JUNE 1. 1-16-
w '* r • •• '* '"■lt/ r fc-/ W t HavU^V/
m wmk.ii It. *•*. I
..fen . n, ...a/ Zt.
oorra tn weil-knowu writer,
auu a distinguished woman in the
ueoig.a ucifcgauon at the biennial of
wouicu o uiuDa, n.aJe the feature ad
uiej* mi uie flume economics dinner
g.i\.u at toe Hotel Astor by
me halite economics department of
geutiai tederation. She repieaents
me C.,eiokee Club, of Cartersville,
ua., and is recognized as me fore
most southern woman wiiter, and
second to none of any other section.
Mrs, Harris is a handsome woman,
of charming and impressive presence.
Her voice is low and sweet, and she
was accorded an enthusiastic ovation.
Her subject was, “The Woman of Yes
terday.” She said:
"Women of today, I have the honor
to bring to your remembrance the one
woman whom we really know and con
cerning whose future there can be no
reasonable doubt —the Woman of Yes
terday.
“She is the fanciful heroine of bal
lads and romance because only one
half the history of this country has
been written. If her services and sac
rifices to this civilization had been re
corded they would be different, but
they would not be less important than
the brave deeds of her bravest men,
and we should discover in her some
thing more than a figure of speech in
poetry and fiction. She accomplished
some of the best and sternest scrip
tures of American life. She was intel
ligent. She had the courage of a pion
eer and the patience of a saint, and
she was no less progressive than the
woman of teday. She started further
back in time and had further to go.
This is the only difference. She was
i pioneer who faced a wilderness and
wrought with faith and infinite labor
to establish the ideals of liberty and
righteousness upon which this civil
ization was founded. If the women of
today run with the same courage the
race that is set before them, if they
preserve these ideals with the same
fortitude they will do well, but not
better than she has done.
Gentle Woman.
“She was a genth woman who prac
ticed her virtues delicately and in se
cret as if these were the ritual of her
faith.
“She was a domestic economist who
never wrote a pa tier nor addressed a
club on this subject. But she literally
practiced these arts of the home about
which we agitate more than we
achieve. She was that woman of the
proverbs who looketh well to the ways
of her household and eateth not the
bread of idleness. She made the
things which we buy, and she knew
b 'ttrr how to save than we know how
to spend. All the doors of industrial
and professional life were closed to
her. Nevertheless she was, strictly
speaking, a producer, not a consumer.
She founded the best and most stable
American home that has ever existed,
and she maintained it with a dignity
and diligence which the woman of to
day cannot surpass.
The Mother of Men.
“She produced great men, not great
issues, and she did not produce her
self at all. She was only the blessed
medium through which all life flowed,
receiving from her a certain fineness,
a color of the spirit, a vague and gen
tle effulgence. She was not the epochal
woman She was the mother and pa
tient prophet of that woman.
“They who fail to comprehend that
the woman of today is the product as
well as the descendant of the woman
of yesterday do not know her history.
She led no movements, but she herself
moved ever forward in the sweeter
grace of silence.
‘‘She was the most truly and wisely
progressive woman this country has
yet produced. She failed of recogni
tion deliberatelv. She had not ad
vanced so far as organizations and at
tendant publicity. But she deserves no
j ess praise for that which she accom
plished. There is not a single right
eous issue advocated by the women of
today which cannot be traced back to
this silent, diligent, thoughtful woman
of yesterday. It was Frances E. Wil
ard, a woman of yesterday, who first
proclaimed the cause of temperance.
The idea of suffrage for women is old
er than Susan E. Anthony. Frau Cower
was the Grand Old Woman of Ger
many. She gave sixty of her eighty-six
years to those reforms which have re
sulted in wider opportunities for Ger
man women. She was working for this
long before there was a single wo
men’s organization in Germany. Made
moiselle Minot did the same thing in
France many years ago. When the wo
manhood of British empire was con
cerned with wars and bloodshed it was
Florence Nightingale, a woman of yes
terday, who founded the Red Cross
and financed it from her own fortune
when the government failed to support
her. Have the women of today, with
their colassal organization and their
wealth, accomplished any better work
than this? It was a woman of yester
day, the mother of a large family, who
did the work of her home and wrote
‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin.’ I am from the
south, and I do not think the facts jus
tified the passionate ardor of that
story, but has any woman of today
written a book which has had so much
influence upon American life? It was a
New England woman of yesterday who
accomplished reforms in the treatment
“Note the Notes!”
THIS is the trade-mark to keep in mind
when buying any records.
It stands for music —the right kind of
music—better produced, better recorded, better in
every way.
It stands for crystal clarity of TONE
It stands for dawless, precise reproduction
It stands for vivid mirror
ing o t life —records of genius,
art, personality , not merely
records of sound, perform
ance.
It means perfection
—perfection that lasts. Columbia
Records are unexcelled in durability ,
just as they are unexcelled in qual
ity of TONE.
“Note the Notes.” That is
all you have to remember in buying
any class of records. Vocal, instru
mental—solo, ensemble—concert,
operatic, orchestral records—what
ever you buy, you get the best if
you buy Columbia Records. That’s
what the “ double - note ” trade
mark stands for. That’s why you
ought to make sure it’s there.
New Columbia Records on sale the 20th of every month
Columbia Records in all Foreign Languages
COLUMBIA
GRAFONOLAS and DOUBLE-DISC
RECORDS
This adrtrtistmtnt teas dictated YJ/\n o A T
to tiu Dictaphone vUK OA J_>b
BEN C. GILREATH DRUG CO.
of the insane. There is the statue of a
woman with a sunbonnet on her head
in New Orleans, raised to the memory
of an old Irish woman who loved and
gave her life for the poor in that city
without straining her fortune through
a charitable organization. It was a
Georgia woman of yesterday who
worked single-handed with the legis
lature of that state until she accom
plished reforms in the treatment of
women prisoners.
Spirit of Pioneer Persisted.
“And the spirit of the pioneer per
sisted in these women to the last. Un
til recently a very old woman of yes
terday lived on a farm near my home
in the valley. When the civil war clos
ed, her husband returned to he>' a
helpless invalid. She ploughed her
fields, cut her wheat with an old-fash
ioned hand-cradle, bound and shucked
her sheaves, and harvested all ner
crops. She never bought anything. She
literally made a living for her family
out of the ground, and they lived well.
She spun and wove their clothes, she
kept an immaculate house. She was
the mother of ten children. She
brought them up in the faith and gave
each of them a college education. They
are the best people in the community.
Not one of them failed her. She was
never twenty miles from the place
where she was born in her life. Are
there many women of today who can
give a better account of themselves?
We are so much taken up with our
preparedness plans for living that we
do not realize that this woman of ■
tertlav did prepare and that she u nni
i far ahead in actual service.
’’There is no standard of maral
however high, no culture, no ideal of
justice for which w e merely contend
that she did not practice with modesty
and patience. She left us to reap the
harvest of her labors with the same
spirit of willing sacrifice which marks
her history from the beginning.
“The women of today hold In trust
the heritage of the women of yes*er.
day for the women of tomorrow, anil
it is our most sacred duty that they
may receive it from us with interest
not squandered by idleness nor daim
aged by decadent theories.”—.Atlanta
Constitution.
The Strong Withstand the Heat of
Summer Better Than the Weak
Old people who are feeble, and younger
people who are weak .will be strengthened
and enabled to go through the depress
ing heat of summer by taking regularl*
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic. It purifies
and enriches the blood and builds q d
the whole system. 50c. p
Highest Grade
SEED CORN
J. E. FIELD & SON
FOR RENT —6 room cottage on
North Erwin street, for three months
or six months, with option for another
year. Will rent furnished or unfur
nished. Address box 607, Cartersville.
Columbia Gr fonolt 75 M
Price $75