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iE BARTOW TRIBUNE
iIBUNB PUBLISHING CO.
(incorporated)
Subscription Rates:
X) per year. 50c for six months.
25c for three months.
advertising rates furnished upoa
ylication.
' !
•roper notice <>f deaths will at
ys be publi.-'iic' without charge
soon as we learn of them, but
mal obituary notices sent in later
1 be charged for at regular ad
"tising '‘ates. \v* reserve tba
ht of editing all items published.
entered, a* second-class matter,
aruary t 7. 1910. at the post offic*
CartersviMe. Oa., under the Aet
March 3. 1879.
i
PULAR CIVIL ENGINEER
DOING IMPORTANT WORK.
■■
’ ;V’ ■* ; r
jß\ JBILI ! '• 3P
i"'
W. W. PHILLIPS.
Uh addition to his duties as county
ineer, in which office he has fur
led grades and provided the a peel
lions for Bartow county’s recently
,roved highways, Mr. Phillips has
je a great deal of civil engineering
’mining companies and various oth
,industrial enterprises in the con
i’Jction of railroads, location of
its and various other thl’irgs re
ing the services of .an expert civil
jinter. Mr. Phillips has heretofore
■j? a great deal of work for the L.
.'. railroad and other railroad corn
lies and his services as county
neer has enabled Bartow county
I jiy claim to the best highway con-
I.iction which has been undertaken
I feorgia during the past two years.
First Dawn of Reduction of Prices
At This Stcre You Can Get Your Winter Wear for the Family
Lower Prices and Furthermore Better Grade Goods
i
'"•w .. . ~ - - —— ■■ ■ - - ' ~ —
195 Womens and Misses’ Jackets and Sport Coats worth 9.75 405 Misses and Children s Coats, values from 7.00 to 12.00,
to 17.50, all will be sold for $5.96 all be sold for .... $4.95
200 Women’s 3-4 long Sport Coats, all new makes worth up 100 Children and Infants’ Cloak Values from 4.00 to 6.00*
to 20.00, our price now $8.86 all will be sold for ... $2.36
Great Reductions in Men’s and Boys’ Suits and Macinaw Sport Goats
Great Reductions in our stock of Men’s Trousers and Odd Coats
THE GREAT SHOE SALE OFFERING ONLY FOR 15 DAYS
MfYTIfPI You Should Begin Today to do Your Buying at This Store. You Will Save. We Handle Noth
in vl 1 lvC! j n g But Reliable Goods in Every Kind That We Handle and Sell.
eßr Ai ■ | rfvn 1 e nAVC Women’s Two Tone Booties in all sizes, shades, brown and white, A
SPECIAL FOK 15 DATS K Pri- an d whitP wl,.p fnrSft to %10 ....
REDUCED PRICES ARE TO BE HAD IN EVERY LINE OF OUR STOCK FOR 15 DAYS.
Red Star Department Store
ON BANK BLOCK Located near Dixie Theatre
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA
RILEY SUFFERED
IEN LONG YEARS
Wetumpka Road Farmer Says,
“This Good Medicine Has
Made a Well Man of Me."
F. P. Riley, a well-known farmer,
\, ho lives five miles out from Mont
gemery, Ala., R. F. D. 3, Box .2, on
tl.e upper Wetumpka road, is still an
other who feels grateful for Tanlac
ar.d who wants his fellowinan to know
of the wonderful benefits he has de
rived from its use.
“I thank God for this good medi
cine,” he said in a spirit of gratitude,
but in all reverence, to the Tanlac
representative a few days ago. ‘‘l’ve
had rheumatism and stomach trouble
for ten solid years and this Tanlac
has picked me up and made a well
man out of me. There’s no use talking,
when a medicine does that it's high
time for folks to talk it up all they
can, for it’s doing good.
”1 had pains in the back and legs
until I couldn't sleep and I was ner
vous all the time and hadn’t any more
appetite than a'person that didn’t have
any stomach. When 1 did manage to
eat it would bloat me up with gas and
make me miserable. I would have in
digtstion so had that I could hardly
get my breath and I'd sometimes get
right dizzy. These spells would bring
on had headaches and I would suffer
wi.'th ’em for hours. My kidneys and
lAadder gave me all kinds of pain and
trouble and 1 seemed to lose control.
1 was weak and rundown and just sim
ply couldn’t muster any energy at all.”
“I’m now on my third bottle of Tan
>ac and the effect it’s had on me is
something I wouldn’t have believed if
anybody had sworn *it beforehand. I
sleep good now and am free from all
the pains and stomach trouble and my
kidneys are under control. My appetite
has come back to me and I’m always
ready when the dinner bell rings.
“I’m ready to recommend Tanlac to
anybody and everybody, for it’s cer
tainly the best medricine I ever put
into my mouth.”
Tanlac is sold by Young Bros, in
Cartersville, Bowdoln Drug Cos. in
Adairsville, Dr. T. L. Arnold in Kings
ton, Farmers Supply Cos. in Taylors
ville, Atco Stores Cos. in Atco, Bob H.
McGinnis in Stileshoro. The Ligon
Mercantile Cos. in Taylorsville, Ga., R.
F D. X'o. t, J. A. Dorroh & Cos., Pine
THE BARTOW TRIBUNE, DECEMBER 7, 1916.
BEVERLY BAYNE A STAR
IN HER FIRST PICTURE
Beverly Bayne, the charming and
gifted young artist, who is starred
with Francis X. Bushman in the elab
orate eight-part screen production of
“Romeo and Juliet,” was born in Min
neapolis, .Minn. She has been in mo
tion pictures for five years and during
that time has appeared in more than
five hundred pictures. She is now'
twenty-two veais old.
Miss Bayne’s advent into pictures
was most unusual. Together with a
party tf girl friends, she went to the
Fssanay studio in Chicago one day to
see how motion pictures were made.
The director was immediately struck
by her remarkable beauty and grace.
He asked Miss Bayne if she would
care to take a position in the studio.
The idea struck her as being prepos
terous, and she declined the proffer.
The next day the director called her
u) at her home and repeated the of
fer. Miss Bayne consulted her aunt
about it, and the aunt advised her to
make one trial, just for the experience.
Miss Bavne has the distinction of be
ing starred in her very first picture.
She has been a star, and an exceed
ingly popular one, ever since.
Miss Bayne attended the public
schools in Minneapolis, and then her
parents removed to Chicago, where
she was graduated from the Hyde
Park High School. She had just start
ed a course in a finishing school in
Philadelphia, and was home on her
first vacation when she went into
pictures. Miss Bayne has dark brown
hair and large, attractive brown
eyes. That she is but a trifle more than
five feet in height will be a surprise
tc her many admirers, as she often
appears in roles where she appears
much taller. Her remarkable versatil
ity is attested by the fact that she has
piayed everything from an ingenue to
an elderly woman.
Since becoming a motion picture
slar Miiss Bayne has found her athle
tic training during her high school
days a valuable asset. In addition she
Dog, Ga., G. W. Elrod, White, Ga., J
T. Bray, Linwood, Ga., Cass Mercan
tile Cos., Cass Station, Ga., Geo. H.
Woodrow, Jr., Ladd, Ga., R. F. D., Car
tersvllle, McTier & Milhollin. Cass
viile, Ga., T. W. McHugh, Bolivar, Ga ,
(R. F. D. Rydai.) <Advt.)
FOR RENT —Two nice rooms, fur
nished or unfurnished, with electric
j lights. 108 S. Bartow street.
has learned to ride, fence, drive rac
ing cars and motor boats, to sail, afi<J
other valuable accomplishments in a
motion picture star's life. Miss Bayne
is talented In many other respects and
among other things is a writer of rare
ability. She possesses a beautiful so
prano voice and plays the piano and
violin. Since she has been with Metro
Miss Bayne has appeared in many no
table productions, including “Penning
ton’s Choice,” “A Million a Minute,”
‘‘‘The Wall Between” and ‘‘Man and
His Soul.”
Miss Bayne will be seen at the Dixie
Theatre in ‘Romeo and Juliet,” De
cember 8.
Miss Jessie May Ginn, who has b en
confined to a hospital in Atlania for
two weeks, is greatly improved since
the apparently successful second op
eration she has undergone since being
taken to the sanitarium.
The condition of Lewis Peeples,
hurt in a football game with Cadar
town two weeks ago and necessitating
au operation in Atlanta, continues to
improve and he is now regarded as
completely out of danger. He will
likely return home the latter part of
next week.
DO MUD ROADS PAY?
Indiana has 26,000 miles of graveled
roads; lowa has 16,000 miles of dirt
roads.
It costs Indiana less than SBO per
mile per annum for maintaining her
graveled roads. -,
Indiana builds roads by bonding,
thus stringing out the cost over a fif
teen or twenty-year period, which,
with interest, maintenance, etc., is
practically taken care of by the tax
income, and it has hard roads' to use
in the meantime.
lowa, and Illinois to a large extent,
sinks its taxes in mud and has only
mud roads.
Graveled roads cost —for grading
and graveling—from $2,000 to $3,000
per mile: $2,500 is a fair average.
Sixty miles of graveled roads at
$3,000 a mile would cost SIBO,OOO, or
5540.000 for 180 miles in three years.
By bonding, this principal, interest
and maintaining could, with tax in
come, be wiped out in fifteen or six
teen years and a county would have
had 180 miles of hard roads for fif
teen or sixteen years.
Nor would one generation be taxed
for the whole expense.
Does it pay to have mud roads?
The Quinine That Does Not Affect The
Because of its tonic and laxative effect ? AXA
riVE BROMO QUININE is better th u or<i‘r :
Quinine and does not cause uerv .
nging; in head. Remember tv ? :.ji! •
ink lor tre signature oi E. \Y. (. /
FINK’S
New Market
Open lor Business December Ist
In the building loimerly occupied by the Chero-Cola Cos.
Fink has on hand a lot of fat
Cattle and Hogs, stock that he
fattened on his farm. He is
going to slaughter this fine stock
for his many old customers that
he served heretofore, so if you
want good pork and beef call
on Fink at his new stand in the
Chero-Cola Building.
J. C. FINK’S
New Cash Market