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THE ffORTH GEORGIA CHTIZW 1 DALTON, GA.
When a Boy
Many a now successful business man has started
. . . * 8maU bank account that through many years
drew a steady rate of interaar , . 8 J jean
y eonntersst, and when he became a man enabled him
to grasp the opportunities that led to fortune.
!» ...r, „ai w. r.o.,y. d.po.iu, fro „ ollr „ , f
these ..posit. at* pro»p,l, .ckecledged .ed t0 „
counts, m «r S.siu.. D.parta.pt „h.r. the, d„„ loU r»« ,, the t...
ef 4 per oent. *
Hamilton Trust & Savings'Bank,
Chattanooga, Tennasaaa.
4 Per Cent. P.ii en Depoette, Writ. f „ , M
[ Woman’s World]
THE LESSON OF THE BIRDS.
I sometimes think, when sorrow makes
a feller sorter moan,
Of the birds that keep a-singin’ just like
trouble was unknown I
I make no doubt they have their grief—
as bitter as the rest,
And yet they sing their sweetest songs
above an empty neBt!
That Mockingbird there, in the blooms,
is making holiday,
Yet vandal hands have wrecked its home
—have stolen its young away!
That little lodge of straw is mute, where
chirped its tender brood,
Yet how it sends its song to God—and
life a solitude!
But just let trouble come along, and
human hearts they sigh,
And send their wailing messages a-ring-
* ing to the sky!
The world is then no friend to graoe—a
shadow dims the light,
The stars shine through a storm of tears,
and phantoms fill the night!
For all our souls, heaven-gifted—for all
our human words,
We read life’s sweetest lesson in the
music o’ the birds!
And the kind God teach that lesson,
when skies above us frown,
To leave the moaning to the winds and
sing the sorrow down !
Frank L. Stanton, in Constitution.
JVJi8ter Chance is a man every
woman wants to avoid, Mister
Chance is a person with whom
intimate and prolonged acquaint
tance means nothing less than
being a failure in life, or very
near it, anyway, according to
the popular standard of failure.
Think of the woman who always
misses her chance! The tow
headed boy from the backwoods,
yfho afterward became the gover
nor pf his state, was her first
sweetheart but she was too dense
to see his brilliant future (in fact,
nobody suspected it) and so she
missed her chance to occupy this
mansion. She was not generous
or imaginative enough to see any
pleasure in jollying the ragged
miser she knew an d when he died
HOT WEATHER,
NERVOUS WOMEN.
he left his fortune to her washer
woman (he did not have any) and
so she missed her chance there.
She failed to arrive at almost
every point in life where she
might have made connection. All
the best things at the bargain sales
were gone when she got there; she
had a boil on her nose when the
leap year danee came off; when
the right man came along she was
en g a g e d in a flirtation with the
wrong man, and so she always
missed her chance. You of course,
know the lady whose name is con
nected with that of Mister Chance;
she is a Miss-Fit.—Edna Cain,
in Quitman (Ga.) Free Press.
To move a woman’s will by ar-
gumentislike trying to extinguish
a star with a slug shot.
It is a woman’s contradictions,
whims, childishness and impulsive
wisdom that make her the sweets
est and most fascinating of all
living creatures.
Toqight at the Presbyterian
church, in Cartersville, Miss
Charlotte Adele Anderson will be
married to Mr. Frank S. Pruden,
of this citj r .
This will be one of the most
brilliant weddings of the season,
in which a large number of at
tendants from all over the state
will participate, and it will be
followed by a large reception,
from 9 to II o'clock at the home
of the bride’s parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. P. Anderson.
Miss Anderson’s maid of honor
is to be Miss Iola Baker, of Macon;
her matron of honor, Mrs. J. Leak
Spencer, nee Laura Dwelle, of
Charlotte, N. C,; and the maids
Miss Lucy Maddox, of Dalton,
Mrs. B. Logan Vaughan and Miss
M'attie Sue Smith, of Cleveland,
Tenn.
Mr. Sam Carter, of Carters
Quarter, will act as Mr. Pruden’s
best man.
The groomsmen will be Mr.
Frank McCutchen, Mr. Mack
Hardwick, Mr. Louis Crawford,
all of Dalton, and Mr. B. Logan
Vaughan, of Cartersville.
The ushers are to be Mr. Will
Dupree, Marietta; F. T. Reynolds,
city; Mr. Joseph Calhoun and Mr.
Rufus Powell, of Cartersville.
The bridesmaids will be beautifully
gowned in white, with touches of
pink, and they will carry pink
flowers. For this occasion the
church will be elaborately deco
rated in white and green.
Beedie Smith, Ruth Bell, Morton
Huff, J. A. Carter .and F. W.
Quillian, Messrs. John Wilson,
Will McGaughey, James R. Huff,
Morton Huff, J. A. Carter, Ward
Carter, and the members of the
bride’s family.
The bride wore a lovely brown
silk shirt waist suit, with hat to
match, and carried a bouquet of
brides roses. Mrs. Ruth Lester
Bell played the wedding music.
The couple left on the W. & A.
train for St. Louis, and will return
to Chattanooga to live where Mr.
Carter is associated with his
father in the furniture buginess,
and possesses an enviable reputa
tion as a rising young business
mau. The bride is one of Dal
ton’s younger girls,and Mr. Carter
was most heartily congratulated
upon his choice.
« VILLAGE V* ’
IMPROVEMENT
ii i m; i n 1 m i‘ 1 mi 11 ^
[ 1SS ELANDHE GREY, ft promt-.
nent young society woman ol
mphis, Tepn,, in a recent letter fronq
Alabama street, says i
•To a society woman whose nervous
ce Is often taxed to the ytmost from
k of rest and irregular meals, I
ow of nothing which is of so muct\
iefit as Peruna. / took it # tow
mths ago when I felt my strength
ing way, and it soon made itself
inifest in giving me new strength
d health, Blanche drey,
’eruna is without an equal as a nerve
lie and vital invigorator,
luy a bottle of Peruna. If you dq
t receive all the benefits from Peruna
it you expected, write to Dr. Dart'
m, Columbua, 0*
Huff-Carter.
June marriages began auspic
iously yesterday.
The union of heart and hand
of Mr. Charles Carter, of Chatta
nooga, to Miss Cecil Huff, of Dal
ton, was celebrated yesterday fore
noon at 10:30 o’olock.
The home of the bride’s mother,
Mrs. Lida Emmons Huff, on
Selvidge street, was tastefully
decorated in white and green for
the consummation, and presented
a lovely scene.
Rev. F. W. Quillian eloquently
pronounced the ceremony that
made them husband and wife in
a very impressive way to Misses
Lucy and Lizzie Maddox, Bernice
Felker,Kate Hamilton,Dimple Mc-
Camy, Mattie Lou Baker, Rose and
Mary Helen Huff, Ethelyn Em
mons, Susie, Alice and Exene Car
ter, Blanch DeVault, Mesdames
Mr. H. C. Hamilton is repaint
ing the iron fence around his
home on Chattanooga avenue.
* *
*
Col. C. C. Bowen has sodded
the ground between the walk and
street in front of his property on
Selvidge street.
* *
*
Walk down a filthy, dirty street,
and you instinctively feel that
the people in that neighborhood
are lacking in their morals.
* *
*
City Clerk Barney C. Bivings
has repaired his home on King
street, and had sodded the ground
between the Walk and street.
* «
*
There are places on the main
streets in Dalton, where the
odors that arise are not sweet
like those from an orange grove.
* *
*
The city council has a force of
hands at work repairing the pipes
connected with the park fountains
and the water will soon be turned
Mr. W. C. Bowen has bright
ened both the interior and exter
ior of his meat market on Ham
ilton street, with a new coat of
paint.
* *
*
Each city official in Dalton
should put his residence and
grounds in perfect condition, and
by so doing furnish examples for
the people to follow.
* *
*
A live sermon, by any minister,
on village improvement from the
subject “cleanliness is next to
godliness,” would do ten times
more good than an old sleepy ex
position of “total depravity.”
* *
*
Mr. Robert Rushton is greatly
improving his residence property
on Chattanooga avenue, by re
painting and recovering 4 the
building, and will also have some
good work done on the grounds.
* *
*
All persons having residence
property to rent can place it to
much better advantage by put
ting the buildings in an attractive
condition, and making beautiful
lawns and building good side
walks about it.
* #
*
A house may not be specially
attractive hut give it a setting of
green things growiu’,” and the
place at once catches the eye. The
imperfections of the house become
lost in the beauty of the surround
ings,
* *
*
Each place in Dalton, both
large or small, can have a pretty
lawn with but little expense. A
few pounds of grass seed and one
good day’s work, for eaoh place,
will give t!tis result and make
Dalton one of the most beautiful
cities in the South.
m *
*
The church properties in Dal-
t#n are being badly neglected.
The people are beautifying the
plaoes where they live, and cer
tainly the sacred temples of the
Lord and the grounds where they
stand are entitled to like atten
tion and consideration.
* m
*
The small places profit much
from village improvement. Love
in a cottage is a symbol of happi
ness, but the cottage must be
clean within, and without have
“roses climbing ‘round the door,”
and the little lawn a smiling bed
of green.
* *
*
At no season of the year need
the village improvement work
cease. Trees can be planted in
the winter, sodding can be done
in the spring, grass seed sowed in
the fall, while painting buildings,
building sidewalks, and prepar
ing grounds should be going on
all the time.
* •
*
There are a few people whe are
failing to comply with the new
ordinance which requires all trash
to be put in receptacles so that it
can be taken up by the garbage
wagon. If»the policemen would
open their eyes and bring such
failure to the attention of the city
council this trouble would be
cured.
Drink a Bottle ot
8 CENTS
At all Stand Grocers and Sateens
Foleys honey^tar
eteee the eoutfh end heels lasses
Grocers’ and butchers’
pass books.
A. J. SHOWALTER CO.
“LET US HELP
YOU TO HEALTH”
Hightower & Talley Want Every
Catarrh Sufferer to Use Hyomel
and Be Cured.
Statistics show that at least 97
out of every 100 persons in this
state suffer from catarrh in some
form.
While the disease is one of the
most common, it is also one of the
most dangerous and offensive,
leading to consumption and other
diseases of the respiratory organs.
Prior to the discovery of Hyo-
mei and its introduction in this
section by Hightower & Talley,
every method of treatment had
been found worthless.
The discovery of Hyomei and
its growing popularity has already
reduced the percentage of those
suffering from catarrh. This
wonderful remedy is the simplest
and most pleasant of treatments.
Put 20 drops of Hyomei in the
pocket inhaler that comes with
every outfit, and breathe it for a
few minutes four times a day.
Relief will be seen after the first
treatment anda complete cure will
soon follow. Breathe the Hyomei
in this way, and the catarrhal
germs even in the most remote air
cells are destroyed. The irritated
mucons membrane is soothed and
healed, and perfect health
restored.
Hightower & Talley say to all
catarrh sufferers, “Let us help
you to health, we are confident
Hyomei will cure, so confident, in
fact, that we guarantee to refund
your money if it fails. A com
plete outfit costs but $1, and if it
does not help you, your money
will be returned promptly.”
FOLEYSKIDNEYCURE
Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right
Illinois Central
RAILROAD.
DIRECT ROUTE TO THE
SLUMS EXPOSITION.
TWO TRAINS DAILY.
THROUGH SLEEPING CARS
From
GEORGIA, FLORIDA, and TENNESSEE
v •
ROUTE OF THE FAMOUS
Dixie Flyer.
Arriving St. Louis in the Morning.
Season Tickets with limitsHecember
15th, sixty days, fifteen days and ten
days.
Low rate coach excursions in June.
For rates from your city, also for
book showing Hotels, Boarding Houses,
quoting their rates, write to
FRED D. MILLER,
Trav. Pass. Agent,
No. 1 Brown Bldg., ATLANTA, GA.
FRIDAY
AND
SATURDAY
B
A
R
G
A
I
N
S
H. M. Ashe,
General Dealer
Smith
Premier
Typewriters,
T. M. 0. A. Bldg.,
Atlanta, - Qa.
ALSU REALER IN
Second-Hand Typewriters Qf A!1 Makt *
WRITE FOR PRICES.
Diamonds, Watchss, Jswslry, Silvor
l
I
Our New Spring Line of.
rs
5
war* Cut Class and Purses
Is now in. We have the most beautiful line
we have aver had, and ear prices ara tha meat
reasonable. We bought onr goods direct from
the manufacturers, and we can
ilv*r-1
■ ■ ■ ■ h
Savs You Mans, an Anything Y*u Want
In eur line. Sterling Silver Hat Pins 25 cents,
and Sterling Silver Shirt Waist Sets Ik cents.
Sterling Silver Saah Pins in new patterns.
Come and see them.
Muncy & Godwin, - Daitan
, 6a. h
a
You will always find extra values
at this store on Fridays and
Saturdays.
Read Our Specials.
2,000 yards good quality Sea
Island Domestic,
5 cents yard.
25 pieces best quality Apron
Check Gingham,
5 cents yard.
20 pieces 36-inch smooth quality
Bleached Domestic, value
10 cents yard.
7 1-2 cents yard.
25 pieces Humburg Edging and
Insertion to match, value
20 cents yard,
10 cents yard.
We are giving a
special discount on our
Ready Made Skirts and
Waists for a few more
days.
LOW RATES
TO
HOT SPRINGS, ARK.
T ICKETS will be sold evefy Wednesday and Saturday
during months of June, July, August and September
from points in the Southeast, at one fare, plus $2.00,
for the round trip, limit 60 days.
For Books and Pamphlets descriptive of the Hotels, Bath
Houses, etc., apply to
I. E. REHLANDER, Trav. Pass. Agf.,
No. 18 W. 9th Street,
Chattanooga, Tennessee.
TO BEAUTIFY
YOUR COMPLEXION
IN IO WAYS, USE
SATINOLA
TH UNEQUALED BEAUTIFIER
Come
and attend
our Friday
andSaturday
Bargain Day
Sale.
A FEW applications will remove tan or
sallowness and restor. th« beauty ef
youth.
SATINOLA is a new discovery, guaranteed,
and money refunded if it fails t. remove
Fiecklee, Pimples, Liver Spots, Blackheads,
Tans. Discolorations and Disfiguring Erup
tions. Ordinary cases in It days, th. w.rst in
20 days. After these defeats are removed the
skin will he seft, clear, healthy and beautiful.
Prie# 58 cents at drug steres er by mail.
Thousands of ladies testify to the merits of
Satinola.
Mrs. R. A. Foster writes
Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 2,1904.
National Toilet Co.,Paris, Tenn.
Gentlemen I have used your Satinola and
Egyptian Cream ever since they have been on
the maiket and unhesitatingly say that they
are the best preparatiens for removing discol
orations and improving the complexion that
I have ever knewn. I regard your Nadine
FAC. Powder as superior te any on the mar
ket.
NATIONAL TOUT CO.,Paris, Tsnn.
SOLD IN DALTON BY
s.j. Mcknight.
LOVEMAN
SONS.
For Sale
Three wagons—must be sold,
Cheap.
Luke H. Callaway.
Arkansas
Texas
Louisiana
An ideal country for cheap
homes. Land at $5, $10, $15
per acre ; grows corn, cot
ton, wheat, oats, grasses,
fruits and vegetables.
Stock ranges 10 months in
the year.
Southeast Missouri, Ar
kansas,Louisiana and Texas
are full of opportunities—
the climate is mild, the soil
is rich, the lands are cheap.
Low Home-seekers rates
—about half fare—via the
Cotton Belt, twice a month
—first and third Tuesdays.
For descriptive literature,
maps, and excursion rates,
write to
H. H. SUTTON, 0. ML,
COTTON BELT,
CHATTANNOflA, TENN.
Bicycle For Sale.
A Crescent chainless, coaster
brake, in first ela-s condition.
Apply to Citizen office. Spot
cash, $30.00.
G. H. HIGHTOWER,
Physician and Surgeon.
All correspondence promptly answered Spe
cial attention given to chronic diseases. Offioe
in the Oglesby Building, two doors south ef
First National Bank. Upstairs.
For Sale
A nice lot, 2-room house, on Mc-
Camy street, $130.00 cash. Ap
ply to VY. M. Jones.
Friction board bor mak
ing pulleys.
Tbe A. J. Showalter Qo.
tf
efflc* Phase *i.
Residence Phene I4f
Money to Loan.
Leans en real e-tate negotiated. If yeu need
meney and have good real estate te secure it I
will be pleased te let you have it at a low| rate
ef interest. Payments to suit borrower.
W. H. ODELL, Att’y at Law,
Dalton,' Ga.
For Sale at Bargain
Or will exchange for a farm,
three houses and five lots in Dal
ton. W. C. Bowen.
OaWitt's JKIisf Salve
For Pit**, Burns, (oroo.