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THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, DEC. 2, 1909.
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PAGE NINE
tv ■ e F agonies
ifom Diseased Kidnev*
And Most Women Do TMs tSTiF • ^
- Real Cause of tW r^L^? owmg
W “* •“>». suffering women V? n “ ltl011
Tt*»i poor, suffering
been led to bellerathaT
ttlaery of mind and body^ enuS
£«“«• "Ul« Of U^KAg“8?
«• “dney* and bladder are
Sponsible—or largely so. And in
•neb eases, the kidneys and blad-
fe •” organs, that need and
must have attention.
l>JJ«ofc« 0r i UrIl iL?' •aorvating sick
headaches, dragging pains in back
gjin and limbs^ Wo'aSng Ltd awe*
SSL* #xtrem itle«. extreme
nervousness or hysteria listw
ness and constant tired; wSrS&M
£S?nT5i® ^ lmo 5 t certaIn symp
toms of disordered and diseased
kidneys, bladder and liver.
DeWitt’a Kidney and Bladder
Pills have. In thousands of cases.
Sfn2fl d i°?? DS H? ted M remarkably
5®“®f c!al in aU such conditions of
female organism—affording the
benefit r ° mPt reUe * aad Permanent
52» : Illustration of what these
PIUs will do, Mrs. P. M. Bray of
Columbus Gm writes thatshJwas
▼cry m with kidney trouble, and
SK& ■*? 1® n °w well—and that
ttese Pills are what cured her.. 1
They are very pleasant to take,
fir.®*® 111 £° case, produce any
deleterious effects upon the system
T-m syrupy, alcohoUo, llqulg prep-
£
arations are apt to ui.
C- DeWItt & Co., Chicago, HI.?
+t Te 7 r man ■”* ^oman who
r5 v ® toe least suspicion that they
are afflicted with kidney and blad
der diseases to at once write them,
and a trial box of these Pills will
be. sent free by return mail post-
Bii4i Bp It to-day. j
A Dollar or Two
Each Week Will Do.
TEeeftfp f&ermon.
@2 (Ket>. ^rdn& (E. ^ime, (pastor Strsf fftrefiBgtertdn
C#urc$, ®afton.
By Rev. Jonas Barclay.
REPAIRING FIRE LOSS
IN RECORD BREAKING TIME.
Western Electric Company's Attention
to “Rush Order.”
FUKHITURE
GLAD TIDINGS
FOR THOSE WHO
(
wish to go to* housekeeping.
A little money goes a long
ways in this house.
■ " i "■■■ . '■
We are showing the best values in
Bed Room Suits,
Parlor, Dining Room and
Kitchen Furniture
that we have ever had.
Floor Coverings of all kinds
Mattings, Squares, Rugs,
Linoleums, Oil Cloth
Chiffo=Robes, Trunks, Suit
Cases
Librry, Extension, Parlor
Kitchen nd Sewing Tables
Sewing Machines, Machine
Fixtures, Needles and Oil
■ 'sV « ~
Shades, Curtain Poles, Shade
Brackets
Will Save You Money by coming Here
baker
<&
BUCHANAN
You will be surprised how a dollar will
grow in this association. You will not
only earn the interest without any ef
fort on your part, but at the same time
you are cultivating a good habit—tha
of thrift. • ’ . , , ,
The “ money-saving habit is t e a 1
that will provide more for you when
vou need assistance.
Don’t defer starting. Take out some
shares in this association today.
Booklet on application.
ASSOCIATION.
i
DALTON BUILDING AND LOAN
THE CHRISTIAN'S ASSURANCE IN
TROUBLE.
Psalms, ,119:75.—“I know, O Lord,
that thy judgments are right, and that
thou in faithfulness hast afflicted me.”
These words are supposed to have
been written by David toward the
close of his eventful life. He had
tasted all that this old world could
offer of joy and sorrow. In. early
youth> the national hero, in maturer
years the great monarch of a mag
nificent kingdom, this man after God’s
own heart had been perfected through
suffering. We see him, a lonely fugi
tive, fleeing from the murderous jeal
ousy of King Saul. Again we see him
writhing in the pangs of an awful re
morse, crying “My sin is ever before
me.” We are touched by his grief
over the death of a darling child.
Later he is betrayed by his intimate
friends; and, finally, his great heart is
broken over the ingratitude of his own
children, and our souls are wrung,
even today, by that lamentable cry
that comes moaning down the ages,
O my son Absalom, my son, my son
Absalom. Would God I had died for
thee, O Absalom, my i-son, my son,”
It is a great thing to be able, in the
midst of earth’s trouble, to say
I know.” And Tavid has attained
to this. So God’s children have
ever been sustained. Job was able to
say, in his almost intolerable misery,
“I know that my redeemer /liveth.”
Paul forgets for the time his trials as
he affirms, “I know whom I have be
lieved.” John uses the word “know”
— times in his first epistle. The
philosopher of this world cannot ac
cept this. “Knowledge” is too strong
a term for him. But “the world by
wisdom knew not God.” “The natural
man receiveth not the things of God,
f^r they are foolishness unto him,
neither can he know them, for they
are spiritually discerned.” Yet this
knowledge is not such as to supersede
faith or to dispense with hope. But
while faith overcomes the world, and
hope holds as an anchor sure and
steadfast, love dares look up into the
Father’s face and whisper softly, “I
know.” For perfect love casteth out
fear.
However, we do not understand
everything we know. We do not under
stand electricity or that mysterious
thing which we call life. “Now we
see through a glass darkly, but then
face to face; now I know in part, but
then shall I know even as also I am
known.” “Secret things belong unto
us and to our children forever.” Yet,
the Dord our God: but those things
which are revealed belong unto us
and to our children forever.” Among
the things that are' revealed, we
find many reasons given for our
joining the Psalmist in saying, “I
know, O Lord, that thy judgments are
right, and that thou in faithfulness
hast afflicted me.” I will attempt to
bring to your remembrance today just
a few of these comforting thoughts.
1. Chastisement is Not Punishment.
“Whom the Lord loveth he chasten-
eth, and sequrgeth every son whom he
qjeceiveth. Now no chastening for the
present' seemeth to be joyous, but
grievous; nevertheless, afterward it
yieldeth the peaceable fruit of right
eousness unto them which are exer
cised thereby.” Always some blessing
is contemplated for God’s suffering
child. Two artists suspended, on a
swinging platform, from the ceiling of
an Italian cathedral, were frescoing it.
One of them began stepping backward
to obtain a more perfect view of his
work. His companion noticed with
horror that he had become so absorbed
in contemplation of his picture that he
had forgotten where he was, and in a
moment more would step backward
over the edge of the platform, and be
dashed to the floor far below. Quick
as a flash he dashed his brush at his
friend’s painting, ruining the picture,
but causing him to spring forward
with a cry of anger, thus saving his
life. We too become absorbed in the
pictures we paint for ourselves, until
we become oblivious of the heavenly
vision and deaf to the Father’s voice.
Perhaps at first we are tempted to re
bel, but afterward we gratefully ac
knowledge that God knew best.
2. Suffering Purifies.—The refiner
of silver sits before his crucible. As
he throws off the dross from the
molten ore he watches until he catches
the reflection of his own image in the
now purified metal. Then the fire is
quenched, and the work is done. So in
the' furnace of suffering we are changed
“from glory unto glory” into the like
ness of Him who was a “man of sor
rows and acquainted with grief.”
3. Conflict Strengthens.—This is
true for the body. No athlete was ever
made strong by soft cushions. It is
true for the mind. None ever became
a scholar by the use of translations
and keys, but by determined grappling
with baffling problems. And the soul
of man must grow strong through con
flict. “It is good that a man bear
the yoke in his youth.” The men who
are making this country great are
those who have grown up to self-mas
tery amid the hardships of country
life. As for individuals,, so for na
tions. Out of Valley Forge and Gettys
burg came Thanksgiving day, 1909.
“O Liberty, thou art not, as poets
dream, a fair, young girl, with light
and delicate tresses gushing from the
cap, with which the Roman master
crowned his slave, when he took off
the gyves. A mailed man art thou.
In one hand thou grasp’sts the sword,
in one the t shield. Thy brow glorious
in beauty, though it be, is scarred with
tokens of old wars; thy massive limbs
grown strong with struggling.”
4. Suffering Schools for Service.—
“Blessed be God, even the Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of
mercies, and the God of all comfort,
who comforteth us in all our tribula
tion that we may be able to comfort
them which are in any trouble by the
comfort wherewith we ourselves are
comforted of God.” None but a be
reaved mother “knows how long a
shadow a little grave may cast,” She
knows the comfort that reaches other
stricken hearts. One of the rescued
men in the recent mine horror at
Cherry, Ill., as he was being -taken
out, learning that there were others
still unsaved, insisted on going back
himself to seek them. He forgot his
own weakness in the rush of sympathy
for those who were suffering as he
had suffered. May we catch the spirit
of this heroic soul, and instead of
nursing our own troubles, let us forget
them in loving sympathy for our sor
rowing brothers and sisters about us.
5. Trials Make the Reward More
-Glorious.—Paul says, “I reckon that
the sufferings of this present time are
not worthy to be compared with the
glory which shall be revealed in us.”
“If we suffer, we shall also reign with
Him.” The Seer of Patmos - beheld,
“and, lo, a great multitude, which no
man could number, of all nations, and
kindreds, and people, and tongues
stood before the throne and the Lamb,
clothed with white robes, and palms
in their hands, and one of the elders
answered, saying unto me, “What are
these who are arrayed in white
robes? And whence came they?” And
I said unto him, “Sir, thou knowest.”
And he said unto me, “These are they
which came out of, great tribulation,
and havJ washed their robes, and have
made them white in the blood of the
Lamb.” In the year 1680 a band of
Scottish Covenanters, while at wor
ship, were set upon by their blood
thirsty persecutors and, after a con
flict, cruelly massacred. ’ The old
Scotch poet immortalizing their mar
tyrdom, caught this vision of their re
ward:
“When the righteous had fallen and
the conflict had ended,
A chariot of fire from the dark cloud
descended;
Its drivers were angels on horses of
whiteness, *
Its burning wheels turned upon axles
of brightness.
A seraph unfolded the door bright and
shining,
All burnished like gold of the seventh
refining,
And the souls that had come out of
great tribulations •
Have mounted the chariot and steeds
of salvation.
On the arch of the rainbow the chariot
is riding,
Through the rift of the thunder the
horsemen are driving;
Glide swiftly, bright spirits, the prize
is before yon,
A crown everlasting, a kingdom of
glory.”
So, too, yon who have suffered shall
one day reign with Him. God give
us grace to say m every earthly
trouble, “I know, O Lord, that thy
judgments are right, and that thou in
faithfulness hast afflicted me.”
Nature Gives Timely Warnings That
No Dalton Citizen Can Afford
to Ignore. n
DANGER SIGNAL NO. 1 comes
from the kidney secretion. They will
warn you when the kidneys are sick.
Well kidneys excrete a clear, amber
fluid. i Sick kidneys send out a thin,
pale and foamy, or a thick, red, ill
smelling urine, full of sediment and
irregular of passage.
DANGER SIGNAL NO. 2 comes
from the back. Back pains, dull and
heavy, or sharp and aeute, tell you of
sick kidneys and warn you of the . ap
proach of dropsy, diabetes and Bright’s
disease. Doan’s Kidney Pills cure sick
kidneys and cure them permanently.
Here is proof in the statement of a
nearby resident . •
J. C. Anderson, farmer, Rolston, Ga,,
says: “For twenty years I was a vic
tim of kidney trouble. My back was
painfnl, especially when I stooped or
lifted, ached intensely at night and
was very lame when I arose in the
morning. I became easily tired, was
languid and nervous and subject to oc
casional headaches and dizzy spells.
The kidney secretions were so fre
quent in passage that I was obliged to
get up at night. Doan’s Kidney Pills
relieved me inside of two weeks and
made a wonderful improvement in my
condition. I can recommend Doan’s
Kidney Pills highly, as they benefited
me when everything else failed. I be
lieve that if I continue taking them
for a short time longer I will be en
tirely cured.”
For sale by ajl dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milbum Co., Buffalo, New
York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the .name—Doan’s—and
take no other.
FOR RENT—9-room house on North
Depot street. Apply to C. D. M3c-
Cutchen. 2t
Replacing the Elizabeth City, N. C.,
switchboard, after the fire in the tele
phone office of that town, was a good
example of modem “rush order” busi
ness methods. The switchboard that
had served the telephone users of that
vicinity was totally destroyed on Sat
urday, November 5. On Wednesday of
the next week, exactly five days later,
a new one was shipped from the fac
tory at Hawthorne, Ill., by express.
The fire broke out in the hack of
the switchboard itself. Before help
could arrive it had completely con
sumed the telephone office equipment
It is said that the blaze was the re
sult of spontaneous combustion. Eliza
beth City was in a bad way without its
telephone service. When a fire of this
sort occurs, crippling the entire tele
phone facilities of a city, business and
social affairs of every sort are hound
to suffer. It was, therefore, up to the
people in charge to see that as little
delay as possible would ensue before
service could be resumed and every
thing running smoothly again.
Word was at once wired to the
house of the Western Electric Com
pany at Atlanta, Ga. The Norfolk &
Carolina Telephone Company, which
Supplies service for Elizabeth City, is
an adjunct of the Bell system, and the
Western Electric Company makes all
Bell” telephones and apparatus.
Atlanta was able to furnish at once
a small 100-line emergency board to
take care of the toll business, which
was most urgent at the Elizabeth City
office. At the same time a “rush or
der” was entered for a duplicate of
the original installation, which was a
common battery, lamp-signal switch
board, completely modernized.
So it was that at Hawthorne, just out
side of Chicago, where the principal
factory of the electric oempany is situ
ated, a telegram was received early on
that Saturday morning, stating that a
duplicate of the original hoard was
wanted in a great hurry. The details
were given briefly, with orders for
haste, to relieve Elizabeth City from
its plight. The Hawthorne people
wired to Atlanta on Sunday night in
reply, stating that the replacing equip
ment would go forward on Wednes
day, November 10.
All possible speed was made at Haw
thorne. The factory, was able to make
good on the job, and Wednesday saw
the new board on its way.
Replacing switchboards under time
pressure Is one of the situations which
it is very often necessary to face. It
will not do for any city or town to be
long without telephone service. The
superiority of American methods in
this respect, was demonstrated when,
about a year ago, fire destroyed the
Gutenberg exchange at Paris, France.
All of the telephone traffic of the busi
ness center of the French capital was
handled through this switchboard,
which was really a very extensive
piece of apparatus.
The French government, which has
telephone matters in charge, notified
a number of European concerns, which
were invited to bid, informing them
that a time limit of sixty days, with a
penalty for each (Jay over the sixty,
would be imposed.
All the European makers balked at
these terms. Paris was crippled with
out her telephone service, and turned
to this country for aid. The Western
Electric Company at Hawthorne, HI.,
was able to*make the board, send it to
Paris, have it installed and accepted
by the government, all within the time
limit, incidentally affording foreign
companies a demonstration of up-to-
date American methods.
A LITTLE FRUIT FARM
NOTICE
GOOD
BARGAINS
IN
, FARM
property
Will pay 1 cent a pound for
good, clean cotton rags.
The A. J. Showalter Co.
A Scalded Boy’s Shrieks
horrified his grandmother, Mrs. Maria
Taylor, of Nebo, Ky., who writes that
when all thought he would die, Buck-
len’s Arnica Salve wholly cured him.
Infallible for Burns, Scalds, Cuts,
Corns, Boils, Skin Eruptions,, Chil
blains, Chapped Hands. Soon routs
Piles. 25c at Fincher & Nichols.
GAME AND FUR WANTED.
I will pay the highest cash price
for game of all kind, and for fur, such
as mink, muskrat, etc.
Stone Produce Company, Dalton, Ga.
For Sale—Second-hand Gas
Range, $5.00. See C. H. Bur
ton, Citizen office.
McKnight’s Liver Tonic, for sale on
ly at McKnight’s drug store.
POUYSKIDNEYCUFB
Makes Kidneys and Right
Weather-proof Roofing.—Farrar Lum
ber Company.
Of twenty-three ormore acres,
known as the Prof. Schoeller
place, located half a mfle
south west of Dalton city
limits. Price is $450, which
is less than the material cost
to build the dwelling house on
the place.
A Few Good Dalton Homes For Rent
28 Selvidge Street, $25; 89 N. Depot Street, $18; 42 Gordon Street, $8.00;
45 S. Spencer Street, $6.00. Others down to $1 00 per month.
Several fine business houses for rent.
IDepenbable IReal Estate Hgenc\>
15J£ Hamilton Street, Dalton, Ga.
s Alone in a Saw Mill at Midnight
unmindful of dampness, drafts, storms
or cold, W. J. Atkins worked as Night
Watchman at Banner Springs, Tenn.
Such exposure gave him a severe cold
that settled on his lungs. At last he
had to give up work. He tried, many
remedies, but all failed rill he used Dr.
King’s New Discovery. “After using
one bottle,” he writes, “I went back to
work as well as ever.” Severe Colds,
stubborn Coughs, inflamed throats and
sore lungs, Hemorrhages, Croup and
Whooping Cough get quick relief and
prompt cure from this glorious medi-
cince. 50c. and $1J00£ Trial bottle free,
guaranteed by Fincher & Nichols.
BOYS
bring your father and mother to our store
and get them to arrange for Santa Claus
to bring you a
“Studebaker
Junior
Wagon
Just right to work your dog or goat to or
even the boys find much pleasure in
drawing them.
They are made with Tongue or Shafts,
and they can be used with bed or freight
frame or lumber gear. You never saw
a boy’s wagon more complete.
Come and see it; we will give you a
booklet showing the different uses for them
The Dalton Buggy Co.
P.S. Tell •your father we also sell “big
wagons” for farm use. D. B. CL
Should be
attended to if
tbey are
troubling you
6>5e chances
ere you need
Glasses
MY MOTTO; YOU MUST BE SATISFIED <£>
I WILL EXAMINE YOUR EYES FREE
I Do What'
Dr. Clifton Newton
I am Here
I Advertise
EYE SPECIALIST (Optometrist)
to Stay
aV
In New Photo Cailery
Bowen Bros.
Call for Shingles, Lime, Cement.
Best Jellico Coal
AND EVERYTHING THAT’S GOOD TO EAT
Wood 111 Stove Len ** ths • - . . Wanted Produce
A^aiiuii*