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ctmott
HILL
C|urc0, wffott,
We can truthfully say our business
for tHe year that is rapidly passing
has been better than we had dared
hoped, and we are duly grateful to
the people of Dalton and surround
ing country for having made it so.
Entering as we do on the year
of 1910 we have resolved to offer
even greater bargains in jewelry
than we have heretofore.
Thanking your for your business
in the past and trusting that we fully
merit your continued patronage, we
(Rev. A. C. Dixon, D. D.,"Chicago, HI.)
evil, but God can keep us from tbe
evil. Let us not be over-particular in
our theological bair-spiitting. The fact
is that we may be saved from our
sins through Jesus Christ our Lord.
The sinful nature, which is as old as
Adam, may remain with us, but it can
be kept under the control of divine
grace. Let us turn our sinful nature
to God and ask him to suppress, to
control, if not eradicate. If he will re
move, praise him forever, but if he
sees fit not to remove, but to-leave it
as a test of character, praise him for
the grace that can make us more than
conquerors through Jesus Christ.
II. A greater word than sin is sal
vation. “He shall save his people from
their sins.” It is neither form nor
reform. It means life "entering our
souls and overcoming death. The
11 open January 3d, with tl
corps of Teachers
S * E. BERRY,
Miss Bernice Bailey, A. B.
Miss Carrie Green,
Miss Mae Rood
pMrs. Edith Wyatt Moore,
■Matt. 1:21,
Music Teacher,
Art Teacher,
Gratefully yours,
This school has just closed the most sue*
gYV#' • . ■ . .. ' V*. .; . -It. • - - '
cessful term in the history of the town and
great things are expected forthe next term.
Muncy & Godwin
Dalton,^Georgia
man has missed the mark; he has*
failed; he has fallen short of God’s
standard; now God would give him
another chance through Jesus Christ
our Lord.
But there is more in sin than sim-
It means dis-
Need we stop
to prove that we are all sinners? Put
in one column all the words that mean
something bad and in another all the
words that mean something good, and
you will find that the bad words out
number the good;
And the text informs us that sin is
ours. “He shall save his people from
tneir sins.” You may have some doubt
as to the ownership of your house,
your hat or coat, but there can be. no
doubt about the ownership of your
sins. They belong to you. God is not
to blame for them; Adam and Eve are
not to blame
STOREROOMS. •
Brown’s at Elk Mills y
Hagerty’s at Crown 'Mills .
DWELLINGS.
89 N. Depot Street, 9 roorris
57 S. Thornton Avenue, 6 rooms
42 Gordon'Street, 6 rooms ,
123 North Depot Street, 3 rooms
84 North Depot Street, 2 rooms,.
13 Jones Street, 3 rooms ........
ply missing the mark,
ease, sorrow, death.
GLAD TIDINGS
FOR THOSE WHO
wish to go to housekeeping.
A little money goes a long
ways in this house.
158 N. Depot Street, 2 rooms
^Dependable TReal Estate Hgenc\>
15)4 Hamilton Street, Dalton, Ga.
your neighbor, though
he may have tempted you, is not to
blame. Sin belongs to the sinner, and
the need of the day is real confession
of sin.
Jesus saves us from our sins. Sin
in the root, sins are the fruit.' We
may differ in opinion as to whether
God destroys the root of sin or simply
destroys the fruit, but there should be
no difference of opinion about the
fact that he saves us from our sins.
He may leave the appetite for drink,
but he will give grace to overcome.
There may 'be in us tendencies to
Will pay 1 cent a pound for
>od, clean cotton rags.
The A. J. Showalter Co.
Dalton, Ga.
We are showing the best values in
Bed Room Suits,
Parlor, Dining Room and
Kitchen Furniture
iat we have ever had.
Floor Coverings of all kinds
flattings, Squares, Rugs,
Linoleums, Oil Cloth- ■
ChiffopRobes, Trunks, Suit
Cases
Library, Extension, Parlor
Kitchen and Sewing Tables
Sewing Machines, Machine
A Few Leaders
LETTERS FROM AN OLD FARMER TO HIS SON
Ground Phosphate Rock for Fertilizer.
, Dear Son—You ask what I think of
buying ground phosphate rock instead
of acid phosphate or complete ferti
lizers.
In your case with plenty of good
stable manure to use with it, I think
‘floats”
to all kinds of inclement
weather are of such com
mon occurrence that they
are not generally consid
ered dangerous. This is
a great mistake. Serious
illness often follows in the
wake of a neglected cold.
you can use ground rock or
to a fine advantage, making a com
plete fertilizer at one-fourth to one-
half the cost of those usually sold in
market.
Your soil is somewhat acid, and the
big meadows will have an abundance
of vegetable humus in the soil when
you plow that in the spring.
food, the solids only 3.9, so if you
feed on the soil you save 77 & of the
nitrogen taken from the soil and air
by the crop, thus returning it
Many soils have abundant potash in.
the soil, the phosphate rock with the
manure nr decaying vegetation com
bined with the potash in the soil makes:
a complete fertilizer of the -finest kind
at 1-10 to 1-2 the average cost of,
Commercial fertilizer,'now sold.
Phosphoric acid is the needed ingre
dient and most essential part of the
fertilizer that you cannot raise on the
farm and must be supplied from out
side on most lands. You can buy
“floats” (dust from the dryers at phos
phate mills) containing 8 to 12 per
cent of phosphorus, at $2.50 to $4.50
per ton, and the ground rock at $3.50
to $5.00 per ton, varying froin 10 to
15 per cent of phosphoric acid. About
12 p^er cent is usually recommended, as
most economical to buy. All tests
made by leading scientists have dem
onstrated that the ground ' phosphate
rock increased the crop yields fully
as much as the acidulated rock did,
at 1-4 to 1-3 the cost of the latter.
It is safe to estimate that 500 pounds
costing $1.25 to you will increase your
yield of grain 25 to 75 per- cent and
hay crops from 50 to 150 per cent
One application will remain in the
soil and benefit largely the crops for
One hun-
DR. D. JAYNES
Expectorant
Fixtures, Needles and Oil
Shades, Curtain Poles, Shade
Brackets
Wagon Harness
Then if
you will feed your stock on the mead
ow this winter when good * weather,
you will have it well manured by
spring.
It is useless to put ground phosphate
rock on worn-out soils devoid of hu-
You must have
has been successful for seventy-
eight years , in curing Colds,
Coughs, Bronchitis, and Pleu
risy. It is also a standard
remedy for Croup, Whooping-
Cough, Inflammation of the
Lungs ov Chest and Asthma.
Cure your cold now—go to
your druggist’s and get a bottle
of Dr. D. Jayne’s Expectorant.
Three sizes, $1.00, 50c. and 25c.
Dr. D. Jayne's Tonic Vermifuge
will build you up splendidly if run
down” from a severe cold.
Whips
Will Save You Money by coming Here
mus In some form,
manure or vegetable matter rotting in
some form to generate the acids to
liberate the phosphates.
If you wish to improve you old plow
ed land, use the ground rock in your 1
stables this winter or ; on the manure
piles, spread it-heavily and plow it in.
The rock used in the stables will, ab
sorb the urine and .fix .the ammonia,
making one of the .best fertilizers
known.
Prof. C. C. Hopkins, of Illinois, Prof.
H. J., Patterson, of - Maryland, Prof.
C. E. Thomas, of Ohio, and Prof. M.
D. Lichliter, of Pennsylvania Agricul
tural stations, furnish a vast amount
of very valuable information on this,
subject, which can be‘ had free by ap-:
plying to the Department of Agricul
ture at Washington or to the various
state experiment stations for their bul
letins.
You can supply the nitrogen needed
cheaply with soy beans, cow peas, and
clovers in the slimmer and with crim
son clover, burr clover, vetches, or
stable manures in winter.
To each ton of clover, bean or pea
hay grown you can figure twenty-five
pounds of nitrogen per acre stored by'
the stubble,- and, if the whole crop is
plowed under, add forty pounds more,
also a large amount of humus and pot
ash:
If you can apply 500 to 1000 pounds,
of the ground rock on the clover or
meadow sod before plowing, so much,
better. The decomposing humus will
create the acids and gas to liberate
the phosphorus.
Do not apply ground' rock unless you
have .the manure or humus to act
on it, as it will lie dormant, idle in
the soil until you have an agent to
dissolve IL It does not leach, nor wash
out unless the. soil is washed away
bodily, hut will remain In the soil
until chemically released. No doubt
the best time to apply the rock is on
the sod or clover, beans or peas before
plowing them in.
Horse
CHANAN
WE CAN SUPPLY ALL YOUR
WANTS. LET US SHOW YOU.
four to six years following,
dred pounds worth 25 cents applied
to each ton of manure is worth to the
average wheat or corn crop on old land
$1.00 to $1.50 per cwt., or four to six
times Its cost and still more on grass
es, thus adding 50 to TOO per cent to
the value of the manure. It is better
to add it to the manure and let it
lie £ under cover a few weeks before
^spreading. Leave no manure out ex
posed to rains and sun.
Do not buy fire-dried or burned rock,
as fire destroys a large share of its
value. Air-dried rock is best Bulle
tin 116, Illinois Exp. Sta., on page 9
says: “One ton of fine ground rock
containing 250 pounds of phosphorus,
costing six to eight dollars^ delivered,
mixed with one ton of acid makes two
tons of acid phosphate, selling at
about $15.00 per ton or $30.00 for no
more phosphorus than there is in one
ton of ground rock costing nix to eight
dollars. The so-called complete ferti
lizers are commonly made by mixing
acid phosphate with filler containing
small amounts of nitrogen -and potas
sium. This mixture is usually cold at
$20.00 per ton or $80.00 for the four
tons of fertilizer containing the same
The Dalton Buggy Co
You will be surprised how a dollar will
grow in this association. Yon will not
only earn the interest without any ef
fort on your part, but at the same time
you are cultivating a good habit—that
of thrift.
The “money-saving habit” is the habit
will nrovide more for you when
What would make a nicer
New Year’s < Present
than a handsome PHOTUOKArn
mounted on a neat holiday folder.
Special attention given to Group
Pictures, Stamped Photo
graphs, etc.
Representing all Old Line Companies
Tie New PMoppl Gallery
26£ Hamilton Str