Newspaper Page Text
Arm & Hammer Soda, 3 pkgs. for 10c
2 pkgs. Bruton’s Snuff for . . . 15c
FOR CASH ONLY
Arbuckle’s Coffee
20c pound
FOR CASH ONLY
Our Fall Stock is now complete and ready for your inspection, and we cordially invite you to call and us a look We don’t ask
you to buy, but we do want you to look. We have the most complete stock of goods ever brought to Dalto 8 at the lowest
cash price, and we feel that we can save you money on every dollar’s worth of goods you buy from us; and in or er o ge you to come
we offer these specials. p>>ginn ; ng Oct. 5, for one week only, strictly cash, 20 lbs. Granulated Sugar for
$1.00 to every customer spending $1.00 or more in the Dry Goods Department
Come to us for your sugar and coffee. We offer you “cream” in the cleanest and best line of Dry Goods, Clothing and Shoes to be
found in Dalton. Read These Prices Carefully:
Dry Goods
Wool Plaids in all colors, per yard . 50c to $1.00
Silk Plaids, Roman Stripes, in all colors,
per yard $1.00 to $1.50
Silk Crepe, 27 inches wide, in 20 different colors,
per yard . ... • 25c
Cotton Crepe in Plaids, 32 inches wide, yer yard 25c
Coat Suits
In very latest styles $10.00 to $25.00
Blankets
Extra Wide, pair $1.00 to $8.00
Wool Crib Blankets, each ... .... 50c
Shoes
Society Shoes for ladies, in all leathers, brocaded
silk top, plain or capped toe and latest style
heels $3.50 and $4.00
Cheaper Shoes, all leathers, patent, viei and gun
metal . . . $1.50 up
Patriot Shoes, for men, patent, vici, gun metal;
button or lace; English last or any last wanted $5.00
Cheaper Shoes, all leathers and styles . $1.50 up
Men’s Heavy Work Shoes, solid leather . $2.00
Children’s Shoes, button or lace, in all
leathers 50c to $2.00
Clothing
Gold Bond Clothing for men; absolute guarantee
with every suit; ail patterns, each . . $15.00
Clothing of other brands,all-wool $7.50 to $20.00
Boys’ Suits in all styles . . . $2.00 to $8.00
Boys’ All-Wool Pants 50c to $2.00
Men’s All-Wool Pants $1.00 to $5.00
Long Coats
Black Cloth, Tibet, 50 inches long, made in latest
style .... $3.50
Bearskin Coats, 50 inches long, each . . $4.00
Nobby, Neatly-Trimmed Long Coats, all colors,
from .$5.00 to $15.00
Misses’ and Children’s Coats, each $1.25 to $8.00
Infants’ Long Coats from . . . $1.00 to $2.00
Men’s Union Suits
Fine Ribbed Spring Needle from $1.00 to $2.50
Separate suits, fine ribbed, garment 25c and 50c
Overcoats
. $5.00 to $15.00
$5.00 to $12.00
Skirts
Ladies’ Skirts, with long pleated tunics $3.50 to $9.00
Ladies’ Skirts, plain, trimmed in buttons $2 to $5.00
For men, in blacks and greys
Craveuette Overcoats . .
$1.00 to $3.00
50c to $1.50
10c to $1.00
Raincoats for All the Family
Misses’ and Children’s Raincoats, with hoods $1.50
Ladies’ Raincoats . • $2.50 up
Men’s Raincoats . • • $2.00 to $15.00
Hats
In all newest shapes for men . . .
Boys’ Hats ...
Men’s Caps ....
Boys’ Caps of all kinds.
Shirts
Hallmark Dress Shirts for men, all patterns,ea. $1.00
All-Wool Shirts ... . $1.00 up
Ladies’ Underwear
Ladies’ Union Suits, with silk braid trimmings
from . . . 50c to $2.00
Separate Suits, per garment . . 25c and 50c
Suit Cases and Umbrellas
Suit Cases
Trunks
Hand Bags from
Umbrellas from
75c to $7.00
$1.25 to $6.00
25c up
50c to $3.00
THIS IS NO FAKE—WE MEAN BUSINESS AND WANT YOU TO BE THE JUDGE
Caylor-Farmer Co.,
Dalton,
Winter storage op onions.
Where regular storage for onions is
not obtainable or possible, a cheap and
efficient way is as follows:
Select a dry, somewhat elevated
place, not necessarily on a ridge or
hill. On this place set a box or frame
of desired dimensions for the amount
of onions to be stored. The depth of
the box should not be over sixteen or
eighteen inches. Pieces of two by four
or four by four should be placed under
the box so that the box will not come
in direct contact with the moist soil.
The floor of the box should be reason
ably tight. After the onions have
been thoroughly cured and topped, they
should be placed in the box and the
boards placed on top. The cover
should be water tight. Before cold
weather sets in keep the cover raised
to permit ventilation.
No other protection is given to the
onion but they are permitted to freeze
solidly and when in this state the box
should be covered with dry straw or
corn stalks or any material that would
prevent the onions from thawing out,
or alternate freezing and thawing. In
the spring of the year, or when ready
to be sold, the covering should be re
moved gradually and the onions per
mitted to thaw out without coming
into contact with the sunlight. During
the winter or while in the frozen state
they may be taken out and gradually
thawed out in a cool room.
In the frozen state the onions will
keep perfectly and when thawed out
will remain solid for a considerable
length of time.
Care must be taken that the onions
Wood's Seeds
Crimson Clover
The Most Wonderful Soil-improv
ing and Fertilizing Crop for The
Sooth. Largely Increases
the Yield of Corn, Cotton
and Tobacco.
Costs less than $ 1.50 per acre
to sow, and the crop turned un
der is considered worth easily
$20.00 to $30.00 per acre in the
increased productiveness and
and improved mechanical con
dition of the soil.
Wood’s Crop Special giving
practiced experience of feurmers
in the wonderful increase of
crops by sowing Crimson Clover,
mailed free on request
T. W. WOOD & SONS,
Seedsmen, - Richmond, Va.
Write for Wood’i Crop Special, and
' prices of any Seeds Required.
are dry when placed in the storage
and that they are kept frozen through
out the winter. The quality of the
onions is not impaired by one freez
ing. E. P. SANDSTEN.
COME
in and see my stock of STEEL
RANGES and let me show you
some written statements from
some of the people to whom I have
sold stoves. A satisfied customer
is the best advertisement.
I not only under sell, hut give
Easy Terms,” so any one can
buy.
McWilliams, Dalton.
ABOU BEN ADHEM.
Abou Ben Adhem (may his tribe in
crease!)
Awoke one night from a deep dream
of peace,
And saw within the moonlight of his
room,
Making it rich and like a lily in
bloom,
An angel writing in a book of gold.
Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem
bold,
And to the presence in the room he
said:
“What WTitest thou?” The vision
raised its head,
And, with a look made of all sweet
accord,
Answered, “The names of those who
love the Lord.”
ISSUED BV AUTHORITY OP
urn
PRiCA
s
OARS
co>&
’ said Abou. “Nay,
Abou spoke more
'I pray
“And is naine onef
not so, ’ ’
Replied the angel,
low,
But cheerily still; and said,
thee, then,
Write me as one that loves his fellow-
men. ’ ’
t
<
The angel wrote, and vanished. The
next night
It came again, with a great wakening
light,
And showed the names whom love of
God had blessed,
And, lo! Ben Adhem’s name led all
the rest!
LEIGH HUNT.
IF I SELL
you the above Novelty Worsted
Suit for $15, and city stores ask
you $18 for it, what percentage
do I save you? .Every one who
solves this problem correctly will
be given a nice memorandum
book and pencil, if you notify me.
McWilliams
DALTON.
‘Clothing Department Up-Stairs.’
go to those who have had expert train
ing, or long experience, which with
real live individual, in some lines of
business, amounts to much the same
thing. Even the work that pertains
especially to farm and home life is
more apt to be carried on in a profit
able manner, if the" worker has had
some special training such as may be
obtained in agricultural schools, and
domestic science classes of the literary
schools. But, if this is impossible, the
farm journals and magazines and those
devoted to home economics, and books
pertaining to these subjects, are most
excellent school masters.
Many girls are unprepared for profit
able employment because of their own
negligence. They fail to take advan
tage of their opportunities, both in and
out of school. No amount of expert
training could do very much for a girl
who does not put her own head and
hands to work.
There is one line of work in which
most excellent training is available for
i: Classified Ad
11
> .. J
i: One Cent a WordT
»
»
WANTED TO TRADE—Eight room
house just off Peachtree street in At
lanta for wild lands or farm, in Whit
field or Gordon counties, Georgia, or
James, Bradly, or McMinn counties in
Tennessee. Write Jim Campbell, 70
South Pryor Street, Atlanta.
FOR RENT—Four-room cottage, 16
W. Morris street.; gas and water. Ap
ply to R. F. Wardlaw, Bank of Dalton.
‘Peruna Cured Me
Baldy Breezer’s
Calendar
HOW GIRLS MAY SUCCEED.
I WAIT
for the 8:11 P. M. Train
because. I expect
mail orders
Send me your mail orders. I pre
pay freight or parcel post charges.
McWilliams
DALTON.
A celebrated European lady of
former century is credited with having
said that if she were thrown upon her
own resources that she had thirty
trades by which she could earn a live
lihood. If a woman, in that day of
limited education and occupations for
women, could find so many ways of
making money, surely there is no ex
cuse for a healthy, active, intelligent,
twentieth century girl, who has not
even one trade or occupation through
which she can keep the wolf from the
door. Yet many of our girls whose
family incomes are limited, are won
dering what they can do to earn
money. One trouble with many of
them is that they think they must go
beyond their own surroundings, when
they could, in many cases, find profit
able employment at home.
Sometimes the parents are to blame,
in that, they do'not read and do not
provide their children with farm papers
and magazines so that they can become
acquainted with modern ideas and ac
tivities, aB applied to farm work and
farm products. So the young folks are
not to blame, if they think there is no
way to make money but to get some
little job in town. We speak advisedly
when we say, “little job,” as that
is the only kind the untrained worker
can get. The better paying positions all
many girls who make the mistake of
underestimating its value. W-e refer
to the home training of a good mother.
Not a few mothers possess a practical
working knowledge of cookery, sanita
tion and all other subjects relating to
the well appointed household (without
knowing the technical terms) as would
far outdistance most of the schools, if
their work could only be displayed to
the public.
A young teacher tells of a lady with
whom she boarded one term, who al
ways baked her own bread and whose
biscuits during the entire time were
of such uniform excellence that if all
had been made at once, and baked at
the same time, in the same pan, they
could not have been more alike, or
more nearly perfect. Any girl who
will take the trouble to perfect herself
to such an extent as that in any
chosen line of work ought to produce
an article that would be salable wher
ever there is a demand for such a pro
duct.
FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms on
King street. Apply to Mrs. Ed John
son.
FINE BULL—We keep, in pasture,
at our dairy, on East Morris street, a
fine hull.
Vernon.
Phone 917-11.. .Fincher &
BUY—Your seed from the grower.
Best seed oats, 60 cents per bushel.
Wonderful Stoner wheat, recleaned
seed, $1.50 per bushel. One-half bushel
of wheat sows an acre. W. E. Bare,
Varnells, Ga. Phone 901-11.
FOR SALE—Good horde'; terms to
suit the purchaser. Or will exchange
for cotton. We also offer $30 coke
stove for $15. Smith-Hall Grocery Co,
FOR SALE—Clean, home-grown, seed
rye. Apply B. A. Tyler, Dalton Buggy
Co., Dalton, Ga.
WANTED—$4.25 each paid for
United States Eagle Cents dated 1856;
keep all money dated before 1895 and
send 10 cents at once for new illustrat
ed coin value book, it may mean your
fortune. W. Gorman, West End Post-
j office, Atlanta, Ga.
No one can expect to succeed in any
business without having mastered its
details, or to hold a position and draw
the pay of an expert without having
acquired the skill necessary to do ex
pert work.
In selecting a line of work one’B own
natural abilities and inclinations should
bo consulted, also the demand for the
work or the product in the given lo
cality. Then, when the choice is made,
go to work.
Some exchange recently said that
when men of the Stone Age wanted
anything they went after it, because
they had no other way of getting it.
If our twentieth century girl will use
the same method, she will undoubtedly
find it still effective.
FOR RENT—One furnished room,
with or without board. Apply 13 West
Morris Street.
FIGURE
If I sell you 3 dozen clothes pins
in my Economy Basement for .5c,
and you are asked 5c a dozen else
where, what percent do I save
you?
Everyone sending or bringing
me the correct solution of this
will he given a 5c pair of tubular
shoe laces.
Me Williams, Dalton.
“Sufficiency and Efficiency.”
am
glad
OVFB
MR. ROBERT FOWLER,
Of Okarche, Oklahoma.
Mr. Robert Fowler, Okarche, Okla
homa, writes:
“To any sufferer of catarrh of the
stomach. I am glad to teU my friends
or sufferers of catarrh that seventeen
years ago I was past work of any
kind, due to stomach troubles. I tried
almost every known remedy without
any results.
"Finally I tried Peruna, and am
happy to say I was benefited by the
first bottle, and after using a full
treatment I was entirely cured.
"I am now seventy years old, and
am in good health, due to always
having Peruna at my command. I
would not think of going away from
home for any length of time without
taking a bottle of Peruna along' for
emergency.
"You are at liberty to use my pic
ture and testimony if you think it will
help any one who has stomach
trouble." 9
Safeguard
your hands
against
electric
currents
Famous Grinuefi]
gEZlSTOT.
protect nands from injury,
outwear two to three pairs or
dinary gloves, and have high
restance to electric currents.
Soft, roomy and easy on the hands.
Give sure, safe grip, 'bare-handed
freedom—deep cuffs with non-slip
“Rist-Fit” feature—double thick
ness at wrist—lined or unlined.
Tryt
'IT'S just as hard to
RAISE .CROPS ON A
POOR FARM AS IT
is a mortgage:
3
Nearly a million people die in
the United States every year. No
one has a lease on life.
Possibly among your acquaint
ances some have passed away un
expectedly.
It is every man’s duty to pro
vide for the future maintenance of
his family, ahould he die.
The method is simple and in
expensive and we will be glad to
explain how to obtain this pro
tection.
HOME OF BALDY BREEZER
Frank S. Pruden, Agent
Roy Vance’* “A Book
of Letters,” is now
ready*
McWilliams, Dalton.
Includes the best of the
writings of this most pop
ular contributor to The
Citizen. Send in orders
now, either to C. R«
Vance, 910 S. 17th St.,
Fort Smith, Ark., or to
The A. J. Showalter Co.,
Dalton, Ga. Supply is
limited. Price, postpaid,
$1.00.
UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING
Complete Stock, Best Equipment u»d
Most Prompt Service.
Special Order* Fre*h Flovin for
Any Occasion.
LEONARD-McGHEE FURNITURE OO.