Newspaper Page Text
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THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1915.
PAGE THREE
Only taste our delicious soda once.
You will come again many times and bring your
friends.
Why are our drinks “better?”
We have the Hill’s Ice Cream, Rexall’s Fountain
Syrups and Fruits.
Our prices on Neapolitan and Fancy Bricks are
cheaper than any in town. We pack and deliver cream
anywhere in town.
Cooper Drug Co.
WE TAKE CARE
The ^teaeaJUL store
Phones 316-210
1* COOK’S
Igoldblume
[ BEER
! HEALTHFUL, SPARKLING
INVIGORATING
=
I Recommended By All the Leading Physicians
Throughout the Country
| Cook’s Beers are made under condi-
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| the famous F. W. Cook Brewery, Eyans-
I ville, Ind., by the most scientific methods
| from the Finest Materials obtainable.
Order a Shipment Today.
You Will Find it
Satisfying.
PRICES EXPRESS OR FREIGHT COLLECT
1 Doz. 2 Doz.. 3 Doz. 4 Doz. 5 Doz.
Pints Pints Pints Pints Pints
Cook’s Goldblume $1.20 $2.30 $3.40 $4.40 $5.40
Cook’s Standard 1.00 2.00 2.85 3.80 4.50
Twenty cents per dozen allowed for empty bottles
returned if you pay the charges.
Market Street C. D. CHEATHAM
WHOLESALE MAIL ORDER LIQUOR DEALER
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
1 Cask
lODoz.Pts.
$10.00
8.50
C. OS BO I
Fire, Health, Aeeident, Life Insurance
Representing Old Line Companies
Room six
BANK OF DALTON BUILDING
Suit
SPECIAL
Palm Beach Suit Sale
$1.98
Suit
Regular Four Dollar Suits in plain and stripe cloth-
While they last only $1.98 suit. How can we do it.
Here it is. A manufacturer by error shipped these
suits to Dalton, and we secured them* at about half
Price. On sale Friday and Saturday.
34 to 40
Routh’s
5c, 10c, 25c Store.
The ideal suit
for hot weather
The Advertised Article
is one in which, the merchant himself has im
- plicit faith—-else he would not advertise it.
are safe in patronizing the merchants whose
appear in this paper because their goods are
O'date and never shopworn.
ligh Tribute to Colonel Andrews
Paid by Directors of Southern Railway
THE LATE C0L0HEL A. B. ANDREWS.
NeW York.—The board of directors
of Southern Railway Company
paid a high tribute to the memory of
the late Col. A. B. Andrews, first
vice-president and for many years a
member of the board, who died at blB
home In Raleigh, N. C., on April 17,
1915, In the following resolutions:
“In Memorlam, Alexander Boyd
Andrews.
“Alexander Boyd Andrews was bom
4n Franklin county, North Carolina,
on the 28d day of July, 1841. He
tendered his services to the Confed
eracy in April, 1861, and In June
of that year, before he was 20 years
of age, was made a second lieutenant
In Company E of the First regiment
of North Carolina cavalry, Confed
erate States Army. He served with
distinguished gallantry until, In Sep
tember, 1863, he was shot through
the chest and lung by the fragment of
a shell at Jack’s Shop, near Gordons-
vllle, Va. After recovering from this
serious wound"he found, when peace
was re-established, the whole indus
trial life of the South prostrate as
a result of war and the people among
whom he lived confronted with the
task of rebuilding their social, and
of creating an industrial, system on
new lines. He became a factor of
prime importance in this creative and
constructive work. Realizing the ne
cessity for transportation in any plan
of reorganization and reconstruction,
he entered railroad life. His first
service was with the Raleigh and Gas
ton and with the Raleigh. and Au
gusta railroads, and as their superin
tendent for eight years he was the
principal factor in their rehabilitation
after the ravages of war.
With the R. and D.
“His efficiency in this work brought
him f£n offer of promotion from the
Richmond and Danville Railroad Com
pany, and in 1875 he became super
intendent of its North Carolina di
vision. He remained with this and
other predecessors of Southern Rail
way Company and with the South
ern itself uninterruptedly until his
death, a period of forty years. Be
ginning with the office of superin
tendent, he worked his. way up
through various intermediate grades
until he became first vice-president
and a director of this company, which
position he held at the time of his
death and had held for many years.
“His active railroad work had thus
extended over a period little short of
half a century.
“During that time the principal
construction and organization work
of the railroads of the South has been
done, and the industrial life of the
South Itself has been reorganized and
rebuilt. In this accomplishment Col
onel Andrews was a vital force. Pos
sessing a strong and dominating per
sonality, virile and commanding in
character and intellect, he threw him
self into his great work with irre
sistible will and purpose. His
achievements, which were many,
richly entitle him to a place among
the great constructive forces, of his
State and section.
Completed Western Road.
“Among these achievements was
the completion of the Western North
Carolina railroad, from Old Fort, over
the mountains, through Asheville, to
Paint Rock, and its branches. Thus
through his efforts was opened up
the great industrial section of western
North Carolina. Population and de
velopment and industries followed hie
pioneer act, and every person in that
rich and inviting territory is now, and
their descendants through all the
eoming years will he, enjoying 1 the
conveniences, the opportunities and
the blessings made possible by this
great-piece of constructive work. The
Western North Carolina Railroad will
remain a monument to the useful and
honorable achievements of Colonel
Andrews, who was its builder.
“His life was not an easy one, for
it was his lot to encounter and over
come great difficulties. His activity,"
his positive and purposeful character
and his touch with great things
brought him into sharp conflicts with
important forces. In the midst of
them all he bore himself with a cour
age and virility which commanded
universal respect and enabled him to
crown his efforts with notable suc
cess. In every trust and in every re
lation of life he was loyal and faith
ful and true.
On the Personal Side.
“On his personal side he was a man
of compelling and attractive person
ality and was greatly* honored and
beloved. He married in 1869 Miss
Julia M. Johnston, daughter of Col.
William Johnston, of Charlotte, N. C.,
who was president of the Charlotte.
Columbia and Augusta Railroad Com
pany. With her his helpmate he
built up an exceptionally happy and
beautiful home life, which he distin
guished by the -most cordial and
liberal hospitality.
“He was a devoted husband and
father and followed his children, even
after they were grown, with' undimin
ished parental tenderness and' solici
tude.
“He ■ took a deep interest in the
welfare of Confederate^ veterans and
in the establishment and maintenance
for them of the Confederate Soldiers’
home in Raleigh.
“Although himself deprived of the
benefits of a college education, he
was an earnest friend and supporter
of the University of North Carolina,
being for many years a member of
its board of trustees and of its ex
ecutive committee.
“He came to realize the value of a
religious' life and connected himself
as a communicant with the Protest
ant Episcopal church, being an active
and zealous member of the Church of
the Good Shepherd of Raleigh, for
which in the latter years of his life
his munificence helped to provide a
new and stately place of worship.
Devoted to Native State.
“He was devoted in his attachment
to the state of North Carolina. No
exigency of business or of personal in
terest was strong enough to persuade
him to make his home elsewhere. He
believed in the sturdiness, the sense
Of justice and the patriotism of its
people, and if at any time they, in
his judgment, erred, his faith in the
ultimate triumph • of their sense of
right was unwavering and supreme.
He was always willing to leave his
name and fame in their keeping, in
the confidence that their ultimate
judgment would correctly appraise
and appreciate his purposes and his
work.
“His death has ^brought universal
sorrow and regret wherever he was
known, but especially In the South,
where his life was spent and his work
most .largely done.
“The secretary is directed to ex
press to the surviving members of
Colonel Andrews’ family the respect
ful sympathy of this board and to
transmit to them a suitably en
grossed and attested transcript of this
minute.’’
CALOMEL IS MERCURY! IT SICKENS!
ACTS ON LIVER LIKE OTN AMITE
THE JUBILEE TRUMPET
THE SEVENTH TRUMPET
Not as Expected, but Surely
Here on Time.
“Dodson’s Liver Tone” Starts Your Liver
Better Than Calomel and Doesn’t
Salivate or Make You Sick.
oo»o
Listen to me! Take no more sick
ening, salivating calomel when bilious or
constipated. Don’t lose a day’s work!
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when it comeB into contact
with sour bile crashes into it, breaking
it up. This is when you feel that awful
nausea and cramping. If you are slug
gish and “all knocked outif your
liver is torpid and bowels constipated
or you have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, if breath is bad or stomach sour
just take a spoonful of harmless Dod
son’s Liver Tone on my guarantee.
Here’s my guarantee—Go to-any drug
store and get a 50 cent bottle-of Dod
son’s. Liver Tone. Take a spoonful to
night and if it doesn’t straighten you
right up and make you- feel fine and
vigorous by morning I want you to go
back to the store and get your money.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is destroying tne
sale of calomel because it is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore it
can not salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of Dod
son’s Liver Tone will put your sluggish
liver to work and clean your bowels of
that sour bile and constipated waste
which is clogging your system and mak
ing you feel -miserable. I guarantee that
a bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone will
keep your entire family feeling fine for
months. Give it to your children. It is
harmless; doesn’t gripe and they like its
pleasant taste.
The Message of the Panama-Pacific
Exposition-Evidences That the Day
Began Forty Years Ago—Handicaps
of Fear and Superstition Constricted
Our Minds—The Night of Weeping
Almost Gone—The Present Darken
ing Cloud the Last Earth Shall See.
Oakland, C a L,
June 6. — Pastor
Russell, ’here in
attendance upon
the I. B. S. A. Con
vention, delivered
a notable address
today at the City
. Auditorium, from
the text, “He that
sat upon the
Throne said, Be
hold, I make all
things new.” (Rev
elation 21:5.) To
morrow will be I. B. S. A. Day at the
Exposition, and the Pastor will he one
of the speakers.
Referring to the marvels of the .Ex
position, the speaker declared that he
has seen the various Expositions from
the Centennial on, and has noticed the
great progress marked by each, all of
which have corroborated what he wish
es to point out from the Bible—that we
are living in a most wonderful time.
Bible chronology shows us that in 1875
the world entered upon a great Sab
bath of a thousand years, which; was
preceded by six great Days of a thou
sand years each. This great Week of
seven ^thousand years will witness the
completion of man’s creation. By the
end of that time the earth will be a
world-wide Paradise, the human race
brought to perfection will have filled
the earth, and propagation will have
ceased.—Genesis 1:28; Luke 20:34-36.
The Turning Point—Divine Mercy.
The Pastor then gave the Bible ex
planation of humanity’s mental, moral
and physical decrepitude. Father Adam
was originally perfect and pleasing to
God; but his disobedience in Eden re
sulted in his rejection by God and his
subjection to death and allots concom
itants of sorrow, pain and weakness.
The first manifestation - of God’s pur
pose for man’s recovery from sin and
death was the birth, of Jesus, to be our
Redeemer from sin and death.
’After Jesus’ death as our Redeemer
and His subsequent resurrection and
exaltation to the Divine nature, the
next step in the Divine Program was
the selection and development of the
Church to be the Body pf Christ. This
has been the work of the entire Gospel
Age. Many Bible students agree that
the Church is almost completed, and
will soon be made like her Lord—spir
it beings of the highest order—in the
First Resurrection.—Rom. 8:17; etc.
Then will come the third step of the
Divine Program—the inauguration of
the Messianic Kingdom, with Christ and
His Church Bride associated with Him
in power and great glory for the bless
ing of all mankind. The speaker then
quoted many Scriptures to establish
his views, and demonstrated conclu
sively that the past six thousand years
have witnessed the Divine preparations
for blessing the world; He emphasized
the point that the Millennial blessings
are not the result of an evolutionary
process, but are the operation of Di
vine providence. Our great inventions
have sprung into existence during the
one hundred and fifteen years dating
from 1799. a period Scripturally styled
the Day of God’s Preparation.
The Pastor attributes humanity’s
gross ignorance of the true meaning
of Scripture to two causes: (1) The
demon doctrines foisted upon our fore
fathers during the Dark Ages; (2) The
unscriptural theory that God expected
the Church to convert the world and
establish the Millennium. As a result
of these misunderstandings of the Dir
vine Plan, inquisitions and persecu
tions were employed to force people
into church membership. How suc
cessful this method has been is wit
nessed by the conditions in Europe to
day. The majority of the belligerent
nations claim that 95 per cent of their
population are Christians; Italy claims
100 per cent. They have attempted to
convert the world by calling people
Christians and including their names
on church records. The truth is that
heathendom has actually doubled dur
ing the last century.
The Seventh Trumpet—The Last.
The remainder of the discourse was
devoted to the discussion of the Last
Trump and the events to occur during
its sounding. The speaker showed that
while once we thought of the Trump
of God as though it were the Devil’s
Trumpet, Bible students now clearly
discern that this Trumpet, like the pre
ceding six, is symbolical and stands re
lated to Messiah’s Kingdom and to the
world’s release from the bondage of
Sin and Death.
The Pastor then showed that Israel’s
Jubilee arrangement was typical of
the Millennium, and pictured humani
ty’s full release from sin, superstition
and death. The antitypical Jubilee will
be a’thousand years long; and accord
ing to Scripture It began in 1875. It
is now time For all members of the
antitypical priesthood to blow the sil
ver trumpet of Truth, and announce
the Message of the hour—that the pres
ent great European war is the prelude
to Armageddon, as Armageddon will
be the prelude to Messiah’s Kingdom.
Pass It Along
BY C. R. VANCE
TO ALL WHO SUFFER FROM
STOMACH TROUBLE.
We want all chronic sufferers from Dysentery,
Diarrhoea and other kindred stomach ail
ments to try
CUBBY’S DIABBHOEA AND DYSENTEBY
SPECIFIC
This popular remedy affords positive relief
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Whatever may be the cause of your trouble
you can rely- on this scientific preparation to
give yon speedy relief.
Get rid of yonr stomadh trouble and stomach
pain.
For Sale by All Druggists, or sent upon re
ceipt of price -by the manufacturer.
CURRY-ARRINGTON COMPANY
Manufacturing Pharmacists
BOME, GA.
My article this week, ladies and gentlemen, will be made up
largely of some splendid and very beautiful thoughts gleaned from
the works of Abraham Lincoln, Benjamin Franklin, Elbert Hubbard
and Robert Ingersoll. Mr. Lincoln was President of these United
States a half century ago, and his name is cherished today through
out the nation.
Ben Franklin was one of a family of seventeen children. -His
father was a poor candle-maker and soap boiler of Boston. Ben
Franklin founded the first public.library in America. He was a
"financier, a diplomat, a statesman, a philosopher and a man of affairs.
Robert Ingersoll was a humorist, iconoclast and lover of human
ity. He dethroned for us the God of wrath, and proved himself to .
be more noble, more lovable and more Godlike than the Jehovah of
the Jews. Especially did Ingersoll ask justice, plain common justice,
for women and children, and for all those who were not physically
able to enforce their right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happi
ness.
Elbert Hubbard was a writer that made you think! He was a
practical man, a farmer, a banker, a lecturer, a writer, and an inn
keeper. Mr. Hubbard was lost when the Lusitania went down a
few days ago. He was en route to Europe to write of the war.
O—
Benjaimn Franklin said:
“Mankind are very odd creatures; one half censure what they
practice, the other half practice what they censure; the rest say and
do as they ought.-’
“If you are not to be forgotten, as soon as you’re dead and
rotten, either write things worth reading, or do the things worth
writing.”
“Idleness is the Dead Sea that swallows all virtues; be active
in business, that temptation will* miss her aim.”
“Doing an injury puts you below your enemy; revenging one
makes you but even with him; forgiving, it sets you above him.”
“None preaches better than the ant, and she says nothing—just
keeps busy.”
0
Address of Abraham Lincoln at the dedication of the Gettysburg
national cemetery, November 19th, 1863:
“Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on
this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to
the proposition that all men are created equal.
“Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that'
nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure.
We have come to dedicate a portion of that field as a final resting-
place for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live.
It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this.
“But in a larger sense we cannot dedicate—we cannot conse
crate—we cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and
dead, who struggled here, have consecrated it far above our poor
power to add or detract. The world will little note nor long remem
ber what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. It
is for us, the living, rather, to be dedicated to the unfinished work
which they who fought here have so nobly advanced. It is rather
for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before ns—
that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that
cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion; that we
here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain; that
this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom; and that
government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not
perish from the earth.”
O
Robert Ingersoll said:
“It is not necessary to be great to be happy; it is not necessary
to be rich to be just and generous and to have a heart filled with
divine affection. No matter whether you are rich or poor, treat
your wife as though she were a splendid flower, and she will fill
your life with perfume, and joy. And do you know it is a splendid
thing to think that the woman you really love will never grow old
to you? Through the wrinkles of time, through the mask of years,
if you really love her, you will see the face you loved and won.
And a woman that-really loves a man does not see that he grows
old; he is not decrepit to her; he does not tremble; he is not old;
she always sees the same gallant gentleman who won her hand and
heart. I like to think of it in that way; I like to think that love is
.eternal. And to love in that way and go down the hill of v life to
gether, and as you go down, hear, perhaps, the laughter of grand
children, while the birds of love and joy sing once more in the leaf
less branches of the tree of age.”
O
Elbert Hubbard said:
“The recipe for perpetual ignorance is: be satisfied with your
opinions and content with your knowledge.”
O
“The man who thinks out what he wants to do, and then works
and works hard, will win, and no others do, or ever have, or can—
God will not have it so.”
O
“No man can make others think unless he himself is a thinker.”
O
“If you have not known poverty, heart-hunger and misunder
standing, God has overlooked you, and you are to be pitied.”
0,
“Calvanism has gone, but it had several advantages; for one
thing it gave you peace by supplying a hell for your rivals and ene
mies.”
O -
“God will not look you over for medals,-degrees and diplomas,
but for sears.”
O
LOUIS BUCHHOLZ. _
When I read of the sudden death of Mr. Lotus Buchholz the
other day, my heart was sad. Mr. Buchholz was a good man; he was
a charitable man and a man with a big heart. I remember some
twenty years ago I was much impressed at a little circumstance that
happened in his place of business; it made a lasting impression on
my mind. A lady from the country strayed into the store and there
was a drove of little poverty-stricken tots with her; she bought five
cents worth of candy, and in the meantime the “kidlets” were look
ing over a stock of toys that were displayed on the counter. Of
course they selected something that pleased their childish fancyT out
the mother explained that she could not afford to buy the articles.
.After Mr. Buchholz was sure that she was too poor to buy the toys,
he very politely wrapped the packages and gave them to the little
fellows. This act filled these little children’s heart with gladness,
and the poor, illiterate mother gave Buchholz a look of joy that I
shall never forget. When there was a move started in Dalton to
do anything for the town’s advancement, Louis Buchholz’s name
always headed the list; he was full of public spirit and civic pride.
Mr. Buchholz was filled with the spirit of hustle, and his business
was his art. He was the first man up on Hamilton street in the morn
ing and the last man to close his place at night. His name is a
household word throughout Whitfield and the adjoinning counties.
Everybody knew and liked “Buck.” In the passing of this charac
ter there has gone out of the world a kindhearted and a good man.
An Ad
in The Citizen is
worth two ox die feice