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PAGE TWO
TOE DALTON CITIZEN. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1920.
Many a Pretty Face
Spoiled by Pimples
TURNING APPLES TO GOLD.
Unsightly Disfigurations Tell of
Impure Blood.
Don’t close your eyes to tfie
warning which nature gives, when
unsightly pimples appear on your
face and other parts of the body.
If you are afflicted with any
form of skin disease do not expect
to be cured by lotions, .ointments,
salves and other local remedies, as
they can not possibly reach the
source of the trouble, which is in
the blood. Begin taking S. S. S.
today, and write a complete his
tory of your case to our chief
medical adviser who will give you
special instructions, t without
charge. Write at once to Swift
Specific Co., Swift Laboratory, At
lanta, Ga,
By Robert S. Walker.
ake a look
at OUR
GUNS and
RIFLES.
Wo Self
Ammunition.
WHEN WE SELL YOU A GUN OR RIFLE. OR ANY
THING. YOU WON’T HAVE ANY KICK COMING.
OUR AMMUNITION IS LOADED RELIABLY. AND IF
YOUR AIM IS TRUE IT WILL BAG THE GAME.
IF YOUR FIRE-ARMS DON’T EXACTLY PLEASE
YOU. SELL THEM OR GIVE THEM TO YOUR BOY AND
COME IN AND GET NEW ONES.
AND WHEN YOU WANT ANY HARDWARE REMEM
BER THAT—
OUR HARDWARE IS THE BEST; IT STANDS THE
TEST.
HARLAN HARDWARE CO.
OLD GRAHAM STAND
HAMILTON STREET DALTON, GA.
Of olden times he was a wizard who
could turn fruits into gold. But the
secret within recent years having been
generally disclosed, here and there
throughout the country we find shrewd
men who find it an easy task to per
form this apparently wonderful feat.
That an old white gravelly hill farm
near Alton Park, Tennessee, which
long ago died from being corned to
death could be successfully used for
a mflting pot for making gold out of
apples and ever-bearing raspberries
was denied by every old citizen of that
community except one man. The
story reads like fiction with here and
there a mystic thread penetrating it,
yet the facts are true. Stranger still
than fiction is the fact that the per
son who attempted and succeeded was
an inexperienced book farmer, yet he
was willing to wager his judgment
against that of the entire community
including men who had devoted their
lives to farming and to weak attempts
at growing fruit.
A little more than 12 years ago Mr
LEMON JUICE
FOR FRECKLES
Girls! Make beauty lotion for
a few cents—Try It!
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into
a bottle containing three ounces of
orchard white, shake well, and you
have a quarter pint of the best freckle
and tan lotion, and complexion beauti-
fier, at very, very small eoet.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet counter will supply
three ounces of orchard white for It
few cents. Massage this sweetly frag
rant lotion into the face, neck, arms
and hands each day and see how
freckles and blemishes disappear and
how clear, soft and rosy-white the skin
becomes. Yes! It is harmless and.
never irritates.—Adv.
HAS NO
PAIN NOW
What Lydia 1 E. Pinkharr.’;
Vegetable Compound Did
for Mrs. Warner.
Onalaska, VTis.— <r Evory month I hr'
such pains ir. ray back and low.cr part <
t-rryni stomach I could r-
881.*
In; in
bed. I si..
f.’red s
o it seen!'
03 t -O’
:g.i I \rou'
an
J I was n
r g a !
a r either. -
'rudortd
for r. yec ■
ami v
3 unlit to c’
n. y li
lise'.vor k
c o u 1 d
only wa.‘-
d i s h a
s onee in .
while.
I ' read a ’.
advert
;isement o.
what Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound had done
for other women and decided to try it.
It surely did wonders for me. I have
no pains now and I can do my house
work without any trouble at all. I
will always praise your medicine as I
do not believe there is a doctor that can
do as much good in female weakness,
and you may use these facts as a testi
monial.”—Mrs. Lesteb E. Wabneb,
1018 Pine St., La Crosse, Wis.
The reason women write such letters
to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co.
and tell their friends how they are
helped is that Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound has brought health
and happiness into their lives. Freed
from their illness they want to pass the
good news along to other suffering
women that they also may be relieved.
Certain-teed Paints Are
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The early fall is considered by many
to be the best time of year for out
door painting. Therefore if the
house needs repainting, you should
delay no longer in getting it done.
For the work you will find Certain-
teed Paints to be highest quality.
They contain only the best pigments
and oils, ground and mixed by
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of experts. They excel in hiding
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Their range of standard colors
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effects you want.
Yet Certain-teed Paints often cost
even less than other equally high
grade paints.
There are Certain-teed Paints and
Varnishes for every purpose and all
are the same high quality.
See your dealer about Certain-teed
Paints and Varnishes. If he hasn’t
enough of what you want in stock,
he can get more for you quickly
from a nearby Certain-teed dis
tributing center
I
Certain-teed Products Corporation
General Office*, St Louis
Office* and Warehouses in Principal CStia*
PAINT-VARNISH-ROOFING &. RELATED - BUILDING -
■ *-t v
For Sale.By:
The Farrar Lumber Co.
The Dalton Buggy Co.
• Wallace Plumbing Co.
H. T. Ellison, who successfully pulled
the stunt referred to above was the
master mechanic for a railroad com
pany in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Thir
teen years previous Ellison had in
vested a few dollars in an old hilly
farm ten miles south of Chattanooga
near Alton Park. For thirteen years
he owned the farm and as he pursued
his trade he let the old farm sleep on
and the weeds came and grew and the
neighbors passed by and said that it
was good that it was so. Generations
of grasshoppers came and went on the
farm and the crickets filled the atmos
phere after sundown with glorious mus
ic because chirping is always good on
an old abandoned farm. The cutworms
waxed strong and moles and mice
grew to manhood without being dis
turbed.
But the natives who approved of the
idleness of this farm did not know
this man, the real Ellison, who bore
the reputation of being one of the best
railroad mechanics in Chattanooga,
When he quit his job some twelve years
ago and rolled up his sleeves, accept
ing the challenge of the old farm, his
neighbors thought be was mad indeed,
Ellison had red blood pulsating through
out his veins, and it is natural for a
daring man who is going to risk his
cold eash in a poor piece of soil to
have an ambition to raise a fruit that
reflects this red blood in its own com
plexion. At that time, Mr. Ellison
was 54 years old—about the age that
the present generation figures on re
tiring. (And by the way if we do
not soon quit the automobile and get
out and exercise, few of the present
generation will ever live to reach the
age of Ellison when he made the ven
ture.) Mr. Ellison is now 66 years old,
and the only practical experience he
has in fruit growing is that which has
been learned during the last twelve
years. Before starting the venture,
Mr. Ellison, supplemented his good
judgment and common sense with a
careful and painstaking study of apple
varieties, cultivation and general care
of the orchard in order that his might
have a successful career. So when the
tops of the worn out gravelly hills were
receiving their broadcast of stable ma
nure preparatory to being turned un
der, the old citizens stood by, shook
their heads ominously and said that
Ellison was a foolish man and predict
ed complete failure before he had
scarcely begun. But they did not
know the man behind the proposition.
Ellison was looking ahead—not one,
two or three years, but for a quarter
of a century and more.
The ground properly prepared, Mr.
Ellison found room for 2000 apple trees,
of which 800 were yellow transparent,
and some the Liveland raspberry va
riety. These constituted his planting
of early varieties. His trees of winter
varieties embraced a number which
were set for testing, but the most were
of the old reliable winesaps. The
young orchard planted, the trees were
CARDUI HELPED
REGAIN STRENGTH
Alabama Lady Was Sick For Three
Years, Suffering Pain, Nervous
and Depressed—Read Her
Own Story of Recovery,
Faint Rock, Ala.—Mrs. C. M. Stegall,
Of near here, recently related the fol
lowing interesting account of her re
covery: “I was In a weakened con
dition. I was sick three years in bed,
suffering a great deal of pain, weak,
nervous, depressed. I was so weak,
I couldn’t walk across the floor; just
had to lay and my little ones do the
work. I was almost dead. I tried
every thing I heard of, and a number of
doctors. Still I didn’t get any relief.
I couldn’t eat, and slept poorly. I
believe if I hadn’t heard of and taken
Cardui I would have died. I bought
six bottles, after a neighbor told me
what it did for her.
“I began to eat and sleep, began to
gain my strength and am now well
and strong. I haven’t had any trou
ble since ... I sure can testify to the
good that Cardui did me. I don’t
think there is a better tonic made
and I believe It saved my life.”
For over 40 years, thousands of wo
men have used Cardui successfully,
in the treatment of many womanly
ailments.
If you suffer as these women did,
take CarduL It may help you, too.
At all druggists. E 85
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain
ed and improved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
kept cultivated the same as one would
a field of corn, and pruning was judic
iously given. In pruning, Mr. Ellison
always strives hard for an open bead
ed tree. This practice he has always
found profitable. Spraying was kept
up to kill the scale and fungus insects
and every now and then a crop of rye,
vetch, or cow r peas was sowed in the
orchard and turned under. These green
crops added wonderfully to the once
impoverished soil and soon its complex
ion began to change. But the natives
did hot cease warning Mr. Ellison of
h : s wild and gambling adventure, yea,
verily he was urged to cut down his
trees and grow some staple farm crop
that he might expect a half-way sue
cess of the old farm. Mr. Ellison
laughed heartily at the old wiseacres’
advice and labored on. Years passed.
The crickets chirped on and the trees
waxed strong in the sunlight overhead
and the soil beneath, until recent year s
the last few crops have almost turned
the neighbors green with envy. Evi
dently some of the neighbors got a
glimpse into Ellison’s bank book. To
visit his orchard in blooming time
makes one think of a real tree rose-
garden. The honey beqs at this sea
son of the year are Mr. Ellison’s most
faithful partners and have contribut
ed their share towards making his
orcharding a success. Of the varieties
of apples grown Mr. Ellison has found
the yellow transparent and the Live-
land raspberry the most profitable.
The Benoni apple he finds bears heavily,
but the fruit is too small to prove prof
itable. For the season of 1919 Mr.
Ellison sold his entire crop at $3 per
bushel delivered in Chattanooga. For
the year 1920 his crop was sold at the
same price on the local market in Chat
tanooga, and the crop of early apples
brought a gross income of $1,518.40.
Mr. Elliso,n lost about $500 worth of
early apples on account of lack of
sufficient -help at picking time. The
winter varieties of apples he has found
profitable, but prefers the summer va-
rities for the reason he can move them
almost as quickly as a crop of peaches;
he meets with few competitors on the
markets and avoids the expense of bar
reling and cold storage charges.
The Ellison orchard is kept in good
condition and while the apple-twig
blight attacks the yellow transparent
variety more readily than others, Mr.
Ellison gets ahead of this bacterial
disease by cleaning out winter breed
ing quarters. This is done by remov
ing all the old dead bark from dead
spots on the trunks and branches in
winter and spraying with a strong solu
tion of lime sulphur or by painting.
Mr. Ellison likes the quality of the
Liveland raspberry apple better than
he does the yellow transparent, bat
the latter named variety has an ad
vantage over the other from the fact
that it is not subject to scab or black
rot. The yellow transparent apples in
the Ellison orchard begin to ripen
about June 10th.
But on this farm is grown another
fruit which sometimes pays better than
apples. This crop is that of
Constant
i Reading
Writing
or Sewing
TIRES THE EYES
Thousands of people thus abuse
their eyes—unintentionally.
Nature resents such abuse.
Our glasses assist nature by rest
ing feverish and weakened eyes.
DR. L. B. HUBBS
With Fincher & Nichols
cjhose Who haOe used
POSTUM
instead of coffee during
the past year are sure to be
ahead in purse and are Quite
apt to he aheadin health;
Fair price, uniformly^
Postum in first place Vith „
many a family,
There's a Rgason
Maude ky
Postum Cereal Company Inc,
Battle Greek. ,^Mich. /
"What
Killed
m
Every man, woman and child in the
world has “Liver Trouble” some times.
Many of them Die from it and never
realize it. No use in this. And folks
are learning better. Thousands have
found out that Dr. Thacher’s Liver
and Blood Syrup will relieve “Liver
Troubles’ ’. Will keep the Bowels open
and the Blood rich and red. You ought
to try this old doctor’s prescription—
before ‘‘Liver Trouble’ ’ gets in its dead
ly work on you—like it did on “Bill.”
Get it from your drug store.
Some Sort of
Liver TrouUer
waR
^ BIG VALUES^ROLLROOFINGS
All are furnished in several weights and can be used for
siding as well as roofing, and all are low in price for va
received. Talk over with us which one you need.
JAMES SUPPLY CO., Distributors, Chattanooga, Tenn.
CHEROKEE MF6. CO., Agents, Dalton, Ga.
LEWIS BURKE ft CO.
.. . CHATTANOOGA,TENNESSEE ^
INVESTMENT BANKERS
Government - bonds that net you
6% free of local taxes are a better
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