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THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1921.
COMING TO
DALTON
ON A RETURN VISIT
The Progressive Medical
Doctors’^Specialist.
LOOK WHAT a DOLLAR BILL WILL BUY NEXT SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, AT OUR PLACE—
FOR MEN:— Children’s dresses
4 pairs men’s heavy grey 220-needle cotton sox $1.00 Hanes unionsuits
3 Earl & Wilson soft collars 1.00 Boys' pants
4 Earl & Wilson Linen Collars 1.00 Boys’ sweaters
Leather work gloves, the $1.50 kind .......... 1.00 6 pairs ladies white hose
10 pairs men’s lisle sox .1.00 4 BWJ. B " s ‘* r Brow " hose * V
Men’s heavy cotton sweaters, worth $2.00 1.00 Ladies $2.00 Buster Brown silk hose
Men's $1.50 caps 1.00 Ladies’ $2.00 Buster Brown silk hose, in h
Men’s overalls 1.00 ' or brown, per pair
(Jumpers to match). ”’
DRY GOODS:—
FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN: ]0 y ar j s 36-inch sheeting
Ladies’ house dresses $1.00 10 yards gingham
Ladies’ coverall aprons 1.00 2 j/2 yards best oilcloth
FOR DOLLAR DAY WE QUOTE BELOW ONLY A
FEW EXTRA SPECIALS WHICH YOU CAty’T AF
FORD TO MISS:
Diseases Without Surgical
Operation
Free Consultation and Examination
to All Who Need and Want
Medical Aid
3 yards of blue Denim, worth 50c per yard, special Saturday ....
7 yards Amoskeag Apron Gingham, special Saturday
4 pairs men’s 35c Hose, special Saturday
OTHER GOODS IN LIKE PROPORTION FOR NEXT
SATURDAY ONLY. COME RIGHT IN. *
Will be at the Bivings House Thurs
day, Jan. 27th, from. 10 a. ah. to 4 p. m.,
one day only, returning in three months.
The Progressive Medical Doctors’
Specialist is licensed by the state of
Georgia; a graduate of one of the best
universities; twenty-five years of prac
tical experience; comes well recommend
ed. Will demonstrate in the prieipal
cities methods of treating diseases of
long standing by means of medicines,
diet and hygiene, thus saving many
people from a dangerous and expensive
surgical operation.
Some of the Cases Cured.
Miss Jessie Boyd, Griffin, Ga., Gall
stones.
G. F. Crumbley, Box 48, R. 7, Car
rollton, Ga., Nervous Trouble and Con
stipation.
Arthur Thomas, 217 South Orage St.,
Dawson, Ga., Catarrah of Stomach and
Constipation.
Ruth Banks, R. 6, NewnaD, Ga.,
Goitre.
Homer Treadwell, R. 1, Crawfords-
ville, Ga., Diabetes.
Daniel Harrell, Box 52, R. 1, Genoa,
Fla., Heart Trouble.
J. N. W. Robinson, 2947 4th Avenue,
Columbus, Ga.
NORTH DALTON SCHOOL
Mrs. Laura Staples, Principal.
first A Grade, Miss Vera Deck; Eva
Houston, Estelle Thomas, Effie McGaha,
James Burch* Floyd Collins, Jack Han
nah, Homer Lee Hughes, Herschel
Ketchem, Edgar Long, Dennis McNally,
Millard Patterson, James Robertson,
John Sane.
Second Grade, Mrs. Calaway; Helen
Armstrong, Pauline Bailey, Mary Bram-
lett, Ethel Croy, Gladys Hegwood, Pau
line Turner, Gertrude Walls, Mabel Wil
son, Johnny Kinsey, J- W. Kinsey, Jack
Mauldin, Tommy Malone, Eugene Mark-
wood, Reuben Rob’nson, Earl Stocks,
Henry Thorn, Finley Thomason.
Third. Graded Mirs. Sta^esl; Clem-
mie McCraw, Pauline Orr, Johnnie
Nashville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway
COOPERATIVE MARKETING SERVICE
The Marketing Division of the Traffic Department of the Nash
ville, Chattanooga & St. Louis Railway will furnish to persons
desiring to purchase the names and addresses of the owners of
the following:
, FOR SALE—We have a few slightly
used wagons, cultivators and plows, and
one buggy, with prices right. J. A
Looper& Son. l-20-4t.
GETTING A
GOOD START
EVERY DAY
Classified Ads
One Cent A Word’
FOR SALE—Rhode Island Red cock
erels, dark, rich, red colored ehoiee
birds; also, Rhode Island Red eggs,
$1.50 for setting of 15. Apply Mrs.
H. H.^Ezzard, Rt., 1, Dalton.
FOR SALE
Baskets, Cases, Crates, Hampers, Boxes; FEED: Poultry, Mix
ed, Cottonseed Meal and Hulls, Ground Barley, Beet Pulp,
Bran, Corn, all kinds of Hay, all kinds of Meal, Rice Bran and
Polish, Salt, Shorts, Straw, Tankage; Inoculation Culture for
Legumes; Lime and Limestone for agricultural purposes; Ma
nure; Sorghum Molasses; Nursery Stock, all kinds; Potatoes-
sweet and Irish; SEED; Barley, Beans—all kinds, Cane, Clo
ver, Alfalfa, Alsike, Burr, Crimson, Lespedeza, Mammoth, Red,
Saplin, Sweet, White, Corn—all kinds, Cotton, Grass—all kinds’
Millet, Qats, Peanuts, Peas—all kinds, Rape, Rye, Timothy’
Turnip, Vetch, Wheat.
FOR 8AT.E—One good 11-yeax-old
mule, one new 2y 2 wagon, one tent
14 x 16 practically new, and lots of
other things. Will sell cheap for cash
or good note. See me at the Dalton
Bakery, J. H. Ellis. l-6-4t.
Red-Blooded Men and Women Are Up
a,nrt Doing Bright and Early
Pauline Orr,
Bess Stacy, Leland Chatham, Herbert
Callins, Marshall Hannah, Clarence
Keeble, Henry Stone, Glenn Thomas,
R. E. Mann, Charlie Stocks.
Fourth Grade, Miss Ivan Wood; Lucy
Mae Field, Eva Huckaba, Louise Huff-
aker, Mary Lou Stone, Carrie Thorn,
Floyd Berry, Luen Pope.
Paralysis with High
Blood Pressure.
Mrs. R. L. Flemister, Armuchee, Ga.,
Large Varicose Ulcer of Leg.
Mrs. W. F. Parham, Greensboro,-Ga.,
Brights Disease.
A diagnosis of any disease of long
standing, its nature and cause, will be
made FREE and proper medicines will
be furnished at a reasonable cost to
those selected as favorable cases for
treatment.
Children must be accompanied by
their parents and married ladies by
their husbands.
Headquarters: Atlanta, Ga.—Adv.
HIGH SCHOOL.
Mr. J. T. Duncan, Principal.
Eleventh Grade, Miss Huff; Louie
Buchanan, Bob McCamy, Dorothy Bar
rett, Lucile Echols, Manita Heartsill,
Pauline Hunter, Martha Lin Manly,
Martha McWilliams, Ethel Sapp, Eu
genia Sapp, Winnie Sapp, Cecil Wood
Tenth Grade, Miss Hamilton; Betty
Hamilton, Ruby Bare, Ruth Hair, Fran
ces Jack, Evelyn Sapp, lone Springer,
Lola Berry, Jessie Ault, Jack Bridges,
Jesse Brewer, Tom Horan, Wesley John
son, Quillian Wilson.
Ninth A Grade, Miss McGhee;
Take Pepto-Mangan, the Famous Blood
Tonic Prescribed by Physi
cians for 30 Years
First B Grade, Miss Ivan Wood;
Charley Carroll, John Huckaba, Dean
Hughes, J. C. Wood.
up in the morning. And when you do
get up, you miss that feeling of re
freshing rest. You feel more tired
than when you went to bed. After a
good night’s sleep you should get up
with a spring, feeling alive, renewed,
refreshed.
And you would, too, if your blood
were' full of red corpuscles. Your-com
plexion would look fresh, your eyes
bright and clear; you would feel the
warm tingle of good health.
Look to your blood if you have that
lazy, heavy feeling in the morning.
Begin taking Pepto-Mangan—the ideal
tonic. It has blood-building properties
that pick you up and give you strength.
Pepto-Mangan is widely and heartily
endorsed by physicians. It is effective
and easy to take. It is prepared in
both liquid and tablet form. Both have
the same medicinal properties.
Sold at any drug store. But be sure
you get the genuine Pepto-Mangan—
‘ ‘ Gude’s. ’ ’ Ask for it by the full name
and be sure the full name, “Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan,” is on the package.
Adv.—
J. H. WATSON, Supt.
To producers will be furnished on application the namps and
addresses of persons by whom the following commodities are
WANTED
FEED: Damaged Grain, Molasses, Bran, Com, Hay—all kinds,
Meal—Barley and Cottonseed, Oats? Shorts, Straw, Tankage;
Manure; Limestone; Sorghum Molasses; Potatoes—sweet and
Irish; SEED: Beans—all kinds, Cane, Clover—Alsike, Crim
son, Lespedeza, Mammoth, Red, Sweet, White, Com—all kinds,
Grass—all kinds, millet, Oats, Peanuts, Peas—all kinds. Vetch,
Wheat.
FOR RENT—One 2-horse crop, two
1-horse crops, gpod smooth land, good
houses and barns, plenty good water;
one-half mile below Brown’s Bridge,
on river, southeast- Dalton. T. S. Mc-
Cune, Dalton, Ga., Rt. 2. l-13-4t.
Ellis
Daniel, John Henry Steed, Ethleen Par
sons, Minnie Fields; Travis Hopper,
Ruth Strain, Walter Folsom.
Ninth B. Grade, Miss Manly; An
nie Sislj, Kathleen WiiBon, Mary Jo
Wood.
Eighth A Grade, Mjiss MeGamy;
Morrell Keister, Annie Gilbert, Evelyn
Deakins, Hattie Mae Hensley, Weems
Johnson, Mary Routh Buchanan, Lucy
Bryant, Thayer Hopper, Ruth Freeman,
Irene Calloway.
Eighth B Grade, Mr. C. W. Isbill; Ed
ward Robinson, Martha Mae Hunter,
Olivia McCarty, Juanita Perkins, John
nie Roberts, Julia Sapp, Helen Stone,
Emma Agnes White, Florine Wood.
in New York City alone from kid
ney trouble last year. Don’t allow
yourself, to become a victim by
against this trouble by taking
NOTICE—If in need of an experienc
ed, first-class earpenter or paper hanger
M C. Cox; 44 E. Morris street, will be
glad to do your work. Prices reasona
ble and good service guaranteed.
l-20-2t. pd.
After Long Suffering Mrs. Siefert
Was Restored to Health by
Lydia E. Pmkham’s Vegetable
Compound
GOLD MEDAL
Breeders of live stock and producers of field, garden and or
chard products for sale except such as reach the market
through established and logical channels, are invited to com
municate to the undersigned complete description, quantities
and other necessary information of such commodities.
Instructive literature on Alfalfa, Silos, Lime in Agriculture,
Peanut and Soya Bean Oil manufacture will be mailed to any
address upon request.
LOST — Black, 8-week-old female
Poland China pig. Reward foj return
to M. Westbrook. Rt. 3, Dalton, Ga.
Phone 919-20. lt.pd.
msmmm
The world’s standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder end uric acid troubles.
Holland’s national remedy since 1596.
All druggists, tars? si etc. Guaranteed.
Look for tie name CeH tilr ! ’ cr er*’r
asui ar/ 2T -
Pottsville, Pa.—“I suffered with
female trouble for four or five years and
was very irregular.
I was not fit to do
my work at times
and took medicine
from a doctor and
got no benefit. I
saw Lydia E. Pink-
WANTED TO RENT—Small house
by February 1st, close in. Dr. W. R.
Barnett. tf.
FORT TTTT.T. SCHOOL
Miss Grace Flemister, Principal.
Seventh A Grade, Miss Flemister;
Dimple Bryant, Felicia Houston, Wil
lie Mae Warren, Clara Pitman, Gordon
Kettles, Pauline Hinkle, Annie Mae
Smith, Irene Hensley, Edwin Keister,
Mary Lou Henderson.
Seventh B Grade, Miss Miller; Oley
Glenn Leslie, Leila Bowen, Ora Bur-
gelss, Mary Frances Carroll, Pauline
Faulkejnberry, Lillian Maples, Edna
Percy, Will D. Shope, Edith White, Ethel
Doris Wilson, Margaret Yarbrough.
Sixth A Grade, Miss. Sybil Deck; A.
J. Hewitt, High Johns, Louis Olson,
Anna Mary Hinkle, Inez McArthur,
Mattie Sue Nations, Mary Helen Sprin
ger, Emma Louise Wilson.
Sixth B Grade, Miss Davis; Harlan
Foster, R. E. Hamilton, Bob Neal, Lizzie
Brooker, Ruth Brumlow, Dora Freeman,
Eula Mae Higgins, Adele Hollings
worth, Lucy Roberts, Beatrice Stocks,
Eleanor Stone.
Fifth A Grade, Miss Moore; Leon
Ritchey, Lois Chaffiin, Mary Emma
Hardy, Itol Johnson, Jessie Keeble,
Ri|by Kettles, Lois McWilliams, Emma
Percy, Bernice Perkins, Bonnie Ware.
Fifth B Grade, Miss Lucy Wood; Ed
ward Davis, Dennis Houston, Quintes
Lee, William Sapp, Gladys Anderson,
Prudie Brumlow, Ruth Cox, Sarah Ham
ilton, Dorothy Johnson, Marie Keister,
Betty Lin PrhtenJ Grace (Robejrtson;
Katherine Trippe, Odessa Ware.
Fourth A Grade, Mrs. Herron; Joe
Bryant, J. T. Bullard, Jarrell Jerni-
gan, Prentiss Kang, Jamies LongleyV
Wells Moore, Julian Sapp, Hoke Rol
lins, Louise Walston, Chester Wilson,
Willie Mae Smith, Mary Helen Wender,
Jennie Bennett, Dimple Bishop, Angie
Hardin, MiTJa. Harlan, Lillie Hyman,
Louis.e McCamy, Martha McKnight, Sue
Pruden, Lucile Reynolds, Helen Shope,
Alary Louise Shope, Alma Stanley, Vir
ginia Peeples.
Fourth B Grade, Miss Hassler; C. L.
King, Harlan Petty, Jessie Brumlow,
Alabel Dobson, Leone AfrCutchen, Ruth
McEntire, Lucile Warren.
Third A Grade, Airs. Fields; Steve
Anderson, William Bowen, Claud Duck
ett, Henry Hill, Y. F. Kettles, John
Neal, Shumate Richardson, Chas. Smith,
Fred Springfield, Martha Bowen, Leone
Cargal, AOldred Carter, Dorothy John
son, Eva Nell Joyce, Sara Manning,
Sammie Lou Smith, Aileen Smith, Eula
Mae Ware, Dessie Wannack, Louise
- ADDRESS:
L. P. Bellah, General Agent,
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE.
Si I ham’s Vegetable
ligiyiLw jS|i| Compound adver-
$ WL* ,'Jff tised in the news-
Jjl papers and took it
JHH and got all right. I
aBBs gained twenty
. mBpawMB pounds or more and
am now able to do my work. I recom
mend the Vegetable Compound to my
friends and you may use these facts as a
testimonial.”—Mrs. Sallie Siefert,
ANNOUNCEMENT
Alexander Gardner.
Alexander Gardner, aged 77 years,
died at 2.3(^o’clock Tuesday morning
at Yarnells. He yas a well known
farmer, havng recently moved there
from Tennessee. The funeral service
was conducted Wednesday from Smith’s
Chapel, interment being in the nearby
cemetery. •
-Mrs. Sallie Siefert,
313 W. Fourth Street, Pottsville, Pa.
The everyday life of many housewives
is a continual struggle with weakness
and pain. There is nothing more wear
ing than the ceaseless round of house
hold duties and they become doubly hard
when some female trouble makes every
bone and muscle ache, and nerves all on
edge. 4
If you are one of these women do not
suffer for four or five years as Mrs.
Siefert did, but profit by her experience
and be restored to health by Lydia E.
Pmkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Dissolution of Business
Jan. 1, 1921
TILTON WOMAN BURNED
TO DEATH LAST FRIDAY
Fur. &
DALTON, GA.
laude Sims’ Clothing Caught
Fire From Open Grate
ALL TOGETHER
Mrs. Maud ft Silks, aged 35 years,
died last Friday night at the home of
her brother, Mr. J. C. Howell, in Til
ton, as the result of burns received
Friday afternoon when her clothing be
came ignited from a fire in an open
grate.
Airs. Sims was fearfully burned, liv
ing only a few hours after, the accident.
Her screams attracted her sister, Mrr.
Howell, who, in trying to, extinguish
the flames, was severely burned about
the hands.
Mrs. Sims formerly lived here where
she had many friends who learned of
her tragic death with sorrow.
The funeral services were conducted
Saturday, interment being made in the
cemetery at Tilton.
Oaks, Nell Harris.
Third B Grade, Aliss Herrin; Opal
Macelreath, Alary Ruth Collum, Perry
Ellis, Flossie Bryant, Paul’Curtis, David
Shuggart, Hubert Ridley, George Red-
wine, Berrien McCamy, Lenora Loch-
ridge, Edwin Lovett.
Second A Grade, Aliss Edwards; Si-
Wender, Lilburn AlitcheU, Farrell
ThaPs what we used to yell when, as boys, after tak
ing a glide down the hill, we wanted to get back up
in order to ride down again. It was necessary to
PULL TOGETHER—it made the load lighter for
each, turning what would have been work for one
into play for many—for there was the ever alluring
prospect of another ride at the end of the pull.
Now, in order to get back up over the shoals oyer
which we have been gliding for the past two or three
years, we must ALL PULL TOGETHER,
• Get that? Well, get your sleeves up, boys, and
let’s go! The farther down we have drifted, the
harder will be the pull hack; but by digging in, we
can make it.
By mutual consent, we have this day dissolved
partnership:—J. A., A. S. and J. W. Carter, under
firm name, CARTER & SONS FUR. CO., succeeding
to the furniture department, 34 Hamilton St., Phone
282, and J. L. Buchanan succeeding to the under
taking department, ll King St, day phone, 33, night
phones, 202 and 401-J.
The public has been kind in its patronage of
Carter-Buchanan Furniture & Undertaking Co.,
which has made it a great success, and we most cor
dially extend our thanks, and earnestly solicit a con
tinuance on the same liberal terms as heretofore.
Very respecfully,
CARTER & SONS FURNITURE CO. '
J. L. BUCHANAN, UNDERTAKING.
P. S.—We will be in charge of the hook accounts
and motes, of Carter-Buchanan Furniture & Under
taking Co. for settlements, atjild stand—34 Hamil
ton St. (assisted by Mr. Buchanan).
CARTER & SONS FURNITURE CO.
mon
Palmer, James Smith, David Swaney,
Leonora Gay, Winston Keister, Ethel
Warmack, Elizabeth
Keister, Sallie
Yarbrough, Alartha Stroup.
Second B Grade, Miss Kirby; Judson
Deakins, George Ezzard, Trimble Ez-
zard, Charlie Rivers, Welch Ray, Ar
thur Robertson, A. C. Shnltes, Elbert
Walston, Arthur Shell, Jim Wrinkle,
Joe Wrinkle, Carolyn Black, Anne Mc
Camy, Bertha Cox, Reita Cox, Ger
trude Smith, Lucile Springfield, Vera
Turner.
F5Mst A Gfrade; Alps). Hill; Aa^on
Bartenfield, Walter Davis, Ralph Haw-
ell, Frances Joyce, Harold Love, Earl
Lochridge, Frank Sapp, William West
brook, Hubert Wills, James Carter, Ruth
Folsom, Willena Hill, Helen Kettles,
Mary Jo Pierce, Opal Robertson, Au-
Finley, Arthur Brown, Martin Hender-
nie Sue Rollins, Elizabeth Wood.
First B Grade, Hiss Rhodes; Glenn
son, George Teems, Vance White, Melba
Brown, Edith Bryant. Elinor Hamilton,
Rossie Hardy, Lucile Hyde, Johnnie Lee
Keen, Alma Parker, Sara Bob Pitman,
Gladys Weaver.
Remember—we are at your service with every
thing on wheels. .
DALTON BUGGY CO.
MAKE OUR STORE YOUR HEADQUARTERS
WE SELL YOU WHAT WE TELL YOU
PHONE 71 DALTON, GA
to. serve you with good
printing. No matter what
the nature of the job may
be we are ready to do it
at a price that will be
Satisfactory
FOR RENT—Furnished
rooms, 15
Crawford street. See Miss Lizzie Dix-
on.
l-13-2t pd.
WANTED TO RENT—Small house
by February 1st, close in.
Dr. W. R.
Barnett.
tf.
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