North Georgia citizen. (Dalton, Ga.) 1868-1924, February 03, 1921, Image 2

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’ : PACKS TWO ■rent DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1921. 1 X - ' Let it be your watch-word for the coming year. Resolve to save a part of all you earn—every day, week and year. Start your Thrift Campaign now. FIRST NATIONAL BANK ‘Bank with us and you can bank on us” A—CITIZEN ocMb ♦ ♦ ♦ DOGWOOD VALLEY. ♦ ♦ 4 44444444444444444 Our Sunday school and B. Y. P. U. are progressing nicely. Sunday was gloomy day, but we had a very good crowd. Come on, young folks, and let’s press forward with Christ’s work and make it a success. We are glad to say Mrs. Lois West brook is recovering rapidly. Mr, John Callaway is at home from Powder Springs spending awhile with homefelks. Miss Vera Lunsford spent the week end at Boynton with homefolks. ’ Mr. Gordon Kirk, of Chattanooga, is spending awhile with his • brother, Mr. C. C. Kirk, of this place. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Jay spent one night last week with Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Roberson, of Mt. Vernon. Mrs. Alfred Reed, of McCutchen, spent a few days last (week with her daughter, Mrs. Lois Westbrook. Mrs. Annie Hinton, of Tilton, spent part of last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Nesbitt. Miss Gussie Callaway leaves today for Florida where she will spend sev eral months with her brother, Mr. Way- land Callaway. It will soon be time to begin plant ing, and the farmers are patiently wait ing for the time to come for them to pull the lines over old Jerry’s back. The crops were bad last year, but we hope that 1921 will prove to be the best year that North Georgia has had for a long time. Success to The Citizen and its many readers. Are You in a Rundown Condition ? Does Your Headache ? Elgin, Tenn.—“I can say that Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and his ‘Pleas ant Pellets’ have been the means of restoring my health. I was weak and run down, had sick headaches, and my kidneys were all out of order. It was a misery ^ for me to walk '/)lj I'.tV' around. I began taking Dr. . Pierce’s medicine and they put me on the road to good health right away. I want to speak a good word ! for Dr. Pierce’s remedies to all suf ferers.” — HARRISON SHEPARD, R. F. D. 1, Box 18. Sold by druggists for fifty years. 444444444444444 ♦ , " ♦ ♦ REO. ♦ ♦ ♦ 4444444444444 4 ♦ Sunday school was well attended at Friendship Sunday. Mr.. J. S. Richardson is very sick. Adill Keown and Bart Hegwood, of LaFayette, spedt Saturday in Reo. Jesse Walker and John Reed, of Mt. Vernon, were the guests of Will Fisher Sunday. Will Morrison, who is in the United States Navy, is the guest of his parents. Dr. Ward, of Villanow, was in Reo Saturday. Carlos Capehart and family, of Mc Cutchen. spent Sunday with Jehugh Carpenter and family. Joe Roberson and wife spent Thurs HOW WOMEN AVOID ' SURGICAL OPERATIONS Some Are Extremely Necessary, Others May Not Be Every Woman Should Give Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a Trial First Chicago. Ill. — “ I was in bedwith a female trouble and inflammation and had four doctors but none of them did me anygood. Theyallsaid I would have to have an oper ation. A druggist’s wife told me to take Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound and I took 22 bottles, never missing a dose and at the end of that time I was perfectly well. I have never had occa sion to take it again as I have been so well. I have a six room flat and do all my work. My two sisters are taking the Compound upon my recommendation and you may publish my letter. It is the gospel truth and I will write to any one who wants apersonal letter.”—Mrs.E. H. Haydock, 6824 St. Law rence Ave., Chicago, Ill. A Vermont woman adds her testimony to the long line of those fortunate women who have been restored to health by L<ydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, after it had been decided an operation was necessary: Burlington, Vt.—“ I suffered with female trouble, and had a number of doctors who said that I would never be any better until I had an operation. I was so bad I could hardly walk across the floor and could not do a thing. My sister-in-law induced me to try Lydia E- Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it certainly has helped me wonderfully. I keep house and do my work and have a small child. I have recommended Vegetable Compound to a num- ber of my friends and you may publish my testimonial. Mrs. H. R. Sharon. Apple Tree Point Farm, Burlington, Vt. In hospitals are many women whoare there for surgical operations,and there is nothing a woman dreads more than the thought of an operation, and the long weary months of recovery and restoration to strength if it is successful. It is very true that female troubles may through neglect reach a stage where an operation is the only resource, but most of the commoner ailments of women are not the surgical ones ; they are not caused by serious displace ments, tumors or growths, although the symptoms may appear the same. When disturbing ailments first appear take Lydia E. Pinkham s vegetable Compound to relieve the present distress and prevent more serious troubles. In fact, many letters have been received from women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound after operations have been advised by attending physicians. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Private Text-Book upon “Ailments Pecu liar to Women” will be sent to you free upon request. Write td The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts. This book contains valuable information. day at Villanow, the guests of A. P. White. William Hammontree had as week end visitors Mr. and Mrs. Karl Lloyd, Misses Nell Hudson and Mary Ham montree; Mr. Bob Moseley, James Mc Gowan, Frank Jones, of Chattanooga, and Carl Little and Ben Hunt, of La- Fayette. Mr. Marvin Mathis made a busiuess trip to Calhoun Tuesday. Grady Bowen was in Dalton Mon day. Joe Wyatt, of Lyerly, was in Reo Saturday. Mrs. William Hammontree has been very' sick. MR. MILLER FEELING BETTER Prominent Huntington Man Says He Peels lake a New Person Mr. Miller, a well known citizen of Huntington, Ind., had suffered for many years with nervous and general debility, when he began taking Dr. Richard’s Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Blood Remedy, and now is feeling fine. He writes: •‘I was in a very nervous condition, well in fact, all run down. I was dis gusted aud stopped doctoring. I read of Dr. Richard’s Stomach, Liver, Kid ney and Blood Remedy, and took that as directed and must say that now I am feeling great. I have a good appetite and ambition to work and attend to business. In fact I feel like a new man.” Dr. Richard’s Stomach, Liver. Kid ney and Blood Remedy is a doctor's prescription especially good for ner vousness and general debility. It is an excellent reconstructive tonic and system regulator and is guaranteed for rheumatism, appendicitis, and all stomach, liver, kidney aud blood dis orders. This prescription has been used in Dr. Richard’s private practice for nearly half a century and given relief to thousands of sufferers. It must please you or you get your money back. Dr. Richard’s complete line of remedies is sold and recom mended by druggists everywhere. Sold in Dalton by Fincher & Nichols, corner King and Hamilton streets. Don’t fail to get a bottle of this won derful medicine today.—Adv. 44444444444444444 ♦ 4 ♦ COVE CITY 4 ♦ ♦ 444444444444444 We are having some wet weather at present; but every cloud will wear a rainbow if your heart keeps right. The people are busy cutting wood and building fires and welcoming new neighbors. Our settlement is getting filled • up with new people. Maybe it is good to make a change. What has become of the old-time shouters and church-goers of last sum mer? You don’t see them any more. We would like to see them out at Sun day school every Sunday morning at ten o’clock. We need their help. Mrs. Luther Patterson and Mrs. Jesse Wheat are on the sick list this week. We hope they will be out again soon. School at this place is progressing very nicely. We are glad to see the teachers taking interest in this work. We would like for the commissioners to look over the roads in Carbondale district and see if they could make them passable. The singing given by Miss Lula Aul- ton Saturday night was enjoyed by a large crowd. The pound supper given by Misses Mae and Pearl Bowman was enjoyed. Rev. J. W. Lee will fill his regular appointment at this place next Sunday. Let’s everybody come and hear him. Mr. Charleston Roberts, of Resaea. spent Sunday with his daughter. Mrs. W. C. Neal, of thi4 place. Don’t forget to come to Sunday school and bring your books and a good lesson. Catarrh Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ enced by constitutional conditions. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE i is a Tonic and Blood Purifier. By cleansing the blood and building up the System, HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE restores normal conditions and allows Nature to do its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. 44444444444444444 ♦ ♦ ♦ MORTUARY. 4 ♦ ♦ 44444444444444444 Mr. M. L. Clark. Mr. Mitchell L. Clark died Saturday at the sanitarium in Milledgeville, where he went three years ago for treatment. The funeral was conduct ed Tuesday at the home of his brother, Mr. R. R. Clark, in Tunnel Hill, by the Rev. Mr. Hair, pastor of the Bap tist church, and the Masonic order. Mr. Clark was born August 14, 1860, “CASCARETS” IF SICK 0 RBIUOUS Tonight sure! Let a pleasant, harm less Cascaret work while you sleep and have your liver active, head clear, stomach sweet and bowels moving reg ular by morning. No griping or in convenience. 10, 25 or 50 cent boxes. Children love this candy cathartic too. in Whitfield county, was well known and liked by a host of friends. Only one brother, B. B. Clark, at whose home the funeral occurred, and one sister, Mrs. G. H. Harris, of Dalton, survive him. He was buried by the 3ide of his father and mother in the Tunnel Hill cemetery. ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine Warning! Unless you see the name Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre scribed by physicians for twenty-one years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bay er package for Colds, Headache, Neu ralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Tooth ache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets of Aspirin cost few cents. Druggests also sell larger packages. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of 444444444444444444 ♦ 4 ♦ IN MEMORIAM. ♦ ♦ 4 4444444444444444 Mrs. J. M. Dunn. Mts. J. M. Dunn, aged 72 years, passed to tlie great beyond January 15, 1921. Mrs. Dunn joined the church at the age of 18. Mrs. Dunn had been confines' to her room for some time. She will be miss ed at her home, and by all who knew her. She was a faithful servant for God. During all of her sickness, she never forgot that she had to die, and she longed to meet her loved ones that had gone on before. She bore her pains with patience. Mrs. Dunn was well known through out the county, and was loved by all wh,o knew her. She was the wife of J. Mj Dunn. Before she was married to Mr. Dunn, she was Malinda Abbie- gill Smith. She is survived by her husband, Mr. Jim Dunn, two daughters, Miss Laura Duun and Mrs. Lola Pierce; four stepchildren, Mrs. S. D. Neal, of Mill Creek; Mrs. A. T. Clark and Mrs. A. B. Bramlett, of Tunnel Hill, and W. L. Dunn, of McGregor, Tex.; two sisters, Miss Caroline Smith and Mrs. M. A. RLudy, and several grandchil dren. Funeral services were held by Rev. Hair at Lee’s Chapel, where her body was laid to rest. A Friend, Mrs. Lee Patterson. GET IT HAND-MADE There’s no reason in buying ma chine-made harness, when you can get it made by hand, out of the best leather, and with the most careful sewing, just as cheap. Come in and let me price you— HAMES, TRACES, BRIDLES, CHECK LINES— anything in harness— MADE RIGHT—SOLD RIGHT. ROBERT DECK King St. Dalton, Ga. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ COHUTTA. ♦ ♦ ♦ 444444444444444 There hag been some mourning and several long faces among the Odd Fel lows for the past few days, as it is thought Their goat perished in the fire which destroyed their hall and the store of Mr. J. L. Pinson on the night of January 26, as no trace has been seen of him since. He was getting old and a little stiff from many hard rides; but the Odd Fellows swear by the fact that he still had a strong pushing way with his head. He is con sidered a very valuable animal by the Cohutta Odd Fellows, and if anyone captures him they will please return him to the president of the lodge and receive a liberal reward. The origin of the fire is unknown, as it caught after the store had been closed for the night. There was nothing salvaged but the loss to the owners will not be very great, as it is practically all cov ered by insurance. The Ladies’ Aid society met with Mrs. J. C. Boyd last Tuesday after noon. Miss Clarice Parrott has been sick for sometime; but we are glad to say she is out once more. The weather inan has gotten things rather badly mixed up in our section lately. The day of our recent fire, it snowed all day long, but didn’t lie long as it fell on a wet ground. Then he went to the other extreme Sun day and gave us a breath of spring, and as if in an attempt to prove that spring had come, we had a real Sum mer shower with a liberal amount of thunder, lightning and hail. Will someone tell our friend who writes from Meigs that to please him as well as some others that may want to know what’s going on around Cohutta that the young people’s class of the Baptist Sunday school will see that there is a piece in from Cohutta each week! Gpyrfrht 1920 The House of Kuppcnheimer Think of Such Prices! One lot of all-wool Suits, in young men’s models, a $30.00 value for only $15.00 Men’s all-wool well made fine Cassimere Suits, former prices $27.50 to $37.50, now ........ $19.75 Men’s fine Worsted Suits, former prices $45 and $50.00 now $27.50 Choice of any Overcoat in the house that sold up as high as $40.00 for only $18.75 Choice of any Kuppenheimer Suit or Overcoat that sold from $50.00 to $75.00 now . . . . . . $39.50 Quality considered, our prices are always the lowest. CANNON’S On the Corner To abort a cold and prevent com plications take The purified and refined calomel tablets that are nausealess, safe and sure. Medicinal virtues retain ed and improved. Sold only in seeded packages. Price 35c. book review. “The World’s Food Resources,” by J. Russell Smith, of Columbia Univers ity. The subject is one in which every individual and every nation in the world is vitally interested. Among the contents are such subjects as: Corn, Wheat, Men, Meat, Cattle, Vegetables, Fish, Land, Distribution of Food and Men. The facts and the figures com piled by the author are handled in an enlivened manner making the book a most important one at the present mo ment. Price $3.50, by Henry Holt & Company, New York, N. Y. of thousands of children in the past, and this new edition is an opportunity for the present generation of children to read and enjoy the same funny negro stories of animal life that our parents so much enjoyed over a quarter of a century ago. Uncle Remus’ stories never grow old, or stale, and they are as interesting and amusing and as capable of producing healthy laughter today as they were in the past. Price $2.25, by D. Appleton & Company, New York, N. Y. “Robinson Crusoe,” by Daniel De foe; a new edition illustrated by N. C. Wyeth. That the review editor of the Southern Fruit Grower should have the opportunity of reviewing a book, the first edition of which was printed in England in the year 1719,—a little more than two centuries ago—is stranger than fiction. The first edition printed by William Taylor beeame very pop ular, and the book has become known throughout the world. The edition just printed and illustrated by Mr. Wyeth is the most beautiful edition that has come under our observation. It is easy to conceive that an artist who beeame charmed with the adventures of Rob inson Crusoe when a child, after mas tering his profession in later life could do a wonderful job in illustrating the book as it appeared to him and this he has done in a most admirable manner by full-page pictures wonde(rful fort their colors and vividness. The book is printed on good paper in a very readable type and altogether it makes a most attractive appearance and he who is looking for a binding of Robin son Crusoe that will stand the test of years will not be disappointed in’ this new edition just from the press of The Cosmopolitan Book Corporation, New York, N. Y. HOTBEDS AND COLD-FRAMES I0B STORING VEGETABLES. The empty hotbed and cold-frame may be used to good advantage during the fall and winter for storing vege tables, says J. T. Rosa, Jr., of the University of Missouri College of Agri culture. The empty pit is then avail able for storing in bulk potatoes an 'i root crops of all kinds. Celery and cabbage also can be stored here bj pulling the plants with the roots 011 and setting them closely together k the upright position, with the roots embedded in a few inches of l° 0s ' moist soil in the bottom of the ph The cold-frame is used in the sam ‘ way as the hotbed; but since it has no pit, its capacity is limited. dh( regular glass sash can be used to cov er these structures when used 101 vegetable storage, but they must b supplemented with board shutters straw mats, or loose straw to protec the contents from sunlight and fro® freezing and thawing. The walls 01 the outside should be well banked vritl soil or manure. “Uncle Remus—His Songs and His Sayings,” by Joel Chandler Harris. This is a revised edition with over 100 illustrations by A, B. Frost. These stories have been enjoyed by hundreds Money back without question if HUNT’S Salve falls in the treatment of ITCH, ECZXMA. RINGWORM. TETTER or other itehlnr akin dlseaaea. Xtr n 73 cent box at our riek. Fincher & Nichols. Good luck will help a man over ditch if he jumps hard.—Spurgeoi DIAMOND DYES Dalton Women Can Now Dye Old, Fad®! Garments, Draperies, Anything Buy “Diamond Dyes ,” n0 ot! kind, then perfect results are g° anteed. Each package of Dyes” contains simple direction, diamond-dye worn, shabby waists, dresses, coats, gloves, sto ings, sweaters, draperies, eoverii everything, whether wool, silk, cotton or mixed goods, new, rich, fa less colors. Druggist has Color Ca —Adv.