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PAGE SEVEN
Me *,
Clancy
Kids
Oh! Timmie!
By PERCY L. CROSBY
,„,m. br me McCInrg Newspaper Synd c«i-
in Chattanooga next week. Watch
the daily papers for particulars re
garding the greatest bargain event
Sale Begins
Wednesday,
March 9th
You’ll Never
Forget the
Big Values!
One Low Cash Price to All!
Anniston, Birmingham, Gadsden, Bessemer, Chattanooga,
Montgomery.
826 MARKET STREET
Chattanooga, Tenn.
You Pay No More Nor No Less!
A precious one from us is gone;
A voice we loved is stilled;
A place is vacant in our liome
Which never can be filled.
The golden gates were opened wide;
A gentle voice said, “Come;”
And angels on the other side
Welcomed their loved-one home.
Written by a friend,
Minnie Hall.
Charles Sutter is a new member of
the United States shipping board. He
is from Missouri.
Side and Sack Hurt
Jordan Mines, Va.—“I am making
this statement for the benefit of any
one suffering as I
did. I had pain
in my side and
could scarcely eat
anything. My
back hurt all the
time and I was
very nervous. No
medicine did me
any good until I
took Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical
Discovery and his
Favorite Prescrip don, together with
the Pleasant Pel’-ts. After taking
four bottles of eae’>. I could be up all
day.”—MRS. SAPAH R. TERRY.
All druggists, c* - send 10c to Dr.
Pierce’s Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo,
N. Y., for a trial package of any of
hiB remedies.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ ♦
♦ REO ♦
♦ ♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Sunday sel^ool wws well attended)
Sunday at Friendship.
Elmer McNees and Miss Willie Clark
"are married Saturday.
Frank and W. A. Hall made a busi-
ii'trip to Chattanooga Tuesday.
-M : —• Bess iBovven spent Batturday
n'udit with Mrs. Jess Bates, of ^Rocky
Face.
Frank Smith has returned from
t-’liickamauga.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cleghorn and
children, of Mill Creek, spent Sunday
with .Mr?. W. D. Cleghorn.
-Mr. Hugh Hickey, of Rossville, is
Hie guest of Mr. Jake Morrison and
family.
Mrs. .John Morrison is very sick.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gilstrap, of Green-
l; -r ere the guests of Mrs. Nealin
'lei.'? Saturday.
Fourth Grade — Kimons ’Oarlock,
Elizabeth Sherman, Janine Harnmon-
tree, Minnie Ruth Roberson, Ralph
Fisher.
Second Grade—Pollard Aikens.
First Grade—Loney Hegwood, Owil
Hegwood.
Minnie Hammontree, Teacher.
STOMACH RIGHT
NO INDIGESTION
'Pape's Diapepsin” has proven itself
the surest relief for Indigestion, Gases,
1 atulence, Heartburn, Sourness. Fer-
tneniation or Stomach Distress caused
■ y acidity. A few tablets give almost
immediate stomach relief and shortly
the stomach is corrected so you can
eat favorite foods without fear. Large
case costs only few cents at drug
s, om Minions helped annually.—Adv.
4. In the counties where the law is
in operation thousands of school chil
dren have been given expert examina
tions and advice regarding their health
and well being.
5. Hundreds of mothers have been
given directions regarding the jcaTe
and feeding of their infants, as well
as instruction for their own physical
welfare.
6. Epidemics of disease have been
cut short or avoided altogether.
Tens of thousands of dollars have
been saved the tax payers of the stare
by preventing such expensive diseases
as typhoid fever, dysentery, hookworm,
malaria, etc. In one county typhoid
fever was reduced 63 per cent anil dys
ntery 88 per cent the first year.
8. You are entitled to the protection
of this law. Your child aud that of
r neighbor’s should receive c
siderat'on at the hands of an expert.
The Ellis Health Law saves more dol
ors than it costs. Is the best in Amer-
America is the best on the face
of the earth: Is the best too good for
your baby, your neighbor’s baby or
ourself?
For further information write
leorgia State Board of Health,
'ision of County Health Work,
lanta, Georgia.
Sloa
Liniment
is always ready to
ease meumalism
« A T the very first twinge, down
comes my bottle of Sloan s;
then quick relief, without rubbing,
for it's stimulating and scatters
congestion. The boys use it for
stiff muscles, and it helps Sadly a
backaches, too. 86c, 70c, $1-40.
♦ *
« the ELLIS HEALTH LAW. ♦
♦ ♦
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
CAMERON MORRISON
Cameron Morrison is the new gov.
K nor of North Carolina, euoceedlng T.
. Blckett
♦ ♦
4 HONOR ROLL ♦
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♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ (♦’. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
fhe pupils on the honor roll at
■^sietn school for the month of Feb
ruary;
Seventh Grade—George Mulkey, Wil-
ljllru Morris, Dellie Cleghorn and Ora
'^°nes.
Sixth Grade—Pearl Jones, Miary Lou
■^"Ikey and Fannie Lou Roberson.
1. Provides for a County Board of
Health, consisting of the chairman of
the Board of County Commissioners,
the County School Superintendent, and
a local physician elected by the grand
jury.
2. The law becomes operative only
upon the recommendation of two suc
cessive grand juries.
3 After the adoption of the law the
County Board of Health elects a full
time Commissioner of Health from a
list ofeligibles submitted by the State
Board of Health.
♦ ♦
♦ IN MEMORIAL! ♦
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The death angel visited the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Walker Bryan, of Deep
Spring, Saturday night and claimed
for its own their darling little baby.
10 months old. Though it is sad to
give this lovid-one up, yet we know
that God does everything well and His
ways are far above ours.
The baby leaves a father and moth
er, sisters and brothers to mourn the
death. The body was laid to rest
the Deep Spring cemetery.
MISS SUE WHITE
nesday of last week, interment being
made Thursday in Dunegan cemetery.
W. J. Horton.
Mr. W. J. Horton, aged 4S years,
died Sunday at his home in the sou
thern part of the city. The body was
taken Monday to Tilton for interment.
HUNTINGTON PEOPLE
ARE BECOMING
EXCITED
Hastings Seeds
1921 Catalog F ree
It's ready now. 116 handsomely Il
lustrated pages of worth-while seed
and garden news. This new catalog,
we believe, is the most valuable seed
book ever published. It contains
twenty foil pages of the moot popular
vegetables and flowers in their natu
ral colors, the finest work of its kind
ever attempted.
With oar photographic illustrations,
and color pictures also from photo
graphs, we show you Just what you
grow with Hastings’ Seeds even be
fore yon order the seeds. This cata
log makes garden and flower bed
planning easy and it should be in ev
ery single Southern home. Write ns
a post-card for it, giving your name
and address. It will come to you
by return mail and you will be mighty
glad you’ve got it.
Hastings’ Seeds are the Standard
of the South and they have the larg
est mail order seed house in the world
back of them. They’ve got to be the
best. Write now for the 1921 cata
log. It is absolutely free. H. G. HAS
TINGS CO„ SEEDSMEN, ATLANTA
GA.
Mrs. Mary Weber, living at 615 North
Street, Huntington, Indiana, along with
many other people in Huntington, has
become greatly interested in a new dis
covery called Dr .Richards’ Stomach,
Liver. Kidney & Blood Remedy. She
has given the medicine a good trial and
highly praises it for the good it has
done her. She had suffered for years
with spasms, but she says she has been
entirely cured by this wondyerful pre
scription. She writes:
“I am writing this testimonial with
pleasure and sincerely hope that all
poor sufferers, who are afflicted with
spasms, will read this and find relief
as I did. I have taken ten bottles of
Dr. Richards’ Stomach, Liver. Kidney
and Blood Remedy and have not had a
symptom of the disease since I began
taking the remedy. I thank God for
the good it has done me, and hope oth
ers will be benefited by this letter.”
Dr. Richards’ Stomach, Liver, Kidney
& Blood Remedy is a doctor’s prescrip
tion. especially good for nervousness.
It is an excellent reconstructive tonic
and system regulator and is guaranteed
for rheumatism, appendicitis, and all
stomach, liver, kidney and blood disor
ders. This prescription has been used
in Dr. Richards’ private practice for
nearly half a century and gives won
derful results in thousands of cases.
It must please you or you get your
money back. Dr. Richards’ complete
line of remedies Is sold by druggists
everywhere. In Dalton by Fincher &
Nichols. Don’t fail to get a bottle of
this medicine today.—Adv.
Miss Sybil Jane Moore of the Amer
ican Society of Friends has returned
to Philadelphia after spending six
months in relief work in Vienna.
♦ ♦
♦ MORTUARY ♦
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MRS. JOHN MOODY DIED
AT TUNNEL HELL HOME
Miss Sue White, research chairman
of the National Woman's party, is
making the first complete survey of
laws affecting the legal status of
women in the different states.
MY TEMPLE.
Respected and Beloved Resident Died
Last Friday
said to myself one day as I lay
Where the balmy wind of the west
blew in,
I will up and away for one rare day—
Away from the dust of the city’s
roar and din.
And I will go to the mountain solitude,
Free as the winds that roam the
forest wild—
To my temple of solitude in the woods,
Where queen romance reigns as na
ture’s child.
Her presence and song my being thrills,
In the dreaming woodland I can see
her;
I can hear her voice upon the hills,
I know that she, ‘ ‘ The Beautiful, ’ ’
is near.
High above yon hills the mountains
rise,
To the splendid heights where si
lence reigns;
I forget all else in -boundless view of
sunlit skies;
I seek my own, my own seek me on
hill and plain.
JAMES A. BRITTON.
Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth Moody, aged
66 years, a beloved and highly respect
ed resident of Tunnel Hill, died Fri
day, her death causing widespread sor
row throughout the county. Mrs.
Moody was an excellent woman, and
her passing is a decided loss to the
community in which she lived.
The funeral services were conducted
Saturday by Rev. Mr. Jones, interment
being in Tunnel Hill cemetery. Mrs.
Mood}- is survived by her husband, Mr.
John Moody; one daughter, Miss Lula
Moody, of Tunnel Hill; two sons,
Messrs. John Moody, Jr., of Vicksburg,
Miss., and Ernest Moody, of Tunnel
Hill, and three brothers, Messrs. Joe
and George Mitchell, of Mumford, Ala.,
and T. B. Mitchell, of Attalla, Ala.
When turnips or carrots are to be
peeled before cooking, the labor of peel
ing may be much reduced by first pour
ing hot water over the vegetables and
allowing them to remain in the water
until sufficiently cooled to permit hand
ling without discomfort.
The same treatment may be applied
to onions.
Mrs. B. N. H.
Mrs. Emma Smith.
Mrs. Emma Smith, aged 63 years, a
respected resident of Reo, died Wed-
A Careful Driver?
Yes
reckless
meet on
But how many
drivers do you
the road who could cause
you to have an accident?
Liability Insurance
is what you need, and we
have some left.
F. S. PRUDEN
General Insurance
Give Sick, Bilious Child
“California Fig Syrup”
“California Syrup of Figs” is the
best “laxative physic” to give to a sick,
feverish child who is bilious or con
stipated. Directions for babies and
children on bottle. They love its
fruity taste. Beware! Say “Califor
nia” or you may not get the genuine
recommended by physicians for over
thirty years. Don’t risk injuring yonr
child’s tender stomach, liver and bowels
by accepting an imitation fig syrup.
Insist upon “California.”—Adv.
ANNOUNCEMENT
tf Having bought an interest in the undertaking business
of J. L. Buchanan, we will open up a first-class furniture
store and will continue the undertaking business at the old
stand on King street.
•J The furniture business will be operated at the old Buch-
holz stand, recently occupied by Shell’s Cafe, on Hamil
ton street.
We have bought our goods at new prices which are from
35 to 50 per cent cheaper than former prices.
We will open our furniture business on or about the 1 5th
of March, formal announcement of which will be made
within the next week or two. The partnership will be
composed of
J. L. BUCHANAN,
J. N. CAYLOR,
J. L. TREADWELL.