Newspaper Page Text
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1921.
PAGE THRU
\
DALTON HOSIERY MILLS
are running full time with orders enough to keep busy in future. Many of our former knitters and loopers asked us to notify them when
we could give them steady employment. We can use 8 experienced knitters and 4 experienced loopers if they will apply at once
We can also use about 8 inexperienced girls between the ages of 16 and 21 years.
Dalton Hosiery Mills
BOWEN BROS.
Rea Top
Timothy
Red Clover
Sapling Clover
Sweet Clover
Blue Grass
Orchard Grass
Tennessee Red Cob
Corn
Hickory King Corn
Batts Prolific Corn
Tennessee Yellow
Dent Corn
Tennessee Red Pea
nuts
Kentucky Wonder
Beans
Valentine Beans
Giant Stringless
Green Pod Beans
Tennessee Green Pod
Beans
Watermelon Seed
Sweet Potato Plants
BOWEN BROS.
and I will pass upon said applica
tion on the first Monday in April,
1921.
J. H. WOOD, Ordinary^
LETTERS OF DISMISSION.
Georgia, Whitfield County.
A. E. Loughridge, administrator es
tate of Mary B. Loughridge, de-
seased, has applied for Letters of
Dismission and I w T ill pass upon
saul application on the first Monday
in April, 1921.
J. H. WOOD, Ordinary.
Legal Notices
LETTERS OF DISMISSION.
Georgia, Whitfield County.
J. A. McClure, administrator of the
estate of Mrs. Altha Tipton, deceas
ed. has applied for letters of dismis
sion and I will pass upon said ap
plication on the first Monday in
April, 1921.
J. H. WOOD, Ordinary.
LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION.
Georgia, Whitfield County.
M. L. Pinson has applied for per
manent Letters of Administration on
the estate of V. W. Bishop, deceased,
REPORT OF APPRAISERS.
Georgia, Whitfield County.
The appraisers' appointed to set
apart a year’s support for the widow
of 11. J. Edwards, deceased, have
filed their report with me and I will
pass i<)on said report on the first
Monday in April, 1921.
J. H. WOOD, Ordinary.
REPORT OF APPRAISERS.
Georgia, Whitfield County.
The appraisers appointed to set
apart a third year’s support for the
widow and minor children of W. H.
Hill, deceased, have filed their re
port with me and I will pass upon
said report on the first Monday in
April, 1921.
H. J. WOOD, Ordinary.
LIBEL FOR DIVORCE.
Lillie Bryson vs. Charlie Bryson.
No. 39, Whitfield Superior Court,
April Term, 1921.
To the Defendant, Charlie Bryson:
Greeting:
You are hereby notified that the
plaintiff in the above cited cause
has filed suit for a total divorce
against you returnable to the April
term, 1921 which meets on the 4th
day of April, 1921. And you are
notified to appear and make defense
if any you have, as in default there
of the court will proceed as to jus
tice shall appertain.
Witness the Honorable M. C. Tar
ver, Judge of said Court. This the
14th day of March, 1921.
C. L. ISBILL,
Clerk Superior Court.
GEO. G. GLENN, Plaintiff’s Att’y.
DANDRUFF MAKES
HAIR FALL OUT
Immediately after using "Dander-
ine - ’ you can not find, any dandruff or
falling hair, hut what pleases you
most is that your hair seems twice
as abundant: so thick, glossy and just
radiant with life and beauty. Get a
Sii-cent bottle now. Have lots of long,
heavy, beautiful hair.—Adv.
Quit Laxatives,
Purges; Try NR
NR Tonight—Tomorrow Feel Right
It is a mistake to continually dose
yourself with so-called laxative pills,
calomel, oil, purges and cathartics
and force bowel action. It weakens
the bowels and liver and makes con
stant dosing necessary.
Why don’t you begin right today to
overcome your constipation and get
your system in such shape that daily
purging will be unnecessary? You
can do so if you get a 25c box of
Nature’s Remedy (NR Tablets) and
take one each night for a week or so.
NR Tablets do much more than
merely cause pleasant easy bowel ac
tion. This medicine acts upon the
digestive as well as eliminative organs
—promotes good digestion, causes the
body to get the nourishment from all
the food you eat, gives you a good,
hearty appetite, strengthens the liver,
overcomes biliousness, regulates kidney
and bowel action and gives the whole
body a thorough cleaning out. »Thi3
accomplished you will not have to take
medicine every day. An occasional NR
tablet will keep your body in condi
tion and you can always feel your best.
Try Nature’s Remedy (NR Tablets)
and prove this. It is the best bowel
medicine that you can use and costs
only 25c per box, containing enough to
last twenty-five days. Nature’s Rem
edy (NR Tablets) is sold, guaranteed
and recommended by your druggist.
Better than Pills j GET A
For Liver Ills,! 25c BOX
CITY DRU6 STORE
NOTICE OF FIRST MEETING OF
CREDITORS.
In the District of the United States
for the Northern District of Georgia.
Northwestern Division.
Iii the matter of W. Lee McWil
liams, Bankrupt.
In Bankruptcy. No. 1331.
To the creditors of W. Lee McWil
liams of Dalton, Ga., in the county of
Whitfield, and district aforesaid, a
bankrupt. Notice is hereby given that
on the 21st day of March A. D., 1921
the said W. Lee McWillams was duly
adjudicated Bankrupt; and that the
first meeting of his creditors will be
held at the refree's office—No. 11 King
St. in Dalton, Ga.,. on the 1st day of
April A. D., 1921, at nine o’clock in
the forenoon, at which time the credi
tors may attend, prove their claims, ap
point a trustee, examine the bankrupt,
and transact such other business as
may properly come before said meet
ing.
March 21st, 1921.
C. D. McCutchen,
Referee in Bankruptcy.
HOME DEMONSTRATION WORK .
Madame Devouge. in charge of do
mestic science work at the normal
school Grignon, France, is now in the
Paint Insurance-
Save
the Surface
and you
Save All”
Destruction of your property by fire isremote,
destruction by decay and neglect is certain.
Y . j, r p parrying fire insurance, which protects
Jou againsTpSble loss, but does not prevent
fire—■
tfiKSy tht K
increases the value of your property and adds
to its appearance.
_ Jopp that needs to be painted, varnished
For every surface that n ^ Finish that
or stained, you 11 ima a ree^ ^ lowest cost . Half a
^ntur V y of°reput£?onfor highest quality is behind the
Pee Gee Trademark.
A.k us for FREE Paint Book -Homes and How to Paint Them.” also
iot^Color Carda, or write direct to
Peaslee-Gaulbert Co., i»corp»r*«.<a. Louisville, Ky.
City Drug Store
United States by appointment of the
French Minister of Agriculture, study
ing our system of Home Demonstra
tion work with the ultimate purpose of
establishing it in France, and yet we
have some people who say. "Oh, well!
we have no use for a canning club
woman in our county. She costs us
fifty or seventy-five dollars a month,
and we just can't pay it." And yet
France, with all her war depression,
sees fit to send people to our land to
study the same thing we are doing.
Brazil, China, Canada and other places
have their representatives in the Geor
gia State College of Agriculture study
ing the thing that our farmers think
foolish. These people are studying not
only subjects as affecting agriculture
but are studying out plans of getting
tlie better things to the farmer through
the Farm and Home Demonstration
agents. They are studying the newest
system of marketing and farm bureaus,
with the sole idea of establishing same
in their countries. We realize that
we need a better system of marketing,
because of the terrible indictment of
our modern civilization. We have a
great surplus of food supply and can't
get enough for it to pay tlie cost of
shipping it to the half of the world
that is suffering for want of food. As
we struggled to do our bit during thg
war, so do we need producer, jobber
and consumer to put shoulders to the
wheel in order that we jfo over the
top.
We must arrive on a price level
which will be fair to people aud prod
ucts. As it is the producer gives his cow
for a few, pounds of steak, his bale of
cotton for less than a suit of work
clothes for his family, his note and
mortgage over his entire possessions at
8% to pay, or promise to pay, for
the fertilizers he is compelled to have
if he produces anything on the farm.
We are the best producers in the world,
but our sales system is bad, indeed.
My opinion is that these conditons can
be wonderfully helped through, 1st. re
quiring a standard by which our food
stuffs shall he put up; 2nd, by com
munity councils that actually function
(Farm Bureau); 3rd, by curb market
ing. We, the producers, are willing
to bear our part of the blame because
we have refused to he organized, but
we do know that a pasture once cover
ed with the richest of green can be
grazed to a level, aud then trampled
to ruin. Are we quite sure the pasture
has been grazed to the limit and still
is being pastured? What should we
do? Go on without organization and
standardization into another year's dis
aster? No! the farmers are not going
bankrupt; they are going to get on the
job aud be up and -doing and not down
and out.
My time at present is taken up al
most entirely in the health work that
is being put on in the . ehools of Ihe
county; but the schools are closing and
my time and attention will now he turn
ed to production and marketing. I
have visited nearly all the schools and
some, have responded beautifully to ray
work while some have failed to co
operate iu any way. The community
that is not served will be the one that
refuses to be served. I cannot serve
he entire county individually neither
can your county superintendent of
schools teach every child in the school
age individually; but through organiz
ed schools or community councils, we
can serve all. “In union there is
strength." Do we need strength? I
say we do from every angle, even
physically.
There are over 277,000 undernourish
ed children in the school age in Geor
gia and you will find when final sta
tistics are given from the present
health work now being done in Whit
field that we have our share of it.
Another Dalton Case
It Proves That There’s A Way Out for
Many Suffering Dalton Folks.
HOG and HOMINY at HOME
<]f Those responsible for the policies of this bank believe
that this country as a whole is economically sound. We
further believe that local conditions are far better than are
general conditions in other parts of the country—
There is a deep underlying reason for the better condi
tions which prevail here—
<JThe people of this community are industrious, thrifty
and conservative. As a rule they do not rely upon just
ONE line of endeavor. They produce MANY of the ne
cessities of life at home—
€]} We believe this to be the better policy and we firmly be
lieve that the continued prosperity of this community de-
pends upon intelligent, diversified endeavor. We believe,
that as nearly as possible, a living should be made at
home—
tfWith the barn full, the crib full, with the smoke-house
full, with the pantry lined with the good things which
“mother put away,” it matters but little what price cotton
is bringing—
CJLet our motto be: “Hog and hominy at Home.”
W. C. Martin, Pres.
E. P. Davis, Vice Pres.
OFFICERS:
James J. Copeland, Cashier
W. A. Broadrick, Ass’t. “
The Bank of Dalton
You will find that it is not only in
homes of the poor, but just as com
mon in the home of the wealthiest
The statistics which you will get from
this will not be guesswork, neither
will it be concerning foreign nations.
The percentage death rate is increas
ing rapidly. Why? because of the lack
of knowledge concerning foods and
their values to the human body. Among
the most important object in the
schools and home demonstration work
of Whitfield county for the next four
years will he improving health con-
Dodson’s Liver Tone
Killing Calomel Sale
Don’t sicken or salivate yourself or
paralyze your sensitive liver by taking
calomel which is quicksilver. Your
dealer sells each bottle of pleasant,
harmless “Dodson’s Liver Tone” under
an ironclad, money-back guarantee
that it regulates the liver, stomach and
bowels better than calomel without mak
ing you sick—15 million bottles sold.
“Start Your Child
Right”
Buy a
Kimball
Organ
FOR SALE-GOOD TEAM MULES
WEIGH ABOUT 1050 EACH
CASH IN PART OR GOOD NOTE
THE DALTON BUGGY CO.
ditions in the homes and schools. Line
up with us, patrons, and let’s'use pen
nies in preventive instead of dollars
and deaths in cure.
My Itinerary is made up by the
week, so any community wishing my
services will please notify me not lat
er than Tuesday of each week.
In conclusion I wish to express my
appreciation to the teachers, patrons
and county board of education for
their cooperation. I hope to help every
teacher in organizing their communi
ties for school improvement work.
Having “kept” school, I know what it
means to have a disorganized communi
ty.
All club girls will wear or bring
white suits on April 8th. I want pic
tures of all my Poultry and Garden
club members on that day.
Mrs. Moore.
Just another report of a case in Dal
ton. Another typical case. Kidney ail
ments relieved in Dalton with Doan’s
Kidney Pills.
Mrs. D. E. Counts, 17 W. Morris St.,
Dalton, says: “My kidneys began to
trouble me last winter causing a lot of
pain in the small of my back. I was
so bad I couldn’t do any housework and
my hack was sore and stiff. I was ner
vous and couldn’t stand the least noise
and was often dizzy. My greatest trou
ble was the way my kidneys acted. I
was in misery. A friend gave me a box
of Doan’s Kidney Pills, to try, and they
did me so much good, I continued using
them. I got my supply at Fincher &
Nichols’ Drug Store, and took them ac
cording to directions. Doan’s entirely
cured me, and made me feel like a dif
ferent person.”
60c, at all dealers. Foster-MUbnrn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv.
and be sure
that your child
gets the right
idea of tone,
etc. Get a
Kimball Copy
righted instruc
tion book and learn to play the Or
gan with that “gliding Organ touch.”
If you buy an off brand new Organ
simply because it is “cheap” or use
an old “has-been” Organ, you will
never be a good Organist, but sim
ply a “Bang-Jiggler” performer. If
you learn to sing by an organ of
questionable tone or action, you un
doubtedly will not be a fine singer
or even a fairly good singer. You
will simply be a “YVhang-Doodler.”
Don’t take any chances, friend, don’t
take any chances, buy a Kimball Or
gan and give your family the best
Organ advantages. They will last
for 50 years or more, with careful
treatment. Write for Catalogue and
Prices, if you can’t come to see me.
I have sold several Kimball Chapel
Organs within the last year. Take
no chances, buy a Kimball, that is if
you want the music good.
McWILLIAMS Sells the*Best.
ROUTH’S
SPECIAL EASTER OFFERINGS
CHARMING STYLES IN LADIES’ SILK WAISTS
AND OVER BLOUSES—
Values up to $7.50 Choice $4.95
LADIES’ HATS—
Pattern Hats and popular Sailors $3.50 to $7.50
SPRING SUITS AND DRESSES—
Ladies’ Tailored Suits in all-wopl Serge and Tric
otine—special values offered for this week__$19.85 up
Dresses—Taffetas at special prices for Friday and
Saturday $13.95 to $25.00
Silk Poplin Dresses—all the new colors—all at one
price §6.95
NEW SPRING SHOES— *
Oxfords and Straps $2.95, $3.95, $4.95, $7.95, $8.95
MEN’S AND BOYS’ WEAR—
Men’s new spring Suits, correct in style, dependa
ble material and workmanship and surprising in
price $16.50, $19.85, $25.00, $35.00
Boys Suits—a line that will certainly please you
—at $7.50, §10.00, $15.00
New Easter Neckwear 50c, $75c, 95c
Shoes, Hats, Shirts, Underwear at prices that mean
a substantial saving to you without sacrificing
style, quality or service.
ROUTH’S