Newspaper Page Text
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1921.
PAGE THREE
a cigarette
Kkeliis in injr day__
The Camel idea wasn’t born then. It was the
exclusive expert Camel blend that revolutionized
cigarette smoking.
That Camel blend of choice Turkish and Domestic
tobaccos hits just the right spot. It gives Camels such
mellow mildness and fragrance!
The first time I smoked Camels I knew they were
made for me. I knew they were the smoothest, finest
cigarette in the world, at any price.
Nobody can tell me anything different.
Camel
R. J. REYNOLDS Tobacco Co.
Winston-Salem, N. C.
Legal Notices
PETITION FOR CHARTER.
State of Georgia, Whitfield County.
To the Superior Court of said County:
The petition of O. M. Lanliam and
George Garrison, both of Floyd coun
ty, Ga., and their associates, shows to
the court the following facts:
1st. Petitioners, together with their
associates, desire to be incorporated
under the name and style of Faultless
Piston* Ring Company, for a period of
twenty years, with the right to renew
said charter at the expiration of said
term. The object of said corporation
is pecuniary gain to its stockholders.
Its purposes are to manufacture, buy,
own and sell metal-working machinery
and tools, and metal articles for use
Use It—Then Decide
We Will Lend You
A Valet AutoStrop Razor for
a full thirty day trial. If you then
decide to keep it, pay us $5.00 for
it—if not, return it without further
obligation.
You Pay Nothing to Try
This Razor
Any responsible party can ar
range at our Cutlery counter for
tbis Free Trial. If you have a
charge account, write to us and we
wi& mail the razor to you.
You are given the opportunity
of frhia wonderful Razor,
without any kind of risk For a
month your shaving will cost you
-then you may return the
f you c» n get along without
Valet AutoStrop Razor
Is Complete in Itself
It is more than a razor—more
than a safety device.
It is stropped, it shaves and is
cleaned without taking apart;
without even removing the blade.
And like a perfectly stropped
ordinary razor, the blade im
proves with use.
And it doesn’t cost you a cent
to prove all this to your own
satisfaction. **“
CITY DRUG STORE J, W, Crawford, Prop. Phone 210
PERHAPS your sal-
^ ary would continue
were you to sustain an
accident, BUT, wouldn’t
your expenses be large
ly increased, such as
physician and hospital
bills?
Accident Insurance
Will Pay Such Bills
F
PRN1SHES
rank
S URE pROTECTlON
. IT ruden
Phones 49 and 407.
BANK CATECHISM
Published by courtesy The Atlanta Constitution
in or connection with machinery of all
or special kinds and such materials
and products as are useful or necessary
to the manufacture, use or sale of
metal articles of manufacture; to make
contracts, to borrow, own and lend
money, to sue and be sued, to plead
and be impleaded; to buy, own, lease
r release, mortgage or sell real estate
and personal or mixed property, in
cluding patents and patent rights
necessary or convenient for the suc
cessful conducting of the business of
said corporation, and to do any and
all acts not contrary to law which may
he necessary to the conduct and opera
tion of said business.
2nd. The principal place of busi
ness of said corporation shall he in
Dalton, Georgia, in said County of
Whitfield, but the petitioners desire
the privilege of establishing and main
taining such branch offices and other
places of business as they may from
time to time decide to establish else
where.
3rd. The capital stock of said
orporation shall be two hundred thou-
and dollars ($200;000.00) divided into
hares of the par value of one hundred
dollars each, but petitions desire the
right to increase the amount of said
capital stock to the sum of one mil
lion dollars or any proportion there
of from time to time as may be decid
ed by the vote of the holders of
a majority of the stock of said corpo-
ation. The corporation to begin busi
ness when ten per cent of the capital
stock has been paid in.
4th. Petitioners desire that said
corporation shall have the right to
elect such officers and directors as it
may deem necessary to manage and
conduct said business; to make and
have all papers, by-laws, rules and
regulations which may be proper and
necessary for the carrying on of said
business also to have and use a corpo
rate seal.
Wherefore petitioners file this their
petition in *the office of the Clerk
of the Superior Court of Whitfield
County, Georgia, and pray that after
the same has been advertised as re
quired by law that they may be in
corporated under the name and style
above written with the powers, privi-
eges and immunities provided by law,
and as now or hereafter may he allow
ed corporations of similar character
under the laws of Georgia.
GORDON MANN,
Attorney for Petitioners.
Georgia, Whitfield County:
I, C. L. Isbill, clerk of the Superior
Court of Whitfield County, Georgia,
hereby certify that the foregoing is
a true and correct copy of the appli
cation for charter of the Faultless
Piston Ring Company, as the same ap
pears of file in this office.
C. L. ISBILL,
C. S. C. of Whitfield Co., Ga.
Q. What is a travelers’ letter of
credit?
A. A travelers’ letter of credit is a
document issued by a bank, trust com
pany or banker, authorizing a corres
pondent in a foreign country to pay the
person in whose favor the credit runs
a specified amount, usually in some
foreign currency. The correspondent
charges the issuing bank with the
amount it pays out in the currency
called for in the letter of credit and
upon arrival of advice of such pay
ment the issuing hank converts the
amount into dollars at the current rate
of exchange and charges the amount
against its customer. In many cases
the customer pays for the letter of
credit when it is issued at the rate of
exchange at such time, and the issuing
bank takes the risk of profit or loss in
exchange when items are presented for
payment. The bank, however, always
knows its exchange position and can
usually buy to cover without loss be
fore such items are presented for pay
ment.
Q. What are travelers’ checks and
how do they differ from travelers’ lei
ters of credit?
A. Travelers’ checks are generally
issued in fixed denominations of $10,
$20, $50 and $100, some payable in for
eign currencies at fixed rates of ex
change, and some payable only in dol
lars. The person purchasing them signs
all of the checks at the time of pur
chase at the place provided, and, as a
means of identification, signs again in
the presence of the party cashing the
check. A travelers’ letter of credit
may be made out for any amount, and
is more frequently used where large
sums are to be expended.
Q. Travelers’ letters of credit and
checks provide for payment in foreign
countries when presented in person, but
how can money be sent to a foreign
country without leaving the United
States?
A. A person could, of course, send
his personal check on his regular bank,
but in most cases this would not be
satisfactory, as both the person and the
bank might be unknown abroad, and,
besides, the question of exchange would
be a factor. Banks doing a foreign
exchange business have accounts with
many correspondents in foreign coun
tries, just as foreign banks carry de
posit accounts in the United States. If
a person wants to send money to Eu
rope he usually goes to the bank and
buys a draft payable in the foreign
country. If the local bank has no for
eign correspondent it applies to one of
the banks doing an international bus
iness and obtains the draft from it. Of
course, if haste is required, the whole
transaction can be accomplished
through the hanks by cable, and a tre
mendous amount of such business is
carried on each day.
Q. What is a federal reserve bank?
A. Under the federal reserve act of
1913 the United States was divided
into twelve districts and each district
has a federal reserve bank, with one
or more branches if desired.
Q. Do federal reserve banks take
deposits from individuals?
A. No. The federal reserve bank
can take deposits only from member
banks and trust companies, foreign
hanks, foreign governments and certain
United States government funds. It
can also take deposits from non-mem
ber hanks for specific purposes only.
.Q. What are the functions of fed
eral reserve banks?
A. The principal functions are:
(al The centralization and regula
tion under government control of the
gold reserves’ of the United States,
which formerly were scattered through
some thirty thousand banks of the coun
try. with greater opportunities to si'
it to foreign countries or dispose of i'
at pleasure. The centralization and
control of the gold is in the best inter
ests of The country as a whole and
makesr the gold more readily availald!
for credit purposes. .
(b) The means by which the cur
rency of the country is automatically
expanded and contracted to meet bus
iness requirements, as previously ex
plained. *
- (c) To facilitate business by acting
as a clearing house for the collection
of checks, drafts, etc.
(d) To act as a balance wheel in
regulating credit expansion' in excess
of the amount necessary and safe for
the good of the country.
(e) To act as a medium through
which the United States government
can distribute its borrowings when in
need of funds.
(f) To purchase in the open market
or from other federal reserve banks,
commercial bills of exchange, bankers’
acceptances, etc., which would tend to
preserve equilibrium between localities
where money was plentiful and where
it was scarce.
F. E. BANKS
Sheet Metal Works
Makers of anything in Sheet
Metal.
Estimates cheerfully given.
Phone 343. 26 E. Morris St.
DID YOU?
(A poem read before the Sunday
school classes in the First Methodist
church, Dalton, by Rev. F. R. Smith.!
Did you give him a lift?
He’s a brother of man,"
And hearing about all
The burden he can.
Did you give him a smile?
He was downcast and bine,
And the smile would have helped him
To battle it through.
Did yon give him your hand?
He was slipping down hill,
And the world, so I find,
Was using him ill.
Did yon give him a word?
Did you show him the road?
Or did you just let him
Go on with his load?
Do you know what it means
To be losing the fight
When a lift just in time
Might set everything right?
Do you know what it means—
Just a clasp of a hand.
When a man’s borne about
All a man ought to stand?
Did you ask what it was—
Why the quivering lip?
Why the half-suppressed sob,
And tbe scalding tears drip?
Were you brother of his
When the time came of need?
Did you offer to help him,
Or didn’t you heed?
Give Your
Children a
Better Chance
Than You
Had
CD
WHEN all’s said and done,
the greatest piece of work
that a man has in life is to pro
vide for his family. If a man
and woman can start their
children farther along the road
than they themselves started,
their lives have been successful.
You want your children to be free from the handicap of
poverty, don’t you? You want them to have education,
comforts and opportunity for advancement.
Then the path lies clear before you.
A little money deposited each week
at The Bank of Dalton will build up
and double itself by the time when
your children are liable to need it
most.
^BANK" DALTON
W.C.MARTIN, PRES.
E.P.DAV I S, VICE-PRES.
JAMES J.COPELAND;CASHtER
WA.BROADRICK, ASST. CASH
ARE RAISING FUNDS
I^OR CHURCH PURPOSES
Play at Dawnville Next Saturday
Night, June 11
We will have a play at Dawnville
next Saturday night, June 11. A small
admission will be charged each one.
The characters of the play are as fol
lows:
Jack Montgomery, a misplaced hus
band.
Jerry Arnold, Jack’s best friend.
Mr. McNutt, an Irish detective.
Elmer Flannel, a college boy.
Abou Ben Mocha, the Terrible Turk.
Mabel Montgomery, a nervous young
wife.
Mary Ann Finnery, an Irish cook.
Zuleika, an Irish maiden.
Mrs. Bridger, Mabel’s and Virginia’s
mother.
Virginia Bridger, Mabel’s sister.
Admission for adnlts, 25c; children
under 6, free; from 6 to 10,15c.
The curtains will open promptly at
8 o’clock, the proceeds to go for church
purposes. Remember the date, June 11.
R. F. Rollins, Manager.
CURED BY HIS
OWN MEDICINE
Well Known Doctor Finds His Own
Prescription Far Superior
to Others
LIBEL FOR DIVORCE.
J. W. Poindexter vs. Alice Poindexter.
Whitfield Superior Court.
July Term, 1921 .
Libel for Divorce.
To Alice Poindexter:
Plaintiff, J. W. Poindexter, having
filed petition for divorce as above stat
ed, and it appearing that Alice Poin
dexter is not a resident of said county,
and that she does not reside in the
state, and an order having been made
for service on her by publication, this
is to notify you, Alice Poindexter, to
be and appear at the next term of said
court to be held on the fourth Monday
in .July. 1921. then and there to an
swer said complaint.
Witness the Honorable M. C. Tarver.
Judge of said Court, this 4th day of
June, 1921..
C. L. ISBILL. Clerk.
W. M. Sapp. Atty. for Plaintiff
CROWN MILL LOST CLOSE
ONE TO SIXTH CAVALRY
Visitors Won Uphill Game with Sev
eral Feature Plays
The Sixth Cavalry'baseball team sta
Honed at Fort Oglethorpe defeated tbe
Crown Cotton mill team in a closely
played game here Saturday afternoon,
the final count being 7 to 5.
Stone, first up for the locals, hit the
ball over the fence for a homerun. The
feature of the game was the throw
from deep right by Faith, of the locals,
cutting off a run at the plate.
The visitors’ outfield was the best
ever seen here.
Score by innings: R H E
Crown Mill 110300000-5 11 3
Sixth Cavalry 0 0 2 0 1 0 3 0 1-7 13 2
Struck out . by Caldwell. 9: Gant, 2.
Batteries, Caldwell and Fincher; Gant
and Roberts.
Contrary to the theory that a doctor
cannot be cured by his own medicine.
Dr. Richards cured himself of a very
severe case of stomach trouble, after
failing to get relief through the pre
scriptions of the best doctors in the
country. He not only cured himself of
stomach trouble hut hundreds of other
cases besides. Dr. Richards has used
the same prescription in his private
practice for nearly half a century. He
writes a very interesting letter con
cerning this remedy, as follows:
“While helping to clear up my fath
er’s farm I strained the muscles of my
stomach and for nine months was un
able to he out of the house. I was
under the care of the most successfi
doctors in the country, hut received
very little help. Finally I compounded
a remedy of the best known drugs for
stomach trouble and started using that,
and in a short time began to see some
change for the better, and in one month
was able to be out of bed. and in an
other month was able to begin work,
much to the surprise of everyone and
the amazement of the doctors. This
same compound has been used in my
private practice, with great success for
nearly half a century. And this same
medicine is now manufactured by the
Dr. Richards’ Medical Co.. Columbia
City, Ind., under the name of Dr. Rich
ards’ Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Blood
Remedy. Not only this remedy but all
the other preparations that are now
on the market under my name, are my
own prescriptions, and I have used
them in my practice with very great
success.”
Dr. Richards’ Stomach, Liver, Kidney
and Blood Remedy is a doctor’s pre
scription, especially good for stomach
trouble. It is guaranteed for rheuma
tism, appendicitis and all stomach, liv
er, kidney and blood disorders. It must
please yon or you get yonr money hack.
Dr. Richards’ complete line of reme
dies is sold in Dalton by Fincher &
Nichols, and leading druggists every
where. Don’t fail to get a bottle of
this wonderful medicine today.—Adv.
When a mother devotes two hours
daily to sweeping and cleaning
that the APEX Electric Suction Cleaner
does better in one hour, or less, then
both mother and children are cheated
out of many hours of leisure—time that
might be spent together to the profit of
the little ones and the greater happiness
of the mother.
Cheated—because the housekeeper who
does not own this great saver of carpets,
rags and home furnishings is paying for
it over and over again.
VHq
ELECTRIC SUCTION CLEANER.
Days Trial
FREE
No Deposit
Recpiired
See elsewhere in this paper the interesting advertisement of die APEX
Electric Suction Cleaner* Watch for others to follow each week.
By special arrangement with the manufacturers, for a short time only,
we will deliver an APEX to any home in this community for five
days free trial.
ELECTRIC SUCTION CLEANER
No security—no obligations of any kind.
Call, write or telephone us your address.
Murphy Electric Co.
Phone 117
DALTON, GA.