Newspaper Page Text
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1921.
PAGE SEVEN
Smoke Stachelberg’s
WHITE SEAL 10c.
Wrinkle Bros. Foundry & Machine Works
General'Repair Work, Castings
Depot Street :: Dalton, Ga.
T HE slate surface gives you a spark-proof surface.
It gives you a beautiful shingle in the natural,
fadeless red or green slate color.
The asphalt in Carey Shingles is the best quality
nature affords, and is refined and tempered to make
a water-proof body by the oldest and most expe
rienced makers of asphalt roofings. The wool felt too
is made in the Carey mills further to assure the supe
rior quality of Carey Shingles.
THE JAMES SUPPLY CO., DISTRIBUTORS
The Cherokee Mfg. Company
Dealer
DALTON, GEORGIA
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x x
ffi PROFESSIONAL CARDS *
x a
John R. Humphries
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
AND AUDITOR
P. O. Box 145 •
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
W. U. GORDON, V. S.
VETERINARY SURGEON
Office:
SERVICE GARAGE
Phones:
Day 89 Night 277-L
DR. H. L. JARVIS
DENTIST
Office Over Eaton & Coffey Store,
Hamilton Street.
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♦ . ♦
♦ IN MEMORIAM ♦
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Office Honrs:
9:30 a.m. to 12 m.
2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
DR. F. L.TEALL
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
First Nat’l Bank .Bldg. Dalton, Ga.
Office Phone 233-10 Hours 9-12 2-5
Residence Phone 233-20.
DR. E. D. ANDERSON
DENTIST
Office Over Fincher & Nichols
Drug Store
Office Hours:
8 a.m to 12 m. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
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♦ DAWNVILLE ♦
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We :iro still in need of a good rain.
Everything is about to dry up on the
si alii: but we will surely get some rain
soon.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hair, of Tunnel
Ilill. spent one day last week with rel
atives here.
Mrs. s. E. Varnell has been on the
sick list for the past few days; hut we
hope she will soon be well again.
Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Tilling and sons.
Joe and Charlie: Mrs. A. E. Rollins and
sen. Mac. spent last Tuesday in Ring-
"olil and Chattanooga.
Mrs. Lee Rollins and family, of Deep
tyring, spent last Sunday with Mrs.
H. Renfro.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Ray and Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Rollins spent last Sunday
fit Cobatta.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller and fam-
uni Mrs. McRrayer and baby, of
{ oilman, spent last Sunday with Mr.
ai "J Mrs. 1. E. Hair.
Mrs. t.ee SVarmaek, of Deep Spring,
is 1! her mother’s. Mrs. D. TV. King's.
Me;:. We certainly hope she will soon
!v well again.
Mrs. <; W. Hair has returned to her
m ; ■ in Tunnel Hill, after a pleasant
i to her children here.
1 -rybody. remember that next Sat-
n *?ht is the night we are to have
our play.
Uatarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
Catarrhal Deafness requires constitu-
tional treatment. HALL’S CATARRH
MEDICINE is a constitutional remedy.
Catarrhal Deafness is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lining of
the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is
inflamed you have a rumbling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it is entire
ly closed. Deafness is the result. Unless
the inflammation can be reduced, your
hearing may be destroyed, forever.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE acts
through the blood on the mucous sur
faces of the system, thus reducing the in
flammation and restoring normal condi
tions.
Circulars free. All Druggists.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Oh*o.
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♦ MORTUARY. ♦
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Smoke Stachelberg’s
WHITE SEAL 10c.
L. T. McHan.
L. T. McHan, aged 71, a farmer liv
ing near Carbondale, died Wednesday
of last week, the body being taken Fri
day to the family burying ground near
Spring Place, Murray county, for in
terment.
Dennis Grant. .
On the evening of June 3, as the
angels gathered jewels for the Master,
they saw none fairer than Dennis
Grant, so they bore his spirit to a man
sion prepared for him in that country
where no more sorrow, sickness or sep
aration comes.
Dennis was sick for only a few days
hut his suffering was great, but he
bore it patiently. A few hours before
he passed away, he called his parents,
wife, brothers and sisters each by
name to his bedside and embraced
them and kissed them goodbye and said,
"Don’t weep for me, I am going home to
heaven.” And he said he wanted each
one to meet him in heaven. His moth
er asked him was he ready to go, and
he said he was ready and willing to
go, but was sorry to leave his relatives
and friends.
Only those who have traveled this
road know how to sympathize with
these fond parents, wife, brothers and
sisters. Would that we could lessen
their grief.
How our sympathy goes out to the
entire family in their crushing grief,
and we know how their hungry hearts
cry out for their lost idol; but they can
find great comfort in one of the last
things Dennis said: “I am going home
to heaven.” We do trust that this fam
ily will remember his last words and
be ready like him to “wrap the drapery
of their couches about them” and lie
down to peaceful slumber. The remov
al of this young man from the home
is not death—it is only the beginning
of a new life. His future is all to be
happiness. In the great future there
will be a happy meeting, and we shall
know him there.
He leaves to mourn his loss a wife,
father and mother, three brothers and
two sisters, and a host of relatives and
friends.
His remains were interred in the
cemetery at Bethel church Sunday,
June 5, at eleven o’clock, Rev. Oscar
Davis conducting the service.
Written by a friend,
Mrs. W. P. Edwards
♦ ♦
♦ IN MEMORIAM ♦
♦ ♦
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GIRLS! BLEACH SKIN
WHITE WITH LEMON
after four years
Daltor. Testimony Remains Unshaken.
a Dal ton story that has stood the
oi ‘ lnie - It is a story with a point
1 will come straight home to many
of us.
-1. Cash, prop, of grocery, 7 E.
■ J irr ’ s St-i Dalton, says: “I think
t " in s Kidney Pills are the best kidney
y made: I cannot praise them
" 1 highly, for what they have done
me. My back caused me a lot
■- MTering, and I was so sore and
• l; I could hardly bend. I had dizzy
“pens and headaches, and my kidneys
, or a cted right. A friend recommend-
Doan’s Kidney Pills to me, and I
ri ’-’d them. They did me so much
^ ■ I continued using them, and they
P-t my kidneys in good shape.”
^he above statement was given
■; arch 5 , 1915, nad on May 4, 1918, Mr.
as ] 1 s aid: “I cannot say enough in
praise of Doan’s Kidney Pills. They
gently relieved me of kidney trouble
l° me ago and any kidney remedy
ev er used cannot take the place
of Doan’s.”
at all dealers. Foster-Milbuin
°-> **», Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv.
Roland Babb.
Roland, the bright little 10-year-old
son of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Babb, died
Wednesday of last week at his home
near Dug Gap. his death causing sor
row throughout the section where he
was a prime favorite. The funeral ser
vices were conducted Thursday by Rev.
J. O. Dautzler and Rev. B. F. Hunt, in
terment being in Dug Gap cemeterj.
He is survived by bis parents. Mr. and
Mrs. L. C. Babb, three brothers and
three sisters.
Squeeze the juice of two lemons into
a bottle containing three ounces of Or
chard White, which any drug store will
supply for a few cents, shake well, and
you have a quarter pint of harmless
and delightful lemon bleach. Massage
this sweetly fragrant lotion into the
face, neck, arms and hands each day.
then shortly note the beauty and white
ness of your skin.
Famous stage buties use this lemon
lotion to bleach and bring that soft,
clear, rosy-white complexion, also as a
freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach.—
Adv.
Dennis Grant.
Dennis Grant, aged -1. a young farm
er iMhg near Bethel, died Friday, in
terment being made Sunday in Let.
cemetery. The funeral service was
conducted by Rev. Oscar Davis. M:
Grant is Survived by bis wife, his par
ents. three brothers and two sisters.
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♦ BROAD ACRE. ♦
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ASPIRIN
Name “Bayer” on Genuine
Warning! Unless you see the name
“Baver” on package or on tablets you
are not getting genuine Aspirin pre
scribed by physicians for twenty-oue
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
A number of the farmers here have
been cutting their wheat and oats for
the last few days.
Rev. H. A. Winstead, of Varneli.
spent Saturday night with T. L. Teas-
iey.
Mr. Lloyd Long, of Dalton, spent a
few days with Mr. Hobson Barnard re
cently.
Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Kirk, of Dogwood
Valley, spent Saturday night with Mr.
Fred Thogmartin and family.
Mr. and Mrs. .Tack Mears. of near
Varnell. spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. M. E. Caldwell.
Mrs. W. G. Combee. of Atlanta, is
visiting her mother. Mrs. J. F. Lace-
well.
Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Dantzler and chil
dren called on Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Cox. of Dawnville, Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Phillips spent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
M. E. Caldwell.
Miss Clair Caylor, of Dalton, spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. H. Caylor.
Mr. W. P. Spears made a business
trip to Dalton Saturday.
Mr. Jim Caylor and sister. Miss
Ruth, attended the singing at Dawn-
ville Sunday.
week.
Mrs. Robinson, of Chattanooga, was
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Webb
last week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Williamson and
Miss Sibyl McClary, of Benton, Tenn.,
were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. C.
Buraes Sunday.
Miss Ida Burns, of Chattanooga, is
spending .her vacation among friends
around Cohutta this week.
Mrs. J. H. Sams, of Gadsden, Ala.,
is visiting her mother, Mrs. Susie Wil
liamson.
Miss Elizabeth Bare, of Chattanooga,
was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. E.
Bare last week-end.
father, mother, three brothers, three
sisters, grandfather and grandmother,
and a host of other relatives and
friends.
Written toy his cousin,
Mrs. E. W. Bagby.
of July, they begin to acquire wings,
when they become very active and
fly from vines undisturbed, so it is
very difficult to treat them.
Probably the best remedy for this
Ittle leaf-hopper is a thorough spray
ing with Black Leaf 40, which is an
extract of tobacco and may be ob
tained at almost any drug store. The
spray should be directed on the un
derside of the leaves and is best ap
plied early in the morning or rather
late in the evening when the insects
are least active. Whale oil soap in
the proportion of one pound to six
gallons of water, or a good kerosene
emulsion may be used in place of
the Black Leaf 40 mentioned above,
if more conveniently obtained-—C.
P. Gillette.
WATCH YOUR PORCH VINES FOR
LEAF HOPPERS.
This ornamental vine, often incor
rectly called Ivy, is commonly used
as a shade for porches and during
the past two or three years, has been
very seriously attacked by little
whitish, jumping insect that suck the
sap from the leaves, causing them to
turn very pale at first and later be
come brown and drop off. Early
in the season, these little leaf hop
pers are wingless and may be easily
seen on the underside of the leaves,
but by the middle of iune or the first
Teacher (after lesson on snow)—
‘As we talk out on a cold winter day
and look around, what do we see
on every hand?”
Pupil—“Gloves!”—Life.
“Painters often put gray skies
into their loveliest pictures. If life
is not all sunshine it can be beauti
ful even under the gray, if lived
rightly.”
“Don’t make the mistake of ex
pecting more from your fellow-man
than you give.”
In loving remembrance of Roland
Babb.
On the morning of June 1st, just at
dawn of day. the death angel entered
the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Babb
and claimed for its own their darling
boy. Roland.
He was 10 years, 11 months and 3
days old and was sick only a short time,
but during the few days he suffered
agonies untold and bore it with more
patience than most grown people.
All that could lie done by the best
skilled physicians and the very best
nurse that could be obtained, together
with the help of loved ones, failed to
heal their child. It was God’s will to
take him from this world of sin and
suffering to that beautiful home above
which He has prepared for His angels;
and the spirit of this dear child will
only wait a brief period when in sweet
ness and love he will meet again with
his father and mother to part no more.
Roland was such a sweet child. Ev
eryone who knew him loved him and
admired his sunny .disposition, and
until the end came with him he was
cheerful and recognized his people, of
ten asking mamma and papa how they
were feeling.
He was a child that was especially j
loved by his schoolmates, and he often
denied himself of pleasures in order
that they might be happy. There’s a
vacancy In the school room, in the Sun
day school and church and one in the
home that no other child can fill; but.
dear parents, think of One that loves
us all and cares for little children and
remember that light some time will
break through and there will he a
glad and happy reunion in the great
beyond.
May God bless you in your hours of
sorrow.
Funeral services were conducted at
his home by the pastor. Rev. J. O.
Dantzler, assisted by Rev. Hunt, of
Dalton.
Roland leaves to mourn his loss
when you want
that next job of
Printing
You will get first-class
work, and you will get
it when promised, for
having work done
when promised is one
of the rules of this office.
If you prefer, send the
order by mail or bring
it to the office in person.
Let Us Show You
What We Can Do
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♦ ♦
♦ COHUTTA. ♦
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Children’s Day at Grove Level.
There will be children’s day at Grove
Level on the first Sunday in July. A
committee of young ladies is getting up
a nice program for the children. There
will also be plenty of good singing
throughout the day, and all good sing
ers are especially invited to attend.
Rev. H. A. Winstead of Yamell, will
preach at 11 o’clock.
Remember the date, July 11.
The Cohutta baseball team still has
the “number” of all comers. They won
from a Dalton team last Saturday by
a score of 17 to 5. They challenge any
team within reach of Cohutta and that
will play the game as clean as they do
to play them anywhere that may be
satisfactory to both teams.
Last Sunday was a great day for
Cohutta Baptists. They had an inter
esting program and plenty of dinner
and the guests were well cared for
otherwise. The Fidelis class which
had a prominent part in the day’s exer
cises made a fine showing.
The Mount Olivet church near Co
hutta will hold a Children’s day service
Sunday, June 12th. They have some
thing good in store for all visitors.
Come.
Miss Edna Copeland, of Rome, is vis
iting Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Copeland this
IT IS CONCEDED
by all retail merchants who
keep a cost system that delivery
by horse drawn vehicles is
much cheaper than by automo
bile trucks. During these times
economy is necessary. We can
furnish you the delivery wagon
you need to cut June costs.
Come in and see us and get rid
of tire and engine trouble.
Make Our Store Your Headquarters
The Dalton Buggy Co.
Telephone 71
Dalton, - Georgia
“We Sell You What We Tell You”
Paint Insurance-
“Save
the Surface
and you
Save All'
Destruction of your property by fire is remote,
destruction by decay and neglect is certain.
You are carrying fire insurance, which protects
you against possible loss, but does not prevent
fire—
Paint affords positive protection and insures you
against decay and deterioration by the elements, be
sides it increases the value of your property and adds
to its appearance.
For every surface that needs to be painted, varnished
or stained, you’ll find a Pee Gee - Paint or Finish that
will give you lasting satisfaction at lowest cost. Half a
century of reputation for highest quality is behind the
Pee Gee Trademark.
Ask us for FREE Paint Book "Homes and How to Paint Them,” also
for Color Cards, or write direct to
Peaslee-Gaulbert Co., ILiiiii Louisville, Ky.
CITY DRUG STORE
Phone 210