Newspaper Page Text
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1921.
Wrkkle Bros. Foundry & Machine Works
General Repair Work, Castings
Depot Street :: Dalton, Ga.
urn
They are spark-proof.
They are crack-proof.
They do not warp.
Heat does not dry them out.
Ice action won’t break them.
Wind won’t lift them.
Nails are protected from rust.
Their red or green color is
the color of the natural
slate and is fadeless.
They require no paint.
They are made with the best
asphalt known, by a firm
that has been perfecting
asphalt processes for 46
years.
They are inexpensive, and the
best possible shingle value.
THE JAMES SUPPLY CO., DISTRIBUTORS
The Cherokee Mfg. Company
Dealer
DALTON, GEORGIA
yj yj
* PROFESSIONAL CARDS »
John R. Humphries
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
AND AUDITOR
P. O. Bos 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.
Office Honrs:
9:30 a.m. to 12 m.
2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
DR. F. L.TEALL
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
First Nat’I 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.
For Sale at your Dealer
ASK FOR THE YELLOW PENCIL WITH THE RED BAND
EAGLE MIKADO
EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, NEW YORK
♦
♦ MORTUARY.
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MR. JOHN C. YORK DIED
IN CINCINNATI, OHIO
Body Brought Here and Taken to
Dunegan for Interment
Mr.
funnel
dent 1
tiiiua!
indite:
here !
for in
Mr.
who
news
(»u i
ied
odv
John C. York, aged 37 years, a
well-known and respected resi-
Dalton. died June 15 in Cin-
O., from an attack of acute
"ion. The body was brought
-iiurday and taken to Dunegan
'em lent.
Y"i-k had hosts of friends here
■ shocked and saddened at
: his death.
Death of Infant.
‘-months-old child of Mr. and
hie Smith, formerly of this
'! at the home in Calhoun and
''lght here Monday for inter-
3Vest Hill cemetery.
Ottie May Arwood.
May Arwood, aged 24 years,
unlay in Chattanooga, the
- brought here Sunday for
The funeral service was
by Rev. Mr. Boyd. The de-
survived by her mother and
Ma:
fla« irb
died
honi t .
seat V.
§>r in:
Mrs
.'var<,
made :
fuller;.
Boyd.
ters
Mr.
M'ednc-
in Mil
made
Margaret Hale.
et. the little two-mouths-old
"f Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Hale,
'day of last week at her
Depot street. The body was
uesday to Fostersville. Tenn.,
ment.
rs. Mary A. Jackson.
'•■'try A. Jackson, aged ‘66
d Monday, interment being
'Vest Hill cemetery following
rvices conducted by Rev. Mx\
>e is survived by three daugb-
Purse Love.
use Love, aged 43 years, died
by of last week at bis home
reek Valley, interment being
mirsday in Mill Creek ceme
tery. Mr. Love is survived by bis
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bub Love; three
brothers, Messrs. Lester, Sam and Jew
el Love, and two sisters. Mrs. Clifford
Wood and Mrs. Hix.
Smoke Stachelberg’s
WHITE SEAL 10c.
Japan’s Substitute for "Hot Dogs”
Although this street vendor of Japan is selling boiled meat instead of
the “hot dogs” the young American is used to, he is as popular with the Jap
anese children.
Wild Boar Hunt By Motorcycle
TWO MORE WHITFIELD
BOYS TO GET MEDAL
Tbos. A. Johnson, of Dalton, and
John L. Rogers, of Tunnel Hill, have
applied for their Victory Medals and
will receive them in a few days. The
Victory Medal Officer, 304 Journal
Building. Atlanta, is -expecting orders
to close his office on the last of this
mouth. Every ex-service man. wnetlier
he served overseas or not, and the
nearest relative of every one deceased,
will want this medal eventually.
Those who do not. have it at reunions
will feel, as one man put it, "un
dressed.” Only 7 days more in this
month. Apply now.
Here are seen the results of the first wild boar hunt by motorcycle e\er
undertaken. It was on Santa Cruz island, in the Pacific ocean, and the boar
was said to be one of the largest ever killed.
Shipping Board Vessels Laid Up
MRS. HENRY C. WALLACE
Dodson’s Liver Tone
Instead of Calomel
Calomel is quicksilver. It attacks
the bones and paralyzes the liver. Your
dealer sells each bottle of pleasant,
harmless “Dodson’s Liver Tone” under
an ironclad, money-back guarantee that
it will regulate the liver, stomach and
(bowels better than calomel, without
sickening or salivating you—15 million
bottles sold.
Children’s Day.
Children’s day will be observed Sun
day. July 3, at Grove Level. Every
body is cordially invited to attend.
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain
ed and improved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
Mrs. Henry Cantwell Wallace, Des
Moines, la., wife of the secretary of
agriculture, who is, like her husband,
a practical agriculturist.
SEVENTH DISTRICT
DOCTORS WILL MEET
Wednesday, July 6tli. the Seventh
District Medical Society will be en
tertained by Gordon county physicians
at Calhoun.
OPEN-AIR SERVICES AT
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
A* union service was held last Sun
day night on the lawn of the First
Presbyterian church. Rev. H. C. Emory,
pastor of the First Methodist church,
being in charge. The new plan of hav
ing the services out of doors met with
By harboring shipping board vessels in Jamaica bay, the United States
government saves §5,000 a month on each vessel. The photograph shows an
air view of some of the vessels.
Excavation in Mexican ruins has
revealed roads paved with huge blocks
of stone.
Malone, N. Y r ., has a publicly owned
forest in which 45.000 trees were plant
ed last spring.
In England the rolling chairs used
by invalids and others have to carry
a motor license.
Tennis, golf and other outdoor
sports are becoming popular among
the young women in Argentina.
A certain church in New York city
provides a plain gold wedding ring,
free of cost, to immigrant couples de^
siring to get married.
A Swiss has arrived in Paris after
traveling round the world on a bi
cycle. He took seven years for the
trip and covered 35,000 miles.
decided favor, and this will be follow
ed during the summer months.
DUANE TEAM LOST GAME
TO OOLTEWAH SLUGGERS
Visitors Didn’t Tote Fair—Hit Ball
Far Too Hard
The Ooltewali. Tenn.. baseball team
defeated the Duane Chair company
team here Saturday afternoon by the
score of 13 to 5.
The visitors hit the hall extremely
hard—too hard to suit the local team,
and so the less said about the game
the better.
NOTICE.
Dr. H. L. Erwin will, after July 1,
have his offices in the Manly Building,
corner of King and Pentz streets, in
the building with Maddox, MeCamy
& Shumate.
james a. McFarland
WILL HANG SHINGLE
Popular Young War Vet Will Begin
Practice of Law Here
practice of law here. Mr. McFarland’s
many local friends and admirers are
glad to know he will locate here.
His offices will be in the Fincher &
Nichols building, corner Hamilton and
King streets.
Mr. McFarland is a veteran of the_
world war, having held the commission
of first lieutenant when he was shot
down while leading his men “over the
top.”
CHARLES L. PATTON
Charles L. Patton of Marion, O.,
tas been made assistant keeper of the
White House grounds. He is eighty
and a Civil-war veteran. He is a great
avorite with the newspaper men who
/vere on duty at the Marion “Front
’orch” during the campaign.
Members of Dalton Council No. 30,
Junior Order of United American Me
chanics, are requested to attend the
meeting of Thursday night, June 23,
for important business will come up.
Tbe presence of every Junior is earnest
ly desired.
Albert Gregg. Councilor,
R. H. Sapp, Secretary.
GIRLS! LEMON JUICE
BLEACHES FRECKLES
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 the
best freckle and tan lotion, and com
plexion beautifier.
Massage this sweetly fragrant lem
on lotion into the face, neck, arms and
hands each day and see how freckles
and blemishes bleach out and how-
clear, soft and rosy-like the skin be
comes.—Adv.
Of All
Kinds
PRINTING
not the cheap kind
but the
good kind done here.
Save Pennies—
Waste Dollars
(j[ Some users of printing
save pennies by get
ting inferior work and lose
dollars through lack of ad
vertising value in the work
they get. Printers as a rule
charge very reasonable
prices, for none of them
get rich although nearly
all of them work hard.
Moral: Give your printing to
a good printer and save money.
Our Printing Is
Unexcelled
Latarrhal 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.
James A. McFarland, who this year;
completed his law course at the Uni-j
versity of Georgia, will, about July 1,!
hang out his shingle and begin the
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 any good. They all said 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 yon
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 Lydia 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. 1 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 who are 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
to The Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts.
This book contains valuable information.