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Boys’ white Wash Suits from $1.00 tc
Ladies’ Silk drop stitch Hosiery to go for $j
Ladies’ plain Silk Hosiery from .
New arrivals in Printed Organdies. They are dainty in blue,
red, brown,’pink and lavender, and going for 50c y
Dress Voiles priced from 33^
Fine assortment of Ginghams at prices from lOc
Silk finish Batiste in white only for 5
Shirt Madras priced for ... __30c, 32 i/ 2 and l
Dress Percales from 10c to 2
New shipment of Matchwell Bundles—the kind that pleases
customer.
Men’s pure thread Silk Humming Bird Hosiery, $1.50 values for 75c
Men’s all-wool Serge Odd Pants going for $5.00 pr.
Men’s all-wool Odd Pants going for $3.98 pr.
Men’s pin-check Wash Pants for $1.00 pr.
Men’s Blue Work Shirts, Washington Brand, for 65c
Men’s blue Overalls for $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50 gets the best.
Ladies’ Wash Skirts reduced to —I 98c and $1.98
Ladies’ Silk Poplin Skirts for $3.50
Ladies’ Silk one-piece Dresses from i $9.98 to $17.50
Children’s Wash Dresses at reduced prices.
Boys’ “Slipova” Wash Suits priced from 98c up
Men’s Dress Pongee Shirts, $2.00 values for $1.00
Men’s Earl & Wilson Shirts—best Dress Shirt on market—for— 2.50
Men’s Summer Unionsuits in long or short, Hanes make, for 1.00
Men’s Dress Pinot Straw Hats — 69c
Men’s Manila Straw Hats 1.39
Men’s Panama Straw Hats - 2.48
Large stock of Men’s Sample Felt Hats from 98c up
(Which means you buy at wholesale prices.)
Don’t forget we are giving reduced prices on Walk-Over Oxfords as
well as other brands for men and women. These consist of browns
and blacks in different heels. See our Sample Counter of Slippers
for unheard-of bargains.
Look for Yellow Front with big Horse Shoe hanging Over Door
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded—Spot Cash and Small Profits
ANDERSON CO
Dalton, 6a
Next Door to Springfield’s Restaurant—One Door Only
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1921.
PAGE EIGHT
THIS MAN DREADED
TO SEE NIGHT GOME
SOLONS ARE IN SESSION
Was So Restless He Couldn’t Sleep
and Daylight Was Always
Welcome.
"With the exception of a little milk
toast, which comprised my diet for
more than eight weeks, I could not
eat anything.” said Capt. Geo. W. Wom-
hle. residing at 105 Jennings St., Knox
ville. Tenn., a highly respected citizen
of that city.
“I am now able,” .continued Capt.
Womble, “after taking two bottles of
Tanlac, to eat practically anything. I
had a bad form of stomach and in
testinal trouble for a long time and for
months my condition had been such
that I suffered agony. I got so I could
not eat the simplest food. I tried
doctor after doctor and all kinds of
medicine but nothing that was pre
scribed for me seemed to do me any
good. I had a terrible pain in my
breast, just over my heart and for
weeks and weeks I got no relief.
“I finally got so nervous that I act
ually dreaded to see night come as I
could not sleep and was always so rest
less that I would rejoice to see day
light come. I was also constipated all
the time. In fact, life seemed a burden
and I was so miserable that I was al
most on the verge of despair. Several
of my neighbors told me about Tanlac
and advised me to try it.
“I am personally acquainted with
Mr. Dan Chambliss, of the firm of
Kuhlman & Chambliss, and when I
told him of my condition and how I
suffered he advised me to begin taking
Tanlac without delay and that it had
relieved hundreds, of the best people in
Knoxville. I have now taken two bot
tles of Tanlac and am giving you this
testimonial in the hope that it may
induce others to take it. Since taking
this medicine I actually feel like I had
been made all over again with the
youth, energy and ambition of a six-
teen-year-old boy.”—Adv.
senate, are running for re-election.
Many Bills Expected.
Georgia legislatures are always
prolific when it comes to introducing
kills, and this legislature is expected
to produce a greater crop than ever
before. Legislative cure-alls of many
and divers kinds will he proposed for
all of the ills of the state, whether
economic, industrial or social. Reor
ganization of the state’s finances will
he the main subject, with Governor
Hardwick pressing for action.
Senator L. C. Brown will demand
an investigation of the department of
agriculture, with special reference to
the expenditure of funds appropriated
to it. J. J. Brown, commissioner of
agriculture, says he will not object to
an audit of his department if all de
partments are audited, hut will fight an
investigation aimed at his department
solely.
The Georgia Farm Bureau Federa
tion will demand the abolition of the
state bureau of markets on grounds of
economy, and Commissioner Brown will
resist this effort, the bureau being a
part of his department.
A strong demand will manifest it-'
self early in the session to dispense
with sinecure jobs, and in view of
this wave of economy a good many
people on the payroll of the state
are already busily engaged in an ef
fort to show that their services are
indispensable.
Trusts Beauty.
Chicago.—“What a beautiful ring.”
said a miss to C. B. Reilly .as he step
ped into a cabaret with a big diamond
ring on his finger. “Yes, it cost me
SI.$00.” was the proud reply of Reilly.
,7 T am going to take it into the next
room where I can see it better,” said
the pretty miss. Reilly never saw it
again.
French Deputies Have Bar..
Taris.—The French chamber of dep
uties “has it over” the American house
of representatives in at least one re
spect. It has a bar. And during 1920
the 626 members of the chamber spent
over the aforesaid bar the neat little
sum of nearly a million francs, $250,000.
FARM FOR SALE.
Still and Bernard, Realty Dealers,
Senatobia, Miss., have for sale a
2200 acre tract of land in the St.
Francis Basin, Ark., black sandy
loam, than which there is nothing,
nothing better; 1200 acres under
high state of cultivation balance in
fine merchantable timber estimated
to cut five to six million feet. It has
a frontage of 6 miles of high and
dry riven banks where the timber
can be stored, and accepted by the
mills.
165 laborers and house room for
all. A seven-room new bungalow
with water and light plant. Com
plete outfit for handling cotton and
seed, hay and all feed stuffs, grist
mill, etc. It can be bought at half
its value, one-half cash and balance
easy at 6 per cent. No trade.
It will grow a bale of long staple
cotton or more, and from 80 to 125
bushels of corn per acre. The finest
dirt I ever saw, says Mr. John Dink
ins, a land expert. As rich as a pig
sty. All personal property and labor
iccounts go in. We invite inquiry
nd inspection. Both Banks.—Adv.
NOTICE.
Pursuant to a resolution adopted at
a meeting of citizens of Dalton on
Friday night, June 17th, 1921. notice
is hereby given that there will be in
troduced at the present session of the
General Assembly of Georgia a bill
having the following caption:
“A bill to be entitled an act to pro
vide a new form of government for the
City of Dalton; to provide a body for
the performance of legislative func
tions of said government, and to exer
cise or delegate to employees the dis
charge of executive powers; to pre
scribe the powers and duties of such
body, and of all other officials or em
ployees of such city government; to re
peal previous acts incorporating said
city, in so far as they conflict herewith:
and for other purposes.”
Births Crowd Malta.
Washington.—While France and some
other countries are disturbed over the
falling birth rate, the Island of Malta
is embarrassed by an Increase of its
population of 2,000 to 3,000 a year.
Malta Is already overcrowded, hut the
population increases rapidly. A con
sular report says that the island gov
ernment is seriously considering a plan
for emigration which involves payment
of at least part of the passage of any
Maltese who desires to leave the island.
GEORGIA AUTO LICENSE
RECEIPTS OFF $220,522
DR. C. E. SAWYER
President Harding's personal physi
cian will be Dr. C. E. Sawyer of Mar
ion, a leading Ohio physician. He has
been made a brigadier general in the
army medical reserve corps and will
make an investigation of government
agencies for public welfare.
Secret Revealed.
New York.—A certain well known
professional golfer tells the following
story: The vice president of the club,
being an every day attendant at the
links and playing at least one round
daily, always had a supply of nice
white halls. One day the “pro - ’ asked
the caddie master if he had any idea
where Mr. So and So (the vice presi
dent) purchased his golf halls. One of
tlie caddies standing nearby spoke up
and said: “Sure. Don’t we go out
looking for them together every morn
ing before the gang gets here?”.
age of 86, was burled in the coffin and
the ashes of her husband were scattered
on her grave.
Kick in This Kiss.
• Cincinnati.—You can get a genuine
“kick’’—alcoholic—from a kiss. Leo B.
Forst, retiring head of the federal pure
food and drug laboratory, has discov
ered that chemicals put in the toilet
waters with which girls anoint their
lips give rise to a violent come-back.
Flivver No. 5,000,000 Out.
Detroit.—Flivver No. 5.000.000 has
just been turned out by the Highland
Park factory of the Ford Motor Com
pany. It will probably take its place
in Henry Ford’s museum beside flivver
No. 1.
Princess a Chauffer.
Rome.—King Victor Emmanuel’s sec
ond daughter, Princess Mafalda. has
passed the tests and gained her certifi
cate as a motor-driver. She has be
come expert by practicing on the royal
estate.
CHURCH NOTES
Hamilton Street M. E. Church, South
Rev, Chas. Williams, Pastor.
Sunday school—9:45 a. m. Sundays.
Preaching—11:00 a. m. and 7:00 p
m. Sundays.
Epworth League—6:00 p. m. Sun
days.
Prayer meeting—Wednesday, 7:00
p. m.
Preaching every Saturday 7:00 p. m.
Bethel—Chas. H. Williams, Pastor
I’reaching—2nd and 4th Sunday
fteruoons, 2:30.
Mineral - Springs—Chas. H. Williams,
pastor.
Preaching, 1st and 3rd Sunday after
•oons. 2:30.
Landy Bancroft, wose death is re
ported in England, was not only a capa
ble actress, hut also an excellent bus
iness woman and was generally cred
ited with having made the fortune of
her husband. Sir Squire Bancroft, who
retired from the stage with a fortune
of thee-quarters of a million dollars.
Sleep by Machinery.
Paris.—A French electrician claims
to have invented a machine which will
produce sleep. The electric current is
passed into the body by means of tiny
batteries fixed on the wrist and onto
the instep and joined together by tiny
wires. ■ The current, it is stated, re
laxes the nerves and very quickly pro
duces a sensational or physical ease
which is followed by sleep, even in the
cases of persons habitually suffering
from insomnia.
Prince Gets Even.
London.—Every schoolboy envies the
Prince of Wales and the way he evened
up things with Arthur J. Balfour. Some
days ago Mr. Balfour handed the Prince
a degree from Cambridge and addressed
him in Latin. So when the Prince had
the chance of giving Balfour a degree
from the University of Wales, he talked
to him in Welch, in which Balfour is
even less proficient than the prince is
in Latin.
Mother Fights Mad Bull.
Leicester.—A bull, which was being
driven through the streets, suddenly
became infuriated and attacked a group
of children. Mrs. Siddens. mother of
one of the children, dashed at the bull
and saved - her child. The bull then
turned on the mother and severely
gored her in the back.
Hen Lays Record Egg.
Flint, Mich.—A common Plymouth
Rock hen belonging to Mrs. Howard
Bennett laid an egg five inches in diam
eter and weighing a quarter of a pound.
The hen has no long pedigree, but is
just “plain chicken” declares the owner.
of having the litter all scratched to
one side, which occurs when light
is secured from only one direction.
Exercise is insured by keeping the
floor covered with several inches of
straw, and feeding all grain in this
litter. The roosting quarters should
be compact and comfortable. They
can be made easy to clean by placing
all roosts on a level at the north
side of the house and by arranging
a platform underneath the roosts to
•catch the night droppings.
T. B. Townsley.
SHADE TREES ABOUT THE FARM
BUILDINGS.
MARKET SURPLUS COCKERELS
AND CULL THE FLOCK.
- The total motor vehicle receipts for
the first five months in 1921 are $220-
522.45 less than during the same period
in 1920. Secretary of State S. Guyt.
McLendon states. The total automo
bile license receipts for the first five
months of 1920 were $1,7S3,707.75, while
the figures for the same period of this
year are $1,563,185.30. The discrep
ancy is accounted for in large measure
by the fact that due to the stringency
of the times not as many people are
using automobiles as formerly.
Frowns on Modern Dances.
Rome.—A Jerusalem letter to the
Unita Catolica reports that people
there—Christian, Jews and Mohamme
dans—are indignant at the ultra-mod
ern dancing by European professionals.
The natives do not allow their daugh
ters to see the shows.
Epidemic of Suicides.
Berlin.—Wholesale self-immodations
are taking place in the province of
Tamboff and the neighboring canton of
Kazloff. Five hundred peasants dug r
moat around their village, posted be
hind armed guards to keep away stran
gers, barricaded themselves in their
bath-houses and burned themselves to
death. When all were dead the fifty
guards returned to the village.and shot
one another. Several similar tragedies
of smaller dimensions have occurred.
The causes are stated to be partly reli
gious and partly connected with panic
induced by the spread of the new dis
ease called “yellow decay.”
Many farmers are holding cock
erels that are a constant source of
expense and should be marketed to
help pay the feed bill of the matur
ing pullets. Every male bird, ex
cept those that are to be held over
for breeding purposes and a few
that are to be kept for table use,
should he sent to market as soon
as it weighs a pound and a half.
There is no evidence that the keep
ing of a large number of young
birds purely for meat purposes is
profitable. It was formerly believed
that caponizing cockerels- was a pro
fitable farm practice, but increased
prices of feeds following the war
coupled with the fact that a capon
will consume more than the average
bird in the flock ? has made capon
izing an unprofilable ’practice for
this year at least.
POULTRY FLOCKS MUST BE
HOUSED COMFORTABLY.
Open Skyscraper Church.
New York.—The skyscraper church
has been opened. It is the Fifth Church
of Christ Scientist and occupies five
floors of the 21-story building on East
Forty-third street. A paneled arch
rises the full five stories. Columns of
marble support a balcony on three sides.
Over the reader’s desk a $35,000 organ
has been installed.
No Watches.
Kansas City.—There are plenty of
flivvers in Bushton, Kan., which has
500 population, but not one watch. The
town has -a good school, two churches,
a flour mill, two garages and all else
that a prosperous town should have,
but not one timepiece—at least none
that the county assessor could find.
Kept Coffin 16 Years.
Lafayette, Ind.—For sixteen years a
coffin containing the ashes of her hus
band has occupied a place of honor in
the parlor of Mrs. Emma B. -Everett’s
home here. She died recently at the
Comfortable quarters should be
furnished the pullets as soon as
they are ready to start laying. The
poultry house is both the home of
the hen and the factory where win
ter eggs are produced. Unless it
provides suitable living and work
ing conditions the hen cannot ac
complish satisfactory results. Com
fort is the important essential of a
poultry house. To provide comfort
the house must be dry, well-lighted,
and well-ventilated and have suf
ficient floor space to furnish exer
cise by scratching. It must also
contain sleeping quarters that are
clean, well ventilated and yet free
from drafts. All these conditions
can be met in one room, thus econ
omizing in the expense of building.
Ventilation in a poultry house is
secured by leaving the south side
relatively open and making the other
sides tight. This provides plenty
of fresh air without drafts. Where
possible, light should be admitted
from all sides. This prevents dark
corners and eliminates the nuisance
Nothing gives a place a less home-
like and comfortable appearance
than one that is treeless, vineless
and porchless. The time that could
and should be taken for rest, when
the teams are feeding or given need
ed rest, are spent on such barren
farms in a most uncomfortable man
ner, because no shade of tree or vine
affords protection from the burn
ing sun. And when the houses are
small, and wood or coal is the fuel
provided for cooking, the house
does not afford many comfortable
resting places. When a person is
actively engaged in any labor, the
bodily discomforts are not so notice
able, though their effects are telling,
and unless a person becomes rested
during the rest period, ill results
are apt to follow.
The greatest expense of having
trees and vines; is in the labor and
care taken in planting them, and in
the after culture. The woods in
most every vicinity will furnish
trees and vines that will give abund
ant shade for any home, if one feels
that he can not afford to buy nursery
stock, hut the trees and vines at the
nursery is a small matter.
Then, too, a farm home that has
Smoke Stachelberg’s
WHITE SEAL 10c.
Classified Ads
One Cent A Word'!
PORTO RICAN POTATO PLANTS.
1,000 to 4,000 at $1.75 per 1,000 ; 5,-
000 to 9,000 at $1.65 per 1,000; 10,000
or more at $1.50 per 1000. Orders fill
ed on short notice. We ship good
strong plants and guarantee full count.
O. L. HARRIS & CO., Cordele, Ga.
4-7-12t pd.
FOR SALE—6-room house on Thorn
ton avenue. See S. E. Hamilton, Tel.
40S-J. 6-1612L
CLERKS, (men, women) over 17, for
Postal Mall Service. $120 month. Ex
perience unnecessary. For free par
ticulars of examinations, write R. Ter
ry, (former Civil Service examiner)
1016 Continental Bldg., Washington,
D. C. 6-16-2L
FOR SALE—A number of second
hand automobiles, including one Ford
starter touring ear. Bargain prices.
Hill’s Garage.
attractive shade trees and vines
properly located, has a greater fi
nancial value. Purchasers for a
farm home will pay more for a
farm that has well grown trees and
handsome vines, even if the build
ings are not so fine. To grow trees
requires time, a factor that can not
be purchased. The valuable result
it brings must be patiently waited
for. Houses and barns are ques
tions only of money,—if you have
the means you can soon put them
up, not so with elms, maples, and
the like. Hence the importance of
giving the shade question prompt
Smoke Stachelbcre s
WHITE SEAL 10c.
and business-like attention. Farm
ers simply can not afford to ignore
trees of some sort, either ornamental
or fruit, about the buildings.
V. M. Couch.
Suitable Tip.—“I say. porter, did
you find fifty dollars on the floor
this morning?”
“Yes, suh. Thank you, suh.”—
The Brown Jug.
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ends of its 13-inch “mouth” as at the
center.
No other cleaner nozzle has so long an
incline or slope. To clean under and
around things, without having to move
or lift them is easy if your cleaner is—
suction cleaner
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Phone 117
MURPHY ELECTRIC CO.
fife;, ;
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