Newspaper Page Text
UNITED STATES
The
Clancy Kids
They Weren’t Shuffled
13 Enough.
IjUApyAMeA* ( u
1 MAO 6 A HIS-TAKC
UeYj PSANUTS.
Ya MAoe A r"
MISTAKES
JTH6(?e SZ~
SIX IWTH(S,
-7 6AC-5
PEANUTS
Five a
&A6 r
Washington, D. C.—Intoxicating bev
erages imported into the United States
during the fiscal year were valued af
Ions, as compared with 28,000 in 1920.
Whiskey came in larger quantities in
the past year, with a total of 195,000
gallons, as compared with 32,000 gal
lons in 1920. Great Britain shipped in
most of the whiskey, France practically
all of the champagne and Spain the
greater part of the other wines.
PERCY L. CROSBY
, r the McClure Newepuper Syndicate
GIRLS! BLEACH SKIN
WHITE WITH LEMON
front yard shortly after finding the eggs, gation being made by William W. Mc-
more than $5,000,000, as compared with
about $500,000 in the previous year,
to reports issued last night
by the commerce department.
Wine was the largest item in the list
oi intoxicants entering during the year,
amounting to more than 2,000,000 gal-
■ -• m
L }
th^'
PAGE SEVEN
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1921. :
■■■■■■" i i iimsl mi uni ' ■ !■—-n. «mm
TMDADTC m? T TATTAI? Tf»
n’s Laughter a Pleasing Sound
• m
Altoona, Pa.—“I am writ
hing to tell you what Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound has done for me. We
had six children die almost at
birth. From one hour to nine
teen days js all they have
lived. Before my next one
was born I took a dozen bot
tles of your Vegetable Com
pound, and I can say that it is
the greatest medicine on
earth, for this baby is now
four months old, and a
healthier baby you would not
want. I am sending you a
picture of her. Everybody
says ‘ That is a very healthy
iooking baby. ’ You have my
consent to show these few
lines to . anybody.”—Mrs.
j C, W. Benz, 131 3rd Avenue,
Altoona, Pa.
Mrs. Janssen’s experience of interest to childless wives.
Millston, Wis.—“ I want to give you a word of praise for your wonderful
medicine. We are fond of children, and for a considerable time after we
iere married I feared I would not have any. I began taking Lydia E. Pink-
kin’s Vegetable Compound, and it strengthened me so I now have a nice,
(trong, healthy baby girl. I suffered very little at childbirth, and I give all
the credit to your medicine, and shall always recommend it highly.”—Mrs.
H. H. Janssen, Millston, Wis.
Mrs. Held of Marinette, Wis., adds her testimonial for Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. She says:
Marinette, Wis.—“I was in a nervous condition and very irregular. My
doctor advised an operation. My husband brought me one of your booklets
ind asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It overcame
ny weakness so that I now have a healthy baby girl after having been mar
ried nine years. I am glad to recommend your medicine, and you may use my
litter as a testimonial. ”—Mrs. H. B. Held, 330 Jefferson St., Marinette,Wis.
There are many, many such hordes that were once childless, and are now
blessed with healthy, happy children because Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has restored the mother to a strong and healthy condition, as it
icts as a natural restorative for ailments as indicated by backache, irregu
larities, displacements, weakness and nervousness.
Women everywhere should remember that most of the commoner ailment:
of women are not the surgical ones—they are not caused by serious displace-
Bents or growths, although the symptoms may be the same, and that is why
so many apparently serious ailments readily yield to Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, as it acts as a natural restorative. It can be taker
with perfect safety and often prevents serious troubles.
Therefore if you know of any woman who is suffering and has been unable
to secure relief and is regretfully looking forward to a childless old age, ask
her to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, as it has broughthealth
and happiness into so many homes once darkened by illness and despair.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Private Text-Book upon “Ailments
Peculiar to Women” will be sent to you free upon request. W rite
to The Lydia' E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts.
This book contains'valuable information.
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,
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.
LORD APSLEY
We Have ’Em—
You Want ’Em—
And we’ll go further and let you
have ’em.
Mills Wagons Buggies Engines
Roofing Mascot Ranges Owensboro Ditchers
Maytag Washing Machines
Wood Saws and Saw Frames
Western Electric Farm Lighting Plants
and other things. Make jgour store
your headquarters. “We sell you
what we tell you”
The Dalton Buggy Co.
Telephone 71
Dalton, Georgia
akle Bros. Foundry & Machine Works
General Repair Work, Castings
ot Street == ; Dalton, Ga.
DAK DEVELOPING
ries in quality according to workmansh.p
and material used.
WHY NOT GET THE BEST?
Our “Glossy Finish” is a revelation m
kodakery
PROMPT SERVICE
EY’S STUDIO Dalton, G ■
It’ is rumored in court .circles in
England that Princess Mary, only
daughter of King George, is to wed
Lord Apsley, eldest son of the earl
of Bathurst.
Catarrh
Catarrh is a local disease greatly Influ
enced by constitutional conditions.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE Is a
Tonic and Blood Purifier. By cleansing
the blood and building up the System,
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE restores
normal conditions and allows Nature to
do its work.
All Druggists. Circulars free.
P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
CIGARETTE AND TOBACCO
STATISTICS ANNOUNCED
Washington, D. C.—Cigarettes num
bering 61,S59,900,000 were manufac
tured in the United States last year,
the census bureau’s annual tobacco re
port issued today shows. Of that num
ber, 15,834,000,000 were exported, leav
ing about 46,000,000,000 factory-made
cigarettes for consumption in the Unit
ed States. Cigars manufactured, 8,720,-
754.000, and tobacco manufactured, in
cluding chewing and smoking and snuff,
total 413,S91,000 pounds.
R U Superstitious
Do You
Believe
In Signs
If you do you are
a judicious adver
tiser and a good
business man. Ju
dicious advertising
Always Pays
and especially when
yoif advertise in a
paper that is read
by everybody in
its territory.
This newspaper reaches the eye
of everybody who might be a
possible buyer in this section.
Britain to Reforest
LONDON'.—The forestry commission
has acquired 103,000 acres of land
which it intends to replant! with
trees. In ten years, according to pres
ent plans, the acreage’of Britist forests
will be increased by 150,000 acres.
■Aid For Unemployed.
LONDON.—Local .train lines have
been requested to grant free fares be
fore 8 a. m. to all persons looking for
work.
A Parisian Woman recently appeared
on promenade with a parasol made of
iizdrd skin.
Mrs. H. B. Rnffner is chief of the
finger-print bureau of the Omaha po
lice department -
More than 16.000 farms in Texas are
operated by women.
The hawthorn was the flower which
formed the wreaths of Athenian brides.
PAID $1,163 FOfi A SINGLE
ROSE—SOME FLOWER, EH!
Paris.—The world’s record price for
a rose was recently paid by Enrique
Jones, antiquary of Paris. The number
of simoleons M. Jones shelled out was
exactly 1,163.
It all resulted from Mille. Cecile
Sorel, noted comedienne, turning auc
tioneer for the benefit of mutilated
veterans. She wasn’t really there to
sell flowers, but old lace, but when a
piece of the latter valued at $164 hit the
ceiling for $17,000 and there was noth
ing left to sell she took a rose from
her corsage and offered that
These he took to his home, placed them
in a box of dry sand, and a few days
later found 9 young rattlers wiggling
cheerfully about in the box.
SMALL BOY RESCUES
FARMER FROM BULL
WHEN DO DUCKS QUACK?
COURT MUST SETTLE IT
Chicago, Ill.—When do ducks quack?
Magistrate C. T. Northrup, of Wilmette,
a Chicago suburb, wants to know.
Ralph M. Snyder complained that
Benjamin P. Kiefer, a neighbor, main
tained a nuisance in the form of ducks
that continually quacked..
"Impossible,” said Kiefer, “ducks
quack only when hatching eggs. Those
that bother you must have been wild
ones.”
The case was continued while the
magistrate investigates ducks.
JOBLESS GIANT, BERLIN
BOUND, NEEDS 3 BEDS
New York. N. Y.—Three beds were
lashed together to make one big one
Saturday on the steamship Orduna,
which is carrying Ludwig Schulten and
some additional cargo back to Germany.
Ludwig is seven feet three inches
tall and life until recently was rosy
for him. All he had to do was sit on
a platform in a side show at Coney
Island and let people see how huge lie
was. But the- giant business is not
what it used to be, if it ever was.
Giants are a drug on the market, cheap
■ tjnd plentiful.
DEXTER S. KIMBALL
Dexter S. Kimball, dean of the col
lege of engineering in Cornell univer
sity, who was elected president of the
American Society of Mechanical En
gineers.
WED WITHOUT RITES;
COUPLE SIGND' CONTRACT
New York, N. Y.—The marriage by
contract of Dr. Leslie Spier, professor
of anthropology at the University of
Washington, now teaching at the Co
lumbia University summer school, to
Miss Erna Gunther, of Brooklyn, was
announced today. The acknowledge
ment of their signatures to a mhrriage
contract before Justice McCook con
stituted the ceremony. Spch marriages
are legal under a New York statute,
but infrequent.
LEE COUNTY FARMER HAS
A RATTLESNAKE FARM
Americus, Ga.—M. W. Bryant, living
in the Rift neighborhood, in Lee county,
20 miles from Americus, has just hatch
ed 9 rattlesnakes from eggs found up
on the Usry plantation, the owne* of
which is his father-in-law. The young
rattlers measure about 12 inches in
length, and will be kept under observa
tion until disposed of. Bryant recently
killed a rattler measuring 6 feet and
having 9 rattles and a button in his
Greenville, S. C.—A twelve-year-old
boy, George Carlton, recently attacked
an infuriated bull with rocks and sticks
in a heroic attempt to rescue William
Cothran, aged thirty, a farmer, who was
being gored by the animal.
The lad’s blows finally caused the
bull to release his victim, but Gothran
died four hours later from thp wounds,
SCREEN SILKEN HOSE IS
PLAN OF SEATTLE COURT
Seattle, Wash.—Short ■ skirts, rolled
stockings, highly colored garters worn
below the knee, dainty ankles and thin
summer dresses'all figure in an investi-
Guire, superintendent of buildings, to
determine the advisability of placing
screens about the witness stands in the
different superior court rooms.
Attorneys have often contended that
juries are swayed by pretty women
with plump limbs, short skirts and
silken stockings, who sit with crossed
legs and smile at male jury members.
Learning that precautions against snch
influence had been taken,at Spokane by
buildihg a short screen about the wit
ness stand which allowed a full bust
view of the witness, but concealed the
lower portion of the anatomy, McGuire
decided to investigate the need of such
precautions here. ^
With the protection afforded by the
screen women clad in short skirts may
cross their legs and take their ease
without exercising any undne influence
upon the jurors. ■ '
Save Pennies—
Waste Dollars
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
Copyright 1921 Hart Schaffner & Marx
Here’s what we mean by
bigger values this fall
Hart Schaffner & Marx
new fall styles specially
priced at
$35.00
for suits with one pair of trousers
$45M0 for suits with two pairs of trousers.
Styleplus Clothes for Fall $25.00, $30.00, $35.00
Satisfaction or money back.
HARLAN & NEAL
The home of Hart Schaffner & Marx and Stylepla. clothes, No Name and Stetson.
Hats, Manhattan Shirts, Nettleton and Bostonian Shoes.