North Georgia citizen. (Dalton, Ga.) 1868-1924, September 08, 1921, Image 2
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1921.
PA&h TWO
Tenn., died last Saturday in Atlanta,
the body being taken to Tunnel Hill,
former home of the deceased, for in
terment.
Mr. McCalla was 51 years of age and
was a prominent Mason, being a Shrin-
er. The funeral services were con
ducted Sunday at Tunnel Hill by Rev.
Mr. Hair, interment being made with
Masonic honors in Tunnel Hill ceme
tery.
He is survived by two brothers (ind
two sisters.
How Much of Your
Earnings Belong to You?
You may think
all com flakes are alike
until you taste— ^
Post Toasties
—best com flakes
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.
Makers of anything in Sheet
Metal.
Estimates cheerfully given.
The portion of your- earnings that
remains after you have paid ex
penses is really all that belongs to
you.
DR. F. L. TEALL
OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
First Nat’l Bank Bldg. Dalton,
Office Phone 233-10 Hours 9-12
Residence Phone 233-20.
Mrs. Ida Haines.
Mrs. Lidia Haines, aged 49 years,
wife of Mr. Alfred Haines, died at her
home in the western part of the city
Saturday, the funeral service being
conducted Sunday by Rev. C. H. Wil
liams, after which interment was,
made in West Hill cemetery.
Calhoun motored to Chattanooga one
day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Jay and Mr. J.
T. Caldwell pnd family attended
church at Tunnel Hill Sunday.
Mr. E. B. Chapman and family, of
near Ringgold, visited relatives here
Saturday and Sunday.
Mr. Jim Massengill and daughter,
Miss Cahie Mae, spent Sunday with
friends and relatives in Villanow.
Mrs. W. C. Jay and little W. C., Jr.,
spent the latter part of last week
with Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Roberson, of
Mt. Vernon.
Mrs. D. C. McClain, of Sugar Valley,
is at the bedside of her sister, Miss
Octavia Dowling.
Miss Ethel Cook, who has been teach
ing school at this place has returned
to her home in Pleasant Valley.
Mr. C. A. Jay and family, of Chat
tanooga, have been visiting relatives
at this place.
Don’t forget the Sunday school at
ten o’clock. Come and bring some
one with you; and B. Y. P. U. in the
afternoon at two-thirty.
If your expenses equal your earn
ings then none of your earnings be
long to you.
Mrs. L. B. Hubbs, Chairman Young
People’s Work.
Lee Routh, Chairman Adult’s Work.
H. L. Smith, W. E. Nants, Sam Has
sler, Executive Committee.
Any one or more of the above are
subject to call for service by any Sun
day school in the county any time.
Next Meeting: Mt. Vernon church,
1922.
Then you’ll understand why the flavor, crispness
and texture make “Post Toasties” the superior ki
Mildred Inez White.
Mildred Inez, the 10-months-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. White,
died Sunday at the home of her par
ents on East Morris street.
Open a savings account for
$1.00 or more and let no
week pass without part of
your earnings being saved
for future emergency or op
portunity.
Interment
was made in West Hill "cemetery after
funeral services conducted from the
home by Rev. Josiah Crudup.
family has the sympathy of
friends in their bereavement.
J. F. Wilson, president East Side
association, and Clay Kenemer, pres
ident West Side association, with the
other officials, are cordially invited to
cooperate with us in the county Sun
day school work. The work does not
conflict, the former emphasizing grad
ing, teacher training extension, sta
tistics with the help of workers and
speakers from the Georga State Sun
day School association, and the latter
emphasizing singing by singing con
tests (second only to gospel teaching)
and other spiritual exercises.
So let us join heart and soul and
make Whitfield county a veritable bee
hive for the next fiscal year and be
able to make the best of all reports
next year at Mt. Vernon.
The Citizen has kindly tendered us
space for news items from any Sun
day school of the county. Divisional
presidents are urged to send me news
items for this space, such as •will en
courage and stimulate other schools.
J-. A. CARTER, PRESIDENT.
many
The First National B
“Bank With Us and You Can Bank On Us.
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Cooper, of Union
Point, were the guests of Mrs. W. E.
Whitener Sunday.
Mrs. F. T. Nelson spent Saturday,
night with Mrs. Bob Nelson in Dalton.
Mrs. Daisy Schneider called on Miss
Cathie Evans at High Point Monday.
Paul Bailey, of Ball Ground, spent
several days last week with homefolks.
Miss Louise Schneider was the
guest of her aunt, Mrs. Lizzie Roe,
of Calhoun, several days recently.
• Ola Bailey, of Chattanooga, spent
the week-end with her parents.
Mrs. G. W. Beach spent Saturday
with her daughter in Dalton.
Messrs. George and Will Berkle and
sister, of Atlanta, and Mrs. Buchholz,
of Dalton, spent Sunday with Mrs.
Daisy Schneider and family.
Rev. Mr. Hair will fill his regular
appointment here next Sunday.
Think About It
(Last Week’s Letter.)
Our Sunday school is processing
nicely at this place, and we have or
ganized a B. Y. P, U. which we hope
will prove a blessing to the church and
community. Also there is prayer
meeting here every Sunday night, apd
the young men seem to be especially
interested, one of them conducting the
services each time.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Lynch and Miss
Eva Gene Robertson are with relatives
and friends in Reo, attending protract
ed meeting which is in session there
this week.
Mrs. Henry Wilson and Mrs. Stone,
of Dalton, were guests of Mrs. S. S.
Calhoun Tuesday afternoon.
Miss Nellie Robertson, of Mt. Ver
non, was visiting relatives in our town
Sunday.
Mr Bud Bryant spent the week-end
with relatives at Beaverdale.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Long and family
are spending the week in Whitville.
We understand that Miss Mary Cal
loway has accepted a position as a
teacher in the Dalton High School.
Miss Bertie" Kennemer. of Dalton,
was the week-end guest of Miss Arrie
Wood.
Miss Ruth Hassler is in Atlanta this
week, the guest of relatives.
We wish her much success in her new
work.
Alabama Lady Was Sick For Threa
Years, Suffering Pain, Nervous
and Depressed—Read Her
Own Story of Recovery.
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain
ed and unproved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
The first meeting of the officers is
called to meet at the First Baptist
church, Dalton, at 3 p. m. o’clock next
Sunday, for the purpose of mapping
out the work of the year 1921-22. Every
one is urged to be present. The im
portance of this meeting is obvious to
all. An invitation is extended to other
Sunday school workers to attend and
take part.
A TEXAS WONDER
For kidney and bladder troubles, gravel,
weak and lame back, rheumatism and irreg
ularities of the kidneys and bladder. At
your druggist’s or by mail, $1.25. Small
bottle often cures- Send for sworn testi
monials. Dr. E. W. Hail. 2926 Olive 8t.,
St. Louis Mo.—Adv.
bad to lay and my little ones do the
work. I was almost d?ad. I tried
every thing I heard of, and a number of
doctors. Still l didn’t get any relief.
I couldn’t oat, and slept poorly. I
believe if I hadn’t heard of and taken
Cardul I would have died. I bought
six bottles, after a neighbor told me
what it did for her.
“I began to eat and sleep, began to
gain my strength and am now well
and strong. I haven’t had any trou
ble since ... I sure can testify to the
good that Cardul did me. I don’t
think there is a better tonic made
and I believe It saved my life.”
For over 40 years, thousands of wo
men have used Cardul successfully,
In the treatment of many womanly
ailments.
If yon suffer as these women did,
take Cardul. It may help you, too.
At all druggists- E 85
CENTER POINT.
BETTER
DEAD
Life is a burden when the body
is racked with pain. Everything
worries and the victim becomes
despondent and downhearted. To
bring bade the sunshine take
C0LDMEDAL
TUNNEL HILL.
MOHt
Rev. Jones filled his regular appoint
ment Sunday and Sunday night at
the Methodist church.
Prayer meeting was conducted by
Mrs. Jones Wednesday night and by
Mr. Jack Bridges Thursday night.
Mr. and 3Trs. John Landon have
returned home after a pleasant visit
with relatives and friends at Cleve
land, Tenn.
Misses Cecil Clark and Elizabeth
Stephens, of Chattanooga, were the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Clark
and family.
Miss Wlnnifred Head is visiting
Mrs. Carrie Hassler, of Chattanooga.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Moody an
nounce the birth of a daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Reed, of New
Hope, were in the city one day last
week.
Miss Catherine Moore left Sunday
for college.
Miss Mary Prothro left Monday for
college at Athens.
Mr. King Stephens has returned to
his work in Alliance, O.
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Baldwin, of Chat
tanooga, are visiting homefolks.
Mrs. Ethel Deadwyler and baby
have returned home to Maryville, Ga.,
after a pleasant visit with her mother,
Mrs. J. R. Foster.
HCAVt
BEEBE
ROLL'ROOFING
The national remedy of Holland for over
200 years; it is an enemy of all pains re
sulting from kidney, liver and uric add
troubles. All druggists, three sizes.
Lack tor the name Gold Medal on every box
FREEZ0NE
Big Production Means Big Value!
T HE fact that theCareyFactory at Lockland is the
largest roll roofing plant in the country makes a
difference to you in dollars and cents.
The Carey factories operate their own asphalt refin
eries thereby insuring the quality at all times.
They manufacture their own felts with the finest cost
saving machinery ever invented. They pay no middle
men’s profits anywhere.
They employ many cost reducing methods in manu
facturing which are not possible in a smaller plant.
They can put better felt and more asphalt in each roll
of roofing and still keep the price down.
We offer you roll roofings in a wide choice of finishes
and a choice of weights, to afford whatever length of
service you wish to get, at the lowest possible cost for
that service. .
Corns Lift Off
with Fingers
CLUB NOTES
MORTUARY
Drop a little “Freezone” on an ach
ing corn, instantly that com stops hurt
ing, then shortly you lift it right off
with fingers. It doesn’t hurt a bit.
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
“Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to
remove every hard com, soft com, or
corn between the toes, and the calluses,
without a particle of pain.—-AdT.
On last Thursday, Sept. 1, the L. G.
C. Judd Winning Sewing club met at
Dug Gap. Several members were pres
ent. Mrs. Ruth King, president, call
ed the meeting to order and work be
gan.
Several dresses and smocks were be
gun and some few finished.
Mrs. Clara King ’made a talk on
“Hats” after we had worked two
hours sewing.
We decided to meet again Monday,
and to have two meetings each week
for a while—Monday and Thursday
afternoons. A call meeting of mem
bers was called for Saturday, Sept.
10. Every member is requested to
come. We will talk and discuss our
work for the fair.
Beatrice Williams, Sec.
DEATHS TAKES PROMINENT
GORDON SPRINGS FARMER
W. M. Crawford Stricken Monday
Night, Dying in Short Time
Mr. and Mrs. Stark entertained
their visitors, together with neighbors,
at a delicious barbecue dinner Mon
day.
Mr. Bill King, of Chattanooga, was
the guest of his mother, Mrs. Ed King,
Sunday.
Mrs. Phyllis Anderson, of Chatta
nooga, is the guest of Mrs. Lizzie Belle
King this week.
Miss Ida Ford spent last week with
relatives and friends in Atlanta.
Several from here attended the bap
tizing at Swamp Creek Sunday.
W. M. Crawford, aged 47 years, a
well-known and popular farmer living
in the Gordon Springs settlement,' died
at about 5 o'clock Tuesday morning.
Mr. Crawford got out of his bed dur
ing the electrical storm of Monday
night and suddenly fell unconscious to
the floor. He never came out of the
stupor, his death occurring within a
few hours.
Mr. Crawford, is survived by his
wife and the following children. Har
ris, Martha Susan and Ben Crawford.
The funeral services will be held
this afternoon. Rev. J. H. Cargal to
conduct the services, and interment
will be made in Dnnegan cemetery.
ANTIOCH.
THE JAMES SUPPLY CO., DISTRIBUTORS
The Cherokee Mfg. Company
Dealer
DALTON, GEORGIA
Mrs. Katie Kreiscber spent last week
with her daughter, Mrs. Lizzie Roe,
in Calhoun.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cavender and
son, Travis, of Dalton, called on Mr.
G. W. Cavender Sunday afternoon.
Those who spent Sunday at J. M.
Bailey’s were Misses Nina and Valna
Johnson, of Dalton, and Mrs. F. T.
Nelson, Mrs. Gertrude Nelson, Miss
Robbie Bailey and Mr. Roy Carder, of
Tilton.
Mr. T. E. Bishop, of Chattanooga,
spent the week-end with his niece,
Mrs. J. M. Bailey.
Mr. and Mrs. Roe, of Calhoun, were
the guests of Mrs. Daisy Schneider one
day last week.
GIRLS! WHITEN SKIN
WITH LEMON JUICE
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 beauties use this lem
on lotion to bleach and bring that soft,
clear, rosy-white complexion, also as a
freckle, sunbuyn, and tan bleach.—Adv.
Dodson’s Liver Tone
Instead of Calomel
DEATH OF DALTON’S
FIRST FEMALE CHILD
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-hack guarantee that
at will ^regulate the liver, stomach and
bowels better than calomel, without
sickening or salivating you—15 miiii<m
bottles sold.
Mrs. Lucy Morgan Passed Away at
Her Home in Murray
J. M. Cash, prop, of grocery, 7 E.
Morris St., Dalton, says: “I think
Doan’s Kidney Pills are the beet kidney
remedy made. I cannot praise them
too highly, for what they have done
for me. My hack caused me a lot
of suffering, and I was so Bore and
lame I could hardly bend. I had dizzy
spells and headaches, and my kidneys
ever acted right. A friend recommend
ed Doan’s Kidney Pills to me, and I
tried them. They did me so much
good, I continued using them, and "they
put my kidneys in good shape.”
The above statement was given
March 5, 1915, nad on May 4,1918, Mr.
Cash said: “I cannot say enough in
praise of Doan’s Kidney Pills. They
greatly relieved me of kidney trouble
some time ago and any kidney remedy
I ever used cannot take the place
of Doan's.”
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milbnrn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv.
Mrs. Lucy Morgan, wife of W. M.
Morgan, died Monday at her home in
Murray county. She was 79 years of
age.
Mrs. Morgan was bom in this city,
being the first girl baby bom here
when the town was first laid out.
The body was taken to Tilton ceme
tery for interment
SKIN TROUBLES
May Defy Lotions & Ointments
Eczema, tetter and similar affec
tions should be treated through
the blood. Outside applications
offer only temporary relief. The
thing to use is S. S. S.—the stand
ard blood purifier, which has suc
cessfully relieved such troubles
tor over 50 years.
For Special Booklet or for indi
vidual advice, without char go,
write Chief Medical Advisor,
S.S.S, Co., Hep’1431, Atlanta, Ga.
DOGWOOD VALLEY
♦ ROSTER, WHITFIELD COUN- ♦
♦ TY SUNDAY SCHOOL ♦
♦ CONVENTION ♦
Yalet AntoStfop Razor
1» Complete in Itself
It is more than a razor uwe
than a safety device.
It is stropped, k shaves and m
cleaned without fading apart;
without even removbg the blade.
And like a perfectly stropped
ordinary razor, die blade Im
proves with use.
And k doesn't caatyoae-cent
to prove all dais ta yew mm
satisfaction.
CITY DRUG STORE J. W.
Any aeapoceibie P«*y can ?’
wnae at oar Cbdesy counter rcr
das Free Tried. If you have a
charts account, write tx> us and we
wffl nadl the razor to y°°-
Teams men the opportune
of trying tfabwonderful Raz^*
wfchootWkind of risk Fora
■mtfk your shaving will cost you
Rev. W. R. Lackey.
Rev. W. R. Lackey, aged 90 years,
died Wednesday in Chattanooga, the
body being brought here Thursday
and taken to Pine Grove for interment,
Rev. Mr. Dantzler conducting the fu
neral service. Rev. Mr. Lackey was
formerly stationed in this county and
had many friends and admirers here
who were grieved to learn of his death.
J. A. Carter, president; W. L. Mc
Williams, vice president; C. O. Smith,
secretary.
Nonsectarian. Nondenominational.
Division presidents: First, H. J.
Smith; second, R. A. Williams; third,
W. H. Westbrook; fourth, Frank Rol
lins; fifth, W. E. Nants.
Mrs. W. L. McWilliams, Chairman
Children’s Work.
John H. McCalla.
John H. McCalla, of Rockwood,