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THE DALTON CITIZEN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1921,
Such Values Have Not Been
Offered Since 1914
One Price for Any Fabric /
300 styles to choose from. Guaranteed /
strictly all wool—Made to order. /
They’re All One Price / A
lz suit $28 50 A
Made to Your Order ■ Ir
We bough heavy in new merchandise for fall; Quality and style considered in every purchase. These goods
were bought at the right time to get the lowest possible prices, so we are going to pass these bargains on to
rou. During the County Fair week we are going to give you some extra specials and extend a cordial in
vitation to all our friends and customers to make ou r store headquarters for your shopping, to leave your
packages and rest. We are always glad to see you. Come one, come all, and enjoy the big Fair. Look-
Read and Buy and enjoy these Specials:
Men’s Department
Men’s all-wool serge suits in Conservative and Men’s odd coats, Special _$5.00 and $8.50
English cuts. Special $19.50 ' Large stock of men’s work pants. Special $1.25 up
Men’s all-wool French serge with snap in ev- Men’s dress shirts. Special ------$1.00 up
ery suit Special $24.50 Large stock of men s and boys sample hats that we
Men’s raincoats and overcoats. Specially priced can pass on to you at wholesale prices.
at _ _ _ $6.00 up Boys, we have that Norfolk belted suit that you have
Men’s overalisT Special'"”-- ”””__$1.25 pair been wanting, in fancy all-wool French serges
Men’s blue work shirts. Special 69c and tweed mixtures. Specials $7.95, $9.95, $13.50
Men’s odd dress pants. Special __$3.50, $4.50, $5.00 Boys’ odd pants and slipover sweaters, as well as
an( j $6.50 coat sweaters. Special 65c up
Full Suit
or Overcoat
Made to Order
$32.50
John D. Anderson Co.
Exclusive Agents
New Shoes! New Shoes!
Ladies’ coats with fur collars, belted and loose
back models. Special $9.98 up
Ladies’ coat suits. Special $12.48 up
Children’s coats, ages 2 to 14. Special $1.48 up
Dress ginghams and chambray. Special, per
yard — »- 10c up
Fall color outings. Special 1 , per yd 12V 2 c
36-inch unbleached sheeting. Special, yd 10c up
Full bed size double blankets. Special, pair$1.98 up
Fhll line of serges and satins. French serge in
navy and plum. Special, yd. $1.25
Duchess satins. Specially priced, yard $2.19
Silk floss in colors to harmonize.
Look! Children’s hosiery, sizes 5 to 9% in black
black and brown. Special, pair 10c up
Full line of knit headwear and underwear for the
whole family.
SPECIAL:- Linen and wool flannel, 32 inches
wide, soft and warm, yard i. 75c
Other grades, yard 45c
Don’t forget the bundles for all purposes at 75c
$1.00 and ^ $1.35
TRAM HARK RK.US.fM.Ofr. IIM H6.US.fW.0H.
Large stock of shoes now ready, for dress wear and every
day, for the ENTIRE family. The right kind at the right
prices. See them before buying and be convinced. The
all-leather kind with a strong guarantee, so you run no
risk in buying them. Don’t forget we are sole agents for
Walk-Over Shoes—-the shoe with a national reputation.
Look for the big Horseshoe hanging over the Yellow fron t,
Spot Cash and Small Profits.
WANTED—A CASH REGISTER.
CLOSING OUT PRICES ON ALL TRUNKS,
tion, which claims to have millions of
dollars for the establishment and main
tenance of a great system of chain
Stores.
DIAMOND DYES DON’T
STREAK, FADE OR RUN
Girl Drives Touring Car for Gang
sters.
New York, N. Y. ; —A girl gangster
took part in a fresh outbreak of a fend
of long standing in the San Jan hill
district of Manhattan early this morn
ing. She, driving a large black tour
ing car in which rode four male gang
sters, flashed past the intersection of
ninth avenue and Fifty-eighth street in
an automobile, firing a fusilade of shots
at a group of men standing just aeros-
the street.
SENATOR JOHN K. SHIELDS
Always at Your
Service for
Printing Needs!
Buy “Diamond Dyes’’—no other
kind:—then perfect home dyeing is
guaranteed. Even if yon have never
dyed before, you can put a new, rich,
fadeless color into your worn, shabby
dresses, skirts, waists, stockings, coats
sweaters, draperies, hangings, every
thing, by following the simple direc
tions in every package of Diamond
Dyes. Just teU yonr druggist wheth
er the material yon wish to dye is woo.
or silk or whether it is linen, cotton,
or mixed goods. Diamond Dyes never
streak, spot, fade, or run.—Adv.
Put Lid on Tenants.
London.—Tenants of the new houses
[built and rented by Bedwas Council
have been; forbidden to take lodgers or
to keep pigeons or chickens.
We ar^ constantly receiv
ing new goods for the Fall
trade. Now is a good
time to buy what you need.
The new goods arriving
i
are of course on the
Operation on Chicken.
Stockholm, N. J.—A pullet owned by
Mrs. Lncinda Simonds swallowed a
bone, which lodged in its crop. Mrs.
Simonds slit 4 the crop, removed the
bone and sewed up the wound with
catgut. The‘chicken has completely re
covered.
Birth Announcements
Wedding Stationery
Envelope IndosBM*
Sole Bills
Bond Bills .
Price Lists
Admission Tickets
Business Cards
Window Cards
Time Cards
Letter Heads
Note' Heads
Bill Heads Envelopes
Calllnd Cords Leaflets
Statements
Milk Tickets
Heal Tickets
Shipping Taim
Announcements
Briefs
Notes
Conpons
Pamphlets
Catalodnea
Cliv.nlars
. Body Seen to Pass Over Niagara
Falls.
Niagara Falls, N. Y.—A woman’s hat
and a black leather purse were found
on a bench on the state reservation
following a report that a body had
teen seen to pass over the brink of the
American falls at 6 o’clock last night.
The purse and hat, according to in
scriptions written on a memorandum
inside, were the property of Miss Beat
rice Orr, of Cleveland. Ohio.
Siren Heralds the Bride
Bellamy, Ala.—Alabama is talking
today about a most unusual wedding.
The minister who was to have tied the
.knot was in an airplane, which crashed
into a tree
new
low level of price and ev
erything has been marked
down to conform. Some
goods in our lines are
showing a slight advance,
so you can’t lose in buy
ing now.
Our friends are always
welcome and we hope you
will drop in to see us at any
time.
YOU’RE SICK, BILIOUS!
TAKE “CASCARETS” FOR
LIVER AND BOWELS
a blast from the siren at
the lumber plant announced the arriv
al of the wedding party at the altar;
1,000 wedding guests were seated at a
table in' a frame church built for the
ceremony, and the table was so long
that those at one end could not hear
other. Those who
Movies for Lunatics.
Birmingham, Eng.—Moving picture
have become so popular at WInson
Green asylum that the authorities hare
decided to continue the performances
which they began three months ago.
’New portrait of Senator John Knight
Shields of Tennessee.
Blotters
invitation*
Folders
Checks
Blanks
Notices
Labels
Ledal Blanks
Venn Cards
Placards
Dodders
Post Cards
Prodrams
Bacelpta
Prompt, careful and effi
cient attention given
to evety detail
speakers at the
didn’t dance were entertained by mo
tion pictures.
Some Sleeper!
Paris.—Awakening from a nap on a
train- between Lison and St. Brienc,
Prof. Albert Terhune, of Oxford Uni
versity, found the entire lining , of his
coat cut away and his pocketbook gone
with its contents of $5,000 in bills.
Noted Wrestler to Help.
New York.—Dr. B. F. Roller, heavy
weight wrestling champion of America
in 1913-14-15, is going to devote half
of the balance df his life to rebuilding
overworked business men. Though he
has a flourishing business in this city,
Dr. Roller has opened a health farm
at Stockholm, N. J., and is. going to
spend half of his time there rebuild
ing the inert muscles of business men
whose good health, he says, is essen
tial for the country’s welfare.
DALTON CREAMERY
Notice To Farmers
Don’t fiend Yonr Order
Out of Town Untfl Yon
See What We Can Do
Saved $50 in Twenty Years.
Burton-on-Trent, Eng.—Thomas Hall,
an -inmate of the local workhonse,
saved his coppers for twenty years,
accumulating $50. Then he applied for
leave to visit friends. It has been
granted.
All farmers intending to make agreements to
furnish cows for the Dalton Creamery are re
quested to see J. J. Copeland at the Bank of
Dalton at
Cripple Makes Fortune.
Wrexham, Eng.—Seth Lovell, who
broke his spine several years ago, open
ed a betting office and took the bets
as he lay on his bed at the open win
dow. He accumulated a fortune before
the police interfered. He has promised
to retire. < /
younger brothers and sisters and then
commit suicide. Physicians fear that
the shock will permanently affect her
mind.
SEVENTEEN CITIZEN Keister
Dancing Champions.
London.—Charles D’Albert, president
of the Imperial Society of Dance Teach
ers, declares Englishmen have at last
become the world’s finest dancers, sur
passing all American competitors. He
says Americans go in too much for
“stunts.’’
once,
ery is to be built.
Try to Hold Up Prince.
Zurich, Switzerland.—Five bandits
attempted to rob the Maharajah Hol-
kar of Indore at Grindelwald, but were
beaten off by the Prince’s attendants.
One was captured later.
Why Prisoner Was Late.
Cumberland, Md.—When the case
against Henry Marcus was called in
court here the defendant failed to an
swer. A few minutes later a guard
arrived and said that the lock on Mar
cus’s cell was broken anid the door could
not be opened. A blacksmith released
the prisoner in time to be fined $50.
French Protest Trade.
Paris.—Owing to the large number
of foreigners doing business in France
as “French companies,” sixty-one em
ployer?’ associations have joined-hands
to force every corporation to name
their directors and the nationality and
address of each on the official letter
heads.
THE DALTON CREAMERY CO
Americans Challenge.
New York.—An organization of
American clothiers has decided to in
vade Europe and compete with Euro
pean fashions right on their own
ground. Paris and London will Be the
distributing centers of this organiza-
Watches Father Slay.
Little Rock, Ark.—Hiding behind a
door, Henrietta Fenton, aged 10, looked
through the crack and saw her father,
a discouraged farmer, kill her four