Newspaper Page Text
Lake Mahop c, Nr Y
the edge of a < nek to g
Arthur Hamer, aged 6,
and was dm ned in
water.
problem of the disabled
n is ever-expanding and
ill not reach the peak be-
is the assertion of well-in-
emment officials and that
Cross Chapters regard it
Got S mething
You
Want to Sell?
< ► Most peoj le have a piece
\ ► of furnituia farm imple-
J | meat, or something else
< > which the r have discard-
4 ► ed and wl ich they no lon-
\ l ger want.
i»
i ► These thi igs are put in
< ► the attic, i r stored away
\ * in the ba a, or left lying
< ► about, get ing of less and
1", less value each year.
Jnited States Public
Contract and Govem-
i men receiving
impensation and
■om the Govem-
their efforts to'
the Red Cross
t, acting as the
VHYNOT
SE1L THEM ?
Some »dy wants those
very tilings which have
become of no use to you.
Why not try to find that
somelsody by putting a
want advertisement in
THIS NEWSPAPER?
Most vital to the man’s gaining full
benefit from the Government’s care Is
keeping his mind free from worry about
his home. Keeping the veteran’s fam
ily from hardship of every kind and
informing him of its welfare is an-
GROWS LONG,
AND ABUNDANT
VDanderine” costs
only 35 cents a bottle. A
One application ends all 1
dandruff, stops itching
and falling hair, and.
in a few moments, you
have doubled the beauty v
of your hair. It will 4'
appear a mass so soft,
lustrous, and easy to '"I
do up. But what will \ J
please you most will be®
after a few weeks use,-Si
when you see new hair”
—fine and downy at
lontli during the last year,
can Red Cross has given
one kind or another to an
129,215 former service men
families. An indication of
of the faith reposed in the
Chapter is to be found in
hat there were 356,544 re
friendly aid in the solution
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY,
he would -be welcomed as the people
wished, with cheers or other demon
stration. However, this created such
a protest from the Conservatives that
the lid was clamped down. When the
Prince arrived here he was given a
silent welcome, not a sound coming
from the vast assemblage which had
assembled at the station.
workingmen. As a result landlords are
combining to help relieve unemploy
ment.
Elephants Cause Panic.
AMIENS.—A herd of elephants
brought here by a moving picture com
pany became frantic in a storm and
ran amuck. They terrorized villages
for twenty miles around before they
were captured.
KEEPING WELL ad N1 Tablet
(a vegetable aperient) taken at
night will help keep you well, by
toning, and strengthening your di
gestion and elimination. „ _
clsed for
Latest Fish Story.
SWANSEA, Wales.—While fishing
for mackerel, Mrs. Mary Thompson
hooked a five-foot shark. Five men
helped her land it.
: Madman at Sea.
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt.. — Giovanni
Lonjini, a; wealthy importer, went in
sane while traveling from Genoa to
Alexandria. He killed two passengers"
on his steamer and wounded the cap
tain before he was shot to death.
Assassin Ends Life.
VIENNA. — The unidentified Bul
garian who attempted to assassinate
Prince George of Serbia at the Par-
posi railroad station, has committed
suicide. 4
School Children Strike.
LLANGOLLEN, Eng.—Seven hun
dred school children went on s trike here
when the headmaster, a popular fa
vorite, was replaced by an unpopu-.
lar instructor. The strike ended af
ter several \of the leaders had been
flogged by their parents.
N - Latest Opera Cloaks.
PARIS.—One of the striking opera
cloaks displayed at the season’s open
ing here was of gold brocade, trimmed
with dull red rose. Another was all
of ermine.
New Excuse Wins.
'ORK.—“Yes, I was drunk-
Gii$* eff ihs Old Bock
NEW
Ml JUKI O.BS Little JRs
Cnc-tbird the regular dose. Made
of the same ingredients, then candy
coated. For children and adults.
CITY DRUG STORE.
Bolsheviks for India.
RIGA.—More than 300 Bolshevik
agents have been sent to India to
foment trouble between England and
her native subject^. All are liberally
-supplied with funds.
Women on ’Change.
BERLIN. -- Anticipating favorable
action on tl/e bill abolishing the rule
excluding women from the Berlin
Stock Exchange, nearly fifty women
hive opened brokerage offices here*
The men brokers intend to oppose the
bill. •/ fH ■ -
XPECTAH
'MOTHER;
For Three Generation*
Have Made Child-Birth
Alcohol was first distilled by the
Arabians.
“No Work; No Rent.”
LONDON.—The slogan of the Shore
ditch Labor Party, “No - Work; No
Rent,” is being adopted and put into
effect by numerous organizations of
Theater Salaries Cut.
LONDON.—TJheaters of both Lon
don and Paris are reducing wages.
The humble stage hands are not af-
WR1TKPOR BOOKLET OR MOTHERHOOD AMTSR BAST. PRU
Erabfield Regulator Co.. Dept. t-D. Atlanta. 6a.
Powdered SOAP
Do you want to do a washing without rubbing clothes
—without boiling them—without doing a thing more than
taking them from the soaking water—wringing them out
and hanging them up?
Do you want to do a washing in this way and have
clean, sweet, white clothes? Then soak your clothes
with Grandma.
The miracle will happen. Grandma’s Powdered Soap
will make your clothes clean just by soaking. Soak them
over night—or soak them two or three hours ip the mom*
ng; Then wring them out. Not a single harmful ingredient
to injure fabric or color.
A wholesome soap powdered fine.
No waste. The quickly dissolving
granules never stick in the fabric, as
bar soap does. The big 5c package
saves soap, saves time, saves the
clothes. The most economical soap
you can buy. Grandma is good
enough for your finest things and
cheap enough for all your things.
No Boiling—No Rubbing—Washday Made Easy
The Globe Soap Company .*. Cincinnati, Ohio
New Sultan Recognized.
LONDON.—Great Britain has rec
ognized Ibn Sand, the Arabian Emir,
as Sultan of Nejd. In that Arabian
country it is a penal offense for women
to wear a silk gown, while cigarette
smoking and alcohol drinking are pun
ishable by death.
Bars Noise for Prince.
TOKIO.—Before Grown Prince Hi-
rohito returned from his Western trip
it was announced that on his arrival
fected, bat instead the stars are re
ceiving cuts of from 25 to 50 per cent.
Champion Egg-Layers.
AUCKLAND, N. -8L—In the official
report of . the egg-laying contest pro
moted by the New Zealand Poultry
Club, one duck is reported (to have
laid 341 • eggs in 240 days; another
laid 363 eggs in 365 days.
850 DISASTER DEATH
TOLL FOR ONE YEAR
Red Cross Gives $1,871,000 Re
lief When 65,000 Families
Are Made*Homeless.
Forty-three, disasters, resulting in
the death in the United States of 850
persons and the injury of 2,500 called
for emergency relief measures and
the expenditure of $1,871,000 by the
American Red Cross during the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1921, says an
announcement based upon the forth
coming annual report of the Red Cross.
These disasters caused property dam
age estimated at $30,000,000, affected
sixty-seven communities and rendered
65,000 families homeless.
The year’s disasters were of vary
ing types, including several which pre
viously had never been thought of
as falling within that classifica
tion. The Red Cross furnished
relief in seventeen fires of magnitude,
five floods, seven tornadoes or cy
clones, one devastating storm, three
explosions, including the one in Wall
street; one building accident, twj
typhoid epidemics, the most serious be--
Ing that at Salem, Ohio, which af
fected 9 per cent of the population;
one smallpox epidemic, in the republic
of Haiti; one train wreck, the race riot
at Tulsa, Okla.; the famine in China,
emergency relief in famine among the
Indians of Alaska, the grasshopper
plague in North Dakota and an earth
quake In Italy.
Pueblo Most Serious
By far the most severe of the dis
asters In the United States during the
period covered by the Red Cross re
port was the Pueblo, flood early in
June, 1921. The rehabilitation prob
lem confronting the Red Cross in
Pueblo was one of the most difficult
In recent years. When the first news
of the horror was flashed throughout
the country, the American Red Cross
National Headquarters responded with
a grant of $105,000 for relief work.
Governor Shoup of Colorado, appre
ciating the long and successful experi
ence of the Red Cross in organizing
disaster relief work, placed the en
tire responsibility for the administra
tion of relief in its hands.
In response to appeals from Presi
dent Harding, Governor Shoup and
other governors of western states and
through local chapters of the Red
. Cross and other community organisa
tions, public-spirited citizens brought
the total contributed for Pueblo’s re
habilitation to more than $325,000.
The terrible havoc wrought by the
flood waters Is a Shatter of record.
More than 2,300 homes were affected
and 7,351 persons were left homeless.
Estimates of $500,000 as an absolute
minimum for rehabilitation were made
by Red Cross officials In charge of the
relief work..
Fast Work in Wall Street
The Wall street explosion was nota
ble in that relief workers of the Red
Gross were on the scene twenty min
utes after the disaster occurred. The
race riot at Tulsa also was unique in
disaster relief annals In that outside
of a small emergency relief fund con
tributed by the Red Cross, the only
relief measures outside the city con
sisted of the service of social work
ers, nurses and a trained executive
whose object was to assist local forces
to directing their own efforts.
In decided contrast with the pre
vious year, only one tornado assumed
the proportions of a major disaster.
This occurred on April 15, in the bor
der sections of Texas and Arkansas
with the city of Texarkana as the
center. The significant feature of this
disaster relief work was the fact that
It covered so much rural territory as
to make necessary a large number
relief workers.
The famine in China, necessitating
relief expenditures totalling more than
$1,000,000 by the American Red Cross
was by far the most serious of the
foreign disasters in which the Red
Cross gave aid. *
Builds Up. Its Machinery
In connection with the administra
tion of disaster relief measures, an in
creasing effectiveness on the part of
the Red Cross to deal with emergen
cies was manifested daring the past
year. In 328 Chapters of the Ameri
can Red Cross there have been formed
special committees to survey the re
sources of their respective communi
ties and to be prepared in case of
disaster. In others of the 3,402 active
Chapters, a network of communication
has been formedthrough which instan
taneous relief may be dispatched to
any part of the United States.
That its work in this field may be
continued with ever greater effective
ness, the American Red Cross is ap
pealing for widespread renewal of
membership during its Annual Roll
Call, to be conducted this year from
November 11 to 24.
LIFE SAVING CORPS
ENROLLMENT 10,000
Growth of Red Cross' Life Saving
Corps throughout the country con
tinued unabated during the last fiscal
year, a summary of the year’s
achievements by that Red Cross Serv
ice shows. There are now 160 Corps
with a total membership of more than
10,000 members, of whic-h 1,276 are
sufficiently skilled in the wor\ to act
as examiners. Among the outstanding
achievements of the Red Cross in this
field during the last year was the or
ganization at the United States Naval
Academy, Annapolis, of what is per
haps the largest life saving corps in
the world.
by the doctor’s orders,” said James
Clarkston when arrainged here. “He
ordered me to take gin and I took it—
a bottle.” The physician corroborated
his statement. Clarkson was dis
charged.
Finest Motor Track.
Paris.—The finest jnotor racing track
in the world will be built near the Port
of Versailles. It will far surpass the
famous English course at Brooklands.
$10,000,000 AID
FOR VETERANS
Red Cross Provides Friendly
Service of Many Kinds to
Army of Disabled.
BULK OF WORK BY CHAPTERS
2,397 of These Are Helping Ex
Service Men Obtain Bene
fits U. S. Provides.
One field of Red Cross service alone,
that of assisting disabled veterans ol
the World War, entails expenditures
$4,000,000 greater than the aggregate
receipts of the Annual Roll Call of
1920, the American Red Cross an
nounces in a statement urging a wide
spread increase'in membership at the
Annual Roll Call, November 11 to 24
At the present time National Head
quarters and the nation-wide chain of
Chapters of the Red Cross is spend
ing approximately $10,000,000 annual
ly for the relief of disabled ex-service
men and their families, while the ag
gregate receipts from last year’s Roll
Call were approximately $6,000,000-
It Is in the 2,289 of the 3,600 Red
Cross Chapters which still are helping
solve the veteran’s problem of adjust
ing himself to a normal civilian status
that the greater part of the cost of this
service is borne. Of the total sum
spent for veterans’ relief last year,
National Headquarters expended a to
tal of more than $2,600,000, while the
remaining disbursement of approx!
mately $7,000,000 represents the con
tribution of Chapters in this country
wide effort to assist the. Government
in providing the aid sorely needed
these men and their families.
An Ever Expanding Problem
That the. problem of the
service man Is ever-expand
probably will not
fore 1925, is the
formed Gov
2,397 Red
as their most important work is evi
dence that the expansion is in nowise
confined to a particular section'but Is.
on the contrary, nation-wide. At the
end of the fiscal year, June 30, 1921.
there were 26,300 disabled service men
in the 1,692 1
Health Service,
ment Hospitals and Soldiers Homes,
and that number is increasing at a
rate of 1,000 a month.
Thousands of these
medical treatment, eompensa
vocational training from the
ment today, started
obtain them through the
Chapter. The Chapter, acting as
disabled man’s agent in claims against
the Government, informs the man as
the procedure necessary to gain for
him that which Is provided him by
Federal statute. His applications for
compensation, medical treatment
training are properly filed with the aid
of the Red Cross Chapter.
Many Forms of Assistance
If there is delay before the man’s
claim is acted upon, the Red Cross
Chapter lends the man money
the imperative needs of himself
his dependents.
Most vital
benefit from the
VM11C1 piVMlUVU VI IUC VlUiptCl. X* i
from fear on this score, the man’s
eovery and- advancement usually Is
rapifl.
Every month during the last
die American Red Cross
service of
average of
and their families. An indication
the extent of the
Red Cross Chapter is to
the fact that there were
quests for friendly aid in
of personal problems.
448 Workers in Hospitals
While the man prior to
Government care deals largely
Chapter, afterward he comes into
tact with the service provided by
rional Headquarters. There are 448
Red Cross workers in the United
States Public Health Service and. con
tract hospitals and other Institutions
In which these men are being cared
for, whose duty is to provide for his
recreation, help him with his compen
sation claims, keep him in touch with
his family; in short, meeting his every
need outside of that provided by the
Government. While these are a few
of the responsibilities of the National
Organization, they are by no means
all. Among other Red Cross accom
plishments for the year are:
It handled 70,732 allotment and al
lowance claims.
It delivered through its Chapter or
ganization 63,655 allotment checks to
veterans who had moved from the ad
dresses furnished to the Bureau of
War Risk Insurance. •
It provided a special fund of $10,00C
for medical assistance to men under
vocational training.
It made 32,495 loans totaling $450,000
to men taking vocational training, of
which 85 per Cent has been repaid.
QUARTER CENTURY
SEARCH REWARDEg
Mrs. Ida Pickett, 274 South Diyki,
St., Buffalo, N. Y., says: 1
“Twenty-five years is a. long tic
to keep looking for something witw
finding it, and it’s no wonder I aW
lost hope. But I finally found wiugi
was hunting—a medicine to relief h
of an awful case of indigestion.
“Tanlac rewarded my long seam
for relief, and I now enjoy bettj!
health than I have in thirty yeara.”
Many people on verge of de^,
have taken Tanlac and recovered.
Tanlac is sold in Dalton by Finett
& Nichols.—Adv.
We Are
Always Ready
to serve
printing- _ „ ... wwtm
the nature of tHe job may
be we are ready to do a
at a price that will be
you with good
No matter what
actory
theory propo
ical Journal
Queen’s Uni'
ui led
v€ sity,
in the British Med
Dr. S. T. Irwin of
Belfast.
first—yes—but really new hair - r0 "'
ing all over the scalp. ••Danders is
to the hair what frqsli showers of
rain and. sunshine are to vegetatin'-
It goes right to the roofs, in vigor jH'>
and strengthens them. This deligt't 1111,
stimulating tonic helps thin, lif-'t"-
faded hair to grow long. Thick, h-.-av)
and luxuriant.—A-dv.
King and Prince Firemen.
ROME.—The King and Crown Prince
have<-received an engrossed letter of
thanks from a village near Valdieri,
their country residence. The royal pair
led in the work of fighting and ex
tinguishing a fire which threatened to
destroy the village.
Brainy Microbe*.
LONDON.—That intellectual ability
is due, not to the size of the brain, but
to substances in the blood ereated by
the microbes of various diseases is a
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