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TWO GREAT WRITERS and “THE OLD NEST’
“One of the greatest of all stories because its theme is the great
est of all themes—Life, and Life NOW, here, yours, mine.
“All bitter and sweet, and sad and glad, and majestic and
petty, and divine and pitiful!
“A film story of life!”—Dr. Franl? Crane.
“The Old Nest’’ is real and touching and almost incredibly
without an atom of false sentiment. I have seen it four times
and cried each time.—Alice Duer Miller.
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9TH
DON’T FORGET THE DAY AND DATE
Suppose you could make a wish at the
breakfast tablp and fir-ally have the wish come
true. Would you say,
“l want this to be a good day,” or—T am
willing for this day to drag along?”
If you keep on wishing your days' with the
food you eat, finally the wish is likely to come
true.
Grape-Nuts helps yen:; wkh T ra good day.
Nothing miraculous; just the natural result from
right food with the right taste.
There i3 a charm of fh Tr rr and crispness
in Grape-Nuts that is like the smile of a good
friend at the breakfast table—
And Grape-Nuts, with cream or miik (fresh
or tinned), is fully nourishing—feeding the tissues
and glands, the bone and blood with iust those
elements which Nature requires — building
strength without any “heaviness.”
Grape-Nuts is' the perfected goodness of
wheat and malted barley, scientifically developed
—ready to eat from the package. A Grape-Nuts ‘
breakfast or lunch is a practical wiuh for good luck.
“There’s a Reason
Sold by all grocers
We Sell You What We Tell You
TELEPHONE 71
tfj E|j ij;
Mr. A. L. Funk, of Tulsa, Okla., is
visiting Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Tyler, and
is being warmly welcomed by bis Dal
ton friends.
BUY A USEFUL PRESENT
This year and come to us for It
CONSIDER THIS LIST:
Whips
Lap Robes
Leather Puttees
Cook Stoves
Ranges
Washing Machines
A Western Electric Light and Power
Plant at $245.00. Give it to the fam
ily. It will make the memory of
Christmas, 1921, last a lifetime.
The Dalton Buggy Go,
Some People We Know, and We
Will Profit to Hear About Them.
This is a purely local event.
It took place in Dalton.
Not in some faraway place.
You are asked to investigate it.
Asked to believe a citizen’s word;
To confirm a citizen’s statement.
Any article that is endorsed at home
Is more worthy of-confidence
Than one you know nothing about,
Endorsed by unknown people.
Sam Hensley, shoemaker, 3 S. Depot
St., Dalton, says: “I was injured and
my kidneys were weakened. It seemed
the least work gave- me severe pain in
the small of my back and disordered
my kidneys. This greatly annoyed me
during the night. I had to get up sev
eral times and lost much sleep. Hear
ing of Doan’s Kidney Pills, I bought
a box at Fincher & Nichols Drug Store
and they greatly relieved me.”
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milbum
Go., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ ♦
♦ PERSONAL MENTION ♦
♦ ♦
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
Mr. Ernest Stroup is home from an
extended trip to Orlando, Fla.
Hi Kifi
See Roberts Bros, before you sell
your corn and peas.
Hi Hi Hi
Mrs. F. K. McCutchen returned this
week from a delightful visit to friends
in Atlanta.
Hi Hi Hi
Tanlac now has the largest sale of
any medicine in the world. There is a
reason. Sold by Fincher & Nichols.—
Adv.
Tanlac has made life worth living
for millions of people who had almost
given up hope. It will do the same for
you. Sold by Fincher & Nichols,
you. Sold by Fincher & Nichols.—Adv.
Hi Hi Hi
See us for Premo Cameras, Films,
Albums, Developing Tanks, Trays,
Art Comers, Every-Beady Pencils and
Edison Fountain Pens. Finley’s Stu
dio.—Adv,
“Tanlac made me feel younger.” “It
put me back on the payroll.” “I can
eat whatever I want now.” “I no long
er,,, suffer from indigestion.” “I gain
ed weight rapidly.” These and many
more expressions are now heard daily
as people tell of their experience with
Tanlac. Sold by Fincher and Nichols.
—Adv.
'
-
'
Farm for Sale
At Auction
DECEMBER 17, 1921
Thirty-five (35) acres, more
or less, at Hopewell Church,
about three miles northeast
of Cohutta, Ga., known as
the Frank Rose farm. Land
is well improved; nice house,
store house, barn and good
fences. Terms: oiie-half *
cash, balance on twelve
months (12 Mos.) time with
interest. Sale at 10 o’clock
on the farm.
Mrs. C. W. Woodard
■
l : V- # W.
THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1921.
PAOF FIYB
The mother whose children no longer
Res t seemed to want her
S UDDENLY piey have all grown up and left her—the babies sfie used
to tuck in bed at night. The old house is empty and silent. All have
forgotten her. Her birthdays pass unnoticed.
Each child has embarked on a drama of his own. Loves, ambitions,
temptations carry them away. There are moments of laughter and come
dy, romance, adventure, tragedy. The story of their lives sweep you along.
Your life—your home—your mother—as they might have been or as they
are. “The Old Nest” will awaken deep in your heart memories of the moth
er to whom you ran with your childish troubles.
Never before has the screen touched with such beauty and dramatic force a
subject which finds an echo in the lives of everyone of us. One of the most
heart-gripping dramatic stories ever narrated.
FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9TH
ONE D AY ONLY
CRESCENT THEATRE
PRESENTS
‘THE OLD NEST"
presents i
A Reginald 3ar1cer Special Musical Program
Rupert Hughes’
Heart-gripping Story of Home
With, Ike Greabe sb Sba.r
Cast £ver AssemhlecL
A Coldtvyn Picture
A picture that presents with
out false sentiment or melo
drama the most beautiful
and the most sacred of all
themes—a. mother’s love.
Without hesitation we pro
nounce this the equal of any
production that has ever
played this theatre, and we
know there are many who
will think it the greatest
screen drama ever made.
Fly to The Old Nest
“EAST, WEST,
HOME’S BEST”
Your eyes will fill with hap
py tears when you see that
last ecstatic scene in “The
Old Nest,” the scene in
which Mother’s brood comes
home at last. The public
can thank Rupert Hughes
and Goldwyn for producing
the finest, truest picture of
real life the American thea
tre has ever known.