Newspaper Page Text
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THE DALTON CITIZEN, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1921.
D
IFFITH’S
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AMERICAN INSTITUTION
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18,000
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People
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The Greatest Spectacle
Ever Seen
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JlATlOfi
3,000
Horses
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“The Supreme Picture of All Time”
—New York Mail, May 3,1921
ORCHESTRAL
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ACCOMPANIMENT OF THE
ORIGINAL SCORE
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PRICES NIGHT :
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Children 50c Adults 75c
PRICES MATINEE:
Children 25c Adults 50c
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TOOK down the pretty new courts or streets
I . where the most modem homes have just
* ^ been built. There you will generally find
red and green Carey shingle roofs doing their bit
to make the scene even more beautiful.
Carey Asfaltslate Shingles are also spark-proof,
non-curling, rot-proof, enduring, low in first cost
and never require painting. Let us supply you,
‘ i . \ '
THE JAMES SUPPLY CO., DISTRIBUTORS
The Cherokee Mfg. Company
Dealer
DALTON, GEORGIA
Household Remedies
Our White Pine and Tar Cough Syrup
The best that can be made.
Our Cold Tablets
Almost break a cold in one night.
Our Iron Tonic Pills
Put roses in the cheeks.
Our Syrup Hypophosphites Compound
Makes rich red blood and vigor.
Our Clay Poultice Compound
Good for congestion, inflammation or swelling.
Our Worm Syrup
Guaranteed to give satisfaction.
CITY DRUG STORE
J. W. CRAWFORD, Prop. Phone 210
Over 3,000 Bottles of
Tanlac Sold Each Week
In State of Georgia
After Six Years of Phenomenal Demand, Manufacturers
Still Taxed to Limit to Keep Public Supplied
With "Great Tonic.
A little over six years ago in the city of Atlanta, the first bottle of Tanlac
was offered to Georgia people. The public was skeptical at first. They just
couldn’t believe the remarkable powers for this new medicine, but in a short
time so many local men and women, whose integrity could not be questioned,
told in such sincere, straightforward statesments of the wonderful benefits
they had received from its use that the truth of the claims could no longer he
The Spirit Of The Double Barred Cross
Miss Mary Clare Glynn in the title role of “The Spirit of the Double
Barred Cross,” a pageant given at the annual meeting of the National
Tuberculosis Association.
doubted.
People all over Georgia, from Ra
bun Gap to Tybee Lights began tak
ing Tanlac and testifying to its great
ness as a medicine. Before long Tan
lac had become a household word bn
every city, town, village and hamlet
in the state and the manufacturers
were taxed to (keep- the druggists sup
plied with enough Tanlac to meet the
enormous demand.
The popularity of Tanlac contin
ued to grow from year to year as new
tests of its powers were made by the
people, until now the sales in Geor
gia alone have reached the phenome
nal total of 753,552 bottles, which is
at the rate of 126,000 bottles a year,
or over 3,000 bottles of Tanlac sold
every week to the people of Georgia.
Such a phenomenal demand for a med
icine is absolutely without a paral
lel. Nothing like it has ever been seen
before, but the reason for it is very
simple and it can all be explained in
one word—merit.
Contrary to popular opinion, there
is no great mystery about Tanlac .ex
cept in so far as the chemistry of
the human body itself and what it
does with substances taken into it, is
a mystery. Some of the ingredients of
Tanlac have been known and used
as medicines for centuries. Others are
of more recent discovery, but every
one of them is of recognized therapeu
tic value and used by the medical pro
fession everywhere. Tanlac is simply
a co-mingling of these medicinal ele
ments in a way hitherto unknown and
which brings out their curative and re
constructive powers to a most remark
able degree.
Briefly, it allays irritation of the
stomach, strengthens the digestive and
assimilative organs, builds up and re
vitalizes the whole system, and gives
the body new powers of resistance and
strength. Gratifying gains in weight
are not uncommon, especially where a
person has suffered from under-nour
ishment brought on by dyspepsia, indi
gestion, illness, operation or other
causes.
It is a demonstrated fact in medical
science that the stomach is the starting
point of most of the ills that afflict
the human body, and many of the so-
called diseases are not diseases at all,
but reflex symptoms of the stomach
derangements and the weakened condi
tion of the body that naturally fol
lows. Some kinds of rheumatism,
gastritis, palpitation, nervousness, kid
ney disorders and liver complaints are
among the more common troubles de
veloped, through the stomach. Scores
of othyr diseases have been traced to
the same source.
Tanlac was made especially to over
come these stomach complaints and
the various so-called diseases and
symptoms that follow them, but the
astonishing reconstructive powers re
vealed by it have not only astonished
the general public, but have somewhat
surprised even the originators of the
medicine themselves. Thousands of
letters reach the Tanlac offices from
all parts of North America telling of
remarkable results derived by people
who have suffered for years without
being able heretofore to find relief.
Naturally these remarkable achieve
ments have spread the fame of Tanlac'
to all quarters of the continnent, and
the demand for it has necessitated
working the laboratories night and day.
Tanlac is sold in Dalton by Fincher
& Nichols.—Adv.
When Anti-tuberculosis workers
from every part of the United States
gathered at the annual meeting of the
National Thiberculosis association in
New Yofk City this year, a pageant
was enacted to represent the work
carried on against the disease which
Oliver Wendell Holmes called the
Great White Plague.
When the famous New England
Writer applied this unforgettable term
to the disease it was in reality a pla
gue, but in the years that have passed,
the menace has been lessened, for an
unfailing fight against tuberculosis has
been carried forward under the symbol
of the Double Barred Cross.
When the National Tuberculosis as
sociation began its work on a large
scale fifteen years ago, there were 200
deaths from tuberculosis per 100,000
population in this country. Today this
death rate has declined to 114" per 100,-
000 population. Another way the sav
ing in lives over a comparatively brief
period may be estimated, is to go back
as far as 1900. It has been estimated
that if the death rate from tuberculo
sis had not diminished since that year,
the number of deaths from the disease,
in this country, would have been more
than 210,000. As a matter of fact,
however, the deaths from tuberculosis
in 1920 numbered 132,000. Therefore,
it has been pointed out that more than
75,000 lives have been saved owing to
the decrease in the death rate. But
the fight beneath the standard of the
Double Barred Cross is far from be
ing won. Tuberculosis has been prov
ed to be a preventable and curable dis
ease and yet there are at least a mil
lion active cases in this country today,
with as many more latent or quiescent
cases which may become active at any
time, if the individual's powers of re
sistance are weakened. Somebody
dies from tuberculosis every four min
utes, night and day, throughout the
year in this country alone.
Funds to carry on the work of the
National Tuberculosis association and
its 1200 affiliated state and local or
ganizations throughout the country,
are< secured from the sale of Tubercu
losis Christmas Seals. The Fourteenth
annual seal sale is now being launch
ed throughout the nation and will con
tinue until Christmas day, and the re
sponse of the public in the purchase
of these seals will determine the extent
to which the fight against tuberculo
sis may progress in 1922.
In Dalton, the Lesche club has
charge of the sale, and the seals are
to be found, in many local business
houses. '
ITHACAS WIN
6 OUT OF 6 (
Panl Earl juat won the Sooth Caroline
’ Championship with ah Ithaca. An Ithaca has
won the South Carolina championship S times
in 6 Tears. That’s another world’s record for
Ithacas.
Any man can break more.target* vrith an
Ithaca
CATALOGUE FREE
Singles, $75 00 up. Doubles, $45-00 up.
ITHACA GUN CO., ITHACA, N. V.
BOX 54
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
♦ . ♦
♦ ROSTER, WHITFIELD COUN- ♦
♦ TY SUNDAY SCHOOL ♦
♦ CONEVNTION ♦
♦ ♦
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J. A. Carter, president; W. L. Mc
Williams, vice-president; C. O. Smith
secretary.
Non-sectarian. Non-denominational.
Division presidents: First, H. J.
Smith; second, R. A. Williams;" third,
W. H. Westbrook; fourth, Frank Rol
lins; fifth, W. F. Huffaker.
Mrs. W. L. McWilliams, chairman
Children’s Work.
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 at any time.
Next annual meeting, Mt. Vernon