North Georgia citizen. (Dalton, Ga.) 1868-1924, December 29, 1921, Image 6

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PAGE SIX TEE DALTON CITIZEN. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1921. {JfThe Public'Schools belong to the people; they are of the people. The crowded condition of the schools in Dalton makes it necessary for enlargements and additions and a new building. There is only one way to do this, and that is to vote bonds for the purpose, just as other communities are doing m the state of Georgia. Dalton cannot afford to neglect the education of her children. On January 6th the people will go to the polls to say just what they want done with their schools. A bond election has been called, and a bond com mission has been named by thfe city council, this bond commission being the school board, elected by the people. ^[When the bonds are voted they will be properly and legally advertised, and sold to the highest bidder, or bidders. No favoritism will be shown, the bond commission recognizing its full responsibility to the people whose money it is to handle and spend wholly to the end tnat Dalton has a system of Public Schools adequate to the needs and demands of a growing town. - SjfThe interest rate is named at 6%, which will make the bonds an attractive investment, and will guarantee a higher price than if they carried a lower rate of interest. If the interest rate were lower the price at which the bonds would be sold would be proportionately lower. So it will be seen that it is as broad as it is long. Hartsville, South Carolina, is now selling a $180,000 issue of Waterworks, Sewer and Street Bonds, bearing interest at the rate of 6%. Can you, as a voter and taxpayer, borrow money at less than 6%? ^To the North Dalton School must be added two rooms and above these an assembly hall. $JThe City Park School must be remodeled and prepared for grammar grade work, in order ta relieve the congestion at Fort Hill. €|The Fort Hill buildings need comparatively little remodeling, but some work must be done there. f[The Emery Street School must be put in shape to take care of the growing demands. €JThen a new High School building, in keeping with the spirit and progress of the times, is a necessity in Dalton. There is not a town in the state of Georgia the size and importance of Dalton that is'without a modem high school building. . .. ; €JThe School Board has well defined ideas of just what is needed, but will not attempt to spend $90,000 just for the sake of spending it. It is the pur pose of the Board to sell a portion of the bond issue at a time, and to only spend such amounts as are necessary to do the building and remodeling absolute ly essential if Dalton’s school system is to live and thrive. If it does not take $90,000 to do the work no body of men will be more pleased than the school board, every member of which is a property owner, a business man and a taxpayer. *. FRANK MANLY, Chairman, PAUL B. FITE, W. C. McGHEE, F. S. PRUDEN, T. S. SHOPE, City Board of Education, man who buys this farm. W. Lee Mc Williams,. 30 1/2 W. Hamilton St. Real Estate, Buying, Selling, Renting. In Felker building, over Oaks Restau rant. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONOS Would you invest $1,700 in some well located renting property paying 20 per cent? See Dr. Barnett, Cannon Bldg. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS Fifth avenue, good property in a good locality, accessible to city schools.—Ad dress, C. D. Giddens, Dalton. 1-t-pd. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONOS FOR SALE—On easy terms, one 4- room house, water and lights. Pay as rent; also 4 vacant lots, all on Fort Dependable. Apply Hill’s Garage. 1-t. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS LOST—-At Country Club Monday night blue lace fan ivith gold trim ming. Return to Mary Stuart Sims and receive reward. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS FOR SALE CHEAP FOR CASH— My automobile, or will trade for va cant lot in Dalton. Write P. O. Box 120*, Dalton, Ga. tf. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS STOVEWOOD FOR SALE—Good and dry, by (the cord. J. A. Shope. VOTE 1 FOR SCHOOL BONDS FOR SALE—Good dry stovewood, delivered. Call John A. Shope, Phone 292 or 74. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS WANTED—Some one to keep one of my Registered Collie Matrons and raise puppies on the shares. Lucky Strike Collie Kennels. (Reg.) Phone No. 3, No. 26 Thornton Ave. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS WANTED—A white girl capable of taking care of invalid—looking after SEE WHAT SHE FOUND NOT THE USUAL LANDING MORTUARY. Mrs. Sarah Cline. Mrs. Sarah Cline, aged 91' years, a respected and- beloved resident of the Deep Spring settlement, died Tuesday at the home of her son, Mr. J. W, Cline. The funeral service will be con ducted today (Wednesday), with in terment in Deep Spring cemetery. Hundreds of Men and Women in Dalton Appear To Be Physical Wrecks Simply Because Their Systems Are Starving For Nourishment. There are hundreds of thin, run-down, nervous men and women right here in Dalton who should be strong, sturdy and vigorous, with rich, red blood tingling through their veins and feeling brimful of life and energy, if they would only profit by the experience of others all over the United States and Canada, and assist nature to digest the food they eat, by simply taking Tanlac. Millions of people have not only been * relieved of the most obstinate forms comes saturated with poisons, the pait- of dyspepsia and indigestion by Tan- ent becomes thin and pale and in time • " J .. . . 41 , various complications are apt to re lac after other remedies have failed, suR. but large numbers of them have re- , ,. Tanlac is a powerful reconstructive ported a remarkable and rapid increase tonic ^ quickly overcomes this con- in weight and a return to normal (jition by aiding Nature to eliminate health and strength by its use. the impurities from the system in a In fact, so phenomenal have been natural way and enable the vital or- the gains in weight by thin, frail peo- gans to properly perform their func- ple through the use of Tanlac that this tions. That is why it is called^ Na- remarkable preparation is now being ture’s Medicine. proclaimed everywhere as the World’s j n f aCf t, there, is not a single por- Greatest Toni6. tion of the body that is not benefited The food people eat does them ab- by the helpful action of Tanlac, which solutely no good unless they digest it begins its work by stimulating the di- properly. When yon suffer from indi- gestive and assimilative organs, there- gestipn wu/i other forms of stomach by enriching the blood and invigorat- trouble, the food does you harm in- ing the entire system. Next, it enables stead of good, because food which is the weak, worn-cu*- stomach to thor- not digested stays in the stomach And oughly digest its food and convert the ferments, causing pains, swelling, gas nourishing elements into' bone, blood on stomach, shortness of breath, bad land muscle. The result is you feel EVERYONE NEEDS THEM Breed your sows to BERRYTON’S IMPERATOR ORION, No. 180715 the. finest boar in North Georgia. FEE $2.00. Registered Jersey bull for service. Looper Stock Farm H. S. LOOPER, Mgr., Tel. 922-13 Dalton, Route 2 VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS Beatrice Wumpy. Beatrice, the seven-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Wimpy, dial Monday, the body being interred Tues day in Dogwood cemetery. Mrs. J. W. Curtis. Mrs. James W. Curtis, wife of Ker. J. W. Curtis, died at 5 o’clock Wednes day morning, following a protracted illness. On the preceding Saturday Edna, her one-year-old daughter, died. The body of the child was interred Tuesday afternoon in the Presbyterian cemetery in the western part of tie city, where Mrs. Cnrtis’ body will b® buried Thursday. She -is survived W her husband and six children. Come in and renew it next time you. are in town. Misled in the dark, an aviator crashed his plane into a tree about a mile from the University of Virginia at Charlottesville recently. This most unusual photograph shows the plane sticking fast in the tree on the follow ing morning. . Miss Mildred Lee of Los Angeles, Cal., with the two large and-valuable pearls which she found recently in an oyster which she was preparing for a stew. America Taking Lead. The collector of real antiques or merely the buyer of good period fur niture is all too prone to fofget the “Made in America.” It Is the old case of the prophet without honor in his own country. For, while the American combs every antique shop for Georgian, Queen Anne, Louis Quinze, or Italian Renais sance stuff, the continental furniture dealer scurries about for American Colonial stuff. This is the big contribution of America to the furniture world. Our output-of the Colonial era compares very favorably from the standards of design and utility with any period of any other country. MRS: CHARLES A. JOHNS house. Apply to 40 Thornton Avenue. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS STORAGE—For rent storage space in Felker building over Oaks restau rant. Will take good care of anything you store with me. Price reasonable. W. Lee McWilliams, 30 1/2 Hamilton St. Up stairs. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS COLLIES—Registered Collie puppies for sale. Ideal companion, best watch and stock dogs. Lucky Strike Collie Kennels,. (Reg.) Phone No. 3, No. 26 Thornton Ave. VOTE^FOR SCHOOL BONDS nr a I ESTATE IILnL Llst your Farm or city prop erty with me and kiss it good bye. I hope to handle each transac tion so that it will be mutually pleas ant and profitable. Will rent your store, warehouse, dwelling or farm for you. Rents collected promptly and re mitted same day collection is made. W. Lee McWilliams, 30 1|2 Hamil ton St. Real Estate, Buying, Selling, Renting—Abstradtlng. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS rini| A dandy 100 Acre Farm rAnlYI Convenient new dwelling, 4 1/2 miles So. of Dalton, good barns, about 70 acres cleared, well suited for cotton, corn or diversified farming. Sufficient meadowland, sever al springs. In fact a moat desirable farm. Fortunate indeed will be the MISS RUTH AGNES BRADY Y OU can’t do your best when your bade and every muscle aches with fatigue. . Apply Sloan’s Liniment freely, v -. out rubbing, and enjoy a penetrative glow of warmth and comfort. Good for rheumatism, neuralgia sprains and strains, aches and P 310 , sciatica, sore musdes, stiff joints an the after effects of weather exposure. For forty years pain's enemy. your neighbor. Keep Sloan's hatury. At all druggists—35c, 70c, $l-40> WANTED—To board your baby while you are out-of-town or at work. Careful attention given. ’Phone 912- 30. Mrs. J. C. Cochran, at B. F. Smith’s farm, two miles west of city. 12-15-4t pd. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS FOR RENT—The Loveman home on Thornton avenue. All the Love- man household goods on sal^now. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS FOR RENT—On S. Thornton ave nue and Dixie highway, about 45 acres of good land, 5 aefes meadow, to re liable, experienced farmer with own stock and farming implements. Ap ply to J. D. Thomas or Miss Retta Thomas. . 12-13-4tpd. VOTE FOR SCHOOL B0ND8 FOR SALE — Four-room house. Paved sidewalk, city water, good gnr- age. Small cash payment, balance like Oldest College President. Dr. M. Carey Thomas, president of Bryn Mawr college, remarked in a public address in Washington recent ly that she is the oldest living Amer ican college president still in office— she has presided over Bryn Mawr con tinuously since 1894 and has been a member of Its faculty since 1885. Miss Thomas defined education for women and prohibition as the two outstanding achievements to man kind’s credit during her life of sixty- four years, and expresses confidence she would live to see the third and greatest of them all—establishment of world pence.—Washington Dispatch in tho Philadelphia Public Ledger. One Cent A Word' Liniment ASK your dealer for Reed’s Glen dale syrup, North Georgia’s finest sor ghum. Our guarantee protects you. Don’t let them sell yon “jnst as good.” The trouble is they may not have it. ll-24-6tpd. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS FOR SALE—100-acre farm, good 6- room house, good barn, 3 miles south east of Dalton. Terms: $1,000 down, balance on easy terms. C. A. Barten- field, 8 Fifth Avenue, Dalton, Ga., 12-15-4t pd. The Better the Printing if your stationery the the impression it will ere® | Moral: Have your A new photograph of Mrs. Charles A. Johns, formerly Elizabeth Busch pf Portland, Ore., the youthful bride pf Judge Johns, formerly of the Ore gon Supreme court, who has accepted an appointment as federal judge in the Philippines. Mrs. Johns was graduated from the University of Oregon in 1913. Miss Ruth Agnes Brady of Balboa, Canal zone, In a contest with nearly * thousand other girls, was voted the most beautiful girl at a great ball In Panama, Miss Brady, who Is seven teen years oid, Is the daughter of a veteran government employee In the xone, rent. Bargain If sold this month. Dr. Barnett, Cannon Bldg. VOTE FOR SCHOOL BONDS FOR SALE—My mihurhuu farm