Newspaper Page Text
VOL., 36
SPRING HARDWARE
Now is the time to buy:
Hoes and Rakes Singteties Roll Roofing
plows and Repairs Sprayers Incubators
Horse Collars Barbed Wire Corn Planters
House Paint Trace Chains Auto Tires
We invite you to compare our goods and prices
Carroll Hardware Company
2615 Whiteside St. Chattanooga, Tenn.
Hall's Catarrh Medicine
Those who are in a "run-down” condi¬
tion will notice that Catarrh bothers them
unch more than when they are In good
health. This fact proves that while
Catarrh Is a local disease, it is greatly
influenced bv constitutional conditions.
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE is a
Combined Treatment, both local and in¬
ternal, and has been successful in the
treatment of Catarrh for over forty years.
Sold by all druggists. Toledo. Ohio._
F. J Cheney & Co.,
Tuft’s Pills
Induce reader Relieve habit, good the
dyspeptic digestion. and debuitaled
and tege up the system
AGAINST MALARIA
TEN DAYS SALE
For Ten Days Beginning Feb. 21
and Running thru March 1st. As
We Need Some Ready Cash, We
Are Going to Offer A SALE in
Trenton That Hasn’t Been Equaled
For A Long Time. It Might Pay
You To Get In On It.
Tobacco and Snuff One lot Aluminum
ware, any piece -----
S Plugs Fish Hoook for S3C This is high grade Aluminun 78C? too
2 20c boxes Burton’s OOC Lard, 4 lb- Compound
Snuff ................ Lard,81b.Compound
All other brands in proportion. “.............
Groceries Bulk Meat, lb........ 21c
2 Beans large cans Pork and 6)94* M&X* Flour and Feed
for.......... $2.75
(i ood bulk Coffee for 32c High Patent 48 lb.
lb....... Very Good Patent $2.90
A limited amount to each 481b. at........
c istom. I not going to mention
Large am
Beaches. Size Bull Dog 23c price on Feed but only ask you
to "Come around and inquire”
6 bars Soap......... 25c Hardware
Large s tock Tonic Size Dr. for..... Hess S5c Good Chaians heavy ........... Trace 85c
10 Per Heavy Hames, "Lone Star” (4 9 A
Cent Off All Dry LeatherCollars$2«10 pr..........
Goods and Shoes Good
Ore lot Gingham
Per yd....... Heay Bridles f er... •
We carry a full line of wagon material and are right
between two ©f the best Blacksmiths in Dad* County.
If that old wagon needs repairing send it around
and we can fit you up. Price Right.
FREE
During this Sale with each 110-00 Cash you pay on
trade or Acc't, at this time, we are going to give you a
® lb. sack of fin© granulated sugar FREE.
We want Corn, Hay, Eggs, Whit© Oak Ties, and
^ay buy some lumber. Ask us about it. If you trade
as much as $10.00 on any of above, you are entitled to
tree sugar.
PRICE
TRENTTON, GA.
Dade (Joentt Times
©v Official Organ of Dade county ®/~
TRENTON, Ga., FEBRUARY 19, 1925
Play at Rising Fawn
Come, laugh and enjoy your¬
See "Remus” and "Mam¬
my” in play "Oat of Court”
Rising Fawn School House,
evening, Feb. 20th.
adults 30c, children
Committee
The Times $i.oo.
New Homes For Old 1
By William A. Rsdford,
Editor, American Builder Magazine
/A N many of the old fashioned
V/ homes we see today, there are
towers and balconies; bay win¬
dows and cupolas, all of which do
not conform to the present-day idea
of home architecture. These homes
are well-built, of the best of mate¬
rials, which at the time of building
g did not cost nearly as much as they
•w would cost today. However, many
owners of these homes would like
to have them conform to modern
ideas of attractive exteriors. By al¬
tering the homes at a comparatively
small cost and by decorating them,
both outside and in, they will have
homes that compare favorably with
those recently built.
What can be done with one of
these old type homes is shown in
the two illustrations. The smaller
shows what to our eves is anything
but an attractive home, while the
larger illustration shows the same
home after the ri building and paint¬
ing has been completed.
It will be noted that the balcony
over the entrance porch has been
removed, the roof continued where
the tower over the bay window was
and the gable transformed into a
hip-roof projection at the rear. An
overhanging roof has been extended
from over the entrance to the corner
of the house and to the sun parlor
and sleeping porch that have been
added.
By painting the house white and
applying a dark green paint to roof,
and shutters and a slightly lighter
shade to window trims and facings
.he house is transformed into a most
inviting dwelling place. The addi¬
tional color of ivory-yellow shades at
the window and the suit sunlight
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LOCAL MENTION
Mary had a Thomas Cat
It warbied like Caruso;
A neighbor thru a baseball bat
Now Thomas does’nt do so.
S. L. Sells was in Chatta¬
nooga, Tuesday and Friday on
business.
Sherrard Lye^ance and Le-
Roy Morrison who are attend¬
ing Baylor School at Chatta¬
nooga, spent the week end at
home.
L. S- LyeMance and A. J
rtoope were in Chattanooga,
Monday.
Rev. E. R- Lewis and wife
were in Chattanooga, Monday-
Jim Austin is very sick at
his home near Deer Head Gove.
Mr and Mrs. D. E. Lea and
Mrs. E. G. Wright were shop¬
ping in Chattanooga, Monday-
A new ceiling has been put in
the Ordinary’s room ia the
court house-
Edgar Turner spent Wednes¬
day in Durham transacting
business for the Times.
John Clarke of Berkhalter
Gap is in a hospital in Chatta¬
nooga seriously ill with pneu-
nonia.
The Ladies Aid Society will
ieet with the President, Mrs.
I f. G. Nethery, Wednesday,
'ebruary 25th.
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DUSTING KIT.
KM.
SULU SLEEPING niiniiiL
parlca * living PORjCH
KM.. ~ reception" _ bed BED
*3 HALL KM. 1R.M.
rir.sT floor plah SECOND FLOOR PLAN
The sketch above
shows the hone after
all alterations have
been made. Green
and white paint has
been used to achieve
an attractive color
comtvnation on tha
extb.-iur.
There are many
small old fashioned
houses like the one to
the left which can be
transformed into
charming homes by
remodeling and re¬
painting.
Miss Thelma Boothe of Chat¬
tanooga was the week end
guest of Miss Lorena Hale-
Our field agent has found
one mean man in Rising Fawn
his wife was chopping wood.
He leports findings hen-pecked
husband in Wildwood.he heard
his wife tell him to "Shut up.”
We truly believe that if reserve
are to be found in Heaven,
they must be reserved for hen¬
pecked husbands and news¬
paper editors.
Prof J. O Martin, State Super¬
visor of rural schools will be in
Trenton, Saturday to hold an in¬
stitute at the High School.
Homer Teague of St. Elmo
spont Tuesday night and Wednes¬
day with Edgar Turner.
Court of Ordinary. February
Term, 1925.
Brock Dean, administrator of
the estate of James Dean, [deceas¬
ed] having made application for
leave to sell the lands belonging
to said estate for the payment of
debts and distribution among the
heirs, notice is hereby given that
the same will be heard at my of¬
fice on regular court day, March
term, 1925 and it no legal objec¬
tions are filed, order will be grant¬
ed authorizing the sale of said
property by the administrator.
This February the 2nd, 1925.
I. H. Wheeler, Ordinary
colors of the draperies just seem to
beckon one with smiles into what
must be a real home inside.
The floor plans of the old home
and the new one show the changes
in the interior arrangement. The
rooms are as they were, with the
exception of a door cut through from
the living room to the sun parlor
and another door from the two cor¬
ner bedrooms into the sleeping porch.
Every room has been painted in
different shades of the same color,
though some walls have been given
a stippled finish and others a paneled
effect by the use of stencils and a
contrasting color of paint.
It is to the exterior of the home,
however, that the greatest changes
have been made, the principal fea¬
tures being the changes in the roof
lines and the addition of the sun
parlor and sleeping porch and the
pleasing color scheme achieved by
the application of good paint.
Ten Days Sale
Th« Times printed the big
sale bills for W. I. Price’s Ten
Day Sale this week. His prices
are very low and you can save
money by buying there during
the sale. He wishes to call the
attention of the public especial¬
ly to his price on flour and
feed. A reproduction of his
circulrrs appears in the Times
this issue, read it.
Obituary
Flavins N. Guinn age 6» died
this week at his home at the old
furnace near Rising Fawn. He
was buried Feb. 15th at the Han¬
nah cemetery. The funeral was
in charge of Rev. E. R. Lewis.
He is survived by two brothers,
Virgel and Bunyan; two sisters,
Mrs. Laura Slayton and Mrs.
Sarah Amos; his wife; five sons,
H. C., William, Walter, John and
Ernest; seven daughters, Mrs. Rea
McBryar, Mrs. Alma Shaltz, Mrs.
Bessie Dykes, Mrs. Pearl Oldhem,
Irine, Margaret and Clarice Guim.
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