Newspaper Page Text
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J TODAY’S PAPER {
r CONSISTS} OF r
f SIXTEEN PAGES f
96 COLUMNS 4
ESTABLISHED 1887.
WE HAVE SAID IT!
11 A W
WE’LL DO THAT VERY THING
—we shall for a time (days longer) offer any
and every article in our store-top to bottom, all over, through and through-ex
cept Foster’s Kid Gloves, Contract Corsets and Butterick’s Patterns at what it
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cost us—what it cost us and no more. The why is not in the issue. That we are
doing it is the fact in which you are interested. You can get the goods at what
they cost us—that’s what you can do during this sale, if you have the cash to pay
for them. Can not sell goods at cost and pay book-keepers and collectors. Noth
ing charged. No periodical tickets taken. -
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RESPONSE ROYAL! millinery.
The second floor, in a sense, not a part of the general store. A well filled, wel
This great sale has leaped out and beyond our most sanguine hope. Not since the rounded, peerless store within itself a radiant millinery store without an equal in
all North Georgia.
very birth of the earth has retail sale of human wants scaled the heights of achieve- _.. , .... , ~ - , n . , , ~ ,
7 That millinery store on the second floor has been on a rousing boom these recent
ment as this has done. People read our advertisements. They believed our pledged days. Ladies measured the elegance and grace of the work turned out. They visited
. . . . the upstairs store; the supply was large and the exhibit—it was as a “transaction of
word. They responded to our invitation and they got the goods as advertised, and . . . r -r, Tt , •
dreams” —parlors all aglow with the newest and prettiest creations of Dame Fashion,
what’s more,they’ll ever continue to find goods at our places as advertised. We repeat: The goods are speeding away during this unprecedented sale. Miss Mynson and her
„ . , ... ... ~ ~. , , ... . , . gifted help, never awed by task ahead, are working day and night to meet the want of
Keeping faith with the public has built for us the greatest retail dry goods business 6 > & j &
the trade.
that ever was in Rome. Keeping faith with the people has given us achievement in We ask you to visit again and millinery store, as in everything else, we
dry goods circles in Georgia unequalled by any, and we’ll not tamper with that faith are tO P notch for all that is latelßkewest and best. Stock yet large. What
an opportunity to buy fashionable Millinery, as well as Dry Goods. Notions, Shoes,
now. You’ll get the goods at what they cost us if you come for them. Clothing. &c„ at cost, and the opportunity is yours. '
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This sale will continue until it stops. This much we promise. But after it stops;
such prices as we are giving now will be enrolled as a back-number.
COME AT ONCE AND COME OFTEN.
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THE ROHE TRIBUNE.
THE HOME TRIBUNE, ROME, GA., SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1896.
t PART ONE. J
5 —*— J
i PAGES I TO 8. \
PRICE FIVE CENTS.