Newspaper Page Text
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ablished 1850.
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if You Want to Know the Successful Merchants in Dalton Read The Citizen Advertisements.
All Home Print
DALTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 1898.
$1.00 Per Annum
[store news by
Xoveman,
That impress at the start.
TRUTH, pure and simple,
prices are the same in most
a II stores, but QUALITIES
ar e often vastly wide apart.
We don’t claim to have the
lowest prices in Dalton, but
we do insist, however; that
theDry Goods or DressGoods
that we sell at 4c, 5c and 6c
per yard are strictly First
Class, Fresh, New and Clean,*
and we believe same quality
will cost you more money at
E
♦
I A SHIRT WAIST MATERIAL SALE.
Yes, we are going to have one, and it’s going
to be a treat to those who take part.
15c, 18c and 20c.
FRENCH MADRAS CLOTH.
35 inches wide. The Newest of Nobby De
signs. Will be offered Friday morning at
10c per yard.
Limit, io yards.
115 PIECES WASH DRESS GOODS,
Made to sell at ioc, I2^c and 15c, will be of
fered Friday morning at
5c per yard.
Limit, 15 yards.
1000 YARDS
Absolutely Fast Colored f Shirt Waist Cloth,
cheap at 6c, we will offer Friday at
4c per yard.
I THESE THREE SPECIALS
Will be on sale until Saturday night, if the
lots hold out that long.
PARASOL WEATHER
will soon be here.
Fast Black, Splendid Cloth, Steel Rod and
Natural Wood Handles, 26 inch at 50c.
Elegant Material, Fast Black, Cotton Gloria,
Steel Frame, 26 inch at
75c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 and $2.00
Good enough for any body. Qualities per
fect. Jet Black or Natural Wood Handles.
W T hite Silk Parasols, $1.35 to $4.50.
Black China Silk Parasols, $1.50 to $4.50.
Children’s Parasols, 25C, 50c, Slid 65c.
FOR LADIES, MISSES AND
eildren.
r «n’s Slippers, - - - - $ 50 to $ 8 5
: s’ Slippers, - - - 75 1 2 5
is ’ Slippets, - - - 75 to 2 00
is ’ 3 point broad toe House Slipper 5°
■KA values
in Ladies’ and Children’s Fast Black Stock-
in s s , 10c and 15c per pair.
^ hird shipment this season.
I -=
£ u n ^ ee P coming to see us, We can, want to, and
£ e you money.
. LoveridN & SONS.
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§THE FEMININE OBSERVER.]
The things we buy for nothing
are seldom worth a penny more.
Children rarely show any evi
dences of economy, save in their
use of soap.
No mother ever thought the
best woman living quite good
enough for her son.
It is easy enough running into
debt, but you rarely get out of it
at the same gait.
Independence on the part of a
woman is the surest death-knell
to matrimonial love.
The latest idiocy of the young
mother is tell her friends how cute
her baby breathes.
Love is anything but blind, for
it sees more perfections in the
adored object than any one else is
ever able to discover.
If women would pay more at
tention to their hair and less to
their hats, the result would be in
finitely more satisfactory.
It rarely, if ever, happens, that
a woman actually falls in love
with a man the rest of the world
thinks she should.
A woman shows her real innate
daintiness in preferring lovely un
derwear to showy outside garments
if her purse allows her extrava
gance only in one.
The woman who knows it all—
have you met her ? If not, you
are blessed beyond the common
iun of mortals ; hut we imagine
that the exception who has not
come in contact with this trying
individual is hard to find. She
who is so all-wise is infinitely
happy in her own conceit, and is
not to lte shaken in her beliefs by
the say-so of any one, no matter if
the opinion at variance with her
own emanates from a mind and
judgment as superior to her own
as the sun is to the arc light. Her
yea is yea; her nay, nay ; and the
laws of the Medes and Persians
were vacillating and uncertain in
comparison with her dictum.
In society she can be tolerated,
because she is at times over-pow
ered, but in the home, where she
has, by reason of her tyranny,
made every one bend to her for
years, she is absolutely intolerable.
She knows everything from the
way the biscuits should be baked
to the manner of cutting the grass
in the front yard. She downs her
husband in political arguments,
and though he knows he is in the
right, he does not dare to assert
his knowledge lest a regular pitched
battle ensue, in which, after all,
he would be worsted, for she con
tends with sniffs, and clinches ar
guments with personalities that
make it preferable to give in in
the first place. Her edict on dress
is final; yet she is all too fre
quently a dowdy herself. In fact,
she is the embodied essence of
self-satisfaction, though despite
her assertive manner, she can never
get any one to believe as she does,
for even when she is right, her
positive attitude makes others fail
to agree with her simply because
she rubs them the wrong way.
Fanny Fern.
Dr. Bell’s Pine Tar Honey cures
coughs and colds. It sooths the
air passages. It heals the bron
chial tubes. It strengthens weak
lungs. It builds up the tissues.
It enables the blood to receive its
proper supply of oxygen.
Tu Cars Constipation Forever,
Take Caacarets Candy Cathartic. 10c ov.
tt C C C. (ail to cure, druggists refund
i NEWS OF ALL SORTS. I
Margaret Mather, the eminent
American actress, died suddenly
last week in Charleston, W. Va.
Not a single mortgage has been
recorded in Whitfield county in
three or four years.—Savannah
Press.
Consul General Fitzhugh Lee
has returned from Havana. His
tour from Tampa to Washington
was a triumphal one.
From June 16th to 26th the
Southern Biblical Assembly will
convene in Knoxville, Tenn. One
fare will be given on all railroads.
President McKinley, it is noted,
“ was made a mason in Hiram
lodge, Winchester, Va., May 1,
1865, receiving his degrees at the
hands of a confederate master of
the lodge.”
A SONG.
If I were king, my wars skould be
But wars of roses:
The only shield that men should bear
But one of posies;
The only weapons ladies' eyes
And laughter merry;
The only province to wjn,
Lips like the cherry—
If I were king.
If I were king, no eye should weep,
No heart should break;
Each warior should a lady wed
For her sweet sake,
And when my last campaign was done
I’d cease to reign,
And hand my scepter o’er to Love
And join his train—
If I were king.
—C. C, B.
The Savannah Press says:
“The Candler papers insist that
joint debates between Colonel
Candler and Judge Atkinson
would ‘hurt the party.’ But they
are crazy to have Judge Atkinson
and Mr. Berner ‘get together on
the stump.’ Why is this ?”
A Wonderful Discovery.
The last quarter of a century records
many wonderful discoveries in medicine^
but none that have accomplished more tat
humanity than that sterling old household
remedy, Browns’ Iron Bitters. It seems to
contain the very elements of good health,
■nd neither man, woman or child can take
without deriving the greatest benefit.
'Iron Bitten is sola by all '
CLOTHING
Twice a Week.
The Tourist Sleeping Car Line oper
ated by the Southern Railway between
Washington and San Francisco without
change, via New Orleans, baa proven so
successful that it has become necessary
to make a semi weekly service, the west
hound departure being on Wednesday
and Saturday of each week.
This sleeper offers sleeping car facili
ties to persons holding first or second-
class tickets, the berth rate being only
$7.00 from Washington to San Francisco,
Los Angeles or Portland, berth being
large enough for occupancy by two peo
ple, if desired, without extra charge.
These Sleepers run through Texas,
Arizona and New Mexico, and connect
with similar cars for Oregon.
Information in regard thereto may be
had from any Southern Railway ticket
agent, from Mr. A. J. Poston, General
Agent, Sunset Tourist Excursions, 511
Penn. Ave. N. W., Washington, D. C.,
or from Mr. W. A. Turk, G. P. A., 1300
Penn. Ave. N W., Washington, D. C.
May 31.
Southern Baptist Convention, Norfolk, Va.
May 5th- 12th, 1898.—Redueed Kates
via Southern Railway.
On account of the meeting of
the Southern Baptist Convention
at Norfolk, Va., May 5th-12th,
1898, the Southern Railway will
sell tickets from all points on its
lines to Norfolk and return at rate
of one-fare for the round trip.
Tickets will be sold May 2d to
6th inclusive. Limited to return
fifteen days from date of sale, but
if deposited with agent of terminal
lines at Norfolk, on or before May
16th, the return limit will be ex
tended fifteen additional days.
The schedule via this route is
excellent, and parties contemplat
ing attending the Southern Baptist
Convention should communicate
with the nearest agent of the
Southern Railway.
May 4.
Men’s Cassimere Suits,
44 Worsted
44 Serge
44 Clay
Boy’s Clay 1 YEARS*
Children’s Knee Suits, year 1 #
COMPANY.
$4.50 to $8.00
5.50 to 9.00
4.00 to 8.00
5.00 to 10.00
3.00 to 6.00
•75 to 5-oo
We are the only ones handling the
famous
QRINDJTONE JLIITJ.
m Double Seat and Double Knee,
* $2.50 to $4.50
WE HAVE NO COMPETITORS IN CLOTHING
We are busy, busy all the
time. Very, very busy selling
Spring Clothing.
The finest and largest line of
STRAW HATS
in the city from
10 Cents to $3.00 each.
We are strictly
HEADQUARTERS FOR SHOES
For Men, Ladies, Boys and Chil
dren. All solid, serviceable goods
at prices far below the reach of
our would-be competitors.