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Established 1850.
If You Want to Know the Successful Merchants in Dalton Read The Citizen Advertisements.
All Home Print
VOL. XLVIII. NO. 49.
DALTON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1898.
$1.00 Per Annum
VM
LOVEMAN’S.
Our two buyers are now in New York and other
Eastern Markets buying our Fall and Winter
Stock. Mr. Sam Loveman writes us that he is
buying one of the largest stocks that he has
bought in years, and in order to make room for
the New Goods that will commence coming in
this week we will cut the price about HALF on
all Summer Dress Goods left in our house.
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I NEWS OF ALL SORTS, f
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10 Pieces of Lawns, Dimities and Organdies that were worth 10c, 12 l-2c
and 15c per yard, now 7c per yard.
450 yards of 36 inch wide percales in light and medium light colors, real
values, 10c per yard. To close out at 6c per yard.
1000 Yards of Yard wide Lonsdale and Fruit of the Loom Bleaching, best
quality at 6 l-4c per yard.
We have about
150 OR 200 REMNANTS
left out of 1000 we put on sale Monday morning that you can buy at 10 per cent
less than the market price. Come and see them.
We will receive the first of next week a new shipment of Cotton Dress Suit
ings and Dark Percales suitable for early fall wear. Come and take a look at them.
OUR CLOTHING DEPARTMENT
Is full and running over with new Fall Suits and we believe they are better and at
at a lower price than you ever bought them at before.
Men’s Suits at $3 00, $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $6 00 and up to $15,00
per Suit, that would be cheap at $1.00 to $3.00 higher on the Suit.
Boy’s Long Pants Suits from $2.50 to $6.00. Sizes 12 to 19 years.
Boy’s Knee Pants Suits from 85c to $4.50. Sizes 4 to 15 years.
Our Odd Pants Department is full and complete of rich and nobby
Patterns. We can fit the corpulent as well as the slim man. Sizes
in Stouts from 42 to 48 waist. Slender from 31 waist to 36 length.
Prices from $1.50 to $6.00 per pair.
DON’T FORGET THAT WE HAVE ONE OF THE
LARGEST AND BEST ASSORTED STOCK OF SHOES |
^ To be found in Dalton- Come to us for your Shoes. If its a $1.00 or a 5.00 Pair
^ we will save you big money on your purchase.
LOVEMAN’S.
.The Lowest in Price, First-Class
Dry Goods, Shoe and Clothing
House in Dalton.
The failures in August were the
smallest in five years and the bank
clearings the largest.
Savaunah was storm swept last
week. Trees were torn up, houses
unroofed and many vessels in the
harbor were beached. The First
Baptist church suffered most of
any building. Its roof was torn
off and the big new pipe organ
drenched.
Adt. Gen. Corbin says that the
1st, 2nd and 3rd Georgia regi
ments will not be mustered out.
Dipththeria is quite prevalent
up at Fillmore, so we are in
formed.
The Hardeman (Tenn.) Free
Press says: “We wish to explain
our lack of editorial this week.
We were down to Memphis, and a
smart alec at the tavern put train
oil on our greens and said it was
vinegar. Of course, we were horse
dew combaw for three days, and
now that we are able to talk, our
language is not fit for publica
tion.”
Democrats, with D. W. Jones
for governor, carried full state,
legislature, senate and state house
ticket in Arkansas Tuesday.
The National Convention of
Populists met in Cincinnati this
week. They are divided in opin
ions.
A railroad collision at Cohoes,
N. Y., this week killed eighteen
and wounded ten.
The yellow fever is spreading
in Mississippi and Texas.
Forty people were killed with
heat in New York City this week.
Memphis, New Orleans and
Montgomery have quarantined
against yellow fever.
The Spanish cortes is in session
this week. A peace commission
will be appointed to meet our own
iu Paris.
The Populists nominated Whar
ton Barker, of Pennsylvania, as
their candidate for president.
Edward Flannagan, the double
murderer, of Atlanta, is now a
raving maniac.
Thomas H. Wheeler, son of Gen.
Joseph Wheeler, was drowned at
Camp Wikoff, L. I., while bath
ing with a friend.
BUSY
BUYING.
Our buyer is in New York this week
also. He took the CASH with him
and he wires that never in his expe
rience has he found such a ready de
mand for cash. He is converting good
round dollars into the biggest, the
best, the cheapest line of
DRY GOODS,
CLOTHING,
FURNISHINGS,
SHOES, Etc.,
that will soon reach Dalton.
IN THE MEANTIME
We were instructed, before he left, to
get rid of everything we had in the
house—upstairs and down, in the
shelves and on the counters, at some
sort of a price. We don’t want him
disappointed on his return and would
rather have a small amount of money
and a big amount of room than incur
his displeasure.
H-oW's This?
We offer one hundred dollars
reward for any case of catarrh that
cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props.,
Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have
known F. J. Cheney for the last
fifteen years, an(| believe him per
fectly honorable ' in all business
transactions and financially able
to carry out any obligation made
bv their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Drug
gist, Toledo, O., Warding, Kin-
nan & Marvtn, Wholesale drug
gists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in
ternally, acting directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. Price 75c per bottle.
Sold by all druggists. Testi
monials free.
Hall’s family pills are the best.
This Business Rests
On a Substantial Basis.
It is not false, inflated or unreliable. Its ad
vertising is not fiction. With us, labor has
been the parent of prosperity. The whole
tendency of our enterprise is salutary and
beneficial. We hope it will continue; we
hope it will increase. Not the prosperity of
lawless speculation and reckless sharpers; not
the prosperity of wild schemes and haphazard
adventures; not the prosperity that puts
Mammon on the throne of Integrity; but the
true prosperity of earnest, hearty and hard
work—the work that lives and thrives by pa
tience, endurance, steady aims and steady
steps. We profoundly trust that such pros
perity will multiply manifold. We know it
will. .......
An Uncertain Disease.
There is no disease more uncertain in its
nature than dyspepsia. Physicians say that
the symptoms of no two cases agree. Itii
therefore most difficult to make a correct
diagnosis. No matter how severe, or under
what disguise dyspepsia attacks you. Browns 1
Iron Bitters will cure it. Invaluable in an
diseases of the stomach, blood and nerveSb
Browns’ Iron Bitten is sold by all deaJsn
NOW THEN
We have cut the price on everything
with a two-edged sword—which cuts
both ways—and we are just bound to
please your sense in bargain giving
and your pocket book in bargain get
ting. COME WHILE IT IS YET
TIME. We must get rid of our goods,
Lots of them suitable for fall wear and
many of them for winter.
INI
'J
*
A. E. CANNON, Proprietor
P. S.—Big Fall line of Clothing bought last
week just in. Also the famous Bion F. Reynold’s
Shoe.