Newspaper Page Text
What you want. Don't make
your selection until you are con
vinced that you are satisfied. Be
sure that the design, the face of
the type and the general appear
ance of your Office Stationery is
in keeping .vith the progressive
ness of the age. Too many peo
ple use stationery in their corres
pondence that positively hurts
their trade. Business men are
judged by the company they keep.
Let their associates in the printing
business be “junk shop” keepers,
who turn out a class of work that
is a disgrace to civilization, and it
goes without saying that they are
no better qualified than the “junk
shop” man to do business, what
ever their calling may be. Our
stationery always pleases, because
the stock is the best, the work
manship is par excellence, and,
too, the satisfaction that comes
from knowing that you have the
best—absolutely above criticism—
is inestimable. It pays to buy
your office stationery at Showal-
ter’s, the recognized leaders in the
paper trade in North Georgia.
Phe >£ tfhcwalter %o.,
Wholesale Paper dealers and fob Printers,
Sbalten, - - Georgia.
L
More ladies’ dress skirts
than all the other stores com
bined. Plain, braided and
Dewey. In cotton and wool
to fit all.
J. M. & T. O. Trotter.
A Question Asked and Answered.
The New York Tribune, which
has never been accused of any
special partiality for the South,
prints the following in its editorial
columns:
“The question is asked whether
ex-Confederate organizations shall
be asked to parade in a peace
demonstration of national veter
ans. ‘Ex-Confederates?’ That
means fellows who used to ride be
hind ‘Joe’ Wheeler doesn’t it?
Well, then, the question answers
itself. Room for the ‘Johny Rebs!’
No place where the flag flies is too
good for Joe Wheeler, and where
he goes his old comrades must
likewise go.”
There never was a time
when we had so many wash
goods this season of the year,
and never a time when the
price was so low. At five
and ten cents you can get al
most anything you want, and
at half price the imported
grenadine organdies.
J. M. & T. O. Trotter.
Mr. John Dudley, the new bar
ber at Fred Wilson’s, is a first-
class artist in his line.
Mr. Clarence Blosser will assist
Miss May McAfee in her recital
next month.
Little Merrel Oslin, who had
his wrist broken, is getting along
nicely, The Citizen is glad to
learn.
Miss Louise Sutherland’s kin
dergarten school is a fine prepara
tory one for the little tots.
Mesdames Wells and Thompson
of Chattanooga, were the gusts of
Miss Lou Shumate, this week.
Mrs. E. A. Cray attended the
annual convention of the womans
Missionary Society at Lyerly, Ga.,
last week. Mrs. Simmons, of La-
Fayette, who has done missionary
work in China, was present and
made an interesting talk.
Walk your feet from home
to our store and put them in
a pair of our low price oxford
ties, all of which have been
reduced to an astonishingly
low point.
J. M & T. O. Trotter.
BUY FRUIT INSTEAD OF CANDY.
“I wish,” said the doctor the other
day, as he watched a group of school-
children troop out of a candy-store,
where they had been spending their pen
nies, “that I could form a society among
the little folks in which each member
would make a pledge to spend all his
pocket money for fruit instead of can
dy.”
It seemed a funny way of putting it,
didn’t it? But the physician was very
much in earnest, and at that moment it
probably occurred to him that, as chil
dren like clubs, an anti-candy club would
be a very good one for them. He wanted
to do two things—to stop their eating
the unhealthy sweet and to coax them
to eat more fruit. An apple or a banana
or an orange can usually, one or the
other of them, be bought for the price
of a little candy, and the fruit is much
better in every way than the sweet.—
New York Times.
Don’t Neglect lour Liver.
Uver troubles quickly result in serious
implications, and the man who neglects his
liver has little regard for health. A bottle
of Browns’ Iron Bitters taken now and then
trill keep the liver in perfect order. If the
disease has developed, Browns’ Iron Bitten
will cure it permanently. Strength and
vitality will always follow its use.
Browns’ Iron Bitters is sold by all dealsn.
Generally the part in shoes
that pinches most is the price.
An inspection of our stock
will take away this fear. All
low cuts and summer shoes
reduced twenty-five to fifty
per cent.
J. M. & T. O. Trotter.
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Cleanliness goes
with health. If we
have catarrh any
where we can
not be wholly
clean.
Make system
atic efforts to
be free from
this disg-usting
disease. Mrs. L. A. Johnston, 103
Pilham and Ripley Sts., Montgomery,
Ala., tells her experience with catarrh
of the stomach and how she was
cured:
“I will state to you that I have
taken eight bottles of your Pe-ru-na
and two of Man-a-lin and rejoice to say,
‘ God bless Dr. Hartman and Pe-ru-na. ’
And I earnestly assure you that it
has done me more good than any medi
cine I have ever taken in my life. I
prescribe it to every one I meet who ^
is suffering, as the best medicine in
the world, and have made many con
verts who are now rejoicing in the
great good which they have derived
from the same. X can tell you that I
am almost entirely relieved of indiges
tion, that great foe which has tortured
me so many years, and can now eat
anything I desire without it is fruits or
something acid.”
To understand the scientific action
of Pe-ru-na it is best to have Dr. Hart
man's special book for women or his
book on chronic catarrh. These books
are mailed free by the Pe-ru-na Medi
cine Company, Columbus, O. All
druggists sell Pe-ru-na.
New Goods in and
arriving daily.
AT HODGE'S.
A Word of Kindness.
“ Don’t take on so about it, Eli-
hu,” Mrs. Geehaw was saying.
; “ I don’t see ez it’s any personal
concern of our’n, even ef these
here monopolists an’ corporationers
do go ahead an’ make money. It’s
a big country, an’ it’s gotter be
developed. An’ when a man
makes a lot o’ money, ’tain’t no
good ter ’im onless he spends it
Walking Hats,
Sailors and . .
Dress Hats.
an’ so it keeps circ’latin’ an’ circ’-
latin’ an’ doin’ bus’ness an’ help
in’ along.”
“ That’s jes’ like your talk. Ye
jes’ seem to inj’y bein’ under the
grindin’ heel of these here Wall
street fellers.”
“I ain’t heard o’ these Wall
street fellers doin’ anythin’ ter
prevent our seratchin’ up the
groun’ weth a plough an’ plantin’
corn an’ feedin’ it ter the hogs an’
eatin’ the proceeds ef so be we
felt hungry.”
“ Course. Ye always did take
sides again’ me, an’ I s’pose ye
alius will. Ye jest like ter git
right down under the iron hoof of
despotism an’ grovel. Them fel
lers is responsible fur all our mis
AT
Western & Atlantic R r
(BATTLEFIELD LINE. ' ^
AND
Nashviille, Chattanooga
& St. Louis Railway, ’
TO
CHATTANOOGA,
NASHVILLE,
CINCINNATI,
CHICAGO,
MEMPHIS and
ST. LOUIS.
PULLMAN PALACE BUFFET siffpiv
CARS JACKSONVILLE Md ATLAs£®
TO
NASHVILLE AND ST. LOUIS, THROIm
WITHOUT CHANGE. UlGH
Local Sleepers between Atlanta and Ch a t
tauooga.
Cheap Emigrant Kates to Arkansas ana
Texas.
Excursion Tickets to California and Coin,,
ado Resorts.
► '
For Maps, Folders, Sleeping Car Reservation
and any information about Rates, Schedules
j etc., write or apply to
ery.
“ But, Ellihu, we ain’t miser
able.”
“ That jes’ shows yer foolishness
agin. We’re so run down an’
pushed an’ jostled an’ crowded
that we kin hardly say our souls
are our own. You don’t realize
it ’cause ye ain’t heard the folks
thet go through the country talkin’
about it same ez I hev. I don’t
blame ye so much fnr not realizin’
thet we’re miserable. I sometimes
git ter feelin’ kinder comfortable
myself when I let my mind wan
der off o’ what these men hez been
a-sayin’. But I do blame ye fur
stickin’ up fur them capitalists.”
“ But they don’t want ter see
the country go ter smash any
more’n you do. Leastways, ef
they do, I don’t see whut makes
’em.”
“ It can’t he anythin’ but pure
cussedness. An’ I’m agin’ ’em.
Ye kin talk all day, but ye can’t
find anythin’ thet’ll make me feel
any better towards ’em.”
“ There’s one thing you fergit.
They must have their use in this
world.”
“ I don’t see it.”
“ I’m sure of it. I used ter feel
kind o’ hard towards ’em tell I
got ter thinkin’ about ’em in a
proper frame o’ mind. Whut ever
ye hear about ’em an’ think about
’em an’ say about ’em, they’s one
fact, Elihu, thet ye can’t git over,
and that is, thet the Lord made
’em.”—Detroit Free Press.
HOT WEATHER
C. B WALKER, J. A. THOMAS
Ticket Agent, Ticket Agent
Union Depot, No. 8 Kimball Luse
ATLANTA, GA.
C. K. AYER, J, L. EDMONDSON,
Ticket Agent, Chattanooga
Rome, Ga. f em .
JOS. M. BROWN, C. E. HARMAN,
Traffic Manager. Gen. Pass. Art.,
Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta, Ga
G. W. ORR, Agent, Dalton, Ga.
ARKANSAS
AND
TEXAS,
offer to all classes of thrifty
persons unequaled induce
ments to locate within their
borders.
To the Farmer,
is offered good land at low prices,
and on easy terms; good markets
for all he raises, and never failing
crops.
To the Laborer:
a country where work is easy to get
and where good wages are paid.
To the Merchant:
good openings, where honest, legit-
mate business can be carried on
with profits.
We have lawns to close S 1
^ To the Manufacturer:
out. Former price, 15c, 4
►
►> now 7|c. Former price, J
an unlimited supply of raw materi
als, and good shipping facilities to
all the large markets. Liberal in
ducements are offered by the citi
zens oi the various localities.
►V ioc, now 5c.
SLIPPERS.
, COTTON ;
1 BELT
The COTTON BELT P*®e9
cii: ectly through the _oest |
portions of tbes^
States^
th- best route fertile I
*11(1 1* til- l>e.-i ruiiK-'-r
intending .-ettler, a? it**
onlv line running counorta
Former price 50c, now
20c.
Former price $1.00, now
50c.
Former price $1.25, now
60c.
Former price $2.00, now
7 5 c.
\ nnTrr'r ^ nie chair cars and Tuli®an
l_ R0UTE _i gsnrfflirjfe
Lw- -w- —' —t change. It you ar>-rbinG/_
of moving write lor tree copies 1 f mes
somely illustrated pamphlets—“Texas,
in the Sonrhw• m.’ “Truth:- about
“Glimpses of S- u neu- Missouri, - , -sale
Northwest Loni-it.ua," «««» "H'vou »
Along the Cot im Bell,” They will b* I -
find a good location.
H. H. SUTTON. E. W. ( -aBAl
Trav. Fa-s. Agt . 'ten. Pass, and .
Chattanooga. Tenn. S..fiow.
CLOTHING.
We have a few suits of
several styles of Clothing
that we will close out at
less than half they cost
us, We expect new
goods in by tomorrow,
probably before The Cit
izen reaches you. Come
right away and save from
50 to 60 per cent,
OL...
I COMPLETE
PILE
CURL
DONS
PILE CURE:
OINTMENT and
tablets.
One aids the other ,
I CURB ITCHING J
iBUNO.a.rEOiNG 1
I PROTRUDING**
JUUERATED f“
l ail
hCHBW
tfubes 1x6 in-W ol -
syringe pipe with ^ j
in the sides goes wu^.j
tube for ^^/ffected f
ment direetjf to ^ ,
parts, which
i nil am m&noii stated /
ately, beals d 1 ® *Ts the I
surfaces, redu nr tstbei
swelling “fP^aiid.
membranes in
healthy condition-
The tablets
internally to, ate tfie I
the system, rego the j
cause 01
DON’T BE CUT WITH ^
Don’s Cure is Pleasant and ^
wgS&ETs
Longei’i
#e wiV
Cure
Yob.
,sen*
it.A-V-- .. .