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THE
NEWS.
CLINTON It BEADLES, Proprietors.
FAYETTEVILLE, GA., FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1889.
VOL. I. NO. 39.
BUM
Offei’to the Public All
Kind of
WAGON,
BUGGY,
CARRIAGE,
Ml & wooft hi
IN FIRST-CUSS STYLE.
We use ihe very best “3 X” Select
Timber H at can be bought. Wc do as
good IKON WORK us any shops in
Georgia.
All Work Done Undera Guarantee
We have on hand a full supply of the
Timed Flow Stocks,
k
Also, a full Stock of the
RHODES COTTON PLANTERS.
We arc putting up tlii best
HARROWS
Ever used in Fayette County. If you
want a Fiiet-class Job of
PAINTING OR TRIMMING
On BUGGIES, WAGONS, &c., call on us.
Coffins Mide to Order.
Wt» hav« TIKE SETTERS to use
without rutting Tire. Best
BUGGIES AND WAGONS
On hand for Sile. Prices to suit the
customer. Give us a trial. Price our
Stock before buying ej^ewheie. Re
spectfully,
HEADQUARTERS
-FOR-
CHEAP
GOODS.
;o to
W.P.aiLLlEDWHE'S
—TO GET—
GOODS
—AT—
Atlanta, Griffin & Newaan Prices-
We Keep on Hand a
Full Assortment of
DRY GOODS,
HARDWARE,
Para & Sark Tails,
S. S,MOORE,
DEALER IN-
Fine Liquors, Brandies
TOBACCOS .AND CIGARS,
9 West Metchell St. Atlanta. Ga.
PRICE LIST.
Gal, Qt.
Pure Pickens Co., Corn £‘2.00 70
Lots 4 gallons and 3 qrts. 1.75
N. C. Sweet Mash Corn 1.65 50
In lots 4£ gallons, l.£0
W. S Samuels & Co. Sour Mash
Rye 10 years old, 5.00 1.25
Old Baker Rye, 5.00 125
Old Cabinet Rye, 3.50 1.00
Robinson County Rye, 2.25 75
Old Reserve Rye, 2.50 85
Boubon Rye 3 years old, 2.50 75
XXXX Mill Creek Whisky 200 60
70 Proof Rye, 1.50 50
Pure Cherokee County
Apple & Peach Brandies 3,001.00
Imported Juniper Gin, 3.50*1.00
Holland Gin, 2.00 60
Impcricd Port Wine, 3.00 75
Beer, Pints per dozen, 1 25
Beer by keg, 2.60
Blackberry Brandy, 1.60 50
f Cherry Brandy, 1.50 50
Jugs per gallon, 10 cents.
' Send money by Postil Note,
Money Order or by Express.
All orders will receive prompt
attention,‘and satisfaction guaran
teed.
S. S. MOORE,
9 West Mitchell Street,
Atlanta, Ga.
CHAMBERLIN, JOHNSON & CO.,
-IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN-
Dry - Goods, - Carpets, - Millinery - and - Shoes.
In all the South’s history, there never have been offered to the trade such stocks as are now opened for the Spring and
Summer trade. In Dress Goods we have solved the problem, and will supply the trade this season with Wools and Silks of
the Latest Paris Styles and in Mammoth Quantities to supply everybody. While we make a specialty of extra fine fabrics,
we deal also in first-class styles in medium priced goods that will claim the attention of the most conservative buyer. All
grades are guaranteed in fine quality.
IN CARPETS, WE LEAD THE VAN.
Full and complete stock of Imported and Domestic Goods. Also Draperies, Shades, Rugs, Mats, Oil Cloths, China and
Japanese Mattings, all in Late Weaves and Elegant Styles. If a Carpet is wanted, see and price with us before giving your
orders. W|e send first-class upholsterers to any part of the South to lay and drape our goods.
MILLINERY, LATEST PARIS STYLES.
No Patent Goods, everything made after order i3 booked.
SHOES—We carry in our Shoe Store the largest stock of fine goods in the city, and every pair is made to order and
warranted. Also we carry all widths as well as all lengths. Full and complete stock for Ladies’, Gent’s, Misses and Children.
Remember, We Do Not Handle Shoddies,
But guarantee both prices and quality on every article sold over our counters. NO TROUBLE TO SHOW GOODS.
CHAMBERLIN, JOHNSON & CO..
66 and 68 Whitehall, and 1,3, 5, 7, 9,1 1,13 and 15 Hunter Sts.
AGENTS BUTTERICK PATTERNS. ATLANTA, GLA.
Mrs. Cleveland in New York.
Bools & Shoos,
HATS & CAPS,
All you have to do is
to price our stock and
be convinced that we
sell as cheap as any
store in Georgia.
WE SELL
“ BRIGHT STIR”
FLOUR.
Be.-t Brog.m Shoes at $1.25.
Ready-Made Shirts at 90 cents.
Cotton Checks at 6 Cents.
Ready-Made Drawers at 33$ cents.
Best Grade Cashmere at 40 cents.
All-Wool Jeans at 33J cents.
NEW LOTlO RSETS,
Best Quality at 50 cents.
ALL SOLID LEATHER
LADIES’ SHOES,
Worth {1.75 at $1.20.
Macaboj and Railroad Snufl
In Boxes, at 55 cents per pound.
Call on us and be convinced of out
Low Prices, Best Quality of Goods.
RESPECTFULLY,
W.P.M.L
Every one wlio has seen Mrs. Cleve
land since she arrived in this city has
remarked upon the great change in her
appearance. She is very much thinner,
having lost probably since her marriage
fully twenty pounds. She 'is a tall
woman, something' like five feet seven,
and -weighed when she married Mr.
Cleveland nearly one hundred and sixty
pounds, which did not seem at all too
much for her height. Now she looks dis
tinctly thin and has lost, too, the bril
liant color she liad as a girl. The life in
Washington has bepn, in, some respects,
a hard one an4; the climate has never
agreed with h?r ivdty well, she having
s been acifciKtcu^ed a colder and
bracing nSmospuerei ' This chnugd
in her appearance lias been greatly ac
centuated by the change in the way of
wearing her hair which she lias recently
made. The Cleveland coiffure, which
meant high coils on the head and a few
curled love-locks on the forehead, has
taken a distinct place among the fash
ions of hair-dressing and has grown uni
versally familiar through the photo
graphs of the cx-President’s wife. But
it is now entirely altered; she brushes
her hair straight back from her fore
head, without any suggestion of a bang,
and pins it in a low, braided coil on the
back of her neck. Such a radical change
of coiffure makes almost as much differ
ence in a woman’s appearance as would
the shaving of his beard on the part of
the man. It 1ms changed Mrs. Cleve
land so much that very few people who
are not personally acquainted with her
would be able to recognize her. It is
said that is what she had in view when
she made the change. She knew that
her face had become so familiar to every
one that she would not bo able even to
walk in the streets or to appear in nny
public place without immediately being
pointed out and stared at, and it was to
avoid this unpleasantness that she
changed her hair-dressing in order that
those people who knew her only through
photographs should not easily recognize
her. She and Mrs. Folsom are already
beginning an executive session with the
dressmakers, preparing their spring
wardrobes, as they probably leave town
early in the season and wish to be be
forehand in their preparations. Mrs.
Cleveland 1ms already made investments
in the pretty new ginghams and China
silks which are being shown in the shop
windows. She 1ms a great fondness for
simple, girlish costumes for summer
wear, and with her fresh complexion
and slender, youthful outlines these are
extremely becoming to her. Mrs. Fol
som, however, dresses very quietly,
does not look very much older than her
daughter, and, indeed, i* far ns age is
concerned, might easily be an elder sis
ter, being but little over seventeen veam
her senior.—New York ]VorlJ,
JOB PRINTING
Neatly and Expeditiously
■EXECUTED
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Manufactory, 213 TV. German St,
Baltimore Md.
St., )
t Cor. 7th and E. S.t. N W.
} Washington, D. C.
EISEMAN BROS,
Strictly One Price
The Home of the Rose.
Nearly fill the roses that New York
belles wear are raised in Madison, N. J.
Probably more roses are grown there and
sold than in any other place in the world.
There are eighty-five enormous green
houses iu the town, and 150 people are
employed in the cultivation of roses. At
least a score of men have grown rich
from the sale of the queen of flowers.
On an average 40,000 cut roses are
shipped from there to New York every
day in the year. Two cars bear the
fragrant load.
EISEMAN BROTHERS,
17 & 19 WHITEHALL ST.,
jATL-A. 1ST T.A., - GEOEaiA.