Newspaper Page Text
• WE MEBM IT V
W 5 0 0 $ -
I MIBB WiST I ■
| —THAT -wrs .a.xc.es—
OKaL.3L.IBJG OUR. GOODS AT COST.
—— . .
OUR ENTIRE STOCK is on the market at cost. We can truthfully say that we have bought cheap,
and you now have an opportunity to get furniture very low. We do not intend to quit business, but are go
ing to reduce our stock. Come and see how cheap we are selling.
IS'he Cherokee Furniture Company;
N. B.—l will always be in charge of our store, and will take pleasure in showing and priceing Goods.
If the services of an undertaker are needed at night, I can be found at home and will give my personal
attention to anyone needing such service. Thanking the people for their patronage in the past and asking
a continuance of the same. . I am,’very respectfully,
E. H. CARMAN, Manager Cherokee Furniture Co.
!a splendid institution.
A Fine Chnnre for a G*<ml BuMineoH
Fvtuenliou.
Attention is called to the card of the
jfioutheri* Shorthand and Business Col
lege, (57 South Broad street, Atlanta,
<Ga.) which appears in another column of
this issue. It is with pleasure that The
Ajtots recommends this worthy institu
to the young man desiring a busi-
and to the parent who
BPME-nes to give his son the best possible
Fy -qualification for a useful life.
■ The editor of The Argus is personally
■ Jicquaiated with Mr. A. C. Briscoe, who
■ is at the head of the institution; he has
Mr. Briscoe’s classmate at college,
iti troyiuiod-awt friend in man-
H hood, and he knows that Mr. Briscoe
■ would make no claim for his institution
H that was not in strict accord with the
I truth. Mr. Briscoe is a gentleman of
■ probity and refinement, and the parent
Jp who sends his sou to the Southern
, Shorthand and Business College can rest
I assured that he will be subject to ail the
1 good nnfral and religious influences that
j a Chruftian gentleman can throw around
i that he will indeed receive as
a Business education as one of
Eldest and most conscientious
inV'A' , \ hind can give. The
f shorthand and Business Col-
lege has few, if any, equals, and it will
be well to think twice, before passing it
by and sending your son elsewhere.
How’s This, Ye Dalton Girls ?
’-—The papers are telling of a 16-year
old girl, who landed in New York,
some eight or ten days since, and who
48 said tube the largest woman in the
world. Though so young, she already
pleasures 7 feet 10 inches in height,
is still growing. Physicians who
seen her say that there is every
.of her gaining another foot.
Bhe was born in the south of France
is on her way to Chicago to be put
xm exhibition, Her hands are 12 inches
long by <> broad, and her feet by actual
measurement are IB inches in length.
It is said that her parents were rather I
under the average in stature, and that
none of her ancestors, so far as known,
were of abnormal h< ight. There is
nothing unhealthy about her immense
size. She is rather spare in figure,
possesses great strength and and ener
gy. and weighs 210 French pounds.
.Just think of that. What 16-year-old
Dalton girl who weighed 210 pounds
would lie proud of it? What Dalton
girl who had hands a foot long and (> |
inches wide and feet It inches long, 5
I would be flopping around showing
them? Eclio answers that there is
not even one.
Hon. W. C. Sibley Cured of Sci-
! atiea.
From the Augusta, Ga„ Evening News, January
20th, 1802.
Lt Some years ago the Evening News,
1, Vliscussing electricity as a healing
,kjnt, alluded to the Electropoise, and
§o phenomenal and wonderful have
been its cures that the reputation of
the little instrument is now echoing
kill over the country. A well known
lease in Augusta has been completely
Loured by the Electropoise and the fol
lowing interview from such a well
known, reliable and prominent man
THE ARGUS; DALTON. GA., SATURDAY. DECEMBER 10,1892.
as President William G. Sibley, of the
Sibley Mill, must deeply impress, if not
entirely convince all who read it.
Mr. Sibley was perfectly willing to
give his testimony to the Evening
News about the Electropoise. He said
he had been a great sufferer from sci
atica for five years before he began
using the Electropoise. For two whole
years he had not been free from pain,
and at limes sciatic pains had been so
severe that he would jump out of bed
in nis sleep and awake to find himself
on the floor in great .agony. He
spent much money in the--North for
special medical treatment and was
sixty-seven times cauterized with a
white-hot-iron on different parts of
his body. The treatment was almost
as terrible as the sciatica itself, and
when fie read that a partner of Gen.
Alger, the great Republican politician
of Detroit, had pan! $5,000 and a phy
sician’s expenses out to California as
his joyful reward for cure from sciatica,
he determined to try the Electropoise.
“How long has that been, Mr. Sibley?’
“A year ago, and you know yoursfelf
my condition before that lime. I»
could not walk to my office, or even
across the street; I was helpless and
had to go in a buggy everywhere.”
Mr. Sibley’s statements arp remarka
ble, but there is no doubt of their cor
rectness, and the cures made by the
Electropoise are indorsed by all physi
cians who examine them.
Dalton, Ga., October 25, 1892. ;
Gentlemen : 1 have used tiie Elec-,
tro|K)ise but a short time in my family
for croup, cold, neuralgia, etc., and am '
convinced thal it is all you claim for it.
By a faithful use of this little wonder
1 look for the best results.
Respectlully,
S. E- Beery.
We, eariM'stly solicit correspondence
from those who are sick, and especially
from those who are suffering from
chronic diseases of longstanding, and
so-called ‘•incurable” diseases. Our in
formation is free, and a fifty-page book
mailed to any applicant. Atlantic
Electropoise Co., Gould Building,
Atlanta, Ga.
They Kick When They Don’t Get
The Argue.
Miss Jennie L. Johnson, of Hight,
Ark., writes The Argus: “I missed my
last issue of The Argus. Please send me
another copy. 1 cannot begin to do with
out auv issue of The Argus as it now
is.”
And so it goes. The people cry for it,
and they kick when they uo not get it.
Now is the accepted time to subscribe. $1
a year. , •
BuCklen’s Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rhenm
Fever Soros, Tetter, Chapped Hands
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup
tions, and positively cures Pili’s, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed to give
perfect satisfaction, ormoney refunded
Price 25 cents per box.
For Sale by S. J. McKnight..
* For Hole.
Ninety (90) acres of land, one-half mile
from the city limits. Sixty acres cleared.
Will be sold cheap on easy terms. 11
John R. Lynch, Dalton, Ga.
IN A NUTSHELL.
Wlmt The Argus <’l*ll lie for the
BusiuesN Nan.
The Argus will print you
Letter heads,
Note heads, *
Bill heads,
Statements,
Warehouse tickets,
Checks,
Circulars,
Business cards,
Visiting cards,
Hand bills,
Menu cards, *
Invitations,
And all other classes of job printing at
the lowest possible rates. Give The
Argus a fair trial; it guarantees satisfac
tion. New type, new presses, new men.
Subscribe to The Argus and read the
news of the day in these parts. $1 a year.
Dr. Joint Bull’s Worm Destroyer
taste gcod and quickly remove worms
from children or grewn people, re,stor
ing the weak and puney Io robust
health. Try them. No other worm
medicine is so sale and sure. Price 25
cents at drugstore er sent by mail bv
John D. Bark a Sons Co. 175 and 17
Sycamore St . Cincinnati. O.
A (taapel Trnlh
Those who advertise in Thk Argus
will be. those who do the business in
Dalton. Thk Argus is whooping things
up for Dalton and its business, enter
prises and industries, and the people are
learning to look in The Argus for what
they want to know. When they want to
buy anything they will .look in The
Argus to see where to go.
h you are wise, you will advertise in
The Argus, and let the people know
what you havc*to sell.
Ma e no Mistake.
When one wants to eradicate every
Indication of malaria from their system
ihey aretruley wise, and make no mis
take if they will try Dr. John Bull’s
Smith Tonic Syrup.
For many years it has deservedly
maintained its reputation as being the
•nost reliable of the many
Cures
one sees advertisement and for the
most annoying and enervating of all
malarial diseases, known as
Chills and Fever.
it has a good and lasting effect and no
other remedy has ever given such sat
isfaction. Demand it of your druggist
Take no substitute on which a large
profit fs made. One bottle will tlo you
more good than six bo’.ties of any other
remedy, and the relief is always per
manent, A word to the wise is sulli
cient. It cures malaria.
Take Bull’s Sarsaparilla.
Is your blood in bad condition? Do
you feel weak? Do you have pain!
Do sores trouble you? Are you in poor
healt>> and growing worse? Use Dr.
John Bull's Sarsaparilla. It will make
you well and strong. Do not delay.
Give it a trial. Get it from your <1 rug
gist. Large Lotties (192 tea-spoonfuls)
SIOO.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Lastoria.
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria
Baker & Colvard,
—MANUFACTURERS OF—
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
Marble and Granite Monuments.
HEADSTONES, TABLETS, AND CEMETERY
WORK OE ALL KINDS.
All Work Warranted to Give Perfect Satisfaction.
Iron Fencing a specialty. DALTON, GA.
Dalton Foundry and Machine Shop,
T| IT- n I ROBBERT HILL, PROPRIETOR,
ta new ot
IIIUHUIUUUIIUI Bullies, Xlinftingx
AIL KOof JOB WOHK
Which shall receive special and prompt attention
Also, keep in stock Grates. Hollow-ware, Fencing, etc.
All work guaranteed first class. Correspondence solicited
! 1 ■I .. R—P——
T. A. & 8. E. BERRY.
IRON AND HARDWARE.
IKagons, Huggies, Harness,
IMPROVED FARM MACHINERY, PLOWS, &C., A SPECIALTY.
Plumbers and Plumbing Supplies.
IlHniilron Street, ... DALTON OA.
.. »J I * II —a——
' Dalton Female College,
Infill Term begins Sept. 6. ISOS.
Entire expenses for ten months, including Tuition in College Classes, I- ar
lights, fuel, washing and service, $l6O.
PROP. HENRI SCHOELLER will have charge of Musical Departmeil.
Mrs. FANNIE G. LES TER will preside in the Preparatory School.
The Literary school and the school of Art are supplied wilh competent
eachers. The new boarding department will be completed by August 15th.
For further terms address
Ci. .T. OKU. PreMklent.
ESTABLISHED 1873.
It K8!‘ON81 Hll.ljY MOHE THAN
f»OO,000.00
G. L. HARDWICK & CO.,
BANKERS.
DALTON, • - GEORGIA.
Our record is pearly twenty year*of success
ful business under same management. With
amplt-capita) and a knowledge of your wants
we can nerve \ou natiafactorilY.
KH PLo’s Remedy for Catarrh is the
Best, Utoieß to Use, and Cheapest.
■ Sold by or sent by mail.
50c. E. T. Hazeltiue, Warren, Pa. ■
V* Dr. BULL'S facilitates an<*
KIDV CYDIID regulates the Boweto. At
UADI ulnUr all Jrmorista. PrUxJicts.
Dill | 70 Cures Coughs, Colds,
Vln In W Bronchitis, Croups
Asthma, I I /S U Whooping
Cough, n# Incipient
Consumption, and re- O W B I I
lieves Consumr>tix» W T IV W •
persons. Price 25 cts. At all druggists.