The Rome tribune. (Rome, Ga.) 1887-190?, June 21, 1895, Image 5

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DACC RRfK £PR * GOLD,SILVER OK GREENBACKS If ■ » Iltelß iWII 8? S Wulf H IOK IILJII ® Taken at Premium, whether coinage shall be f ■ or limited, and . ““16 TO 1— — We are receiving an enormous amount of goods recently bought in the East. We A , bought them because the people come to us for them, and the people come to us for their ' f U 1 ay Ot e s ° e in Warns because our stock is fullest, our sejections best, and our prices invariably lowest. ■ ' - A big stock of goods bought in June, and why not ? Some report June as a dull m mth. With us it is one of the best months in the year—the other best months are January, July, September, February, August, May, December, October, April, March and November—trade looking on the bright side of life all the .time at 243 BROAD and it’s not all by accident. Come to see us during next two weeks and you will see why we are busy in June. Here are a few prices worth the minding—hundreds of others in stock equally as irresistible. Big lot 12 yard feather stitched Braid,all colors, worth 25c and 30c, to close out at 15c. 40c French Organdy, flnest made, at 29c. Striped Organdy, for shirt waists, Zephyr Laines, worth at B|c. SI.OO Fine Serges reduced to 69c. Silk Belts with Buckles, 25c. $1.50 Crepons, our price to close 98c. SI.OO Crepons at 69c. Satin Finish Crepons, worth 15c, at 7|c. R. & G. and Thomson’s Corsets, Prices Lowest. Our Special Corset has no equal at 50c. FOSTER’S KID GLOVES, Big assortment. Givens a chance to supply your wants, and we will give you a chance to save money on yoir purchases. 4 We invite your frequent visits to our store. Examine our offerings—see how thoroughly they fill the measure of our promises and praises. The ears often deceive but the eyes seldom play false. AftO RQATUFRC ft ORBfIRANV do DnUlnEno a uUlflrANla DON’T MARRY ten for our samples and prices of wedding invitations. We also raake a specialty of engagement and ued ding rings of solid 18-karat gold Bend for our ring catalogue. J P STEVENS & BRO., j Jewelers and Engravers, Atlanta, Ga. RUNNERSIIAY READ This Column of Short Paragraphs and Personal Mention. ' Hews notes for hasty readers The Minor Happenings of the City— A Batch of Items of Interest Cut to the Core. Mr. Arnold Broyles, of Atlanta, was in the city yesterday. . We will pay cash for huckleberries in any quantities. Lillard & Co. 12-2 w mAs Lula Culpepper, of Little Row, is visiting friends in the city. Call for book on how to preser ■ e your fruit, at Crouch & Co’s. 6-10-lm Prof. C. F. Gaines, of Everett Springs, is in the city, attending the Institute. For Sale—l 3 improved lots on Butler street, Fifth ward in Rome. Apply to H J Klasing 6-16-ts Rev. J. M. Britton preached a splen did sermon at the Second Baptist Wednesday night. I will take a few more music pupils at $2.50 at my house 608 East Second Street. Mrs. John N. Perkins. th sun i * Prayer meeting at the First Presbyte rian church this afternoon at 5 o’clock. Services open to the public. Prof. W. O. Connor, and a number of the pupils of the School for the Deaf, passed through the city yesterday. Lost—Pair steel framed spectacles, an inch broken from one bar. Reward if left at Moseley’s drug store. Judge Harris has caught up with the criminal branch of the city court and is now engaged in civil work. Miss Mary Reeves, came down from Rome last week and will spend the sum mer at home. —Cherokee Ala, Sentinel. Mrs. Newcomb, of Rome, and Miss Cora Isbell, of Ford, are visiting Mrs. and Miss Julia Pinkerton.—Courant American. j Rhudy & Co., are now devoting ten per cent, of their sales to the St. Peters church fund. Call and see what taey are offering in the way of bargains. Dr. R. W. Harbin has moved to the Dr. Tignor offices, over F. A. Johnson & Co’s., drug store. Telephone 34. Mr. E. E. Bawsell. of Atlanta, form erly in charge of the telephone exchange here, has been in the city visiting friends j for several days. , • ; The rafters and plates for the roof j of the new government building are i being put in place,, and the roof will ■ be completed in a few days. j Misses Katie and Annie Perkins I have been enjoying a pleasant lioli- I day with their friend Miss Montgom- I ery, at Agate, Ga., but will return ! today. / I Henry Stoffregen, has just received a ! bran new red wagon from the Moerlein i Brewing Company, It is a beauty and adds much to Henry’s peculiar style of architecture. Miss Bell, a daughter of C. J. Price, of Rome, is sending several weeks in LaFayette. She is the guest of Misses Alliie and Emma Webb. —LaFayette Messenger. Rev. J. M. Britton, of Atlanta, has been the guest of Mr. J. A. Glover, at his elegant home in the Fourth ward, during his stay with the Teachers’ Institute. We have just received a car load of the celebrated Chattanooga beer, the best on the market. Every ten days we receive a fresh supply and solicit the patronage of all. Kay Bros. Mr. Joe Magnus, of the firm of Jo seph A. Magnus & Co., wholesale liquor dealers, Cincinnati, was in the city yesterday. Mr. Magnus is an old Rome boy. and his friends here are always glad to welcome him to his old home. b Mr. Jeff Davis Dunwoody, repre senting the Atlanta Brewing and Ice Company, was in the city yesterday and closed a contract with Kay & Bro. by wfiich they will handle the Royal Pale and Old Cabinet bottled beers, the choicest brew of that company. Mr. N. E. Stone, fortnarly of Atlanta, but now become a Roman citizen, has taken chaige of the management of the Rome office of the Metropolitan Life In surance Company. He is a gentleman of long experience in the business and will no doubt meet with success in his new field. Wanted a man in every section to sell staple goods to dealers; experi ence unnecessary; best side line. $75.00 a month. Salary and expenses' or large commission made. For sealed I particulars send ptamp. Clifton ■ Soap and Manufacturing company, i Cincinnati, O. 6-12-wed-sat-12m THE ROME TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. JUNE 21. 1895. 1000 large sized Palm Leaf Fans, Ic. 325 School Handkeichiefs, Ic. 400 $1.50 Silk Umbrellas, 98e. 200 pairs Ladies’ Genuine Fast Black Hose, sc. Two cases Ladies’ Vests, each sc. 165 pairs Misses’ 10c Hose, sc. Ore case Ladies’ 20c Vests, 10c. Ladies’ Sc-mless 20c Hose, 10c. 12|c Percales, 10c. One lot Remnan. Dimities, worth 15c, 7|c. One lot Remnant Chailies, 2|c. One lot Silk Elastic, the 20c quality, slightly damaged, given away- at 2c. Butterick Patterns cost but little. Buy them and save trouble in making up your apparel. A good supply of very fine trunks on hand and we are content with very small margins on them. Miss Alma Jones, of South Rome, left on the city editor’s desk a big magnolia blossom yesterday, which perfumed the entire office, and offset the fumes of the snake editor’s pipe. It was a case of sweets to the sweet. Remember it requires no sugar to keep your fruit when Miller’s Pre serving tablets are used. For sale by Crouch & Co. 6-10-lm Miss Alma Hill left yesterday for a visit to relatives in Monroe, Ga. Miss Della Harris, one of the most accomplished young ladies of Ceda: - town, came up from Cave Spring and spent the day in the city yesterday. Hon. Jno. D. Moore, mayor of Rome, has just returned from a very pleas ant trip to Tallulah' Falls, and he vows by all that is holy that he is go ing back again. He says that he never had such a time in all his life, and that it is the finest of all moun tain resorts. We have a fresh lot of Jeremiah Murphy’s “Red Gravy” Hams, old style cure, conceded by epicures to be one of the finest on the market. The only ham that will make the old sash , ioned red gravy. Try them and you will accept no other. Simpson ' Grocery Company. Lost —Small gold locket, “Me O” on back. Finder liberally rewarded by leaving at J. K. Williamson’s jewelry s ore. 6-18-ts MARVELOUS RESULTS. From a letter written by Rev. J. Gunderman, of Dimondale, Mich., we are permitted to make this extract: “I have no hesitation in recommend ing Dr. King’s New Discovery, as the results were most marvelous in the case of my wife. While I was pastor of the Baptist church at Rives Junc tion she was brought down with pneumonia succeeding la grippe. Terrible paroxysms of coughing would last with little interruption and it seemed as if she could not survive them. A friend recommended Dr. King’s New Discovery; it was quick in its work and highly satisfactory in results.” Trial bottles free at D. W. Curry's drug store. Regular size 60c. and sl. On Saturday afternoons and Sun days, the Western and Atlantic Rail road will sell round trip tickets Rome to and return at $2.00. Tickets good returning until Monday . morning following date of sale. Go and spend next Sunday on the top ofold Lookout. There is no fine or more picturesque view from any point in the United States than from Point Lookout. Call on C. K. Ayer, ticket agent, Rome, Ga. TEACHING TEACHERS' I The Work of the Floyd County Insti tue Yesterday. SOME INSTRUCTIVE ADDRESSES. Capt. A. B, S. Moseley Entertained the Au dience Yesterday Morning-,Superindent Bridges on Graded Schools. The work of the Flovd county Teach ers Institute yesterday was of a very : high degree of excellence. In the morning superintendent W. M. Bridges delivered a very interesting and instructive address on Graded schools , at the meeting of the teachers at Shor . ter College. There was a full attendance present and they all enjoyed the address which was full of thoughtful expressions and suggestions on the line of improving the methods of teaching by proper grad ing and classification. Capt. A. B. S. Moseley, who is one of the staunchest adherents of the cause of education in Floyd county, addressed the teachers at eleven o’clock and his address was listened to with careful at tention. He dwelt ar length on improved meth ods and modern ideas and his speech was on the line of progress and advance ment. Among those who have contributed largely to the success of the institute, aside from the faithful corps of most advanced teachers, selected by Su perintendent Bridges to assist him in the work, are Rev. J. M. Britton, one of the best known educators of At lanta; Rev. E. W. Ballenger, presi dent of the Piedmon’t Institute,Rock mart, Ivy Duggan, of this city, and Prof. Charles I. Shifflett, of North Rome, whose work as secretary has been admirably done. Prof. Shifflett stands very high as a teacher in the community in which he lives, and is devoted to the cause of education. The teachers are engaged in the dis cussing of the best methods of teaching 1 history, and the discussion will be pro ductive of much good. i Tne educators of Floyd county rank very high among our citizens and they j are, as a class, earnest, zealous and dil- i igent in seexing after the very best ] methods that can be brough t to be. r 1 upon their work. j Heretofore the cause of education in < North Georgia has been kept in the back j ground, but with such a class of teach- j ers as we have now, the schools of Floyd < are taking a very high rank among the educational institutions of the state. This afternoon, at three o’clock, the ( Milan Straw Sailor Hats, worth 50c, at 20c. Milan Straw Sailors, silk ribbon bands, 35c. Ladies’ Straw Hats, 10c. Ladies’ Straw Hats, with bands, 20c. Ladies’ White Chips Hats reduced from 75c to 45c. If you want a Ladies’ Fine Hat come to see us. 236 pairs Ladies’ Tipped Oxfords, 50c, Four cases Dongola Oxfords, worth $1.25, at 85c, 300 pairs Ladies’ Dongola Button Boots, SI.OO. We have a large stock ot Krippendorf’s Fine Shoes for ladies’ wear nothing finer nor better made in this broad land. Oxfords, Button Boots, Nullifiers, etc , common sense lasts, needle and razor toes. Every thing up to date in foot wear, and bought before the recent great ad vance in leather goods. Our selling prices in Shoes,as in everything else, are the lowest. I closing exercises of the institute will take place and tomorrow the elections of teachers for the ensuing scholastic year, will he the order of the day. The attendance at the institute has been very full this year and the teach ers are taking more interest in its work ing every year as they realize and ap preciate its benefits. < Col Capers’ Great Work, There was ti paragraph on “Swear ing” in yesterday’s issue of the Tri bune and excused the printer when he “pied” a galley, but no one else. — A line in our paper referred to the “Secretary of war” of the Confederate States as being Mr. C. G. Memming ton and stated that Colonel Henry D. Capers had written his biography and so on. Well, the Colonel is the mild est mannered gentleman who ever car ried two hundred pounds of vigorous manhood up and down Broad street with the themometor at 92, so he did not “cuss” when he read that re markable paragraph, but as “Phile tus,” an old friend of the Courier days would say, “he just let his good soul come out in one of his glorious laugh ters that made everyone one glad who heard it.” It should have read “The Life and Times of C. G. Memminger, Secretary of the Treasury Depart ment of the Confederate States of America.” This Episode has like all good “pie” a compensation in the eating thereof. We have had the beautiful Royal Octavo, 694 pages, with its half dozen elegant sreel engravings laid on our desk bound in cloth,sheep and morocco, half and full gilt. As a typographical specimen, the printing cannot be excelled; as a work of bind ing it is the perfection of the art; as a composition and a most val liable con tribution to American history, no work ever issued by any publisher in America has been better received or more exhaustively criticised by such capable persons as Doctor Schwab, Professor of Political Economy in Yale College, Dr. Moses White, edi tor New York Post and by the London Times and Paris Figaro. President Cleveland has written Colonel Capers an autograph letter in ■which he says: “Your worn has greatly aided me and is a very valu able work of reference.” The Colonel has many letters from the most dis tinguished lawyer, Doctors of Divin ity and gentlemen of letters in vari ous sections of the United States and from Europe, expressing themselves i.i terms that are evidence of their sin cerity and highly commending his work. He began writing the work in Rome Ga., in 1880 and has spent years of the most patient research in making it as accurate and reliable as it is pos sible for such a -work to be. Col. Capers has spent the summer in North Georgia with his son-in-law, Mr. B. M. Harlan, of Calhoun, and has many friends here and at other points. Deafness Cannot Be Cured By local applications, as they can not reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mu cous lining of the Eustachian tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and, when it is entirely closed, deafness is the result, and un less the inflamation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, -which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give one hundred dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circu lars, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. SEE THAT fOURr TICKETS READ VIA “THE OLD RELIABLE” Western 4 Atlantic AND NASHVILLE, CHATTANOOGA, & ST. LOUIS RAILWAYS. SAFEST AND BEST ROUTE TO -A-tl antal Dalton, Cliattanooga, TV Making close connection in Union Depots lor all pointe beyond. THE ROME EXPRESS, The Most Popular 'J >iir I■iv <« n Homo and. Is an elegant Through Train, making close con nection in Atlanta with the SeaboAl ah- Line, Atlanta Special and the Southern Railway Ves tibule Limited for the East. Through Coachese*- On Trains Nos. 113 and 112. tor Atlanta....7 40 a. m. 910 a.m. 250 .m For Dalton, > For Chattanooga, } 910a. m. 2 61 n. m For Nashville, ) For any information call on or write to .L. Edmondson, T. P. A W. F. Atir, At Chattanooga, Tenn. Rome, Ga.