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DYER&DANIELS
SUCCESSORS TO
Tjo,ixlx£lxxi. <fcj Sons,
\
I
We make our best bow to the crockery buyers of Rome
and vicinity and request you to write or call on us for
prices in our line before purchasing elsewhere.
We nave purchased the stock of Lanham & Sons at
such prices as enables us to offer big bargains in the line of
CROCKERY
Glassware, Tinware, Stoves, Etc.
We must have room. Have more goods than space to
keep them, with new goods coming in. We carry the
choicest and newest productions of the leading factories of
the world. Our stock of high grade and medium class
goods is the largest and best selected in North Georgia.
We mean business when we say that we will sell you
goods cheaper than any other house, and a cordial invita
tion is extended to every one to call on us and look through
our extensive stock.
OUR WHOLESALE DEPARTMENT
will be kept up to a high standard.
DYER I DANIELS
236 Bread. Street.
> , "
1 '
lihLsllb no*■
:
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CHILDREN GROW
healthy—grow happy—grow rosy cheeked and bright eyed, on HIRES’ <
; Rootbeer. This great health-|k> giving temperance drink]
I' should be kept in every home, It will benefit and delight]
every member of the family from the baby up, and prove a most delicious <
thirst satisfying beverage for callers. It’s good all the time—morning, ]
WV ■ WRk WPW- V noon and night. Get the genuine
nlßtb Rootbeer
Al 5 cent puktge m.kei 5 galloM. Sold ..crywhere. The Cha*. E. Hire* Co.. Philadelphia, i 1
JOYS AT GREENACRE.
A SUMMER SCHOOL UNLIKE ANY-
THING OF ITS KIND.
A Congress of Religions—Series of Lectures
to Be Held This Season—Notable Results
of Miss Farmer’s Noble Work—Evolu
tion and Science.
wnere me distant mountains melt into
the tenderness of hill purples and cloud
land ; where gigantic pines rear their state
ly heads as guardians of the place, and the
broad Piscataqua moves gently to the sea,
like a tired child to its mother's arms;
here where sunlight and shadow form ex
quisite combinations, and the very clouds
enter into the spirit of harmony and beau
ty, lies Greenacre, Eliot, Me., the birth
place not of mere mortal man, but of a
conception that was the result of universal
forces—love to God and love to man. Like
the musical octave that must ever return
to its first note for completion, so Green
acre gives voice to the thought of the new
age as the fulfillment of the physical life,
begun here centuries ago, when the first
city of the new world was in this same
county of York. Wo never see causes.
They are forever Invisible, and only by re
sults can we estimate the value of any
movement.
Before the results have been accom
plished we must gauge the magnitude of
an enterprise by the character of the origi
nator. Never was this more true than of
this new departure inaugurated in the
summer of 1894 by Miss Sarah J. Farmer
at Groonacre. To those who meet her on
ordinary linos she is a rare type of woman,
a Greek in aesthetic exterior, uniting the
grandeur of all womanly virtues to the
executive ability of a practical mind and
the warm heart of a nature so largo that
in its love all the world can bo embraced.
To those who know her interior nature there
is a feeling, amounting almost to knowl
edge with some, that she is a woman sent
to the world for a special mission, to which
all the lines of her life have converged at
the present time in the planning and es
tablishing of a summer congress at Green
acre. Much could bo written of the life of
this wonderful woman, born of a mother
as spiritual as a saint and a father whose
inventive genius should have brought him
worldwide fame. It is only necessary to
enter the Farmer home to know how such
a woman as Sarah Farmer could be borg
and reared In purity and .sanctity tliat •'ts
uer quite apart irom orOinary vfdmen Os
the nineteenth century.
The ordinary woman, when she sees her
loved ones depart, centers herself in her
grief. Sarah Farmer, left alone, said, “I
must live for the world and humanity,”
and uplifted by this spirit of self abnega
tion she became inspired with the thought
that it might not be Impossible to con
tinue the world’s parliament of religions
from year to year until all tributaries
were united in one stream that could flow
peacefully, like the glorious Piscataqua,
to the sea of rest.
The summer school of Greenacre Is un
like all other institutions of the kind, for
its aim Is to develop in practical living all
beliefs and creeds founded on love to God
and man.
In connection with the Greenacre lec
tures arrangements have been made this
season for a conference of evolutionists
July Bto 13, inclusive. The object of the
conference is consultation and interchange
of views among the leaders of scientific
thought with regard to its bearings upon
the social, ethical and religious problems
of our time, and especially to emphasize
and illustrate its positive, constructive,
helpful implications as relating to these
problems.
Miss Farmer has Invited Dr. Lewis G.
Janes, president of the association, to as
sist her in inviting speakers and otherwise
assuring the success of the meetings. Aft
ernoon and evening sessions will be held
each day, with an address by some well
known representative of evolutionary
thought, with abundant time between
whiles for social converse and the enjoy
ment of the natural beauties of the place.
Among the speakers already engaged
are: Professor Edward S. Morse of Salem,
late president of the American Association
For the Advancement of Science, whose
topic will be “Natural Selection and
Crime;” Professor E. A. Dolbear of Tufts
college, “Relations of Mind and Matter;”
Miss Mary Proctor, daughter of the late
Richard A. Proctor, “Other Worlds Than
Ours;” Rev. Edward P. Powell, author
of “Our Heredity From God,” subject,
“The Evolution of Individuality;” *Ben ja
min F. Underwood, editor of The Philo
sophical Journal, "How Evolution Recon
ciles Opposing Views In 'Ethics and Phi
losophy;” Rev. James T. Bixby, Ph. D.,
“Evolution of the God Idea;” Dr. Lewis
G. Janes, “Evolution of Morals.” Henry
Hoyt Morse of The Outlook will read his
paper on “Utopias; Social Ideas Tested by
Evolution and Principle,” recently read
before the Brooklyn Ethical association.
I It is expected that Rev. John C. Kim-
THE ROME TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, JUNE 22. 1895
Dan or- rtarttora win aaaress ui« cumor
ence and hoped that Professor John Fiske,
LL.D., will deliver his new lecture on
“The Cosmic Roots of Love and Self Sac
rifice” and “The Eternal Reality of Re
ligion.” Brief letters and papers will
doubtless be contributed by other leaders
of scientific thought in our country. The
programme promises to be one of unusual
value, and those interested in these sub
jects cannot do better than arrange to
spend at least a portion of their summer
vacation at Greenacre. Eliot is easily
reached via the B. and M. railroad from
Boston, being in the direct route to the
White mountains, Bar Harbor and the re
sorts of the Maine coast and the northern
woods.
TALES OF THE TIMES.
Graceful Act by Mins Winnie Davis, the
“Daughter of the Confederacy.”
There was a scene enacted at the recep
tion of Miss Winnie Davis at the Capitol
hotel the other day which brought tears to
the eyes of many who witnessed it. Judge
Norman G. Kittrell had escorted his moth
er and her grandmother (the latter, Mrs.
Sarah W. Goree, who is in her eighty-ninth
year, and who had traveled more than 100
miles to attend the reunion, 80 miles of
the distance by private conveyance). Mrs.
Goree had five sons in the Confederate
army, three in Hood’s brigade, all of whom
came back wounded, while her eldest, Ma
jor Thomas J. Goree, was on Longstreet’s
staff from Bull Run to Appomattox, and
the fifty served In the transmississippi de
partment. Three of her sons were here to
meet her. She was most graciously re
ceived by Mrs. Rice, and her clear black
eyes and placid, but intelligent face, set
In a lace cap, the white ribbons of which
fell over her black satin dress of becoming
pattern, made a picture that attracted in
stant attention, and she held a levee sec
ond only in proportion to that of Miss Da
vis herself.
When Mrs. Goree was presented to Mrs. 1
J. C. Hutcheson, the latter at once led her i
forward and presented her to Miss Davis,
who received her with the utmost grace
and cordiality. Turning for the while
from the hundreds thronging around her,
she bent low and held the hand of the
venerable lady in both of her own and as
sured her again and again of the pleasure |
she felt in meeting her. When the last I
pressure was given, Mrs. Goree raised the I
hand of Miss Davis to her lips and kissed j
it. Whereupon Miss Davis said: “Oh, no. ,
It is not for you to kiss my hand, but for
me to kiss yours,’’and still holding the
thin hand of the grandmother in hers, she
knelt to the floor and kissed it tenderly
Houston Dispatch to Galveston News.
First Cousin to the Sea Serpent.
A strange animal is said to have made
its appearance in the May bog, six miles
southwest of here, and the neighborhood is
greatly excited. Men who claim to have
seen it say it looks like an alligator, but
has two long tusks. When excited, the
creature opens its mouth and shoots out a
long red tongue with great rapidity, like a
snake. On Wednesday 26 men staid up all
night watching for it.
At 4 a. m., they allege, it came from
cover, uttering hideous noises. All of the
men were armed, but only one had the
courage to shoot. He says he hit it, but
the bullet glanced off as if it had struck a
hard shell or impenetrable hide. The ani
mal makes its appearance at night, retir
ing by day to the depths of the swamp.
The parties of armed men who watch for
it grow greater each night.—Buffalo En
quirer.
Martha’s Tan.
A little girl, 5 years old, who has just
been down to Kennebunkport on a visit,
returned nicely browned by the sun and
wind. This little girl has a firm friend to
whom she is greatly devoted in a coal
black woman named Martha, long a faith
ful servitor in the family of a neighbor.
She went to see Martha after her return
and called Martha’s attention proudly to
her tan.
“Yes, I see, honey,” said Martha.
“You’re gittin pretty black. If you keep
on, pretty soon you gwine ter git as black
as me.”
The little girl looked at her with wide
open eyes.
“Maria,” said she, “you must have
tanned awful fast when you was a little
dirl!”—Boston Transcript.
The Statesman’s Wife.
“Pfwat, ” asked Mrs. Grogan severely,
“kop’ yez so late th’ night?”
“Oi wuz down at Harrigan’s barroom
dlscoossin questions av the coinage—inter
changin oideas, Oi may say, Misthress
Grogan, on free silver.”
“And twin ycz got t’rough ye had the
oideas and Harrigan had th’ silver. It is
a foine statesman yez are, Oi don’t think!”
—lndianapolis Journal.
An Enterprising' Aewspapc*.
A recent and noteworthy manifestation
of tho ; newspaper enterprise and liberality
toward subscribers in the matter of pre
miums is to be recorded to the credit of
our esteemed contemporary, The Journal
of Beaver Springs, Pa
We clip this remarkable offer from a re
cent issue of the esteemed Journal:
TURKISH TOWEL FREE.
We are making every honest effort to secure
new subscribers to The Journal, and now offer
to send
THE JOURNAL ONE YEAR,
together with a beautiful
BROWN TURKISH TOWEL,
size 12 by 22 inches, two ply goods, fancy color,
for only 15 cents. Send this amount in stamps
to The Journal, Beaver Springs, Pa., and re
ceive the Towel at once and Journal regularly
every month for a year, all postpaid. This is
a great offer and is open to new subscribers
only.
Surely a great opportunity for the great
unwashed people of Pennsylvania. The
next thing will be to give every new sub
scriber a Turkish bath.
decade 1 could ® et relief
nEr Un E from a most hor
rible blood dis
ease I had spent hundreds of dollars
trying various remedies and physi
cians, none of which did me any
good. My finger nails came off and
my hair came out, leaving me
perfectly bald. I then went to
HOT SPRINGS
Hoping to be cured by this celebrated
treatment, but very soon became disgusted
and decided to try S.S.S. The effect was
truly wonderful. I commenced to recover
at once, and after I had taken twelve bot
tles I was entirely cured—cured by S.S.S.
when the world
renowned Hot
Springs had failed,
Wm.S. Loomis, ik W.k 11
Shreveport,
Our Book on the Disease an d Its Treatment mailed free to any
Address SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. Atlanta-Ga.
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My wife used “MOTHERS’ FRIJEN’B” be
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recovery rapid.
E. E. JOHNSTON, Eufala, Ala.
Sent by Mail or Express, on receipt of price*
SI.OO per bottle. Book • To Mothers’ r mailed Free.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA* GA.
Sold by all Dr uff Riats.
JiiWS
•BAgfr.AS ®
U ON THE
pßice so cents pen bottlc.J Crm . » z», ■
>bo« er vus.ut i«rt>M>nn rm.ilMal H
ro» i«li «» o»u«iin (Sk/' Vl lrlxl I
Relief From the First Dose.
Mrs. J. O. Jelks, of Ha-wkinsville. Ga,, writes:
“I have been a sufferer from Dyepevsia for
years and years. Acidity of the stomach and a
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ousness and many other unpleasant symptoms
attending it. Tyner’s Dyspepsia Rr medy gave
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The Gleason Sanitarium, |
1852 Elmira* N.Y. 1895 ®
’! but the scenery—valleys—mountains—
spring brooks—the green—the sunlight—
tne shade —pure air—the food—the water—
can it help rest and refresh the tired—body g
—eyes —brain. Best medical skill—all kinds Jg
of baths—mas-
sage, Swedish __ (•)
movements-el- A/A-wS (•)
evator service
steam—electri
city—gas—and
terms within j rajo
your reach. Il- ?
lustrated book- 2
g let for the ask- X
S ing. ”
BUY NONE BUT THE GENUINE.
3,000 Merchants sell Hawkes’Spectacles wit
great success.
2,000 of them handled other Spectacles withou
success, showing the great popularity
HAWKES’ GI A'SES over all others.
His Optical Plant and Factory is one of the
most comnlcte in the U. S.
Established Twenty-Three Years Ago.
These Famous Glasses are fitted to the eye at
D. W. CURRY’S, ROME, GA.
418-6 m
DUKE
Cigarettes
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I|D’uKE'?BURHAmB
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i OCULIST.
And Specialist in All Diseases of the
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Such as Cataract, Pterygiums,Cross Eyes,Weak
Painful or Inflamed Eyes, Granulated Kye Lids,
Neuralgia, Headache, DUzlnesa. Nausea, Nerv
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CROSS EYES STRAIGHTENED BY DR
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GRANULATED EYE LIDS CURED WITH
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Honrs 9 to 1 o’clock, daily except Bunday
203 and 204 Kiser Building, Atlanta
Correspe ndence will receive prompt attention
when accompanied by stamp.
nov!4-3taw-ly
money to loan
On city property. Can fur
nish money on short notice
at small interest. If you
want a loan call during next
few days.
ts Geo. F. Chidsey.
Fruit jars and jar rubbers,
W. H, Steele.
SAMUEL FUNKHOUSER:
Real Estate Dealer.
STOCKS AND BONDS,
315 Broad Street, - Rome G-a
JOHN M. VANDIVER.
Wholesale Liquors
BEERS, WINES, CIGARS, TOBACCO, ETC. r
Agent for Joseph Scblitz and Budweiser Bottled Beer
Pure Mountain Corn Whisky a specialty. Jug orders
promptly filled.
I
24 and 26 BROAD Street; - Rome, Ga
O’NEILL MANUFACTURING GO
M ANUFACTURERSiOF
SASH DOORS, BLINDS, .
Flooring, Ceiling, Weatherboarding, Brackets,
Moulding, Mantels, Stairwork.
Yellow Pine Lumber.
GENERAL BUILDERS’ SUPPLIES.
Office and Factory foot of First Avenue. Telephone No. 76. ROME, GA,
eunl2pg-eod bot ea page
H. D- ZETTT-jT-i
REAL ESTATE AGENT
230 BROAD ST.
Renting a Specialty and Prompt Settlement the Rule
John R. Clemmons
SUCCESSOR TO J. S. WYATT,
No, 506 BROAD STREET
Handles the finest liquors, brandies, ci t ars, etc. The very best
whiskeys for medicinal purposes.
Beei Always on Diaug'tit-
We have Mr. Samuel Hawkins, one of the best mixers of drinks in
the south. Jug orders promptly filled. may2B-lmo
JOHN H. REYNOLDS, Prelident. B - l - HUGHES, Cashier
P. H. HARDIN,’.Vice; p reßident.
First National Bank.
ROME. Q-A.-
A T*TT T« Aiyn HEREDVe.: g3OO»OOO'
ALL ACCOMMODATIONS CONSISTENT WITH SAFE BANKING EXTENDED
TO OUR CUSTOMERS.
I _ THE ITO 4 DAY CURE fdr GonorrbcM. I—. ■ .muu i_ . MMT
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a 8 KEMSUHAI ! NO PAIN. NO STAIN. PREVENTS STRICTURE.
PREVENTS KU FRIVATECISEASES. ZD
L aUSEHMHI
i At Druggists, or sent to any address, for |l. UP.
Injection Malydor has given ‘ The Best’ satbfao- f|T | W J
IlffiThfewßl tl ““‘ IPr ° <, BR^RTRENY?BiddX t 'd r , S
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