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Are built in the largest and best equipped factory in the
world. Highest of all high grades. Sold by
MOORE & PROCTOR,
No. 313 Broad Street, . . / ROME, GEORGIA.
TO TEACH TEACHERS.
The Commissioner of Education Arrang
ing for tbe Sommer Institute.
A BIG REUNION AT' CUMBERLAND.
Tbe Teachers to Have a Splendid Normal
Course on the Island—Colored
* Teachers Not Forgotten.
Commissioner of Education Glenn is
busily at work getting everything ready
for the summer institutes. A pamphlet
of nearly two hundred pages, entitled
‘‘Outlines of Methods for Georgia
Teachers for the Summer Institute,” is
being mailed by the department of
education to all of the county school
commissioners and will be put in the
hands of every teacher who attends the
institute this summer.
The syllabus is a very complete one
and will be a valuable aid in the hands
of the teachers.
The annual meeting of the Georgia
Teachers’ association will be held on
Cumberland island, at the auditorium
of the association, from July 14th to the
31st. Special rates have been secured
at the hotel and tenting privileges will
be granted to those who wish them.
The first week will be devoted ta the
usual business session. A very inter
esting program is being prepared and
questions pertaining to schools and their
management will be discussed by the
ablest speakers.
During the last two weeks a very
complete normal will be conducted.
There will be a corps of nine professors
and twelve courses of study. It will
present the best opportunity ever offered
in Georgia for professional improvement
with free instruction.
The Colored Teachers.
The colored teachers will also come in
for their share of instruction. The fol
lowing letter has been issued by Com
missioner Glenn in reference to the
schools of instruction for the colored
teachers.
‘ ‘To the Colored Teachers of Georgia-
Peabody institutes of one month’s dura
tion will be held at the following
places:
‘‘Valdosta, June Ist to June 26th; Al
bany, June Bth to July 3d; Madison,
June 29th to July 24th; Marietta, June
Bth to July 3d; Marshallville, June 29th
to July 24th.
‘‘Dr. Curry, the agent for the Pea
body fund, has appropriated SI,OOO for
these five institutes. Tuition absolutely
free to all the colored teachers in tnis
state. Board at all of the above men
tioned places can be obtained for the
above mentioned teachers at $1.50 to
$2.50 per week. The colored teachers
of all of those counties adjacent to the
above mentioned places must attend
these institutes. I will have the county
commisstoners to note the absence of
any of those teachers, and refuse to em
i ploy any teacher who fails to attend
these institutes, who have not a suffi
cient excuse for non attendance.
"I desire that the colored teachers
shall show Dr. Curry their appreciation
of this donation by enthusiastic attend
ance and hearty co-operation in this in
stitute work. .
“The amount of appropriation which ,
Dr. Curry will hereafter give to this ’
statp to the colored people will depend ]
largely upon the interest that they show
in this institute work this year. I ap
peal, therefore, to the colored teachers
B everywhere to be present at some one of
the above named places during the
mop th of the Peabody institute. Os
one thing rest assured, that those teach
ers who are indifferent to this impor-
\ DO YOU
WANT '
ELECTRIC LIGHTS in your resi
dence, store, office or factory ? If so',
THE ROME ELECTRIC LIGHT
COMPANY can supply your wants.
ELECTRIC LIGHTS are admitted
h by all to be superior to any other illu
minating power. They are clean, do
V not emit any odor and are cool—the
very kind of light for the hot weath
er. What is always desirable, is
' cheap.
If You Do
Want
A an Electric Light, why not a Fan ?
Who will sit and fret over the con-
K templated hot days of the coming
summer without arranging to keep
cool. If you want to keep cool, then
an Electric Fan will do the work.
They are the “fad;” buy you one.
■ The electric current to run it costs
Mi only $2 per month.
For particulars in all things elec-
V trical call on
Allie Rome Electric Light Co,
I < 1
■ No. 225 Broad Street.
tant matter will be noted and employ
ment to them will be refused in the se
lection of teachers hereafter..
There will be three instructors at
each one of the institutes. The colored
teachers shall have the very best talent
of their own raoe, with all of the addi
tional help that the county commissioner
can give from the distinguished lecturers
on education from time to time during
the session of the institute.
“Reduced railroad fare has been
given on all roads.
“Asking the cordial co-operation and
the hearty interest of all of the colored
teachers in the above, lam yours very
sincerely, G. R. Glenn,
‘ ‘State School Commissioner. ’ ’
IT WAS DELIGHTFUL.
The Piano recital Last Evening at the
Conservatory.
The piano recital at the Southern
conservatory of music last evening, given
by Miss Frances Snell and Miss Edith Les
ter, was one of the most delightful musi
cal events of the season. These talented
young ladies, assisted by Mr. Fortin, gave
an entertainment that will live long in
the memories of all so fortunate as to be
present.
The program was as follows;
Concerto C Minor Ist movement Beethoven
Cadenza .. . By Reinecke
Miss Edith Lester.
Orchestrial Accompaniment
Serenade Schubert—Remenyi
Mr. Fortin
Concerto A Minor, Ist movement... Schumann
Miss Frances Bnell
Orchestral Accompaniment.
Magic Fire Scene “Die Walkure.”
Wagner—Brassin
Duo. Polinaise Op. S 3, Chopin
Fantaisie Brilliants, D’0te110...... Ernst
Mr. Fortin.
“Hark! Hark! The Lark.” I ..Schubert—Liszt
Etude. Op. 25. No. 9. f Chopin
Miss Frances Snell.
Dou. “Feu Rollant.” - Duvornoy
How’s This.
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F.
J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be
lieve him perfectly honorable in all busi
ness transactions and financially able to
carry out any obligations made by their
firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, O.
Walding, Kinnan & Marvin, Whole-
■ sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,
acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Testi
monials sent free. Price 75c. per bottle.
Sold by all druggists.
CARRIED TO JACKSON COUNTY.
A Man Who Was Wanted There Arrested
At LaFayette.
Sheriff B. H. Collier, of Jackson
county was in the city for a short time
yesterday, and took dinner with his
brother, Mr. W. L. Collier.
He is a very handsome specimen of
physical manhood and makes a model
sheriff.
He had bean to LaFayette after a
man named Statham who had gotten
into some sort of trouble about a wo
man and had skipped his bond.
Sheriff Collier took his prisoner back
to Jackson county with him where he
will stand his trial.
Paul Berket, Piano tuner,
will be here soon. Leave your
order at Tribune office.
STOPPED THE CARS.
A Crash of Thunder Followed the Lighting
Flash.
Yesterday, a few minutes after 2
o’clock in the afternoon, while a
heavy cloud was rolling up from the
south, there was a blinding flash of
lighting followed by a stunning crash.
Two electric cars were running
along Broad street and both stopped
as the reverberations died away. It
was found that the lighting had struck
the wires and damaged the machinery
at the power house. It was soon re
paired, however, and the cars re
sumed service with only a short delay.
FOR SALE.
“Best Farm in Floyd county”
—4BO acres rich land. Well
stocked with wood. Ample
supply ol water. No better
place in the South lor a stock
iarm. 5 miles trom Rome.
Roads macadamized. Price
910 acre—will sell part cash
and part good paper. Will
give Bond Tor Title nntll] lull
amount is paid. A great op
portunity. Address
E. It. DIDEN, Rome, G».
Tetley’s India and Ceylon Teas,
of London, Eng., will be served hot or
iced at S. 8. King & Co. Friday and
Saturday, this week.
A. C. Heggie,
Distributing Agent.
THE SOME TRIBUNE, SATURDAY. MAI 23. 1896.
'
GROWS IN INTEREST.
The Meetings at The First Baptist
Church,
THE AFTERNOON BIBLE READINGS
Haye Proven Most Effec ive and are Very
Much Enjoyed By the
Congregation.
The at the First Baptists
church grow in interest.
Rev. Dr. R. B. Headden assisted by
Rev. Dr. A. W. Nelson has been very
successful in the work.
The congregation, both afternoon and
evening, are attended by large congre
gations and are very much enjoyed.
During the services this week Bible
readings have been inaugurated that
have proven very intertaining and in
structive.
From the various texts beautiful il
lustrations are given and lessens are
drawn, and these have contributed ma
terially to the good accomplished.
‘ The song service is most inspiring as
rendered by the choir, acoompanied by
the congregation and add greatly to the
spiritual enthusiasm of the services.
The meetings will close Sunday and
many names will have been added to
the church register, besides the large
number of those who have expressed
conviction and a desire to be extended
the benefits of the prayers of the good
people.
I All who attend are made welcome
and the invitation is sent out to all.
‘ ‘Whosoever will may come. ’ ’ .
RAMBLING REMARKS
As a Saturday story the sweet and
simple idyl below must appeal to every
sentimental soul. It doesn’t pretend to
be much of a story—just a simple sweet,
true-to-life, old-time love story. I saw
it in a paper the other day the most truth
f ul paper published in the United States
—in the world, in fact, and in an un
guarded moment clipped it out. It goes
like this:
CHAPTER I.
When sank the golden sun at eventide
The hog that didn’t root laid down and died.
—From ‘ ‘The Lady of the Lake. ”
“He is so swell.”
As Winifred Sawturn thought these
words in an undertone, shearose from
the Smyrna rng upon which she had
been sitting, putting on her stockings,
and wiped her eyes on the silken dra
pery that hung in gorgeous simplicity
from the walls of her boudoir.
Winifred loved—but some said un
wisely. Reginald Stanhope had his
shortcomings, his strong and his weak
points, just as have all men. History
revealed that his maternal great-great
grand-mother had come over in the
Mayflower. This alone was sufficient
to give him entree into the very best
homes. But on the other hand, rumor
had it that his adored ancestor was only
head cook on the good ship. Whatever
might have been the facts in the case,
one thing was certain: Reginald had
red hair.
CHAPTER 11.
Until the old man goes to bed,
To kies ie dangeroi.s ’tis said.
—Milton’s “ Paradise Lost. ”
“Holy smoke.”
It was Reginald Stanhope who spoke,
and the words bused through his teeth
like the draught of a blast-furnace.
“Do yon spurn my love? Do you cast
me overboard?”
He would have gone right ahead, but
his breath gave out suddenly. Inhaling
afresh supply, he sprang to the centre
of the ring, when the gong was sounded
(figuratively speaking), and continued:
• ‘ What is left in this life for me but
suicide?”
“No! no!” pleaded Winifred. “Think
not of that while you yet live.”
“But why do you refuse my hand?”
“I should wound you were Ito men
tion your one fault that makes you ob
jectionable.”
“Mention it then, adored one. I
want to be wounded; otherwise I will
wound myself.” And he seized the stove
poker and held it to his throat as though
he would slash himself.
Barrying her face in her hands, the
miserable girl waited forty-five minutes,
hoping something would happen. The
time seemed an age to her. Still the
desperate man stood irresolute with re
gard to severing his jugular. At last
she said iu clear, silvery sobs:
“Why, you are so swell. ”
Reginald Stanhope left the parlor In
stantly. His face looked haggard and
he had aged fifteen or sixteen years.
CHAPTER 111.
A girl who dyes her hair Are-red
Will wed a man with a bald head.
—From Alfred Austin’s unwritten poems.
It is now a month later. The time is
the backbone of winter. Upon tbe tor
rid waste of Sahara the sun shoots down
its burning rays like a shower bath.
Away under the horizon a man is seen
sprinting towards a lone palm tree.
Some dozen or more inches behind him
is seen a lion in hot pursuit. They are
flying like tbe wind. The lion is gain-
ing on the man. See, he opens his
mouth confident. •
But ha!—ha! ha! ha! the man has
reached the tree and climbs upward.
The lion closes his face,but falls short.
Ha! thank heavens! the man is saved!
CHAPTER IV.
The early bird picked up the worm,
But found he’d got a fatal germ.
—Pliny the Elder.
Twelve months more have elapsed
since we left the man climbing the palm
tree. Twelve long months. The man
was Reginald Stanhope, and he is still
there in the tree. Beneath him still sits
the lion patiently waiting for him to
comedown. Both are very much emaci
ated, but both are determined not to
give in until after death. Which will
die first?
Ha! While writing the above the lion
dies suddenly. ®
With mingled joy and thirst, Regi
nald Stanhope descends from his perch,
and after kicking the dead beast in the
ribs with all the force he can employ,
he makes for the sea coast. In the good
ship Capricorn he is soon voyaging tow
ards New York once more.
CHAPTER V.
—He came back
With a little bunch of whickers on his chin.
—ldyls of Pod Dismuke.
It is a beautifnl day in April when
the ship gets through the mud in the
lower bay without sticking, and sweeps
majestically up to her dock in the North
River. Unlike the other passengers,
Reginald Stanhope loses no time coax
ing reporters to interview him, but has
tens to the home of Winifred Sawturn.
The fair girl is manicuring her hair
when he bursts into her presence.
“Oh, Reginald, ” she cries, as she
springs lithely to her feet and buries
her bead in bis sweater, “how happy I
am to observe’ ’ —
“To observe what, myown?”
With tears of joy they clinch. Then
she replies. “Why, to observe that you
are not so swell now. ’ ’
During the thirteen hours that they
remained in that close embrace Regi
nald told how he had not touched a glass
of beer in as many months.
“It was beer that made me stout,”
he’said.
‘‘Yes,” she answered, and gave him
her hand. (THE VERY END.)
The Rambler.
Burney never forgets trunks.
Phone 106. Armstrong Hotel.
CONGRESSMAN MIDDOX
Talked Democracy Wednesday at the Coup/
House.
Hon. John W. Maddox, the able rep
resentative in congress from the Seventh,
spent yesterday among Cedartown
friends, and spoke at the court house in
the forenoon.
He received hearty congratulations
over tbe result of the ridiculous contest
instituted against him by the Feltons.
By the way, the congressional commit
tee on elections stood six republicans to
three Democrats, instead of five to four
as stated last week.
In his speech he declared himself for
the free coinage of silver, defied anyone
to show where he had proved recreant
to his trust, paid his respects to the men
who are working to defeat his renomi
nation, and offered his services for the
success of democracy whether himself
or Judge Milner was selected to bear the
party standard to victory.
Judge Maddox seems confident ot
both renomination and re-election.—
Cedartown Standard.
Taylor & McCain.
Barbers, No. 3 Second
Ave. Work done for
ladies and children at
shop or residence on
short notice.
Secure The Shadow
Ere the Substance Fate
-AT
Garfield’s
Electric Light
Photographic Studio.
Work done in all its branches
Satisfaction guaranteed.
B.H.GARFIELD,
No. 329 BROAD ST.,
Opposite Masonic Temple.
Rome, Georgia.
Wednesday and Satur
day evenings until 9 o’clock, p. m.
Pictures taken at that hour are
as perfect as those taken during
the day.
Process Entirely New.
FOR WOMEN IN THE SPRING
The Ablest of Women Journalists Indorses Paine's
Celery Compound,
■lip
llfef w
l||l'
'tt-
—---
Mr. H. B. Sperry, who is now the em
inent president of the Woman’s National
Press Association, was assistant editor of
the Washington World. Her vigorous
editorials in Ohio and Washington news
papers first brought her into national
prominence.
£The active profession of journalism has
kept Mrs. Sperry up to date in informa
tion and progressive in thought. When
there was evident need of a remedy in
her family she was well aware that Paine’s
cslery compound was best to use. The
following enthusiastic letter shows the
happy results from the use of this greatest
of remedies:
Wells & Richardson Co., Burlington, Vt.
Dear Sirs:—A few weeks’ use of Paine’s
celery compound by my 83-year-old
mother has been of great benefit to her
and proved to my satisfaction that there’s
nothing like it for the headaches and
sleeplessness incident to impaired diges
tion. A niece in my family was also
cured of insomnia by using one bottle of
Paine’s celery compound.
Yours very truly,
Hannah B. Sj erry.
In every part of this country women
are utilizing these blessed spring days by
taking Paine’s celery compound and in
sisting on its use by the members of their
families. It speaks volumes for this won
derful remedy that all of the women who
have recovered health by its means very
many were induced to take it through
the persuasion of other women—sisters,
mothers, friends or relatives,
Many a man slowly failing in health,
but stubbornly shutting his eyes to the
alarming fact, has been led to take
Paine’s celery compound from seeing its
remarkable health-giving effect in the
case of his own wife, sister or some other
member of his household.
When a sick and feeble sufferer is seen
to gain steadily in health and vigor from
taking Paine’s celery compound, not
,a . IRON VASES
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In =- i’W CASTINGS OF ALL kInOS
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CAHILL IRON WORKS,
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Subscribe For The Tribune
' much room for doubt is left to the most
stubborn-minded person. This joyous
I transformation from sickness to health is
going on in thousands of homes across
the wide extent of this country.
The reputation of Paine’s celery com
pound has grown by word of mouth,
from persons made well, to others who
needed its healing, strengthening power.
The agreement of opinion among the
best informed, most observant class of
people in the well-to-do homes of our
largest cities, as well as in the more
frugal town communities, places Paine’s
celery compound far in advance of any
remedy. Paine’s celery compound is. in.
fact, the only spring remedy ever heard
of-in the home of practicing physicians.
This great remedy is not an ordinary
spring sarsaparilla, bitters, tonic, or
nervine. Paine’s celery compound is as.
far apart from any of these guesswork
remedies as black is from white in the
eyes of physicians who regularly pre
scribe it, use it themselves and carry it
home to their own families. Paine’s cel
ery compound is the famous formula of
that thoughtful and studious phvsician,
Prof. Edward E. Phelps M. D.. LL. D. s
of the Dartmouth medical school.
It is the duty of every man or womir
who has been benefited by Paine’s celery
compound to impress on friends and
neighbors its wonderful efficacy as a
spring remedy that is in every way
worthy of the name.
The past of Paine’s celery compound,
as every one who keeps informed of cur
rent events is well aware, is a remarkaole
story of sick people made well, and of
many persons who had given up health
as wholly lost, made strong as ever they
were in their lives. Paine’s celery com
pound is the spring remedy par excellence.
No invigorator has been so much praised,
discussed, recommended and used by
physicians, and discerning, conservative
men and women in every walk of life.
The story of Paine’s celery compound
in a nutshell is that it makes people welL