Newspaper Page Text
SHORTER COLLEGE
for young ladies
ROME, GEORGIA.
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Tiißnt Session Onens StjttiHr 19W.1894.
ADVANTAGES:
1 A lofty and healthful site, free from malaria,
2' Charming ground? and scenery—an ideal situation.
3. Magnificent brick buildings—“ The beauty of the colleges.”
4. Every material comfort and convenience.
5. A complete force of accomplished Teachers.
6. A splendid Conservatory of Music,
7. A renowned School of Art.
8. An unsurpassed Department 'of • Elocution and Physica
Culture.
9. A strong and thorough curriculum.
10. A superior Finishing School.
11. A deli-ghtful'home for the pupil away from parents.
12. Reasonable charges.
For catalogues and special information, apply to
Dr. A. J. BATTLE, President,
Or Prof. Ivy W. Duggan, BusinessjManager.
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Madison - Avenue
HOTEL.
Madison Avenue and 58th, Street,
NEW YORK.
per day and up. American Plan.
FIREPROOF AND FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY
PARTICULAR.
.—— . ..... 11.
Two Blocks from the Third and Sixth Avenue Elevated
Railroads
The Madison and Fourth Avenue and Belt Line Cars pass
the Door,
«> —<.
N. M CLARK, proprietor
Elevator runs al! nigh*,
—HEADQUARTERS FOR™
L 2S“ rs - 'Drv Goods. Bais. Shoes d Mfc|
Best goods! Lowest prices'
FOR WOMEN FOLKS
Amelia Rives ChaMler.
Mrs. Amelia Rives Chanter who
is staying in London, naturally
gets more or less mention in the
various English prints.
One writer asserts that this
dreamy-eyed Southerner still holds
the palm for “extreme, not to say
sublime, unconventionality” in
authorship over the most audacious
of the Englishwomen novelists.
“Not even,” goes on this critic,
“the bold ‘lota,’ the original Sarah
Grand, the redoubtable John Oli
ver Hobbes, the severe Lynn Lin
ton, the keen Sara Jeanette
Duncan, or the daring Hen worth
Dixon, have yet given us a hero
whose heart gives ‘a hot leap along
his breast to his throat, leaving a
fiery track behind it, as of sparks,’
and whose eyes go ‘so deep’ into
those of the herione that ‘that he
almost felt the moisture of that
divine gaze!’ Neither, too, has
the pluckiest of our novelists creat
ed a heroine who can ‘catch a fold
of her inner lip between her teeth,’
although others than Bai b irk
Pomfret may be said to possess an
elastic cheek.
But let us hope that one detail,
at least, in Mrs. Rive Chanter’s
creation is peculiar to American
widows, namely, away of specula
ting in regard to their dead hus
bands, as to whether ‘if he was a
skeleton now, one could see his
tailor’s name in gilt through his
spinal column.
But in justice to the fair Amelie
I must own that her expressions
are often as beautiful as they are
bizarre, and as suggestive as they
are original. We can forgive much
to a writer who can give us such
exquisite phrases as the ’goldbar
red silence’of a lonely wood, gray,
thoughts, ragged uneven breaths,
and winter woods full of lean shad-
ows.
Divorces West and South
The other day a New York min
ister asserted that there are more
divorces in a ’year in the single
city of Chicago than in all the
southern states east of the Mississ
ippi river,
That assertion seems to be sweep
ing but it is probably true, for di
vorces are as plentiful in Chicago
as they are rare in the south.
In communities which have not
grown from chivalty to commerci
alism women may have less free
dom, but th-y are treated with
more respect and have more ready
defenders, — N-'W York World.
Poisodeti for Their Insurance.
A press dispatch from Saratoga N.
Y says: Catherine Nolan and her sis
ter Elizabeth, aged 16, have been
lodged in tne county Jail, Ballston
Spa, on th charge ut tne murber of
their brother, John Nolan, by admin
istering arseuic Four uitmlh r.< 61
the iaiudy hsve died suddenly since
last September, tne father, motuer,
sister and brother oi the accused.
Embalming fl lid was use i in the
first three cases ben re saspici -us
were aroused but iu the case oi John
Pie last to die. re coroner took
charge of the remains ;nd ordered
an inquest and post—mortem at once
Prof. Maurice Perkins found suffi
cient arsenic in his stoiuch and visce
ra to have caused death, and the ju ■
ry so found.
Another sister, Mary, has neen very
ill with similar symptoms, and it is
in evidence that the two women had
not only obtained policies of insu
rance on the lives of those members
of their family who have died, but
had also applied for a policy on their
sister Mary.
Something About Soaps.
It is astonishing, said a manufac
turer of toilet soaps recently, how
wasteful women are with fine soap.
Those who . would reprimand a
servent sharply for dropping a 5 cent
cake into a bucket or tub of water,
will deliberately nold one that cost
$1.25 under a hot-water faucet, and
then throw it, wet, upon a soap dish,
which oft on has no drainer.
It is. moreover, very provoking for
us, who, in order to give good value
for the money, make our soaps the
reverse of wasteful by leaving them
in drying rooms for a year longer.
No soap should ever be dipped in
to hot water or allowed to remain
wet. It should be left covered with
lather, but so that it may drain.
White, yellow and brown soaps
are apt to be the purest. Fancy col
ors please th© eye, and, of course,
whas pent put by arelinbla mnufao-
I’l V. *’t . f U . . • *
turer, contain nothing which is in
jurious to the skin, but in cheap
soaps stick to the plain colors.
The same authority, himself a
manufacturer, states that a fairly
cheap soap may be as pure as th
most expensive, for the oost is largely
dependent upon the perfume used.
Moreover soaps which are in high
price are not always dearest, for
soap that is properly dried will
last twice as long as that which
though sold for two-thirds the
price, is really dearer by reason of
the water it contains making it
wasteful,
The processes of modern soap
manufacture vary more than might
bo supposed, and it is well that
they do, for by this means it is
possible forthose whose skin de
mands more or less alkali than
others to find what is best suited
to them,
“Nothing to be Learned From
Americans.”
Mr. William H. Preece, of Lon
don, in recent paper, describing
his visit to the United States, re
fers to his former visit in 1877.
stating that the results were .the
introduction in England “of the
telephone, the practial application
of quadruplex working, the adop
tion of sound reading in our tele
graph offices, the disappearance of
the Morse recorder and the more
general assimilation of the meth
ods of working in the two coun
tries;” the chief result of his sec
ond trip, in 1884, “was the intro
duction of the multiplex system
of working by Mr. Delany, now so
much in use among us, and doing
splendid service in many of our
chief towns.” Anything else? Yet
some Englishmen claim, adds The
Electrical World’ that there is
“nothing to be learned from
Americans” 1
A Pecular Accident.
A pecular accident occured at
the Mt. Tacoma Manufacturing
Company’s mill in Tacoma on the
morning of February 6, which is
reported in the West Coast Lum
berman as follows: Charles E.
Tuttle, a logger in the employ of
of the mill, was directed to split
a large cedar log lying upon the
carriage, as it was too large for
the saw,
Tuttle stood on of the log
suddenly parted and th * unfortun
ate man in endeavoring to get out
ofthe danger, slipped and fell into
the opening between the halves.
Before he couid escape the piec
es closed in upon him, loving only
hi« head oulsid '. A number of w >rk
men saw 'ho accident, >nd the. un
conscious ni-iti was by pry
ing the I>g apart U fi st it wa
thought that Im ha I .-*<T rd inter
nal injuries hr. ->fi< r a few days of
r<st he wis ab h t i res.ime work
again.
I 'Zi’.V /T D IR/T
l .rt.'Cay ’veiror ailing
- , i • vi. Dr. PiercoS
If z o 1 f r -eento Preserlption
L ? jnv:B her k oi p.
i For •• female com-
I plaints" of every
* vii 1 sintl, perfodica! pains,
ag l A Vf' internal inflammation
« A or u l cera tl° B , bea*-
H W - ing-dowu sensations,
,Cr--» V&MI and all chronic wea£-
'9* H *T7 < Beases and deracg*-
meats, this is the
® I remedy. It’s the only
** ’ one so sure that ft can
be ovorsn/aad. It it doesn’t benefit or cure,
tn the case of every tired or afflicted woman,
she’ll have her money back.
The H Prescription ” builds up and invigo
rates the entire female system. It regulatss
and promotes all the proper functions, im
proves digestion, enriches the blood, dispels
aches and pains, brings refreshing sleep, and
restores health and strength. ,
Nothin* else, though it may be better fbr
a tricky dealer to sell, oaa be “ just as good *
tor yon to buy.
Use the great specific for *»<xfid tn head*
sad antarru—Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
SoptWn Conservalory of
MUSIC,
Established in 1885
This is the only Conserva
tory of Music in this part of
the Southern States.
Branches taught:
Piano, Violin, Viola, Vio
lincello, Theory, Harmony,
Counterpoint, Ensemble and
Orchestra Classes. Terms for
1894-r5, opens Monday Sept.
3rd.
Paul J. Fortin,
J pjiMor,
Big
Carpet
Sale
At j
Fayb
Fors :
Ten •
Days.
I
I
For the next ten days we i
will offer the trade the most ,
enormous bargainp known to ;
the civilized world in Car
pets, Rugs and Art Squares. ,
We will give you “closing ,
out prices.” For years we i
have carried one of the mos 1
popular lines of these goods . J
to be found in N orth Geon i *
gia, and we now place before ri
you a stock not to be surpass- *
ed in point of beauty, quality,
quantity, variety or price. ; j
We intend to make this and
next week a big barging , n
boom in Casimers at Fahy's
b
;h
Yes ’
e
:r
Blazing beacons beckon to
you from the second floor.
The Carpet Room is in the
throes of agony. The work *
was quick and direful. New -
panellings have given especi
ally attractive tints to tags,
low price, cost price, less
than cost price tints are on u
them. The din ajid tumult of /;
re-arranging and re-adjusting J"
tins department to aceommo- ”
date the needk ss, rushing «
multitudes have been pro
gressing for days. We are if
now ready to astonish thd
wo. Id by the brave policy
adopted to raise cash. The 1
genius and gu.-to of or.gina- _
ting, planning and carrying
toa successfal and resultant
issue this stupendous task
was given fervor and force 1(
by urgent and present needs. (
Cotton Ingrains from 19c n
up. vl
AH wool Ingrains 2 ply.
Super Two Ply Ingrains.
3 Ply all wool Ingrains.
Tapestry Brussells, IC
Velvet Brussells. 1
Body Brussel’s.
Smyrna Rugs, ”
Lined Rugs o
Goat Bugs, I
Rocky Mountain Sheep
Rug l ,
9X9 ft. All wool Art
Squares, *
All that one can demand.
The American eagle on your 141
dollar laugha to see the power it
wields. Rugs, Window Shades I
and 0.1 Cloth sacrificed corros- s
pondingly These oonsumate bar- |g
gains wont last long enough to be E
heraled again. Come while the «
fire is hot. Our blood is up; we j*
re prepaired to Sel
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