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the finest line.
AND
Jest Assortments
SHOES! SHOES! SHOES!
BARGAINSIN SHOESAT
«*|Canirell &
240 BROAD STREET-
SHORTER COLLEGE
for YOUNG LADIES'
ROME, GEORGIA.
fT X
r Jk i
4 ' >1- 1■ \
i lOHiIUBWW 2 1
Agate I i
X_ '- - liwW ‘■; •
Milul Session Opens SeDtemPar MM
ADVANTAGES:
1 A lofty and healthful site, free from malaria.
2’ Charming grounds and scenery—an ideal situation.
3. Magnificent brick buildings—“ The beauty of the colleges.
4 Ever material comfort and convenience.
5 A complete force of accomplished Teachers.
6. A splendid Conservatory of Mus'C.
7. A renowned School of Art.
8. An unsurpassed Department of Elocution and Physics
Culture.
9. A strong and thorough curriculum.
10. A superior Finishing School.
11. A delightful h<>me for the pupil away from parents.
12. Reasonable charges.
For catalogues and special information, apply ta
Dr A. J. BATTLE, President,
Or Prof. Ivy W. Duggan, Business Manager.
A. O- CxA-JTIRA-ILD,
oDEALER INo
MILLINERY and
FANCY GOODS,
• a *
Have moved to 304 Broad Street
Medical Building.
CALL AND SEE US.
*'*’*'• > . —, T - „ ——w I IMBII 1,1 ■!!. r I W
THE LITTLE RUBY
TONSORIAL PARLORS,
H you want work In mv line call at my Shop.
Frank. Taylor, the old
i , • .uV»3 SEEDS.
Z’*' *• v ■ i > under!
■Hr -*v zd & 'I Cnar;.»U.v<j i. ,’.»• :< .u* ' L’ Muory, lAisfjJn nrai
CT *•*<• Power. 11vn...u . ...» <st;» •. i • ; i unions. bervou.
.W « ness ailcM’n* ■ ~.X. ; !lU ve Onn...* either sexcautei
J x- vw I by overexcrti' a t excessive use of tobacco.opium or sthn
utantH, which lead to h . -j ity. Consumption or l,,!#^{ *5 order'wt
For sale in Rome. C- • r BRADFORD DRUG CO.
THE HUSTLER OF ROME, THURSDAY SEPTEMBER, 13 1834
FOR WOMEN FOLKS
LONDON SERVANT WAGES
A British Housekeeper Here Airs
Her Views.
The item of wages opens up the
whole question of servants and do
mestic.,home ru'e. One need only re
fer to the montnly reviews and msg
azimsto see that here we have
indeed a curonic subject ior discus
sion
Tiie professional philanthropist, th e
enlightened and benevolent peeress,
the lady journalist, even Sarah Jane
her seif, all have a word to say. Our
own experience lean give very
shotly. There nus ben on the wlioie
very little troudle, except with the
cooks.
Wages have run on an average as
follows. N urso, £2O; cook £18; to
£2O; bcuse parlor maid. £l6.
When the life and income of a
domestic servant is compared with
that of many a girl in business or
even with that of many working
men, I am prepared to say that
she is exceedingly well off, and if
thrifty could very soon save £IOO.
■Servants are often very good to
their relatives and friends, and
can be taught to save money. But
it is .idle to blink the fact that a
great deal of their wages goes up
on their backs in the shape of un
suitable finery.
Putting all this aside, what can
you get for a wages budget of £54?
Well, you can, with luck, get well
served in every department, except
the kitchen.
“God sends the food, but the
devil sends the cooks.”
The difficulty is mainly this—
the impossibility of getting a plain
cook to cook plain things well ev
ery day. She will boast of her
pastry and “ongtray,” but if you
ask her to cook a chop or fry a
potatoe properly it is too often ut
terly beyond her, and as a rule she
is above being taught.
The middle-class bread-winner
can in London be certain at a
hundred restaurant, or at his club,
of getting a repast of three courses
excellently cooked and presented
to him at a moderate cost.
The same certainty cannot be
had at home. My own explana
tion is a very simple one.
The British plain cook does not
consider, in the first place, that
her employers are entitled to have
food at all better prepared than
she herself knows how to prepare it.
This knocks on the head any
idea of teaching her the art. She
simply listens to her mistress with
silent contempt and ignores her
plain directions. Tnis is one phase
of the cook difficulty.
HINDOO CHILD MARRIES
A Brahmen’s Daughter Marries
.Early or Her Reputation Suffers
The Brahmin has to get hie
daughter married before she attaii s
puberty. This custom has crept in
to religion. The Hindoo religion
strictly forbids single life for wo
man or man ; especially must the
woman be married.
Hence there are no old maids
in India.
Sometimes one may meet an old
•‘crankey’’bachelor, who remained
unmarried because he was too poor
to marry, or because his character
was not good; but even these are
seldom found except in flower
cla sep.
If a man is not married at the
latest by bis ,tweney-fifth year his
reputation suffers. It ip. a belief
that those who have a son go to
heaved, when t tLe sou, after the
d-ath of his parents, performs the
spiritual rites. However this may
be whether they go to heaven or
not this severe rule tends a
strict cultivation of home life.
Owing to this rule, if a Bramin’s
daughter attains puberty before mar
riage the father is disgraced; he loses
his caste and no one wi'l marry the
girl. Thus when a poor man Has more
than one daughter it is a misfortune
fur him. The Hindoo father himself
has to fiud a suitable husband for
his daughtai, so he goes to a gentle
man who has a son.
He first makes inquiries about the
family, the property, the Dealt I , and
education of the b<>y. Then be tisks
I the father of the boy to marry bis sun
to his daughter.
The father of the boy asks for
dowry and the amount of this is fixed
according to the means of the man
who asks for it and not of the man
who gives it, that is to say, if the
father of the bov is very rich he a-ke
thousands of dollars. Hence the Hin
doo father of a girl has to spend
much for the marriage of his daugh
ter ior he always wishes to see her
married into a rich family.
A HARD-HEADED MAN.
He is not Cast Down by Being Re
jected.
Here is a little romance in lit
erature. A gentleman, now a prom
inent citizen of New York, years
ago, when a struggling young man
at college, fell in love with a pro
fessor’s daughter. Both were juung
she was beautiful • The professor
was poor but wise. So he said to
the youth at graduation :
“Now, go out and do something.
I don’t care what you do but do it.
then we’ll see about the girl. If
she really thinks she cMi’t get
along without you she won't mind
waiting a couple of years. If’she
wont wait you won’t want her.’’
The young man filed the usual
demurrer, but was overruled. Then
he went forth. He had no idea
what to do and sat down to think.
Finally he started at something,
and picked up $5 a week and S3O
worth of self-respect while earning
the $5.
He tried something else, and
failed; again and again, with the
same result. The professor said he
was a ro'ling scone, i'he girl said
he was enterprising But the youth
had his eye on that girl all the
time.
He tried newspaper literature.
The professor said that settled it.
So did the gnl. So it did.
He worked his way into a syn
dicate, bought shares in the paper
married the girl, maxes several
thousand a year and now hires
the professor at $25 a week,
Extract your own moral,
Christain Science upto Date.
“Yes,” said the first “scienced”
woman, on the seashore piazza. “I
felt that j.I must conquer boiled
cabbage. I had always had a belief
that it disagreed with me. So to
day I just talked to it on my plate,
told it spirit is all-powerful, and
that it was nothing but ap
pearance of green leaves.
“Then J ate it without fear and
it did not hurt me. ” “I conquer
ed sweet potatoes in much the
same way,” said her neighbor,
“only I did not talk to them. I
merely held them in the thought
of utter nothingness, and ate them
fearlessly.” “I wonder,” said the
man who was smoking near, “if I
can’t tackle watermelon on the
same principle. I have always
wanted to eat a whole one ever
since I was knee high.” But only
an utter nothingness of disapprov
ing silence greeted him.
A GRAaVI* offer!
MME. A. RUPPERT’S
rat£E face bleach
MME. A. RUPPr-'T
flays: “1 appreciate the fact
that there are meny thou
®ttndßofladie»intheUnited
States that would 1 ike t * try
IkmS xny World-Jieuuwned Face
Bleach: but have bee:.
mJ kept from doing . o o»» ar
f- Wk countof pri<kwhich
per bottle or itxjUles taken
ZkkzFyx* together, Sft.OO. in order
th at a! 1 of these m a y ha v '
Ji an opportui i« t y, 1 wHI gi ve
to every caller, aLcAo’utely
free, a sump l " bottle, and
order to supply those out
of city.or in any partu/ . •
world. I will send it safely packedin plain W'rnpp'r
oJ 1 charges prepaid, for 25 cents, silver ui sua- ;
In every case }f freckles, pimples, moth, sal
lowness, blackheads,acne,eczema, oi linens .rough
ness, or any discoloration or disease of the skin,
and wrinkles (not caused by facial expression)
FacH Bleach removes absolutely. It docs no?
Cover up, as cosmetics do, butts a cure. Address
MADAME A. BUPPFKT, (Dept.O.)
No. 6 East 14th St.. NEW YORK CITW
vigoOmen
Easily, Quickly, Permanently Restored.
MAGNETIC NERVINE
restore Lott Manhood. Cures weaknesses. Nervous
Debilit}' and all the evils from early or later ex
cesHea, th.) results of overwork, worry, sickness,
etc. Full strength, tone and development given
to every organ or portion of the body. Improve
ment immediately seen from the first box. Thous
ands of letters of praise on file in our office. Can
be carried in vest pocket. Bent by mail to any
address on receipt of price. One month’s treat
ment in each box. Price <1.00,6 boxes, <5.00, with
Written Guarantee to refund money if not cured.
Vend to us for the Genuine. Circulars Free.
ANTICIPATING FAME.
BESANT’S PATHETIC STORY OF "PAUL
THE WANDERER."
The Quiet Iligulty of » Man Who Was I.tv
ing For Posterity- A Pretty Little Skit
Written In the English Novelist’. Inimi
table Style.
I knew him for several years before
his death. When 1 first made his ac
quaintance, he was already an old man.
He was also, as was evident from the
first, a very poor man. He went about
shabbily dressed. He carried biscuits
in his pocket to the reading room on
which he lunched or took snacks at in
tervals during the day. Perhaps he had
dinner afterward, but I always suspect
ed his dinner to be an uncertain and a
movable feast. It was understood that
he was something in the literary way.
I got to know him by sitting next to
him day after day. Wo exchanged the
amenities of the reading room, apolo
gized for crowding each other with
books, abused the talkers, remarked on
the impudence of those who go to the
room in order to flirt and so forth.
When I got to know him better, 1
made little discoveries about him, as,
for instance, that he liked a glass of
beer in the middle of the day and that
he could not afford the twopence. I may
say, not boastfully, that I was able to
offer him this little luxury. We used
to go out together for the purpose. He
was good enough to take an interest in
my work. He proved to have a consider
able knowledge of books and gave me
considerable help in this way.
One Sunday I met him in the street.
We stopped to speak. He lamented the
closing of the museum on Sunday. For
his own part, he said, he would have
the reading room open every day in the
week. Why close the avenues of knowl
edge? Why damn the fountains and
springs of wisdom? So we walked and
talked. He was perfectly dignified in
his manner, though his great coat was
so thin and shabby that one might be
ashamed to be seen with him. He stop
ped presently at the door of a house in
High street, Holborn.
"I lodge here,” he said. "Will you
come up stairs and see my hermitage?”
I remember that he called it grandly
his hermitage. He led the way; the
stairs were dark and dirty; he took me
to the fifth, or fifty-fifth, floor. He liv
ed in the back attic.
“This,” ho said, ‘‘is the cell of the
recluse. I live here quite retired. There
are other lodgers, 1 believe, but 1 do
not know them. 1 live here with my
library in simplicity. The air is whole
some at this height. ”
He threw open the window and sniff
ed the fragrance of the neighboring
chimneys. The room was clean; the
furniture was scanty; there was no fire
in the grate; on a shelf were about 25
books—his library. The man looked per
fectly contented with his hermitage.
There were no papers on the table,
nothing to show that he was a writer.
I do not know how he lived—certain
ly he did no work at the museum—but
he never borrowed. In one corner stood
a wooden chest. He lifted the lid and
nodded and laughed.
“Aha!” he said, "now I am going to
reveal a secret. You didn’t l?Fiow. no
body at the museum knows, tho people
in the house don’t know, that 1 am—
what do you think?—a poet. It is 30
years since I paid for the pub i: ation
of my collected poetical works. Yes,
sir, and I am going not only to commu
nicate this secret to your honor—in safe
keeping—but to present you with a
copy. There, my young friend!” He pro
duced a thin volume. ‘‘l am Paul the
Wanderer. ” In fact, the titlepage bore
the legend, “Collected Poetical Work
of Paul the Wanderer.”
“Thirty years,” he repeated. “There
were 500 copies. The press received 50,
the public bought four; there remained
446. I have now given you one. There
now remain 445. I have bequeathed
these to the public libraries of the na
tion. Sir, you are young. You will
yourself perhaps publish your poems.
Remember for your comfort that it
takes 50 years, or two generations,
for the noblest poets to take their
proper place. Greatness—true, stable,
solid greatness, not the empty applause
given to an ephemeral favorite—re
quires 50 years at least. Go, sir! Take
the book I have given you, and in after
years, when I am gone, tell the world
that yon knew—Paul the Wanderer!”
I wrung his hand in silence and left
him. More than 50 years have passed
since he published that work. No one
has yet spoken to me of Paul the Wan
derer. But I now understood his digni
ty, his self respect and his content. He
was anticipating and enjoying his fu
ture fame. He was living for posterity.
Present poverty and neglect were noth
ing.—Walter Besant in London Queen.
Another Mammoth Statue.
The sculptor Nikolaus Geiger is put
ting the last touches to his statue of
Barbarossa, which is to symbolize the
ancient kingdom in the Kyffhauser
monument, to be unveiled in 1896. The
Barbarossa appears at the end of a ves
tibule in the style of an ancient castle,
on the steps of the throne upon which
he is sitting like the sleeping figures of
the courtiers, with fabulous animals of
the old mythic world. Barbarossa is rep
resented at the moment of waking from
his long sleep. In his right hand is his
sword; his left hand strokes his long
waving beard. Contrary to all other
figures of the old hero, he is here repre
sented as an actual emperor, with the
features of a noble man. The whole
monument, hewed from the rock, will be
about 80 feet high. The figure of the
seated monarch is about 30 feet high.
—London Sun.
The following is a list of the dates of
founding of the oldest colleges in the
United States: Harvard, 1636; William
and Mary, 1692; Yale, 1700; Princeton,
1746; University of Pensylvania, 1749;
Columbia, 1754; Brown university,
1764; Dartmouth, 1769; Rutgers, 1770
Twin Brotfrere*-
Economy and wisdom are twin brotimni.
There are thousands and thousands of nap
chants, mechanics, laboring men, .ttrawsn,.
stock raisers, physicians, lawyers, and oCJtu-w
--located In cities, towns and paints near tSu
post-office who want to keep posted sw'xsr.'
all that Is going on the world over. They wb
Interested In thepollticalcanipalgnstbrivacX--
out the country, the markets, thecondilVxar
of labor, the Industries, society, 'tally Smw
penlngs, and all that goes to make the urata
of the day. For Instance, they were, derpfs’
Interested In the recent coal and
strikes. They can get this news .inly tlinrx<-
the columns of a great metropolitan mrwas
paper, which costs 30 cents a week. 'This v.ery
feel Is beyond their means; they do not
to make so much of an outlay,. They wtanrv
have the news in order to keep ataatw
of the times. Here is where economy wadu
wisdom combine. The Cincinnati Oosxwns
cial Gazette is one of the greatest new«iwp*a«
In the world. From Us dally-Issues Is i&Mmt
the cream of the news for the ClnefaddCts
Gazette, which is new published twic:, -»»i
week. It Is a paper worth <l4 a .year
but Is now sent twice a week at only
lar a year. It is the pour man’s great news
paper. It will reach you an the days of yani-
Ilcatlon, and serves the purpose of * daoSts
Send for a sample copy tree or remit a 1644-
lar by draft, express or pestui order, to-
Gazette Co., Cincinnati, ©!,. end get Tfc. *,.
whole year. It is worth twice the price.
Road Citation,
GEORGIA, FlovdCocxtv :
■' hereas 'V K.-smith, etal.. have netitionett
the lH>ar<l of < oun ussioners Roads and Raw
< nue ol said ( emu , asking that these'tlemeskk
road now lead! g and rucnii’g direct from St—
noy, Georgia, and running dhectlybywhata}-
i irown as R>'dgeis ole Barn Place and Henry-
I irtin mood's dwelling house and intersect ins),
with the public road known as the Pleaeaas.
Hope cliuich road, at or near Drnmmomte
schoolhouse, be made a second class pnbiir
road, and the Road Commissioners of iso44>'S
trict G. M ■ of said Connt' having reported*tiln
proposed road to be of public utility. Now, th*
is to cite all persons having ohje 'irons therot-s
or claims tor damages ariamg therefrom, ta
make the same known to the Ifioard of ComiSTS-
S'oners ar the next meeting be held on t’an,
first Monday in August lb'.'l
Witness the Hon .lolin <'. Foster ChairmanoC
the Board, This July sth. l«i)4,
d 3i»-d. Max Meyerbardt, Clerk
Election Notice “Fo? Fence
or“ Stock Law.”
Georgia, Floyd county Notice ie-hereby giver,
that an Election will be held at the Court htiate
grounds in rhe 151Cth District (Ridge Valley)
M. in said county on 13th day of Septe.wbt'-
[lßti4i in which the question will lie siibmittrsi
to the voters o; said District “For Feu-t# or
,*Btac Law’’
Given under my hand and Official Signattwa
this zlitli day of August 1884,
15 1 " John I’, Davis, Ordinary-.
' Wild Land S;ilc.
before I lie Court house door tv
the' it' <>f Rome, ,‘i county, Ga. between
’I" legal hours ot sa’e on the fl: r. Tuesday «
I-P'0),,.. ’894. th following il scribed pwp
erty te wit,:
■ > ...i 1....U lot No, 54 containing one
anil sixty acres, and E -st half of io t No. 55: «->» ■
taming eighty acres, all in the -III). District Ul ' i ’
Uii Section • f Fl,,vii county, Ga. Leviedtm
virtue in II) fi la's for the (ears 1884 to 1 «)3 < i
ot state and < ininty vs. Jno. W. Jones as < n
property of the defendsnt.
1-w to d-s-d. Jake C. Mookh, Phertl?.
Warter’s hand made
is the finest smoke on
jne market-—and then
it is Rome madejFruits
of home Industry. Ask
your dealer for one*. .
XVkat N-rve Berries
Y Lave done for others
z^'&hk the y wi,!
IST DAY. '
VICOft \
Or ICTK DAT. 4"..
E tv gn7c/.//
ind Pormarnntly ooth dax
V pcsuive cure for al! Wet .cesses. Nervousness,
and all tin ir train of evils resuAtosi,
from curly errors and later excesses; the r.snig
It overwork. Kick worry ,-u beyefa x>
ini. vivos lane and Mtrengtli to th • -e iu»lv».
Binv. Stops taikiiafurol lox. » >ticli kl r
eint-sions caused hy youtt-.xul errors or ez
■OSS', j e use Ol tobacco, opium »ud 't-si; s
•'meh lead to consumption anif InKuuisJy. «
I ~ie |r us.'snows iiunied.ale improvement.
D' ”■!.at,on. Insist upon having thegymiaw
Berries,
J vCKf I. | P*‘ r hox. six bCML-et*; O»
. ‘•ptm-'ni.Mi. OuarAnfreti (ortrivsniy
i uni kept by your druggist we will send
bj iixftii. upon receipt of price, In plain wr»>-
fr?**. Address all mail order® •
AM MKDI€AJL C'O„ Cinciuiiatk **
For sale by Crouch
Co.
+
W. L. Dcu'clas
*K‘SLJtf''' s ita 4 ISTHEBEST.
W : Il SN.* NO SOUCAAINCS.
5- c 0 R D O VAN •
F-"A’CH&EtiAMEUfDCALF.
x
" FINE.
>.T>- !
, ~ - -'.r,J . P 4i 7 S
" \ SEND FCR catalogue:
■.’* W»L.’DOUGLASs.,
' liACC.uON. MASS..
Vox run save monov by p’tr. liiiniug W.
Dongliio Khoee,
Because, v-e are tiie largest manufacturers ct u
Lwriised shoes in the world, and guarantee,
he value Ly stamping the name and price *k
he bottom, which ; "otects you against ifigrii-
H ires and the ruddle man's profits. Oursb<i®i.
cal custom v : a '•*.,' ' 'ititig ar/s'-
. erir-g qn.'l.'.i.s. V - ). ■ et: err sold vsacys
.■■vat, w. r pr:.' . . ...... h.e ...ivenMiarr
■ :.:-.-rn.. T '.<- : o sub:--'.itut-. If you:
ream . v cm. Sold by
Cantrell & Owens,
Best Yet retails at
good as any 90c tobac -
co. Ask your deader
Sugar scts. at Morm.
Telephone 26.
NOTICE.
All Recounts, now due, ana ' -
paid by September 15th, will bo
put into the hands of Walter Harr—
its for collection.
Respectfully,
8-10-st. H. S. LansdeO.