The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, September 16, 1894, Image 10

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BUYING A PIANO. You have been thinking o buying a Piano Ibra long time. If you keep putting it oil you will never get it. Now is the time to buy, as tall is near at hand, crops were never better. Nights are getting longer, a* <1 you have more timetoenpy music. Call at store 227. B oad street and let me show you some fine in struments. I can sell you a new Piano for $200,00. A good one like the Kingsbery Piano fjr $300,00,0r a lirstclass onewill cost a little more. Terms easy. If you can't call at the store write for catologue and price All 1 want is a chance to prove my claims. I s 11 some of the best make oi Pianos and Or- ‘ gans, and wid save you mon ey on anything in the music line. E. E. FORBES, 227. Broad St. Rome Ga. and AnnistonAla. .A. GRAcJW OTTFEIRT EDEE MME. A. RUPPERT’S I*NEC FACE BLEACH W!ME. A. RUPPERT J~o 'Ws wiy»: “ 1 appreciate the fsict </«CV •Jk Mint there are many t.bo-.i lJ*V’4tjtlS BanrtacfladicsintlieVnited 6tale.thntwou!<lliket »trj my World-Fenowneil Fai l «!. Be fit ’.Co BL’iACH: but hare btei >■? •'!/ S sept from doing so o»> r i ft? A 1 w» countol pri<* ' hich is. 4" • 0. r -ri perb< tlcor ibottleamkvr *’ A $$ together, S;i.(o. In coi<n that all of U ese way ha .’* vtx an Opportunity. I will giVf *\s’ i m* to every cnlk i\ 3b.M>luu !y free, a s«xrr ,M bottle, iih Jk/ z< ? 4 order to suppb tho>e ova .or in «in partof Ur- WorM.lwiu Jen 1 itsafelv p.u-kedin plain trrapp? all charges prepaid, for 25 cent:*. bi v<*r or stam j.‘ In everych*6 Freckle*, pimpr .•.moth, t<ni lowm rs, blackheads, acn<\ecze*nu,o'l ineiis.roug’i ness,or any discoloration or diseased thea’im and wrinkles (not caused by fiiCku exprwmn FACE BlzaCTI removes abrolnt Iy. It does nol cover up, as cosmetics do, but is u cv.ro. Address MADAME A. BUTI-.n’l .(DepkO.) No. 6 Eaet 14th St.. NEW YORK CITY- The Pathway OF Knowledge IS THE Road to Success •I fes fe* ! W.W jMAz-tw In L x IjLf Q Victor Hugo In speaking to young men, once said: I I “It is the learning acquired at midnight that will make your future bright and dazzling as midday.” And in this terse epigram the great Frenchman stated a truth that applies equally to struggling, ambitious young men the world over. Insomuch as you have yet your place to make in the world, and will avail yourself gs opportunities to I, increase your knowledge and improve I your mind, so will you make your J ' life successful and happy. A man’s brain is a garden given him to cultivate, and whose products will be his support. j Plant That Garden with seed of knowledge and from the ' vines will grow the blossoms of < financial gain and honorable ] preferment. , Never before in the history of the world have young men had an i opportunity to fit themselves for the I battle of lite as it is now given them, t. In this, as in everything else, j| American push and public spirit lead £ the world. |C All that the college graduate has IjL been taught, and more, can be H| secure-d by the young man who gets a r set of the Encyclopaedia Britannica I now ottered to The Constitution’s subscribers on the easy payment of our special introductory offer is for n limited time only. The ConstKutaoini, ATLANTA, GA. KINDERGARTENS FOR PARENTS. A Place'Wanted Where They May Learn the Kurilin»nt» of Common Kenne. Among the numerous educational Insti tutions of which this eountry, and indeed the world, are in,need, is a grownup kin dergarten to which parents may lie sent to learn the rudiments of common sense and the simple laws of cause and effect that, it would eeem, must naturally be pat ent to the meanest intelligence. If the father is selfish and fault finding nt home, he has no right to expect his sons, with his example constantly before them, to bo JL gsfl Mt’SUN (SOWN. bripful atstf good humored. If the-mother pmct+cca deceit and equivocation, she should not condemn her daughters for not being truthful and sincere. Why should a man who reads aloud and discusses in the presence <rf his boys the police news and reports of the details of murdersand executions punish them for devouring dime novels or other sensational fiction? Why should a woman who customarily adopts a scolding and complaining tone reproach her girls for not being cheerful and contented? Parents have no right to expect a spon taneous development of gcxxlness in a child. If, with all their advantages of age, experience and mastery of the situa tion they habitually do tilings they ought not to do, how is the child, ignorant, de pendent and with their conduct as its con stant model, to habitually do right? The peevish voice, the deceitful word, the self ish act, the ungoverned temper, are an al most irresistible influence beside which mere commands and penalties are futile. Children have a keen sense of injustice, and when they are punished for a fault that their parents commit with impunity the good and sufficient reason given for the latter's exemption from the general law—“l am your father, ” or “I am your mother,” does not seem a good and suffi cient reason to the victims of arbitrary home legislation, or even to the unpreju diced observer. Mere parenthood does not imply infallibility. There is, unfortu nately, no natural law which precludes persons entirely unfit for the responsibil ity from having children and misgovern ing them. If you want your sons and daughters to be gentle, generous, truthful and broad minded, live up to that standard yourself. A sketch Is given of a gown of flowered muslin trimmed wit! laoo insertion and grecu ribboa. x PERSONAL CRITICISM. Candid Friends and the Weaker Side of Humanity. Few mon or women are strong enough to endure adverse criticism, says a wise observer. The desire for praise is uni versal." The candid friend is a nuisance therefore, and the harm she docs will nev er be known until the secrets of all hearts are revealed. Most of us want helping and cheering along the uphill road. The world outside is too busy and hurried to heed our individual concerns, and if we cannot rely upon our friends for the meat of encour agement and for the oil and wine of sym pathy we are in hard case indeed. But the candid friend has no regard for the weaker side of humanity. “Why should I not speak the truth?” she argues. “It may wound, but it is my duty to set you right V y "• * A7//z'/ BAILOR HAT. concerning this and that." And she goes about the world i>erforming her self im posed task to her own satisfaction and ev erybody else’s hurt. Perhaps the glass at which you look less frequently day by day no longer shows you a satisfactory reflec tion. Your hair is becoming thin; your eyes lack luster; you have lost a tooth or two; you are growing stout. You are per fectly conscious of these trifles. They an noy you, and you are glad to think of them as little as possible, but unfortu nately your candid friend knows them, too, and she lets you know that she knows them. You smile amiably at her as you shake hands in farewell, but there Is rage and resentment in your heart. Only a small wound to your vanity, after all. Granted, my candid friend, but it is not necessary to go through the world sticking pins into people, be those ever so tiny and the tissue into which you insert them ever so adipose. Sincerity is not synonymous with brutality, and it is possible to ignore unpleasant facts without the aid of false hood or deceit. Tlie sketch shows a gold colored straw sailor hat trimmed with moss green vel vet twisted about the crown. A small bunch of yellow chrysanthemums forms a bow on the right side, while the left is trimmed with an erect spray of the same flowers mingled with mignonette and yel low and terracotta roses, with their so- Huge. Tw< - •**——"""• THE HUSTLER OF ROME, SUNDAY SEPTEMBER, 16 1894. GOOD MANNERS. Jndto Cbollrt on the Occult Law of Trifle* In Etiquette. One of the worst breaches of etiquette of which you can Ixi guilty is to attempt to teach your acquaintances etiquette. If you invite a friend to luncheon at a res taurant, for instance, or accept her invita tion, you thereby confess that a degree of social equality exists between you and her, and if she eats her oysters with an or dinary fork Instead of with the trident that has been specially provided for that pur- Jr wr /Tn To \\\ - tA XcMOL o > Ilk £r v 7 kJA SILK TOILET. pose it is not within your province to cor rect her, unless she has previously recog nized you as a guardian of her manners. If she chooses to convey ice cream to her mouth by means of a spoon instead of a fork, let her do it unmolested, the matter is not of the slightest consequence, and to be in constant fear of transgressing some occult law of etiquette one’s self or of as sociating with persons who do so Is to prove one's self not to the manner born and by nature a snob. Even if your coun try guest eats with her knife in public you will prove yourself a provincial by paying any attention to it. It happens to bo her custom, to which she has been reared, and if you have a cosmopolitan mind it will be too insignificant a thing to worry you. However technically perfect your own manners may be, they will exhibit a glar ing deficiency if you correct those of other grown persons. Besides you are not sure of infallibility, and it is not impossible that you may occasionally rebuke a per son who knows even more on the subject than you do and is behaving quite proper ly in the eyes of the cultivated world. When she eats her cheese with her knife, she is merely following the English habit, and it is quite permissible to take olives, corn, undressed lettuce and lump sugar in the fingers. Again, many of the actions that you consider faulty may be due to the absence of mind engendered by lively conversation, while others are accidents to which anybody is liable. Most persons whom one meets socially have a sufficient knowledge of etiquette to be at ease among the people with whom they associate, and that is all that is neces sary. A really well bred person never rests her faith on such minute trifles as the angle at which the knife is left or the number of crumbs to be permitted to fall from the piece of bread. Consideration for others is the foundation of all good manners, and the man or woman who lacks that has mere affectation in the place of tact and true politeness. The sketch shows a gown of rose and gold changeable silk. The skirt drapery is of white mousseline de sole, the bodice of white guipure, the sleeves and girdle of old yellow satin and the two bows of cherry velvet ribbon. ‘ NEATNESS IN DRESS. Haste I» the Mother of Many Sins of Omis sion and Commission. These are the days when neatness in dress goes under the name cf smartness, says a common sense fashion writer, and the smartly gowned woman owes her suc cess to the fact that she makes everything secure and tidy before she leaves her room, invariably making a final careful scrutiny of her attire as she stands, fully dressed, before her mirror. She who boasts that it 12 ra i lh ilw * Z s BATISTE TOILET. ■ never takes her a minute to dress may be fully assured that there will bo abundant b shortcomings in her raiment to bear wit r ness to the truth of her statement. The bonnet and dress covered with dust col r looted during yesterday’s' walk; the veil r : badly adjusted; hooks that seem to have a - | mortal antipathy for their corresponding • 1 eyes; luckless hairpins hanging, like the f sword of Damocles, by a single hair. These ■ are some of the sins of omission or coin , i mission that tell us she devotes insuffi < elent time to her toilet. Believe me, you i I may possess the most expensive of gowns, i bonnets, boots and gloves, yet if they are i improperly cared for and carelessly worn your neat little neighbor, with her ‘‘made b over” dress and her last year’s bonnet, will r put you to shame in the matter of personal I appearance. There is a gentility about her - which brings her the most pleasing atten i tions, and men and women alike pay her • homage because she is so neat and trim. She is a firm believer in that Ust hxik in the mirror. If the mirror is a full length one, so much the better, for things some times go wrong with the lower part of a cos tume, of which the wearer, looking down i upon herself, is quite ignorant, but which are perfectly evident to everybody else. > A sketch is given of a gown of old blue batiste trimmed with white guipure. Tho sash is Os white satin. JUDIC CHOLLET. •THE BIGGEST® THING rome -4"«KMcDonaM-Sparks-Stewart-Gompany.U4- ■umitiire, Carpels, bllinjs & We carry the largest stock in the state. We buy cheaper than any house in the state We sell cheaper than any other house in the state. We do business on business principles. Our customers are always pleased with their purchases. We have The Best Goods -*>§ 4" ZNT D $ IiOWEST FRIGES. We are always pickicking up big bargains for our customers. Once a customer always a cus tomer. Solid Oak Suits $15.00 to $25.00 Call and see our $20.00, PARLOR SUITS. We are just overflowing with bright new Furniture It is a pleasure to show you these goods. Call and see us. WHO-SSr-taißin. 1. Third. Avenue; Xi _ ... ' — —— ~