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»econu-cla«* Mail Matter.
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daily and Sunday.
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coat.* week or $5.00 per annum
•vOFiFfOL Corner Broad Street ano
F'tth Avenue.
ONLY OFFICIAL ORGAN.
f'tl've city <>f Rome, and Floyd, the
*“ Banner county" of Georgia.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For Governor,
" i. ATKINSON, of Coweta,
For Secretary of State,
" ffIL7.LKN>D. CANDLER, of Hall
For Treasurer,
<iL D: HARDEMAN, of Newton.
tf'??©! 4 Comptroller-General,
A. WRIGHT, of Richmond
For Attorney General,
TERRELL, of Meriwether
O'ar- Commissioner of Agriculture
JR. T. NESBITT, of Cobb.
For Congress.
XJhbn W. MADDOX, of Floyd.
For State Senator,
W. 11. LUMPKIN.
tS oE’tepreeentative, Fioyd Ct ,
ROBT. T. FOUCHE,
JOHN H REECE,
MOSES R. WRIGHT.
■ASoveriior Flower conclued o
SBOlilixe the fire escape.
Ths of Hon. W. C
• a?n?.flKß of >t>he Ashland district of
. is 270.
VKheuELi s.t.ler of Rome continue
’ ; ttad.-»il! North Georgia dailies.
■.‘*Axxlu-she a dandy” this morning?
■■A. receiver has been appointed
the Reaves Ware-house Com
which fai'ed in Athens, som,
.ago
■fiTiee Chinese seem to do their
with th«ir heels. If the)
spnrs they would do a great
•deea.! of damage.
I>r. Flopper Felton is too old a
■staler to seriously “believe” that
Ant .jh going to defeat “Our John”
.:«r congress.
'Or. Felton has come, and spok
hj.., and again “departed those
vt'jawsts.” The ancient “Flopper”
ljs rn.hi* dotage.
a Germany a merchant was
• ■rrwwntly fined heavily for usings
» quotation from the Bible at the
itvd of an advertisement.
.About half the crowd heard
Ox. Flopper Felton on yesterday
“siondup,” showing the Demo
< <»rats who should be prayed for.
"While women eai.’j vote they can J
says the Athens Banner, and
JaH W; C. P. Breckinridge ofKet
sftwckv. r.ealiz-s that fact very sadly.
’ Hon. Thomas G. Lawson will
.rddress the citizens of the upper
t portion of Morgan county at Rut-
T ' «dge on Monday night, October
S.At.
There was a time when the
’llalleiijah lick,' of Wm. H. Fel
y on was known from the mountains I
>»o the Seaboard but its only
„ ■«. memory now..
From all over the Seventh comes
'• s idings, >brh ging the strong assu
rances >cfV?he growing strength of
sotaW- Maddox. From, the very
'■ rrFst il hasheen only a question of
majority.
” Th>- Cherokee Advance says that
. lie negroes of Cherokee know who
zjteii friends are and to whom
/they must go for a favor, and they
atr? going to vote the democratic
iX-ccket.
>L he Rev. Sam Jones is not only
a. greet preacher, but he is a phil
-fjaapher. Hear him: “I’d rather
rtin with a rascal like a democrat
L*. a fool like a populite. I’d
'lather be a rascal thau a fool, fur
“;«w caa reform a rascal.”
The Cherokee Advance says that
Toni Hutcherson is pulling for the
shore and is certain of election
and Cherokee in him is certain of
n able, faithful and effective rep
resentative.
With its candidate for governo
sued for embezzlement in Atlanta
and one of its biggest editors on
trial lor fraudulent use of the
mails in Macon, the Populists will
still have something to interest
ihem alter the elections are over.
Griffin News.
Another troublesome thing in
connection with silver currency,
has developed. A silver dollar in
a negro’s puck it attracted a bolt of
lightning which disfigured the
dollar and killed the negro. This
happened near Albany. —Colum
bus Ledger,
Brunswick will have a tremend
ous democratic rally on Thursday
night, September 27th. It will
eclipse any heretofore held and
some of the best.orators now on
the stump will be invited to ad
dress the crowd that will assem
ble. __________________
The 3rd party are holding ral
lies almost every night in the
week throughout the county. Our
Savior said that men preferred
darkness to light because their
deeds are evil. Are the populists
afraid for the sunlight of heaven
and reason to be thrown around
its doctrine? If so, be sure tha 1
it will not do. —Paulding Era.
The Macon News is now guilty of
indulging in wisdom. It says - “A man
without experience can scarcely ever
be as great a fool as a min who, hav
ing had experience does not profit by
it. The proverb says that the fool wil
earn in no other school than that of
experience; but this fool of fools will
not learn even there. There is more
hope for a thousand young fool than
for one old fool ”
A third prrty speaker, Rev. Mr
Dykes, in a speech last Tuesday
night,said that it was gettiug time
for congress to adjourn and come
home. It was a revelation to him
when he wa<told that congress had
been adjourned nearly a month,
and yet this man is a leader, is
heaping abuse iu his wild frenzies
upon the heads of all democrat s
and is asking men to follow him
in it. —Hartwell Sun.
The Atlanta Looking Glass?’
“advertised sensation” did no
materialize in the columns of that
sheet further than to mention that
certain ministers (names not giv *
en) had been guilty of liceucious
conduct. Os course even that re
port is false but were it so, the
Looking Glass is too cowardly to
name its men but prefers to cad
its slurs in a general way. 'I he
Looking Glass is too free with its
slime.
If the story told rn the suit
brought by the administrator ot
the Lawson estate against Judge
Jarnos K. Hines for an accounting
of trust funds left in his hands is
true, the Telegraph fails to see how
any honest man can vote for that
gentleman for governor. There are
so many stories told of a similar
character about the Populist can
didate for governor that it seems
there must be a bas.s of truth in
them. Macon Telegraph.
A well-known public man says
he had a dream about Congress
man Breckinridge the other night.
The defendant in the Pollard scan
del was about to embark from
New’ York for Europe. A band was
at the dock, with many admirers
gathered to see him off. As Breck
enridge went on board the vessel
the band very appropriately struck
up in lively time: “The Girl 1
Left Behind Me.” As the vessel
cast off it became known for the
first time that the congressman’s
objective point was England,
where upon the band played in
most solemn, prayerful tones, God
Save the Queen.
Mr-. Dr. Holmes, who has been
I visiting in the city, returned to
: Atlanta yesterday
THE HUSTLER OF ROME, SUNDAY SEPTEMBER, 23 1894.
We know that Watson has advised
all populists to keep away from
democratic f peakings, we suppose
on account of its good and reason
able and siaip.e principles. Then
he knows that Lis theories will not
stand the teat of reason. They ere
iike the old mau’s flour—they will
not bear close inspection. Besides,
he knows that fewer 3ps the less
wi lbe nis income. He seems to
dread the effect of democratic ar
gument and reasoning, and calm
sober refl ction on lhe part Os th
people Do your uwn thinking.
Man should let reason and n»t prej
udice control him. Come to hear
Maddox speak next Monday.—
Paulding Era
In New York the otuer day nn
other example of the dangerof t el» c
tncity transmitted by water d •
ring rain was afforded bi the in
stantly jkilliug of a man iu El
dridge street through contact with
a railing. During t v.-ry raiusL m
every electric wire becomes aeon
stant menace to life. The merest
contact with any wet object may
ba deadly because of some water
couuesttuu with a neighboring
wire.
No city iu Georgia has a better
police furce thau tn is sitnie city of
Rome—the cowardly insinuations
of the Atlanta Looking Glass’
Rome correspondent tu the con
tray notwithstanding,
Again we feel Constrained toask :
when vill Rome have a uui >u
passenger depot? A id fain ly comes
me eu.. ), ‘Uam the EtOWau.”
Dr. H. j). McCall went down to
Rocatuait yesterday tu spend Sun
with his family.
•T.OOK OF AGES."
• Rock of Aifos, elpft for me.
Let me hide myxelf in thees“
Sang the lady. Host and low.
And the n'Olanchu.y tluw
Os her voice so «swee. a>id clear,
Rose upon the evening air
With that sweet au,l solemn prayer.
" Reek of Ages, cleft f r me.
Let tne hide myself Im thee I”
Yet she sang, as oft she had,
When her thoughtless heart was gtoA;
Sang because she felt alone—
Sang because her soul had grown
Weary with the tedious day—
Sang to while the hours away:
• Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
Let me hide myself In theel"
Where the trembling starlight fall!
On her mansion s stately walls;
On the chill kind echoing street
Where the lights aud shadows meet—
There the lady 's voice was heard.
As the breath of Night was stirred
With that music, floating free;
“ Rook of Ages, cleft for me."
Wandering, homeless, through the night,
Praying for the morning light—
Pale and haggard, wan and weak,
With the death-hue on her cheek,
Went a woman—one whose life,
Had been wrecked in sin and strife;
One of wham, in one far land
Wrote the Master on the sand!
And her soul, by Sorrow wrung,
Heard the lady as she sung:
•* Rock of Ages, cleft for me.
Let me hide myself in thee!"
On the marble steps she knelt.
And her soul that Instant felt
Mercy's healing touch as there,
Quivering. meveAier lips in prayer!
And the God she had forgot
Smiled upon her lonely lot—
Heard her as she murmured oft.
With an accent sweet and soft:
•* Rock of Ages, cleft for me.
Let me hide myself in thee!”
Little knew the lady fair.
As she sang so sweetly there,
T'aat her voice had reached a soul
Which had lived In sin's control!
Little knew, when she was done,
That a lost and erring one
Heard her as she breathed that strain
And returned to God again!
—Frank L. Stanton, in Atlanta Constitution
And We’ll Bo hiwppy Then.
When it rains because we want it to—
Gets warm because we like;
When we order all our blizzards—
Tull the lightning where to strikof
A
The world will be a jolly world
To all the maids and men;
With life a song the whole day long.
And we'll be happy then!
When crops grow of their own accord,
Without a plow or hoe;
When bill collectors ooase to bring
The lengthy bills we ewe:
The world will be a jolly world
Ho all the maids and men;
And birds will sing and cash will ring,
And we’ll be happy then!
—Atlanta Constitution.
My SeutlmeoU,"
Theugh o'er the pathway of my life some ad
.verse winds may blow,
Let tne not sail this world a bowling wilder
nees of woe.
But turn my bock upon Use norm, and took
with thankful eyes
To the beauty of the landscape, and tbo glory
of the skies.
Should melancholy's coffin-face oome gibber
ing to my door.
11l start him out of countenance, and set him
in a roar,
TUI the sound of merry laughter fills the sur
rounding air,
And joy's sweet roeee blossom from the barren
grave of care,
If from the swamps of selfishness a chilling
mist Is sent,
Fraught with the dread malaria of chronic dis
content,
I’ll climb the airy heights of love to labor
there awhile.
And scatter the infection with the sunshine of
a smile.
And when life's evening shadows fall, if I can
only know
That I have carved one smile upon the pallid
lips of woe,
I'll thank the merry gods of mirth, and with
expiring breath.
Waft the world my good-night kisses wblto I
shake the hand of death.
—Lm P. Hills, In Atlanta Oonstltuttoa
FASHION NOTES.
A hat of block Neapolitan is wired,
and the wire u> covers! bv a narrow
fold of bh. k velvet. The hat is
pinched up f t the acid the trim
ming ootisi ,tS cf liandsome black
plumes and a bunch of black s.lk thi.->«
ties.
Scent bottles are a new fad. They ’
are in all sorts of elegant one J
of the new ones being in shape of a i
ripe strawberry in enamel. T.iere are |
green enamel leaves, and the Beetle are
of diamonds in one design and pearls ;
In another.
A little lace bonnet is an eccentric
ity in trimming. On either side of the
front are very full pompons of plaited
lace from the middle of which perky
little aigrets set up about four or five
inches. The bonnet proper is made of
shirred lace, and the pompons are the
only trimming. I
Dresses of batiste are made with
three or five narrow ruffles edged with
very narrow Italian val lace. The
waists are made in simple fashion,
gathered at belt and collar, and over
the shoulders are lace-edged ruffles to
match the skirt The sleeves are in
bishop shape, or are made after the pat
tern furnished for the lining in leg-o’-
mutton sleeves, and are then trimmed
with three or five lace-edged ruffles set
on in shingle fashion.
MEDICAL STATISTICS.
Only 90t> persona Tn 1,000,000 die of]
old age.
Twelve Englishmen in every 10,000
die of gout
France has 18,000 cases of smallpox
every year.
Europe has 383,200 blind, 230,200
deaf mutes.
In Holland more women than men die'
of apoplexy.
Os 10,000 deaths in England 184 are
from measles.
Bright’s disease Is most prevalent in
Shanghai, China.
Os every 10,000 deaths in England 270
are from apoplexy.
In 1857 the Russian hospitals had 62,-
000 typhus patients.
December is the most fatal month in
the year for asthma.
The number of persons born blind is
sixty-five to the million.
Twice as many women as men are
afflicted with neuralagia.
OVER 600 new cases of leprosy are
annually registered in Russia.
HYMNS AND HYMN WRITERS.
“Let us with a gladsome mind” was
written by John Milton, when only fif
teen years old.
“Os Him who did salvation bring"
was translated by A. W. Boehm from
the Latin of St. Bernard.
“How did my heart rejoice tn hoar"
is by Watts. It was originally entitled
“Going to Church."
"In evil long I took delight" was by
John Newton. He caMed it his “Spirit
ual autobiography.”
“Infinite God, to Thee we raise" was
a translation by Charles Wesley of a
part of the To Deum.
“Arm of the Gospel, awake," was one
of the first of Charles Wesley's hymns.
It was published in 1739.
“He dies, the friend of sinners dies,"
was by Isaac Watts. It has been ma
terially altered by John Wesley.
“When on Sinai’s top I see" is from
the pen of Montgomery. It was origi
nally called the “Three Mountains."
MISSING LINKS.
Policemen in Austria must under
stand telegraphy.
Patti has a gold watch only three
fourths of an inch in diameter.
Over 200,000 postal cards are used
every day in the United States.
In France, Belgium and several other
European countries all elections are
held on Sunday.
Canada’s divorces for the past twen
ty years have just been figured up and
they amount to only 116.
The water that pours over the falls
at Niagara is washing the rock away
ut the rate of five yards ip four years.
There are more artesian wells in
California than in any other state in
the union. One county claims four
hundred and fifty-seven such wells.
According to the Electrical Engineer
there are good reasons for believing
that the friction of rain is the real
cause of lightning.
FRUIT BUDS.
Green currants make good sauce or
pies.
Raspberry jam has no superior among
the sauces.
Tut: currant is a native of the north,
perhaps of Holland.
Do not have the currants too ripe
when making jelly; but they must not
be green.
In making raspberry jelly, add con
siderable currant juice; the flavor will
not be impaired.
A currant bush will grow almost
anywhere, and give good returns for
even indifferent care.
Raspberries are best when plucked,
freeh and ripe, from the bushes and
immediately nsed —and so are other
berries.—Good Housekeeping.
POINTERS.
Ax electric railway mail service has
been established in Mon treat
An extension ladder for upper berths
of sieving cars has been devised.
The brilliance of candle flame can be
measured with compasses and calpers.
Pineapple juice is a valuable medi
cine for indigestion and throat trou
bles.
The two swiftest runners of the ani
mal creation are the kangaroo and the
ostrich.
I Early Christians inherited their be-
Jief in witchcraft from their pagan
forefathers.
I GsteK national elections are held
•very four yew* The polling’pla«N
•aa flhnrahea
NOTES ABOUT WOMEN.
Or ths Iwo thousand girl students in
Uu, London Guildhall school of music
about thrme hundred are studying
musie.
Mmg Scstuylhr, the American sir, ger
and oompoowr, known on the stage as j
Idalia Hetoil*, is reported to be about to i
’Ynoanoe the world and enter a Catho- j
lie convent.
Rirr. Ma. Joe, of North Middlcboro,
Mses., has fitted up in the steeple of
his church a play room, in which ba- !
bies are token care of by volunteer !
nurses while the mothers attend divine ;
service.
The daughter of the late king of
Swedes, now crown princess of Den
mark, is the giantess among the royal
personages of Europe. Iler highness I
amounts to considerably over six feet.
—Philadelphia Ledger.
1 Thb only iroinsn lawyer in Spain Is
Manuela y Palido, of Madrid, whose ■
with her permission to prae- I
tica law in tha Spanish courts, hung in
Spain's exhibit in the Woman’s build- j
lug at tha world's fair.
Rudyabp Kipliro seems to have hit
the nail aqua rely on the head in his
slimming up of the situation of the lat
ter-day wxniifi. Says he: “A woman
to-A*jr ean de exactly what her body
I And soul will let her," and she certain-
I ly can. _
PUNSj
i Mba (layboy—"l* your husband’s
I yacht a oenterboerd?" Mrs. r Booze
lelgh—"Mo, a sideboard." —Town Top
ics. *
Cal-ler—"Doesn't it worry you to
think of yonr daughter on the ocean?"
Old Lady—" Dear me, no; she can swim."
| —High School Review.
I Widow —"Mr. your sympathy
strikes vw?y forcibly.” Mr. Jones—
“ Thanks; I meant It for a sympathetic
strike.”—Detroit Free Press.
“I qiubct,” said the mosquito in a
theatrical hotel, “to this interference
in my basincss. The idea of my not
being permitted to do my act without
a net!” —Washington Star.
Thebe appears to be no good reason
for withdrawing the original yachting
proposition to England; that if she will
I furnish the wind this country will pro
vide the speed.—Washington Post.
Kind-U®ahted Stranger—“ But if
j you were, as you say, a champion pu
gilist, what reduced you to this terri
ble copdttion —drink?” Mendicant —
"No, sir; I ios' me voice."—Cambridge
High School Review.
' Tp.achxb—"Johnny, ean you toll me
from whart part we get beefsteak from
a cow#" Johnny—"Frum de shanks. "
Teacher —"And where do we get milk?’*
Johnny—-’“O, we gits dat frum anudder
placer*—dymease Post.
POPULAR SCiZNOZ.
j The temperature of the sun is placed
j by scientists at 10,000 to 20,060 de
i grees P.
It is computed that every year the
i earth receives about 146,000,000,000
shooting stars, which fall on its surface
and thus slowly increase its mass.
Prop Dolbeab says electricity pos
sesses b« virtue as such for the cure of
disease. It will make bad ulcers as
it will heal and destroy life as compla
cently as strychnine or the guillotine.
It is not likely that earthquakes ever
result from electrip disturbances, and
ih hes ssrt jsei proved that they
arar to »ny such, though wh«*n
torpe ff rock are displaced, as
j in Japan ia >B9ll aMght. local changes
I to magrM'tto earvw have resulted.
1 Phoe. Asa Gray says that the Wash
ington elm at Cambridge has been esti
to seven million leaves,
wkicii wouii make a surface radiation
erf about five acres in extent, and give
mat dtosry fojr day hi the growing sea-
; son seven uvel three-fourths tons of
moisture.
j ABOUT PEOPLE IN GENERAL.
Ltwr* U- T. £. Halting of the re
aatoteg Wabanh, is the smallest
i officer in the service, in point of stature.
Mrs. Alexander, the well-known
j novelist, who is realty Mrs- Alexander
| Hector, is a grandmother, ncftrly sev
enty.
The successor of Edmund Yates as
editor of the London World is Maj.
Griffiths, who has long be6fi fl, dontribu
i tor to the paper.
New York dealers in the photographs
of celebrities say that the picture of
Mrs- Ballington Booth Is among the
most popular in the market
Mrs. Bishop (Miss Isabella Bird),
though more than sixty years of age,
I is off again in search of new materials
| for another book of travels. She has
left Liverpool for Corea.
ODDS AND ENDS.
Columbian coins are plentiful now.
Thomas Jefferson invented the mod
ern plow.
The confederate congress had no
printed rules.
Wheelmem now make bicycle trips
over the Alps.
There are eight women colonels in
the German arnay.
Bermuda farms bear three successive
crqps in one year.
Knox county, Me., hae a throe-year
old inveterate smoker.
The charcoal business has been de
clining for thirty years.
Great Britain has twenty-two thou
sand miles of turnpikes.
A sparrow at Joplin, Mo., worked a
five-dollav bill into its nest.
POPULATION ITEMS.
There are in the United States, as a
, whole, 17,330 foreign-born persons to
j each 100,000 native-born.
Os all the Chinese in this country,
72,472 are in California and 0,540 in
Oregon, the rest being scattered.
According to the eleventh census,
the whole number of persons from five
I to seventeen years of age was 18,543,201.
Bt the eleventh census Maine, Ver
, Burnt, North Carolina, lowa and Ari
«ooa had eaeh one Jawmsse resident-
WAITED FOR THE
Methods of an English D ec0 r atorT lu
tn an American's Experience d
Far In the interior of th, Co .
on one of the great lakes there i,
beautiful house built on a bluff 4
a hundred feet high. It j 9 ‘‘J ' er
<m tremendous terraces,
big stone walls, and there are
parts. It is a castle In the north'
west. And it is lived in by a
and his wife, who were resolve
when they built it that it should 1
as perfect as the best artists e ou u
make it, according to the New York
Tribune. So they proceeded to Eu
rope, and in London they consulted
with one William Morris, who n ro .
vided them with decorations ad'lih.
itum—wall papers, furniture and
stained glass and the like. The
wanted, too, some tapestries. ?
Mr. Morris’ answer to their re
quest was characteristic and ex
tremely interesting, as showin?
how the leading English decorate?
of the dav carries on his work, "f
will design the tapestries for you
with pleasure,” he said, “but I i
not promise or bind myself [ n &DT
w»y a§ loathe delivery of tie pieces
I wait until mood
me before I can sketch tfiem out
When the mood comes (and t
tell you when that will be, it m av be
six months, it may be a year/l'U
put the work through so fur as I am
concerned, and then you wifi hav?
to allow a few months for the execu
tion.”
They accepted this autocratic ar
rangement and sat down in their
new house to wait for the tapestries
to oome. The house was finished
but no tapeetries were there. They
had been living In it for months, and
still no tapestries. Nearly two
years had elapsed since their visit
to London, and the tapestries wei»
not forthcoming. But they bad
faith in Morris and never said a
word. At last the precious things
came and were hung in the panels
for which they had been (b.- iuiiej,
some panels in a circular hail lit by
a leaded glass dome. Th"i-e they
now hang, and they are s;;id to be
so passing fair that the w, urinessof
waiting for them has been swal
lowed up in esthet; ■ joy.
EACK2D DY A MAXIM GUN.
An Austrian Project feg Establishing
a Colony in East Africa.
It is stated by the Manchester
(England) Guardian that negotia
tions are still proceeding for the
establishment of the “free land"
colony in East Africa, where it is
intended to make an attempt, on a
scale never before contemplated, to
carry out the idea of a socialistic
community. It is in Austria that
the idea originated, and the district
selected for the experiment is Lyki
pfia, near Mount Kenia, in the Brit
ish sphere of influence. Representa
tions have been made to the British
foreign office and an offer to pur
chase a large tract of country, on
the condition that while the commu
nity shall be subject to any general
laws which the British government
may make, they shall have absolute
freedom to regulate their internal
affairs on a socialistic basis. Theex
periments made in America and else
where have failed, it is said, because
they were tried on too small a stage
and on too small a scale, and the
highest hopes are entertained that,
remote from the bad example o'
society as at present organized, a.u
with ample elbow room for develop
ment, the new community will show
to t&e world what may be done by
men and women devoted to the so
cialistic ideal. The British govern
ment is averse to giving absolute
rights of ownership over the lat£ a
tract of land in question, but ie
organizers of the new movement are
apparently very much iu earnee •
They have secured a leader of the ex
pedition to the new promised an
in the person of Herr Deuhardt, w
is well known on the., east coas
Africa, and part of the equipine l '
of the new community is to
Maxim gun and a supply of rd vS>
EUGENIE AND CARNOT.
The Empress Was Instumentahn G.v
ing Him His Start in Life.
It is not generally known t a t
was owing to the gracious inb i'
tion of Empress Eugenie t ‘
Sadi-Carnot owed tire comm e
ment of his fortune. He hai, in
versity language, been P 0 ,
in his examinations for the
Polytechnique at the end of bis
years of school work, and uni er
circumstances he ought to lU ' e l
left. However, his father had the
'idea of appealing to the empr
accord his son a third v 1 ar
promised to use her ' u^ue!lLt j.i
emperor, on the other aII ’ m c |j
wish to create a prece<
would, perhaps, be made wa , q
sllthe lazy students wb»u
their examinations. j
did not give up her efforts
finally gained the day by 1 ffhicb
out that a favor to a family
thev considered almost as fto . 00 ,
would make a very good impre- .
M. Sadi-Carnot received bis , b
I year's tuition, and s y cce J^ e »
passing in his
fully fledged engineer.