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Madison - Avenue
HOTEL,
Madison Aven' e and 58tr,Street.
NEW YORK.
$d per day and up. /American Plan.
FIREPROOF AND FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY
PARTICULAR.
. ■ . ■ -
Two Blocks from the 't hird and Sixth Avenue Elevated
Railroads
The Madison and Fourth Avenue and Belt Line Cars pass
• the Door.
♦<.,
H M. CLARK proprietor
Passenger Elevator runs all night.
<sTHE PLACE TO STOP**-
WHILE ATTENDING COURT,
sod p ~>3 IS A Tg<- -L .£. £.
Williams’ Restaurant and Boarding House,
on Fifth Avenue opposite the New Court House
a blB/
P. E. Williams, Proprietor.
A. GRA^ y V OFFER* , (
EDSE MME.A. RUPPERT’S ’
rlliX FACE HLEAC C |
MME. A. f.OPPE'
' says: ‘1 appr< cinlv the ■...
''VtS. that there are :n;:i>y tboi. :
4' *tn sandsof ladleslntlieUnlte •
Etatesthnt would like t >ti ' I
ynra my World-Benow..ed Ea v: I
_5» ~ ; -t- dc~~ w*“ Bleach: but hat a be< I
• r kept from doing so on : 1
ajk countof pri A.»lii< h isS 1 : t _
per bottleor .battiest. • , 1
' * f .-'i together, ».‘>.oo. In oi;*. *
>«?W' S *’ Z that all of these may !i..-
an opportunity, I will <■■■ lc
>SH to every caller, al .-oluu:.
x « free, a sample bottle, :... ,
£> Z?^Z -.yin order to supply those 0...
of city.or in any partof tt • <
World.l will send It safely packedin plain wrap,. (
all charges prepaid, for 25 cents, silver or str.uj>.' .
In freckles, pimples .ninth, sal 1 4
lowness,blackheads,nene,eczema,oiliness. rough . '
ness, or any discoloration or disense of thesk.n I
and wrinkles (not caused by facial e.Tpret-lon .
Facb Bleach removes absolutely. It does nt . I
cover up, as cosmetics do, but is a cure. Addrasc <
MAIIASIE A. BVPrEKT.O'itO.)
No. 6 East 14th St., NEW YORK CITY. j ]
j
i
What Nerve Berrie* !
■-J have Hone for other*- i
W to JX u i
~T\ J
VICGIR \
OF 15TH DAY. /x- ~7/
M E h easily, Quick!/
and Permanently Resfcr4(j, both day
c " re ,or ali w e. .tosses Nervous-ms.
Debility and all their train of evils resr’tini
e™<Wrw<»rk rO Ueu n<l laVer excPßSes ; ri*&u:
rk - *»■«••* iei»M. Torry.ete Devplon
tana’ V » * <me and *trenictti io ti. j or I
Kli*’> lo»a ■« nicbkl'
fWlMlowt caused by youlbtul error! or tr
which e le*< % op«"«n ■
Their u»eshow and
no Im“ttt o In "eliu'ei'nprovement. Aceep
no imit.H.Oir insist upon having lue genuine
FierVe no other. Con en-
'A pocket )>ri< .. <? m ’ lcnt to carr >' ir 'rst ’
k ireatmenL *. m < ‘ r ? ox ’ Nlx hox( '"- on. ful
k I f no. li'i k unrante.-,! to cure n.iv vrwe.
mail* upui ?a<iln. rU ‘', Kißt we will «e"d VhMD
SBKsl lit f■ f ‘ .?! price - 13 l ,lair i wrap
Mkitii Ali ws-0..h l 'J r '" s 1111 >» ai > orders V-
*.V nn>H tl. «
by Crouch &j
Country
Produce
A Specialty.
Frenh Butter on hand
all the time.
New goods arriving
daily, We Keep the best
the market affords.
COME AND SEE US,
L. A. Dempsey,
409 Broad Street,
vA 7 S i*-.
W.L. LKrtFCLAS
S 3 SHOE NO SQUCAKIhCh
<5. CO FC DO VAN
N. FREW .WALLED CALF.
\
W POLICE,3 Solfs.
vM s2?^-*2.WOftKiftGMEN S
\ ,j *• EXTRA FINE.
xrtak I BoysSchoolShoes.
-LADIES
-32 ’'BestDoNGol a
\ SEND FOR CATALOGUE ‘
’ W-L-DOUGLAS,
BROCKTON. MASS.
You cun save money l«y purchuslug W. L.
Douirlnn ”Iioe»,
Because, we are the largest manufacturers ot
advertised shoes in the world, and guarantee
the value by stamping the name ana price 01
tin bottom, which protects you against hig>
t rices and the middleman’s profits. Our shoe
" i'.ial custom work in style, easy fitting au
•rearing qualities. We have them sold even
. here at lower prices for the value given tlin
ny other make Take no substitute. If yo>
.aler cannot supply you, we can. Sold by
irtCantrell & Owen?,
THEHUSTLER OF ROME, FRIDAY SEPTEMBER, 28 1894.
STEWARD OF AN OCEAN LINER.
A Position of Responsibility will, nn Army
of Subordinates to Oteraer,
It may surprise some old globe trot
ters to know that the big ocean grey
hounds running between New York
and the European ports carry on nn av
erage nineteen thousand pieces of
sterling silverware for their table serv
ice, and that this large amount of plate
is handled during the voyage by from
two hundred to two hundred and forty
waiters or “stewards,"as they are called
on shipboard. The chief steward is
responsible for every piece, says the
New York Niall and Express. He must
be a man of quick powers of observa
tion, a student of human nature and be
up to all the little devices of a small
army of subordinates usually keener
and quicker witted than those found
ashore in the same calling. It is a
busy day for the steward twenty-four
hours before the time set for departure.
He has purchased or contracted for all
the supplies and an assistant sees that
the contracts are fulfilled. But his per
sonal attention must be given to silver
ware. He keeps a regular debit and
credit account and can tell to a tooth
pick just what he will start away with.
On the voyage passengers are apt to
lose spoons or forks or other ware by
accident, and occasionally a gay blade
may think it amusement to toss a sugar
bowl or half a dozen knives through a
port hole. It is needless to say that he
furnishes a quid pro quo before he
goes ashore. When the other side is
reached the chief steward spends a day
in balancing accounts. He started with
so much, and so much should be on
hand. If there is a difference he seeks
to find it, and if he can't find it he
“makes good” himself. The respond
bility of such a position naturally com
mands a high salary, and every chief
steward on every ocean steamship run
ning from this port is, without excep
tion, a man of unimpeachable integ
rity. The extraordinary record is that
in thirty years there have been but
two accusations of a betrayal of a trust.
FAIRY RINGS OF HELENA
Theories Advanced as to Their Origin-
Common ia Eastern Montana.
The well-known circle on the pas
ture lands about six miles east of
Helena, near tha oil overland stage
road, and which has been a curiosity
and a source of speculation for years,
is identical with the fairy rings so com
mon in some parts of England. There
were formerly two of these rings, says
the Helena (Mont.) Independent, but
one has entirely disappeared within
the last few years. The remaining one
is about two hundred feet in diameter
and forms a perfect circle. The ground
forming the circle is about two yards
wide and quite destitute of vegetation.
Many theories have been advanced as
to the cause of these rings. Some say
that it is the result of lightning; others
that a herd of buffalo, pursued by
wolves, stopped and formed themselves
into a circle as a means oi defending
their young, and thus tramped out We
grass. These rings have attracted the
attention <ri scientific men, and recent
investigations have shown they are the
result of centrifugal development of
certain kinds of fungi, among which is
the common mushroom, which shows a
tendency to grow in this manner. The
spot where it has grown is unfitted for
its continued nourishment, and the
spawn extends outward to new soil,
forming the circle. These rings are
common in eastern Montana, along the
Musselshell river, but the one near
Helena is the most perfect in the state.
COMPLACENT CHINA.
Condescention Toward Wayward Young
Nations Like America.
It is not easy for the outside world
to understand that the position O’.
China toward foreigners is one of phil
osophical condescension, and that
nothing could be more genuine than
the Chinese sense of mental superiority
in dealing with human affairs, says
the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Duaing
one o* the controversies between this
country and China about immigration a
Chinese editor put the case in this way:
“We must remember that we are the
oldest nation and that America is one
of the youngest. We who have been
so favored as to inherit a high civiliza
tion from our wise rulers of antiquity
and have been blessed with the sublime
teachings of our great sages, ought to
be patient with the excited caprices of
anal ?n in its unthinking childhqod.
If we maintain a calm attitude and do
not allow ourselves to get angry over
the pranks of a young country, why,
in course of time America will change
and grow wiser and abandon her pres
ent foolish conduct. Nations learn by
experience, just as children do, and we
ought to maintain our dignity and wait
in patience while America advances to
a state of maturity and learns to man
age fixings in a proper and judicious
way."
Th;, is the tranquil tone of Socrates
pending away a spoiled child, admon
ished, but pardoned and unspanked.
The Heir to China’s Throne.
The birth of an heir to the Chinese
throne at this time is an event of more
than ordinary importance to the peace
of the empire. Kuang Hsu is the first
emperor of the present dynasty whose
right of occupancy is not based upon
actual descent. His predecessor, Tung
Chih. died childless in 1875, after a
reign of only one year. lie left
several brothers, all having children,
:imoti' r whom a strife at once arose as
to the succession. After several weeks
of contention and intrigue a compro
mise was effected by which the young
widowed empress and her unborn child
were put to death, and the present em
peror, then two years old, and the son
of the “seventh prince,” who was a
was a brother of Tung Chih. and him
self one of the contestants for the
throne, was chosen by a family council.
In order to correct the succession, the
dead emperor was supposed to adopt
this infant as his son and successor,
and an imperial decree to that effect
was promulgated throughout the em
wire. Kuang Hsu has been an invalid
prom his birth, and his death at any
timg jvpuld occasion no surprise.
READ IT
Examine Our Bargains,
AND THEN
GATIN’ THE BTJSHj
20 per. ct off of Manufacturers cost.
In order to make room for our enormous stock
which is arrivingdaily, we will for the next ten days
give 20 per. ct. off of Manufacturer’s cost on all
ladies and childrens Slippers, Oxfords, Low Cuts
ano Operas.
-«MWe Have; An Elegant Line Oft 4-
These goods‘bought late ana at a tremenduous di s
.-U- iA*. ' w
count and when you get them of us at 20 per. ct.
off of Manufacturer’s prices they cost you next~to
■'X •
nothing.
<ALL EARLY FOR THETT HAVE*-
1 i
GOT- TO GO.
W.H.COKER&CO
No's 19 & 21 Broad Street,
ROME GEORGIA-