Newspaper Page Text
1320 HONEY COMB TOWELS, EACH 4Cts.
They are full 34 inches long and 20 inches wide. New and bright and
you can buy them at the value of a wash rag at BASS BROS & Co.
o d store, and PARKS & Co, store.
This is but a little item of the Thousand Great Bar
gans in store for the Fall Trade. Our prices for
the next sixty days will be a revelation to
the people, Frices unmatchable, unap
proachable and phenomenal.
YOU HAVE NOTICED
The t announce
ments of our purchase ot the
Receiver ol the Ladies l>az isr
Co., of A the ta. It was a
great stock ol tine Dry woods,
Notions, <fcc., invoicing $39,-
000.
The price paid was nearer
nothing than that at vvhieh
such goods never changed
hands in this broad land, it our
[knowledge ol such nuetters is a
true record- —
8400 Yds, heavy yard-wide Brown Sheeting, worth 6 1-2 cat 4 l-2c.
420“ Turkey red Damask, never before under 20c going at 12 1-2 c.
8000 “ Good quality 4-quarter bleached Domestic worth 71 -2c at sc.
300 “ Cheviot shirts, with collars, priced by others at $ 1,50 to go at 75c
80 Pine Count all wool, 1 0-quart9rißed Blanke 1 s worth $! O. pairs3.so.
4000 Yds Dress Ginghams, lovely styles & colorings worth 7c at 4 l -2c.
300 Pairs Ladies Fine dress button shoes, worth $ l .75 f ogo at $ i .00
3500 Ladies Hems itched Handkerchiefs worth from 10 »o l 5c at sc.
2000 Yds. High grade, fine count, Sea Island full 36 inches wide,
worth 7 l -2c at sc.
240 Pairs of that celebrated Shoe for Men, “Goodwear” worth
s2.so.Unt l sold only $1.50‘
360 Suits Fine all wool Cheviot Suits single and double breasted
sacks, blacks browns. & c., A/orth $ l 0.00. Made to sell for $ ! 0.00 or
more. Nothing equal to them in a thousand miles of Rome for the
money.
FOR DRESSES
B\ fur the Htuck in this
market.
An almost endless verietv from h
single width Aruericau goods from
4c up to the exquisite * fleets of
French Artists: exit i qua ity. Covett
Cloth, Ser res, Novelty Mixtures,
Annures, Bcngalmes, Pcpliues,
Hen vietta Cloths, Camel s H tii ,
Granites, etc.
Satin TDutcbeeses, Mone--, Fail
©3 and Bengalmes, Jhinuitml JaptiL
eae Bilks, Surahs, Ginghams, Prints,
Peic cs. Cheviots, Crepe Cioth. Dicks
Dei Suitings, Stupes, etc
40-inch Covert Cloth, the latest
oomer of new drees fabiics made to
sell nisl.2s ; our price. .85
Beautiful Mixture Covert Cloth,
worth 80c. at 00
Two toned Diagonals, 30-inch
Double fold Suitings, 36-inch,
dark and medium grav, worth twice
the price; lull suit, 8 yards for $),
10 000 yards Fancy Dress Prints,
64x01 cloth wo.th 7c 5
Trimmings & c.
All the imaginables in Silks 11 urni-
Bated Surahs, two-toned, shot and
aeeddot •flees, Beugaiines, Tff,
Veive’s Velveteens. Si k Braids, Pass
ementeries Jets. Ni.vdiy Trimmings,
Ribbons, etc. '1 he desirable t hin.s in
laces. Embroideries on Swiss, Nain
sook amiYaptlilies, all-over embroi
deries .
400 yards Hamburg Edging worth
10c yard at ,5
20c Hamburg at 10
30c Ham burg at .11
A choice p.Mortment for Men, Hoys and Children. Swell effects in Tweeds, Cheviots. Cas
siaiefes and Serges: also swell effects in the dressier Fabrics, prominent among which Clays,
and West of England Diagonals. Suits for slender people, stoat people, young giants and
little fellows. Especial attention is called to litiO Men’s all-wool Suits at .$5.00, They are
simply üßmatchable bargains. u»ir stock of clothing from lowest to best quality comes to
ns as the most brilliant haul of our victorious buyer, and we are determined bp the power
of magnetism ot price to put more new clothing on men and bo)s this fall than ever before
i«» our business experience. The few prices named throughout this mere
ly suggestive of the way other goods will he sold, 300 Uvereouts less than half price*.
Fact, assortment ot Clcaks.
I\AI 111 FR V I Bazaar’s stock almost in i s entirety was snipped to our
IV U LLIIN Ll\ I J Rome house—cost nearly nothing, and if you want anything
in this line, we will sell it to vou away down halow prices of others. Com j to soe us.
BASS BROTHERS & COMPANY.
For the goods here advertised, g~> to either of our stores, excepting
that the Millinery will be found at the PARKS & CO. store, and the
Xlothing and Hats will be at the old store..2s Broad Street.
Less Than l 9 Cts on $ j
•
A good percentage of these
goods has been shipped to us,
■ and if prices and values
.'count tor anything they will j
• ><> into new homes in quick
i order. Our import order tori,
Fail Goods had - ‘on placed]
before this purchase v\. made ,
i and the goods are am* "*gj
ddaily. Must have room, and
■'weave going to make it by
i bidding adimito a.pile of mer-
I •■handise at once.
Sma 1 Wares.
N* e lies, Pins, Hair-Pins, Threads,
WinPebon s, Casings, Hooks-and-
Eyes, Tape.-, Dies.- Shields, Coisels
Laces, Bhod Laces, Buttons, Brads
PIC .
A straw will show the way the
win 1 blows, so in these Little items
\vh w.l' save you 50 to 100 per cent,
on y.*ur purchases Slick a pin down
beiv;il yon have no pin, we will sell
you a whole paper of English Pins
for sc. and everything else relatively
as c cap.
Blankets and Flannels
These goods at pri cs that cannot
and will not be duplicated by others
We bought, them away under the
market at the great auction sale of
Faulkner Page & Co. New York in
May when the inecury was up aud
blankets weie (town.
We want you to see our full size
Bed Blanket at e«<h—a trifle 2o
Our Fine AU-wooi Blankets $lO 00
value per pair 3 50
Nothing ever offered equal to
them as bargains.
Red Flannel worth 25c at 15
White Flannel worth 25c at 15
Bed Twilled Flannel worth 40c at 25
White Twilled Flannel worih 40c at
25
17 very qualify of Flannel cut almost
in Two.
Cents Furnishing
Lium Bosom Shir s Laundned and
Unlaundried ; i P‘‘ rca !@ an< f Cheviot
Shirts Saline Shirts Drawers Scriven’s
Patent Dr .we >; Hosiery and Gloves
CLiOTHUSTG.
THE HUSTLER OF ROME MONDAY OCTOBER 15 1894,
So Puce! Price!
will do it. When the cost is
small, a fraction of the worth,
our lee-way is inimense-19 1-2
cents on the dollar, and all
fine goods too; most of them
Whiter Goods —19 1-2 cents.
You never heard of such a pur
er.nee.
i - ———————
m gr a' variety Scarfs Ties Hos j
Sup ort is Cufl’- Buttons Collars and
Cuff e c.; uli in the bargain cata
logue.
Men’s Fiue A l-Wo il Shirts and
Drawers silk Stiched worth each si.-
00; s long as this lot lasts our prue
will he .09
1,900 4- Linen Collars 10
Shoes
There is no equal to our Dengoia
Button Suoe for Ladies at 1.00
Have you yet bought our specia
Top-Sole Bucher Slices for men?
iLns Shoe is made excusively for us
and cannot be sold by tiny one except
us. We take the bold pot it ion that
there is not a Shoe on es-rth of equal
wear to it at the pri<*e 1.50
Ladies’ Cloth Top Patent tin great
value 1.50
L tdies’ Genuine Kid worth
3.00 at 2.00
Ladies’ Solid Substantial Shoes
Men’s Rrx Calf Shoes 1.50
Hand Welt Call worth $4.50 at 3.00
Children’s Solid Shoes 50
Misses’ Heavy Shoes 65
School Shoes worth SI.OO at 75
School Shoes worth $1 .25 at 1.00
Misses’ Fine Shoes worth $2.00 at 1.50
For all our stores we buy as many
1 Shoes as any 4 houses in Rome; we
buy them at headquarters with the
cash aud we buy them at lower prices
than tnope who’ l>uv in smaller quuni
lits. Cone to our place for Shoes .
FOR WOMEN FOLKS
KOSSi'S RULE.
She Declares That Captivation
Ends with Youtn.
“Some women fatigue me great
ly,’’ Haiti a young lady of observa
tion to the reporter, crumpling up
a paper in one hand and reaching
for a cigarette with the other.
“Now here’s one of them has
been writing a lot of would-be
sentimental stuff to the Bizarre,
saying that women have two stages
of captivation; the first, that of
physical charm, and the second,
that of experience, and that the
second state is better than the first.
Is it? Well, all 1 have to sly is
that I’m not in the least anxious
tori n for that sort of consolation
stakes vet a while. Just write it
down, if you please, that youth is
the period of power. I don’t mean
bread-and-butter youth, but the
youth of physical charm, just as
this writer says, ‘when the bloom
is on the cheek and the sparkle in
the eye, when the flesh is firm and
full, the teeth brilliant, the hair
shining, the step light and the
shape lithe’—the years from 20 to
35.
“Now, she’s all right t’ler • '
That’s the time when we women
are in it-wheu we boss the whole
world. But when she says that
there’s a ‘superior captivation to
that ex rcised by the mere fleshly
beauty’ she’s away off.
That time when a woman is u >
longer exacting and wheu she aims
to make people comfortable is all
verry lovely, of course, but dou’t
you think for one single instant
that it’s tho best and strongest
period in our lives. We can say so,
' but we dou’t believe it.
We can take our liitle tin dip
pers to the still pools of philosophy
ind say :‘Oh, ain’t this deiiciou
■Hid t-o 'ihing?’ but I notice one
ihiug,we’re rnigh'y caretul not to
look at ourselves in the bottom ot
ibe dipper, and we’ve got to get
home before the dew falls. N",
thauk you; I want something not
quite so still in mine, and I don’t
want to know what tmie it is.
“Dou’t mistake me, now. I don’t
mean to say that there ard not lots
of facintmg middle- gel ami old
w mien. The charm ot their com
panionship is delightful. Their
graciousneas is supreme Their un
selfishness is adoiable-and sad
Their knowledge of the heart is
great. They are placid and pleasant
As I said just new-thst’s all right;
nobody is saying a word against
that statement of things; but to
say that you must :pa«s 35 before
you can enter upon your most
captivating period-well, now, tnat
just makes me weary.
Do you mean to tell me that the
cleverest woman in the world, with
fish eyes behind her spectacles,has
more powers of captivation thau a
yotitig worn ay with eyes like wet
sapphires and a‘skm like a warm
rose leal? Is a learned wrinkle
more captivating thau ‘a wicked
dimple? Is a mouth full of comfort
and dentist’s work more captiv \
ting than the smile of lips that nr*
firm and fnli with k 'teeth aud gums
that look like a split pomegranate?
Would you r ither he patted on the
h<>ad with a trembling hand than
have ms put my arm around your
neck? Would you be led away by a
blue stocking aud a epuigheel gai
ter further than you’o follow a
pair of Hack stockings in French
hotlines, do you think? Os course
net.
And then, bless my soul,is a wo
mau not supposed to grow brains
until after she’s 35? Doesn’t she get
tact until she’s 40? Hasn’t she had
any expe-inece before she’s 50?
Doseu’t she know how to make a
man comfortable before she’s 55?
Do you think more of my mother
than you do of me, and is my
grandmother a more captivating
woman then both of us? What,
nonsense 1 Why,it’s the very hor
ror of my fife that we’ve got to
grow old, aud all the smug philos
ophy in tl.e world won’t chauge
that truth. Calm contented age is i
a b eased portion, but wo only g*- t |
it alter ttie hard tight of resigna
tion. lisa time of self-negation
and reminiscence. But it ain’t a
time ot superior captivation and
never will be,aud the wise woman,
when she gets there, will keep her
glasses on and not try throwing!
she *p’s eyes at young men w hen
she's warmed up in her third cup
of tea.
Darkened Sleeping Rooms.
It is claimed by some physicians
hat the brain s cannot rest perfect
ly unless all light is excluded |
from the sleeping room, and)
whether in going to bed at night I
or simply lying down fora hali’j
hour’s rest in the middle of the]
day, this precaution should be tu-j
ken. Where a house has an East-;
ern or Southern exposure the
rooms will be filled with light'
ong before it is time to get up
and unless some means be taken
to prevent, the morning rest will,
be more or less broken. Especially
is this true in the case of little
children, and it is well to accustom
them from the first to sleep in the
dark.
In the absence of outside blinds:
there is no better way to secure
this pleasant twilight so conduc
tive to rest than by the use of in-'
side shades made of the darkest j
green holland, and they have a
great advantage over either inside
or outside blinds in lb it they are
so easily adjusted.
They supplement but not take
the place of the ordinary shades,'
but are set somewhat inside, so as
not to interfere with them, and
are rolled up and quite out of the
way -when not in use.
The best grades of this goods are J
durable, and with reasonable care
will last for years, and from her
own experience the writer can rec
commend them as a most desira
ble investment.
If the beuroom windows have
upper panels of stained glass in
which so many modern houses
i abound the green shades should be
set so as to cover these also, as an
exceedingly unpleasant glare pours
down from them, very trying to
eyes which are trained to sleep in
a darkness as complete as possible.
A Hod Full of Beauty.
A pretty story is told of a wo
man who rec-ntly applied to a
church society fur relief. One of
the iadies of ttie organ izatiou wa,
appointed to visit the woman aud
inquire into the truth of her case.
After toiling up three flights of
steps, sue knocked at the rear
door, which was opeued by a wo
mau who appeared to be very ill,
indeed.
But when she entered the rooms
though the floor was bare and the
turniture poor and di'apidated,in
stead of the gloom aud cheerless
imss which lsgenearlly an accom
paniment of poverty and suffering
a perfect glow of life aud color met
her eyes.
In oue window of the room was
a small Washtub filled with the
most beautiful specimens of ge
raniums in full bloom, and in the
other corner a unique flower stand
was dev se 1.
The woman’s husband, it seems
hau been a boil-carrie r , and she
hid taken one of hie discarded
hods and nailed it uo to the wiu
d m and the rude implement was
glorified by a wealth of crimson
and gold nasturtiums, lovely to
look upon.
The poor woman was as pleased:
as a child wheu her floral treasures
were praised, and their beauty aud
bloom m ?h« miserable room
pleaded her cause far more elo
quently than words—Springfield
Republican
Ftrst farmer:—l see they have
a new wagon yard in Rome.
Second farmer:—Yes I stopped
there last night and they treated
me in first-class style, and took
good care of all my goods. You
bet I am going to stop at “Robin
sons’’ wagon yard whenever I go
to Rome, on Broad street opposite
Engine House. w-4-t.
TaKH
Ur - M - A.
livek, mrdicink. °
,; - '
I DYSPEPSIA I *4* U,>STf Vrftcs9
Imoiu.-hum ( !.k : ' W
Ai/wsxrsA
Sourness hJ/ A Un ni ,-/*
Sr ~"
NomeGcmuineVAme■ r~<- <,
JICNA J.... M iT j- ” r . - I NO
Each ■- Or
Everybody 7,
somebody p-e-.che,
the doctrin: ‘•Patr,-. n i z ®
home industry.” lot
ers of a good eg, ~ '
afford to prac ic w ,V!
they preach for Wart
er s Rome made cigars
are the best on the m^!
rvmg VV. Lari mere, physical'*.!-
rector of Y.M. C A 0 s T
lowa. MS Bhe cm
reoomraend Chamberlain's j
to athletic.!, gym: hU-cii
ball players aud tie prWi
general for bruises, sprains and dia
, locations; also fer
ness of the muscles , p ,„ ied
before the par's be.-o.ne .’ u ; t
will>fleet acute m <>; ei,„ , , J
usual);, required. For sale b; Li ivr»
Bros Druggists
vmmsxsmMSiortmm.
Warter’s “Hand
made” grows more :op
uiar as the da vs vo *-
and its b -tee us of : r
it. For s s e bye: seal
ers. Try cue.
NljL’p-,;
ifidUßCi iy PLiDL ~
IJI g I I
tiope. ;»r>v 1)9-
•BEFORE - AFICR- • sa-
P»*088ion, Softeninp; of the Lr-hit, 5 «ity
, and lit last a miserable c *uh. MAOfrti TiC r
ViNE sts all losses in either m. v, r- La.- . py
l a. . i .
. roue3 up the brein, builas t :: t’u-s;.. . i-> ■ -sh
• ln« deep, ar»«i r-v tcr -- I • a . , the
4»?trerer. A TjionOr* irealnier »u p ain p.>?.,.•* by
mail to any address, sl.lO box 6 for Vita
every s6.ooorder give a YVritte a Ouaf
cure or refund themonay. GircniuiJfroo- Gca.
■ onir by our uaeuto.
i
Country
l
i
Produce
A Specialty.
] Fresh butter on hand
all the time.
| New goods arriving
daily, We K eep th best
the market affords.
COME AND SEE US,
L. A. Dempsey,
409 Broad Stree
i,. . - -
if A LAM’S TOILET 1
M T c . not complete M
"‘fl w 'l tiout sa ideal I
I j t-siwEJEZL 111
H i , I
p; Combines ever} element ot I
< j beauty and puritv It is beauti
j I fying, sootliing, healing, health
-5 I ful, and harmless, and wh-n
fj rightly used s .uvisible. A most
|s delicate and desirable protection ■
|S tp the face in this climate. a
1| Insist upon having the genuine. I
IT
W. L. Douclas
S 3 SHOE»o
$5. CORDOVAN,
At * -uNk FRENCH A ENAMELLED CALT
X *4 soFINECALFSKANSAMI
i 13.5 P POLICE,3 sotr*.
WORKINGMENS
EXTRA FINE.
I s2.’l. 7 - Boys’SchodlShoei
TqW DOUGLAS,
• BROCKTON. ;^. 33, u
Vou enn euve mnncv I>j- purebnsmK
DoiitrinH ShiU**** r„„*iirsr9 0r
Because, we are the largest manufacturers w
Rdverlised shoes in the world. B, ’ t ir nnce on
(he value by stamping the name an P
the bottom, which protects Y”? o‘lir 0 ‘ lir shoes
prices and the micldlcman’s profits^
equal custom work in sty ’ e , easy , • * ver v.
wearing qualities. We have thc .™ . c , than
w here at lower prices for theyalne B- f ottl
my other make Take no .«
Ufu<*r cauDh' rupr*»> >*' *'
Cantrell & Owens,