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TA
cfeiii
£lj> j.V.’X*h? EUS’* ■»■
Is as safe and unless as a fla>
JeeJ ration • -
ticc. ouvi?- ‘c-ra
and curing al' .Miesses pecuiiai
tollies.
vQvange Bios? is a paj
tile easil’/ ~sed at any time;
is applied right to the parts
Every lady can treat herscL
with it.
Mailed to any address upon re.
ceiptoFSi. D'. J. Z .McGill & Co-
Panorama 'xacc.. ( AcagOj 111.
Sold bv
D, W. Curry Druggist.
iHave
lyou q
ia baby i
< that is making you old*
<before your time with wor- [
’rying? Is it weak, deli-*
|cate, puny? Are you fear- ’
| ful lest it be taken from;
’you? Mother! Will you J
< read this letter about £
Brown’s Iron Bitters
(Bl TWIIIWWBMIIIIIBI
J It is genuine—not paid}
|for or even solicited—and J
’the writer is the happiest J i
’woman in New Orleans. J
< 509 Dufedes Street, ) *
< New Orleans, La. ) *
* Enclosed you will find a photograph of *
<my youngest boy, Clarence. He was sick »
J about seven months; nothing cured him but J
* Brown s Iron Bitters. He is now a year J
J old, well and hearty! I cannot say too much ?
J in praise of Brown’s Iron Bitters.
’ Mrs. L. Lkveringberg. J
< This letter was written*
jon July 25th, this year, g
«Have you a delicate cnild ? *
’ Life for many children in»
’Brown’s Iron Bitters! *
< The Genuine has the Crossed k
I Red Lines on the wrapper. »
Ot own Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md .
BEWARE OF OINTMENTS FOR CA
TAKRII THATCONTAIN MERCURY
as mercury will surely destroy t l '
eensH of smell am! completely d
range the whole system when ' n
ering it through the mucous su -
faces. Such articles should never
be used except on prescriptions
from reputable physicians, as the
damage they will do is ten fold to
the good you can possibly derive
from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure
manufactured by F. J. Cheney &
b'o,, Toledo, 0., contains no mer
cury, and is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system,
hi buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure bo
sure ymi get the genuine. It. is
taken internally and is made in
Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney &
vjn Testimonials free.
■•''Sold by Druggists, price 75c
per bott’ej
ALMOST A NEW YORK DAILY
fliat Democratic wonder. The
New York Weekly World, has just
changed its weekly into a twice a
’ f,f ‘k paper and you can now get
the two papers ami the weekly
(( ” kier for the same old price
SI.OO a vear
fhink of it! The news from New
01 1 right at your door fresh every
days—ls 6 papers a vear.
wh'.k ave nia(,e arrangements by
>ch we can furnish the weekly
V i 11 1, 1 ! the twice-a-week New
jp ,'Vorld all for SI.OO a year,
vour 1S t \‘ e °PP or tnnity to get
Yrri 11 <JCil ' paper and The New
’’ ',’Ori twice every week at
$25
F OR mercantile
COURSE IN
BOOK-KEEPING
Including Hooks
& t office for particulars
J G harmison.
THE HUSTLER OF ROME. THURSDAY OCTOBER, 18 1894.
FOR WOMEN FOLKS
CHILD LABOR.
An investigation of the Factories
in Cincinnati!
Cincinnati), Oct. 18.—An in
vestigfiti m of the factories in this
city where labor of minors is em
ployed has just been completed by
M. A. Usher, a loca Knight of!
Labor, Commirhicner \V T, Lew ■
is.
Mr. Usher Ims filed his report
witn ihe Labor Comm issioner, and
it wiil be embodied in the iwxt an
nual report of the l urer. It wilij
c •n’ , 'in about 76 pngog
Usher found that over 1000 chil-|
drew le»8 than 16 years of age wem i
employedin various shoe, clothpig I
cigar and pap«r ffct» rieß, contec-’
' lonery establishments,’ re . Whi'«
it is true that h« wu« ah’e to dis
cover few luaiances in which the
uni <lrrn would admit tha„ they
were below the iprh! age or 14years
oe found h number that admitted
ages to be lb or 16, and stated
that they had been at work for
three or four years.
The result as embodied in A’r.
Usher’s report shows that to an
alarming extent child labor is un
necessarily displacing that of
ad ull s,
He found little support for the
claim that the great bulk of facto
rs chi'd-m. were the sole or main
support o; fh r -ir widowed mothers
or invalid fathers
CHICAGO WOMEN
Registering in Preparation for Vo
ting.
Chicago, October 17. —Today is
the first dav for the registration of
the voters in this city. Citizens
began registering promptly at 8
o’clock this morning, and kept it
up so steadily that leaders of both
parties count on, an unusually
heavy registration.
While it is impossible to make
any accurate predictions, ve 1 in
formed politicians guess the total
for the day all the way from 170,-
000 to 220,000, and there is every
reason to believe that the record
jof the first day of registration in
1892, 190, 428, will at least be
equalled.
Women will be allowed to vote
i for the first time in this city at the
coming election. They are, howev
er, limited to voting for university
trustees.
A Good Story.
A short time ago a young lady
was troubled with a boil on her
knee, which grew so bad that she
thought it necessary to call in a
physician, says the Courier-Jour
nal. ' •
She had formed a dislike for the
family physician, so her father
suggested several others, and final
ly said he would call in the physi
cian with the homeopathic cases
who passed the house every day.
They kept a sharp lookout for
him and when he came along call
ed him in. The young lady mod
estly showed him her disabled
member. The little man looked at
it and said: “Why, that’s pretty
bad.” “Well,” she said, “what
must Ido?” “If I were you,” he
answered, “I would send for a
physician. I am a piano tuner.
No receptacle tor soiled clothing,
even if handsomely decorated,
should be kept in a sleeping apart
ment.
Soak glass globes in hot soda wa
ter, then wash hard in lukewarm
amonia water, and rinse m cold
water.
It is supposed that good beha
vior and lessons are the only things
that count at school, but true
teachers think of character also.
They read it in lots of*ways pupils
never think of. For this season
girls who are going away to board
ing i c’wols, acadamy or college
this tall will do well to leave most
of their jewelry at home. A much
I bejeweled girl may be a bright
j scholar, but she generally isn’t
and wearing ornaments out of
place is a sure sign of l ad taste.
The brother of a well known so
ciety bell has brought suit against
a reporter for discribing his lis
ter’s appearance as being “uu
j fait,” and then allowing the print
er to set it up “all feet.”
An Ohio editor says that hay fe
; ver is caused by kissing grass wid
!ows. An lowa editor thinks it is
caused by kissing a hired girl while
she is feeding hay to the cow. A
wise Kansas editor is of the opin
ion that it is caused by missing the
girl and kissing the cow.
Handsome parlor vases are usu
ally filled wilh such ingredients as
saud to weight them and prevent
the light porcelain from baing
brushed off the mantelpiece.
Whiten yellow linen by boiling
half an hour in one pound of fine
soap melted in cue gallon of milk.
Then wash in suds, then in two
cold waters with a little blueing.
The best way to remove mildew
stains from leather covered chairs
’s to rub the leather well with a
clean, soft and very dry cloth.
Then apply a rag moistened with
pyroligneous acid.
If you want your pie crust to
come out flaky and nice and not
take up the juice of the fruit or
other filling, brush the under crust
with the partly beaten white of an
egg before putting the filling m.
Use Dmon juice and salt to re
move iron rust, ink and mildew on
white goods.
Some time ago “Ouida” inveigh
ed against the “shake hand” as a
ridiculous and ungraceful method
of greeting—“pump-hand-ling”
she called it—and pleaded for the
“slight inclination of the head”
as a substitute. Her protest did
not have much effect, and although
we still go on “booing and booing
and booing,” like Sir Pertinax
Mac Sycophant, to royalty and
acquaintances, yet we like to use a
warmer form o f salutation with
our friends.
Now “Ouida” finds support in a
quarter where she can little have
expected it. At Baku, in Russian
Asia, a society has been formed
with the object of “putting down”
the practice of hand-shaking— not
on the ground of its inelegance,
nut for a more practical reason’
The founder of the society —a doc
to: —lieclarsa “ibat to grasp a
man’s hand, unless it has been
thoroughly diseufected,”is not on
ly dangerous,but suicidal “Would
you,” he asks, “take iu your hands
an unclean object teeming with
cholera bacilla?” and concludes
by declaring that “shaking hands
should be punishable by law ” Os
course kissing is still more to be
deprecated,
A brilliant woman said: “If I
had not bored myself so much in
my life I believe I could have been
very pretty. You smile? That
shows you are unobservant. Don’t
you know that people who bore
themselves continually grow dingy
and dull-eyed, heavy of feature
and graceless of movement? I nev
er knew boredom in congenial sur
roundings. But I have died of it
nearly, and have certainly grown
ugly upon it in the long years that
I have been compelled by duty to
spend in a dead little country
town, where the men all go to
sleep with their pipes after dinner
and the women tittle-tattle about
their secret for making biscuits
rise by the hour.”
Resolve that when you go to
church) ou will prove false the
masculine taunt about women look
ing at *heir neighbors’ bonnet. Do
not strive to see what other people
are wearing. It is not only undig
nified and irreligious, but is likely
to make you green with jnvy.
Twenty months is said to be the
average widowhood of women
under 35.
•THE BIGGEST®
THING ROME,
-WMcDonald-Sparks-Stewart-Company.hA:
wife, taipels, Hings fc
Wecarry 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
We are always picking up big bargains.for om
customers. Once a customer alwaysja cits—
tomer. Solid Oak Suits $15.00 t0;325.00 ~
Call anJ see our
$20.00, PARLOR SUITS. ~~
W i • just overflowing with bright new Furniture
It is a pleasure to show you these goods. Call
an d see us.
Undertaking Coffins, Caskets, <?t
Having purchased the complete Undertaking bus
inessof W. A. Rhudy, we are prepared to give>
this branch of our business the best of at
tention, We have made many improve
ments &c, which enable us to better
serve the public than ever been
done in Rome before
WcDONILD-SSi-tapaiiL
1. 3 & 5. Third. Avenue