Newspaper Page Text
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ErS fcaittf L;£> '-Zt‘-.■■..i’fi'A.s
17J t -M "-••■ T.lens as a fia.-
L d? weapon,
(ice d’MWin ‘ cut v.vera.’ J paw
£id’cvil \; ai’ mewses peculia.
--• T ., »> t„ -
! •‘Orange •-*** * J ‘r lw
Le e^il' at any time;
is applied n S ht to the part,
Every W *-• ‘ creat herset
with it. . .
Maibd to* * - address ”pon re
c^o
/ Pane.-stria * ac ' ’-hicago, IL
Sold I' /
D, W. Curry Druggist
fwhat (ii
J Shall I f M
I Take • jtf
is the anxious question IIS
asked by those who are not 11 a
feeling well—have no appe- \\l
Ute—are out of sorts —have jig
no energy—feel tired out. IIS
Perhaps you are feeling sick IfS
yourself 1 IIS
Many medicines are rccom- 118
mended, doctors consulted— 111
I (in many cases) much money j|l
I spent in thissearch for health liS
I -and yet it can all be avoided, leg
i Wise people commence at Hs
IJ once taking Wa
ffl Brown’s Th
V iron Bitters w
|1 and are soon made well Its
I and strong. Nearly every \\a
II prescription given by physi- jjg
Ij cians for such troubles cou- liS
II tains IRON which some 118
II people say they cannot take. iVa
11 Try Brawn’ii Iron. Bitters— it ill
I is warranted not to give If fl
I headache, stain the teeth or 111
i causeconstipation as al.lothcr *AI
| Iron Medicines do. 11l
| Genuine has the crossed llg
1 Red lines on the wrapper. Ifg
1 BROWN CHEM.CO. BALTO.MD. Ila
1
BEWARE PF oiX 1 MENTS FOR CA
TARRH THATCONTAIN MERCURY i
as mercury will surely destroy th
sense of smell aud completely de
range the whole system when en
ding it through the mucous sur
faces. Such articles should never
he used except on prescriptions
from reputable physicians, as the
damage they will do is ten fold to
the good you can possibly derive
fromthem. Hall’s Catarrh Cure
manufactured by F. .1. Cheney A
Co,, 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 be
sure you get the genuine. It is
taken internally and is made in
Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney &
free.
■•'Sold by Druggists, price 75c
Per bottle]
ALMOST A NEW YORK DAILY
I hat Democratic wonder. The
New A ork Weekly World, has just
changed its weekly into a twice a
"nek paper and you can now get
the two papers and the weekly
'°t Rier for the same old price
SI.OO a year.
I Link of it! The news from New
"'k right at your door fresh every
in-e days—-156 papers a year.
> e have made arrangements by
" Hc ' 1 we can furnish the weekly
v" ! {IER and the twice-a-week New
“ )rk World all for SI.OO a year,
'■'em the opportunity to get
. "ur o\v n local paper and The New
, \\ c»rld twice every week at
extraordinary low rates.
$25
F °R MERCANTILE
COURSE IN
BOOK-KEEPING
Including IBooks
Call at office for particulars
J- harmison.
FOR WOMEN FOLKS
——- . ...
Notes About Women.
Miss Frances Willard will sp«nd
the winter attending temperance
•on ventions, making her head
quarters in Boston. Her friend, I
Lady Somerset, has taken apart-'
ments in thatcity to be near herj
son. who v ill attend lectures at ;
Harvard University, and this fact
influences Miss Willard’s choice of
i winter residence.
A wonnn was complaining the
other day of the diffi ulty of ob
raii.ing comprehensive statistics i
about women’s work. There was,'
she said, no work of which she had
been able to hear, after persistent!
inquiry, in which was condensed,!
and tabulated information of aIT
departments of work in which wo-j
men were now engaged. That want!
will noHong exist. Business wo-1
men s direc cries are being com-I
piled in more than one city, and'
once they become common, statis
tics collated from them will be
f rthcoming in an easily referred
to shape. A Boston woman publish
er is about to issue a business and
professional woman’s directory of
that city. Its compilation has al-[
ready brought to light some unu-j
sual occupations of the sex. Wo-j
harness makers, tailors, commis-j
sion merchants, crockery, shoe,!
and cutlery dealers, funeral direc-1
tors, managers of milk routes —all'
these are recorded with printers,
lawyers, electricians, sculptors,
and druggists besides.
The French actress, Mme. Re
jane, is now setting the fashions'
in paris, having dethroned the di-;
vine if somewhat erratic Sarah;
Bernhardt in this regard. Rejane's !
hair is of a slightly brighter red i
than mahogany, and Parisian tress
es are beginning to take on that j
hue. Rejane is plump, too, which
for the fact that 1
the,heretofore followers of the slim
Sarah are beginning to eat again.
i
A pleasant little story is being
told illustrating the happy home
life of the German imperial fami
ly. Recently a very splendid dress
with a very long train was shown
to the Emperor William, and it
i was suggested that he order it for
the Empress.
‘lmpossible!” he cried; “ tbe
train would get torn to pieces in I
no time, for my wife has three or
four youngsters clinging to her
gowns. ”
There are women in Vienna who
make alivimi by being “physician
-übjects.’’ One of them, for ex
ample, hires herself out io medical
men as a subject on which they
may illustrate laryngology and rbi
nologv. She receives about 75 cents
AO hour furnishing her own instru
ments. Her throat has so little sen
sibility that the manipulations
produce no irritation.
The course of true love, if there
any true love in it, between the
Princess Alix o f Hesse and ths
Czarowitch doesn't seern to ba run
ning smoothly at all. Theyounv
woman has developed a mind of
her own religious matters, and it
is worrying the person intrusted
with the conversion to the Greek
Church with unexpected obstina
cy. The Czarowitch is consoling
himself, meanwhile, with alteanate
duty gifts and letters to his fair
betrothed and genuine interest and
devotion to a pretty Polish dancer,
and the English papers are saying
that it’s a shame to marry the
Queen’s pretty grand daughter to
a sickly and stupid young f»llow
such as the heir to the Russian
throne seems to be accredited with
being. There’s lots more fun now
adays than belonging to the court
circles of Europe.
A New York woman recently in
Paris confessed to a great interest
in the woman bootblacks whom
she saw there.
“They wear a peculiar uni
form," .h. »»y». u, ’! ,ke th,t
of Sisters of Mercy, but thmr co
q e‘tish manners quite nullify th
THE HUSTLE ’’OF ROME FRIDAY OCTOBER 19 1894,
religious association of their dress.
Most of them work with gloved
| hands, and they are wonderfully
i neat and dexterous at their call
i ing.
That men me appreciating the
i value of the rest cine is shown in
an assertion recently made by J.
M. Barrio, the novelist, that a day
; in bed refreshed him as much as a
few days spent at the seaside.
Now that the American Beauty
rose is to have a rival in the Amer
ican Belle, the big, lovely, and
sweet-smelling rose which the flor
ists are promising, and which is
'really a slightly pale American
Beauty. The story of the origin
!of this superb, and peerless flower
'comes with special significance.
i A l ~'
>; As related by a Washington paper,
>it first saw the light in the rose
■ gardens, in that city, of the late
i honorable George Bancroft, and
was one of a number of rose slips
I which that eminent historian and
I great lover of flowers constantly
imported.
Lt grew and blcssomed ia an ob
scure corner, scarcely noticed by
the old gardener till one day Field,
the White House gnrdener during
the Grant occupancy, chanced to
! see it as he was visiting his broth-
jer gardener and lo king over his
jcutting-i, Ho was and de
! lighted with the superb flower, and
'cautiously inquired au<<ut it of the
I Bancroft custodian That worthy
answered him carelessly betraying
that he saw no special va'ue in the
plant.to the effect that it. had come
along with others in thelast impor
tation from Germany. I’he astu’e
Field immediately began cautious
'negotiations, which endi-d m his
; purchase of the coveted cutting for
;$5 A year later when he had de
j veloped his find, and named it,
! happily tbe American Beauty, he
Isold it for $5,000 Since then th J
I American floral world lias bad a
real and worthy queen which no
Amer.cm Belle can dethrone.
The reply of Lawrence Barrett
i to the young actress who asked
him why some actresses succeed
while others with more talent fail
applies to other callings than that
jof the stage. “My child,*' said he,
“business tact, push, and influence
will reach the goal, while simple
genius will faint by the way.”
Mr. J. C. L. —White plaster fasts
may be cleaned by making a thick
paste of cold starch, with which
the figure should be covered, us
ing a brush for the purpose. When
the starch dries, kn ck it off in
I I light flakes and brush with ackan,
' soft brush or wipe with a clean
■ cloth.
X. Y. Z.—The base of the most
approved hair tonics nowadays is
' quinine. An excellent Garmen
formula calls for 100 grams of al
cohol, 50 of castor oil, 2of rose
water, and a little (about a tea.
spoonful) quinine. Any druggist
can put it up for you with these di
-1 rections. If the hair comes out
' very badly ask him to add a lit
-1 tie cantharides; he will be able to
• estimate the right proportion. Rub
well into the scalp three times a
week.
L •
1 ...
Anaemic Women
with pale or sallow complexions,
, or suffering from skin eruptions
or scrofulous blood, will find
} quick relief in Scott’s Emulsion.
All of the stages of Emaciation,
1 and a general decline of health,
are speedily cured.
Scott’s
Emulsion
i takes away the pale, haggard
look that comes with General
Debility. It enriches the blood,
stimulates the appetite, creates
healthy flesh and brings back
strength asd vitality. For Coughs,
Colds, Sore Throat, Bronchitis, We?k
Lungs, Consumption and Wasting Dis
eases of Children.
' Send for our famphlet. Mailed FREE.
Scott * Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. 50c. and It.
Ladies Boys and
’ Mens shoes cheap at
COKER & CO’S
•THE BIGGEST*
THING llir ROME
f
Timihire, Carpels, Mailings &
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
LOWEST? PRICES.
We are always picking up big bargains]for out
customers. Once a customer always a cus
tomer. Solid Oak Suits $15.00 t0j525.00
Call and see our
$20.00, PARLOIt SL ITS. “
Wear just overflowing with bright new Furniture
It is a pleasure to show you these goods. Cal!
and see us.
■
Undertaking Coffins. Caskets, &
Having purchased the complete Undertaking bus
iness of W. A. Rhudy, we are prepared to give a
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
lIcDIINILO-SSi-Cimpan!. •
1 3 5. Third Avenue