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It !s a Conceded Fact
That the library possessed by the scientist,
when it covers only his special line of work
and study, is inadequate for his use.
Nature, within whose kingdom lie the
fields of all science, has so constituted her
domain that no one branch is distinct or
independent of another. The scientist who
enters some ot her fields of study must post
himself upon all.
The botanist must seek his pre-historic
plants in the study of peology—the uses of
plants in zoology or chemistry.
The chemist finds Itis materials for work ig
the study of geology or botany.
The sciences all depend one upon the
other, and the successful scientist must
thoroughly understand each and its relation
to his chosen branch.
Further, the scientist must have his
Information
Within Easy Reach
It must be exact and concise, for in the
midst of an experiment he has no time for
searching large libraries or bulky volumes.
He has found a remedy for the inadequacy
of his special library, it is the new up-to-date
Encyclopaedia Britannica—authoritative,
concise, accessible, complete. He can turn
in a moment to any subject suggested by
any feature of the experiment.
But the scientist is not alone in this
discovery, tor so complete and universal in
its bearings is this wonderful reference
library that men in every walk of life find in
it just what they need. It is
What You Need
It is unnecessary for us tn tell you so—you
have known it lonfc. But it is ours to remind
you that unless you act promptly you must
buy it at the regular retail prices, for the
introductoiv offer lasts but a short time
iongei. Address —
TEie Constitution,
ATLANTA. GA.
/" ■ BP
(WEST
Evnry custom at buying 50c
worth of goods at a time will have
h guess every day they do so, at
ajar of beans, etc., to be opened
October 31st, 1894.
The one guessing nearest the
number gets a good
WATCHa<-
The 2nd nearest a Barrel Flour
The 3 r d. nearest 100 '»«• Flour*
The 4 h nearest s*• ‘ Flour.
The s,b>5 ,b > nearest 25 • . Flour.
The 6 i>, nearer •'» Fine
Soda Crackers,
The 7'ti. neare*' 1 »• I nos
Prime M . <RRes.
The , eight n ch 25c
worth i>t iiv goods ’ y > < se
In °t _
The Guess Costs You
Noth ng.
Evers body invited t call
and see.
-s-F. PENCEo-
412 Broad i- b eet,
FO l E, GA.
Pen e Cheap Cash Grocery and
Notion Store. The cheapest
place in town to buy goods. Giv*
me a call, satisfaction guaranteed.
■ ~~' i
’ AYER’S
THE ONLY
Sarsaparilla
ADMITTED
READ RULE XV. §
©“ Articles °
that are in o
any way dan- o
gerous or of- ®
tensive, also o
patent medi
cines, nos- gj
trum s, and o:
-npirical preparations, whose o :
igredients are concealed, will g;
ot be admitted to the Expo- Oj
OS
ition.” o:
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla was admitted be- ©
mse it is a standard pharmaceutical
eparatlon, and all that a family medi- ©
ne should he. g
o
At the o
WORLD’S FAIR.|
I oooooo °c.0.0.0 0 op o O COOOo
MAGNETIC NERVINE
*£T* **'* r ?o% guaranteed tn cure
’ , Nervous Prostra-
| tion, Fit ®« Oizzi -
■St ? ■ ' ? . ness, Headache,
/ Neuralgia tad In-
- , '■’ W* BOmnia. Great ex.
<*• J **»'*®ee in the use of to-
V , . /'•?' a bacco, opium, alcohol,
‘ :nd in other direc-
z . . x UonH, bringing on De
..T-e'”S - A'T £F, • bility, Sleep less
ness, mental De
’6‘ A,., of the unity
U 398 1‘ „ ■>vih. MAGNETIC NER-
£ u;i •, <i;i tors*sS in either Hex, renewH vitality
." both the UiUMCtilar and nervous system,
5 up life brain, buitdn up the fle«h, hr: i.'< refresh
deep, J.z-d i«£toins beullb i lia jir. ns to the
"er. A mcuth’fi treatment in piitin package by
b ■- box; 6lor_Ss._Uo. With
FGRWBMEN FOLKS.
DEADLY PEANUTS.
TRAGIC FATE OF A GIRL WHO WAS TOO , 1
FOND OF THEM.
Miss Nellie Farrell, 20years old,
whose parents reside in Brooklyn,
I died on Saturday evening in the
' Norwegian Hospital, of peritonitis,
i She was fond of peanuts , and on
I Tuesday and Wednesday she ate
more than usual.
On the evening of Thursday she
set out to visit her parents. On her
way to the cars she fell in with her
friend, Miss Hattie Armstrong.
i Just before they got on a trolley
car Netiie stopped at a stand and
bought a pint of hot peanuts.
These she ate on the car. Soon
afterward, as she sat talking with
her companion, she put her hands
to her side, and for a short time
he co Id not catch her breath.
i'he girls got off the car and
went to Dr. Earl Mayne, Upon the
steps of Dr. Mayne’s house she
fainted away. After working over
the. girl for a long time the doctor
restored her to consciousness. She
soon grew worse and finally went
into convulsions. She suffered
greatly all Friday night and Sat
urday, until 6:45 o’clock in the
; eveniig, when she died.
i
Mise Columbia: How is it, Lord
Tulfi'iit, that so many of our Eug
j lish noblemen can so lower them
selves a* to marry American heir
esses for their money? Lord Tuff
uutt: It is nothing, my dear Miss
i Columbia, but the hopeless despair
jof ever being able to obtain the
i money in any other way.
I
To make a really delicate dish
out of that coarse vegetable, cab
bage, it should be sliced and sim
mered slowly in milk enough to
cover it, over a slow fire for two
hours. Add a lump of butter and a
little nutmeg or mace, as preferred
and serve hot.
Sunday schools find more ways
than one to raise money for the va
rious objects in which they are in
terested. Some of these schools s t
their scholars to work to collect
Columbian postage stamps, and
become possessed of very large
numbers of these abused articles.
They sell for 30 cents a thousand,
canceled, and a million stamps
does not represent a very big Sun
day school or a very great amount
of work, so fast do the oblong
mauves and blues accumulate.
Germany is a great consumer of
canceled stamps of all nations, and
big shipments are made every year
from this country to that.
Mothers who are confronted
weekly with tremendous holes in
almost new stockings, and it is re
markable what two days’ wear by
an active child can ascomplish in
! this respect, will d° well to follow
I the lead of one home darner who
! has worked out her own salvation
lin the manner very cleverly. She
! takes a piece of strong net, bastes
it over the hole and then darns
over it, thus accomplishing a neat
er and stronger darn than in the
old way, and in a shorter time.
The same method is successful in
mending woven underwear.
Old Crusty says that all call an
engine “she’’ because her whistle
makes such a horrid noise.
0 d Lady—Little boy, did you
■ anything of a snow-white
ca* ?
Little Boy—Yes. She fell into
.a b.irrcll of black paint down the
street; but I fixed her all right.
Old Lady—Oh, you good little
boy ! What did you do?
Ithrowedfer into a barrel of
w h i te wash. —Pu v k.
A New York woman recently in
Paris confessed to a great interest
in the women boot-blacks whom
she saw there, “They wear a pect -
iar uniform,,’ she said, “not uu
• like tl e Sisters of Mercy, but their
coquettish manners quite nullify
’ the religjous association of their
THE HUSTLER OF ROME THURSDAY OCTOBER, 25 1894.
gloved hands, and they are won
derfully neat and dexetrious st
their calling.
Watts —Yrs. Potts ju*t looked
stunning in her uew outfit this as.
tei - noon.
Mrs, W a'ts —Hew was she dress
ed?
Watts—l Can't exactly describe
«he rig, except that it had those
pneumatic sleeves.
Cinnamon tea is recommended
by a Southern physician as a val
uab'e drink in fever affected dis
tricts. It possesses an especial vir
tue against typhoid fever, and es
sence of cinnamon is said to be
one of the best of disinfectants to
use in the sick room of a typhoid
patient.
One wonders if the plea to Mrs.
Lowell from Dr. Parkhurst were
not suggested by the success of the
woman’s Breckinridge campaign.
That campaign, by the way, is cu
riously claimed by the friendsand
opponents alike of womans suf
frage. The antis say votes are not
needed for women when they hold
a reserve power, such as was used
in Kentucky, and the suffragists
say many have urged that women
should not mix in the contamina
ting pool of politics. The Ashland
women to preserve their self re
speet, mixed in one of the most
contaminating that could probab
ly be encountered, and the result
has been a wholesome cleaning
out.
Friend—Why do you mark things
99 cents when they are actually worth
$1?
Merchant—Well, you see, custom
ers hate to leave without that odd
ceut, ai?d by keeping them waiting
lor their change they generally see
something else they want.
A “tell-tail” milk jug has been
devised iu England. It is a glass
measure, traduated at every quar
ter pint. Below the pint and half
oiut marks three lines are etched
8 lowing the thickness of the cream
which should appear in mi'k of
average quality in good ana very
good milk, thus measuring both
quantity and quality.
DON’TSOF DRESS.
Don’t hold up silks and display
rags
Don’t use pins where stitches
would do.
Don't wear a sailor hat with a
silk dress.
Don’t wear striped material if
you are fall.
Don’t wear tan shoes if your
feet are large.
Don’t wear a white petticoat un
less it is white.
Don’t dress more fashionably
than becomingly.
Don’t imagine t >at beauty will
atone for untidiness.
Don't buy common boots they
are not economical.
Don’t trim good material with
common trimmings.
Don’t wear big sleeves and big
hats if you are short.
Don’t expect big bargains to
turn out great savings.
Don’t jump into your clothes and
expect to look dressed,
Don’t dress youi head at the ex
pense of your hands and feet.
A physician in Paris, that cen
ter of bicycling women,has collect
d some medical opinions on the
healthfulness of the exercise for
the *ex Os 48‘such opinions he
found 36 approved of the exercise
in moderation, three under certain
onditions, while nine disapproved
f it for women altogether .
==
BARGAIN IN ORGANS.
For the next sixty days I will
sell a good new Organ, about six
feet high, five octaves, seven stops
and two couplers, wallnut case,
warranted for five years, for $45.
Write for catalogue and terms.
Now is the time to save money on
an Organ, terms easy. Good sew
ing machine for S2O. Warranted
for ten years. All kinds of sewing
machine needles. E. E. Forbes,
L_. -w.
51875U4J
iiepiMofe Our Slipal Purchases
FO RTHE FALL SEASON SHOE TRADE
OUR DUPLICATE ORDERS AMOUNTTO
AORETHAN
$5,000,00 !!
And the Shoe Trade Season just
Opened.
AV e can Account for this very flat
ferine: TH ADK in no other way
than for the reason that the people
are outfor thebest vnJ iios possible
for- the least outlavof CASH
WEARELADRS
IN LOW PRICES
-t Bo BASES MAY FOUOW *l-
wi
R 9 Our Specialties includes tne Entire iine.<>H
ygWe name only a few, Vti
Sidi Our Ladies Grain Button at 75c equals High@H
$ 1 ,00. iw
R. “Pongola ” Pat Tip, Opera Toe, All SolidEl
fe>Jforsl ,25. Same shoe in common sense is notjaj
PWequaled in this market at $ 1,50 PH
Our Ladies Fancy Dongola, $2,50 Shoe forM
I’so is creating Panic and Consternation atfflß
ra3“High Price’s” headquarters. Cj
KJ Dont neglect our $3,50 and s4ooLadies Ex-W
bl tra Fine Dongola Kids at $2,1 Oto $2,60.
Our mens line represents everything from a3fl
Pegged to a hand sewed-at 60c tojd
H 55,00. q
“g.A full linechildrens, 40c to $2,00. Always giv-BH
gssing you big Valuable and receivingonly smallff
ft
Our Dress Goods Dept is full of choice Patterns
latest gooas and lowest prices.
Dont forget that we carry an immense stock of
first Class Clothing, Childrens Boys and Mens suits
and Over Coats. A large I nvoice of the latter bought
25c per cent under regular price. See them-at
I. B. CDKEB 410
19 &21 Broad 81. Home Cra. I