The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, November 07, 1894, Image 5

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.JOIK THE . CROWD FAHY’S THIS WEEK- Great Bargains In Fine Dress Goods, Silks, Satins Trim mings, Braids, Novelty Suitings, Silk Skirts Flannel Goods, And wash Fabrics. Hosiery Gloves, Underwear Quilts, Comforts, Blankets, Capes, Cloaks, &c. Carpets, Figs, he Mattings, Shoes, and domestic Goods. Fants Hats, Umbrel las»Trunks, Curtains ’'Window Shades &c. THOS. FA HY T HE HUSTLER OF ROME, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER,? 1894. FOR WOMEN FOLKS FAITHFUL TO HIS TRUST. STORY OF AN INDIANIAn's DEVO TION TO HIS DoMEsl’H’ DUTY Into the City Dispensary recent ly was brought a man on a st retch er. ll* was battered and bruised and in.conscious. He had been knocked from a bridge to the ground below. He was a strong, rugged looking man. The doctors laid him on the operating table to examine him. They felt his chest and his ribs, his arms and legs, and carefully went over his head, taking stoek, as it were, of the broken bones. He was seriously injured, and it was a question in the minds of the doctors as to whether he could re cover. When he began to come to his senses he gasped for breath and c< ughed in a dry, hard way tl a made the doctors fear an internal hemorrhage. They would not have been surprised to see him give ud the struggle. “He is trying to say something,” •aid one of the physicians. The ex pression on the wounded man’s face was full of anxiety, and he seemed to be trying hard to say something important. “Give him a stimulant,” sug-1 gested one of the doctors. A glass ! of whiskey was brought and placed to his lips. He drani- it all with an j evident effort, and between the coughs he gasped out: “I wiah you’d-tell-mv-wife that-the-meat for dinner’s-in-my coat-pocket ” Then he fell back and was carried in an unconscious state to his home. “Faithful to his wife’s last com-I mission.” was the doctors tender comment. —Indianapolis News. CROSS-STITCH EMBROIDERY. OLD TIMES CANVAS WORK AGAIN IN THE HANDS OF NEEDLEWOMEN. ’ The old-time cross-stitch em- : broidery on canvas work is a revi val that has been recognized by all i lovers of needlework, but the ap-, plication of the same stitch to huckatuck is new. The material is excellent for the purpose. The same easily counts d threads which make it so desira ble for darning work make it good for this also. Like the canvas, it is its own guide. Any pattern can be copied . upon it with ease, so that wherever I white is a desirable background it is an excellent material to use. Ou.? sofa cu’hiou sten recently is too good to eecipe mention. The design is a semi-conventional one The colors used are in all the sub dued or “old” tones, and the ef fect is deliciously soft and bar mo nious. It was made by a woman who insists that pillows are for use, and this one carries out her theory to perfection. The silks used are all of the wash sort and will laun der without barm. The linen huckatuck if, of course, able to withstand unlimited visits to the washtubs, and so the cover which is in »lip form, can be made new with the least possible trouble. Silk mail cloth, which is woven in the same way. is also much used and has the advantage both of greater elegance and variety in color. But lenin i« good for ordinii-| ry use, so serviceable and vet e<> | effective that the huckatuck of in finite le i co?t ai p Bs to one’, sense ot fitness as tew more elab orate things do. ASKING TOO MUCH. The two had sat in moody, sullen silence tor some minutes. Then she spoke. “Before we were married, Al gernon,” she said, “you used to declare that you would give up heaven itself for me. “Yes,” answered Algernon, bit terly, “but 1 little thought you would ask me to give up smoking. MUST BE MORE EXACT. How long have you lived .n this state? enquired the registration official. ' All my life, replied the lady j with a gL am in her eyes. I am sorry, madam, rejoined the i official, but T M<n cumpelh'd to n.dt -1 you how many years you have re i s'dul in the state. L \ M B CHOPS IN PA PE R CASES Fold and cut thick sheets <f white paper »o that when oj eneu they wiil be heart-ahaped. Each sheet shou d be about niue itiehta 1 ng and five ai d a half wide Dip ail in oliva oil or me ted butter, being carefully that every pait is well oiled, bet them aside until the chops are ready. Have the chop* cut from the ribe. The rik boue must be scraped claan. Season the chops with salt and pip erand then dip them in melt ed butter. Now pl. c i them on one side of the papers, having the bones turn ed toward* the centre. ]Fold the papers carefully, turning in the edges, Place in the broiler and cook over a moderate fire tor eight minutes if the chops ba about threi-quarters of an inch thick. Serve on a hot dish in the pa pers in which they were broiled. The secret of broiling in paper ;j to have every part of the papei well oiled. While cooking the boiler must be turned constantly. If these directions are followed carefully the paper will turn a • eiicate brown. WEAR SLIPPERS INDOORS! SOMB REASONS WHY IT IS PRUDENT TO HAVE MANY PAIRS OF SHOES. Do you put on a pair of high s ’.oes in the morning, wea ■ them o breakfast, to shop, to walk, ana. all during the evening? And do y u add to this folly the crime of considering yourself an economical person because your shoe box is not filled with all manner of foot Covering? Read this and learn that you are more extravagant than the woman who numbers her shoes by the doz en, more unhygienic than anyone ought to be in 'this enlightened age, and that you are not dainty? This last is, of course, the worst feature in the case You have beeen told that noth ing can stand a constant strain, and that rest is good even for in animate things like sewing ma chines and pianos. So it is f< r shoea. Shoes which are worn eve ry day and all day, last abont one t’lird as long as those which alter nate with another pair. The woman who has slippers for various occasions, and who wears them, saves her boots and her feet , A change of shoes for the feet is as much of a rest for them as a change of occupation is said to be for the mind. Sno s which are designed tn tramp ever the city paviug-stone" and country ruts are necessarily not adapted to hardwood floors and Persian rugs. They scratch the one and tear the other.Dama e amount ingtoageod deal more than the prica of another pair of shoes may be done by wearing one pair all the time. If when you g*t up in'the morn mg you don a pair of slippers, h- ht of sole and soft, your feet will no l be tired when you go out at 11 o’clock. Neither will you hav** worn out 50 cents’ worth of carpet, ing or 75 cents’ worth of high pol ieh. If you don your heavv walking shoeso ’.y wh n you have to walk you will be W’BO. Whan you come in from walking take off your shoes and put on slippers again—this time a pair match the pretty house frock with which it is your duty to replace vour street suit. Your feet will feel cool and res ted ; your bools wiU have a chance to rest also: your slippers will look well and yovr floor will be spared much unueu s »ary wear and tc-ar. Warter’s “Hand made” grows more pop ular days go by and its because of mer it. For sale by alßdeal ers. Try one. 1320 HONEY COMB TOWELS, EACH 4lts. Ty are full 34 inches long and 20 inches wide. Ntw and b "ight an I 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 gains in store for the Fall Trade. Our prices for the next sixty days will be a revelation to the people, Prices unmatchable, unap proachable and phenomenal. YOU HAVE NOTICED [he newspaper announce ments of our purchase of the Receiver of the Ladies’ Bazaar Co., of Atlanta. It was a great stock of fine Dry Goods, Notions, &c., invoicing $39,- 000. The price paid was nearer nothing than that at which such goods never changed hands in this broad land, if our knowledge of such matters 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 2Oc going at 12 l-2c. 8000 “ Good quality 4-quarter bleached Domestic worth 71 -2c at sc. 300 “ Cheviot shirts, with collars, priced by othes s at $ 1,50 to go at 75c 80 Fine Count all wool, 10-quartar.Bed Blankets worth $ 10. pairs3.so. 4000 Yds Dress Ginghams, lovely styles &. colorings worth 7c at 4 1-2 c 300 Pairs Ladies Fine dress button shoes, worth $ 1 .75 togo at $ 1.00 3500 Ladies Hemstitched Handkerchiefs worth from 10 to 15c at sc. 2000 Yds. High grade, fine count, Sea Island full 36 inches wide, worth 71 -2c at 5c 2 10 Pairs of that celebrated Shoe for Men, “Goodwear” worth s2.so.Until sold only $1.50 360 Suits Fine all wool Cheviot Suits single and double breasted sacks, blacks browns. & c., worth $ 10.00. Made to sell for $ 1 0.00 cr more. Nothing equal to them in a thousand miles of Rome for the money FOR DRESSES By far the largest stock in thia market. An almost endless variety from h single width American goods from 4<j up to the exquisite effects of. French Artists: extra quality. Covert cloth , Ser -es, Novelty Mixtures, Armures, Bengalines. Poplines, Henrietta Cloths, Camel’s Hur, irrauites etc. Satin Dutchesses, Mone®, Fail and Bengalines, Dilina and Japan ese Silks. Surahs, Ginghams, Prints, Peic'es, Cheviots, Crepe Cloth. Dicks- De ims, Suitings, Stupes, etc. 46-inch Covert Cot 1 : , the latest ’oiner of new dress fabrics made to sell atsl.2s ; our price .85 Beautiful Mixture Covert Cloth, vortl. 80c. at GO Two-toned Diagonals, 36-in"h D »üble fold Suitings, 36-inch, lark and medium gray, worth tw>ce lie price, lull suit, 8 yards foi‘ sl, 10 000 yards Fancy Dress Prints, >lx64 cloth wo.tb 7c .5 Trimmings & c. ’.ll the imagimibles in Silks. Illumi nated Surahs, two-toned, shot and -eeddot effects, Bengalines, Tff, Velvets Velveteens. Sik Braids, Pass >menteries Jets. Novelty Trimmings- Ribbons, etc. The desirable things i laces. Embroideries on Swiss, Nairn sook and Cambrics, all-over embn i leriee. •100 yards Hamburg Ed gi J p oitb lOe yard nt ,5 20c Hamburg at 10 30c Hamburg at .11 OT-iOTHIISrO-- A choice assortment for Men, Boys and Children. Swell effects in Tweeds, Cheviots, Cas simeres and Serges: also swell effects in the dressier Fabrics, prominent which Clays, and West of England Diagonals. Suits for slender people, stoat people, young giantsand little fellows. Especial attention is called to 360 Men’s all-wool Suits at $5.00. They are simply unmatchable bargains. Our stock of clothing from lowest to 5 nt, j i dit /o n to us as the most brilliant haul of our victorious buyer, and we are determined bp the power of m ignetism of price to putmore new clothing on men and b »v s this fall than ever before in our business experience. The few prices named tlvoughou this advertisement aremere ly suggestive of the way other goods will be sold, 300 Overeats less th u half prices. Fact. Superb assortment ot Cloaks. A/I [ | ||MC DV I The Bazaar’s stock almost in i*s entirety was snipped to our I V 11 L/L>ll N L-/1 \ I J Rome house—cost nearly nothing ind if you want anything in this line, we will sell it to vou a vay down below prices of others. Com j to soe us. BASS BROTHERS & COMPANY- For the goods here advertised, go to either o f > sloreo, excepting that the Millinery will bj found PARKS z CO. store/and the Clothing and Hats will beat the old store. 2 > Street. Less Than 19 Cts on $ A good percentage of thebe goods has been shipped to us, and if prices and values count tor anything they will go into new homes in quick order. Our import order for Fall Goods had L ■‘en placed before this purchase w. made and the goods are arriv ">g daily. Must have room, and we are going to make it by bidding adi°nto a pile of mer chandise at once. Small Wares. Needles, Pius, Hair-Pins, Threads. Wba ebones, Casings, Hooke-iml Eyes,'Tapes. Dress Shields, Cutsets Laces, Shoe Laces, Buttons, Brads etc. A straw will show the way the wind blows, so in these little items we will save you 50 to 100 per cent on your purchases. S ick a pin down here; if you Lave no pin, we will sell you a whole paper of English Pins for sc. and everything else relatively as cheap. Blankets and Flannels Thebe goods at pri-es that, cannot and will not be duplicated by others We bought them away under th market at the great auction sale ot Faulkner Page & Co. New York in May when tLe mecury was up and blankets -were down. We want you to see our full size Bed Blanket at each—a trifle 25 Our Fine A l -woo' Blankets SIO.OO value per p .ir 8. 0 Nothing ever < ffered eqm 1 D' them as bargains. Red Flannel worth 25c at 15 White Flannel worth 25c at 15 Red Twilled Flannel Worth 40c at 25 Wlnte Twilled Flannel worth 40. i at, 25 I very quality of Flannel cut almost i i t»>o. Cents Furnishing Linen Bosom Shirts Laurdned and G’niaundri*d ; Percale and Che'io’ Shiils Satine Shirts Drawers Scriveu’s Patent Drawers; Hosiery and Giove So Price! Price! will do it. When the cost is small, a fraction of the worth, our lee-way is immense-191-2 cents on the dollar, a all fine goods too; most of them Winter Goods—l 9 1-2 cents You never heard of such a pur chase. ’n gnat variety Scirfs Ties H< 8° S pport'jrs Cuff - Buttons CoPars and Cuffs etc.; all iu the bargain cata logue. Men’s Fine A”-Wool Shirts and D: swena silk Stroked worth each sl,- 00 ; hs long as this lot lasts our price writ be .09 1,900 4- Linen Collars 10 Shoes The e is ro equal to our Dongola Button S oe for Ladies at l.Oq Have you yet bought our specia Tap-Sole Blucher Shoes for men? This Shoe is made excusively for us an I cannot he sold by any one except gm. We take the b »ld portion that there is not Shoe on earth of equal wi ar to it ci the p.rrne 1 50 J<aui( s’ (Heth Top Patent tin great v true 1.5 C Ladies’ Genuine Kid wortk i’.OO nt 2.01 Ladies’ Solid Substantial Sheet Men's Rex (Julf Shoes 1.50 II ind Welt Calf wort!) $4.50 at 3 00 Children’s Solid Shoes Misses’ lleuvr Shoes 65 School Shoes worth SI.OO at 75 School Shoes worth $1 .•?'"> as 1.00 Misses’ FineSh >es w< rth $2 U tat 1 50 For all our t-tures we buv as many Sh< es as any 4 houses in Rome; we buy them at Leaiiquarit-rs with the cash aud we buy them at lower prices than tf.ose who buy >n smaller qianti 'ies-. Come to our place for Shoes.