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I Shoes FDR The Million.
Wa handle the finest
We sell tha best
You come and see us
W» do the rest.
j u r School Shoes for Boys and girls have
n , sup3fi°'-
THEY WILL SUM THE BACKET!
Thousands of pairs of lasting oeauties for
tic ladies, . • •
Our mens bargains have no peers in this
Spring Heels in oil eizesand styles.
PEETDECOBMB ANDKOBN lOWOTOS
# >tCanirell & Owensw*
240 BROAD STREET-
Bwlutua! Loan Association.
HOME OFFICE ROME GEORGIA,
325, Broad Street.
A National Building and Loan Compny
Purely Mutual, safe Investment and
Good Pro Made by small
Monthly Payments,
OFFICER?".
j A GLOVER, President. J- »• MOORE, Sec’ty A Treas.
I GRAVES,|Vice President. J- H. RHODES, Mgr* L»nd Dept.
HALATED SMITH, General Council.
COjVZj ! COAL I
all grades,
ROME COAL CO.
Ml-Seconi Are.; ‘""isasg''’
sodtueTTbotel.
CHATTANOOGA TENN.
A Strictly First class Hotel. Right in the heart of the city
Convenent to business, depots and electric car lines.
The service is unsurpassed and the prices reasonable.
W. A_- Camp Manager.
O’Neil M’tp! Co.
SELL
©COAL®
TELEPHONE76_
-tJIIE WR STWI DIE WHS.*-
530 Market St. Chattanooga
W.C. SMITH Agt, Proprietor
LADIES & GENTS CLOTHING CLEZhE
DYEDOR REPAIRED,
AT LOWEST PRICES.
PROMPT PROFESSIOANL WORK.
H&. * ' w
IM . I
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; : Pavo. 161? - '
IN CD SEOBT MICE Bl GEO. WYATT
‘_HE HU ST LET OF ROME MONDAY DECEMBER 3 1894
FOR WOW! FOLKS.
the wedding march.
The wedding march from Lohengrin the or-
K»t> loudly plays,
The groom ami his supporters greet the gatb.
ere • public's gaze ;
The swelling music trembles as are touched
the polished keys.
But the tremble isn’t in it with the shake in
Freddy’s knees.
Down the aisle the blushing maids proceed
with stately tread,
And each regrets the day ia not the day for
ter to we<l;
But there's a silver lining to the cloud
hovers o’er—
They know thev never looked so sweet in al,
th rlhe efore.
And now the oigan thunders forth a welcome
h ud nnl clear,
A hundred heads are turned to see the blush
ing bride appear.
Her fa t er. who supports her down the long
amt dizzy aisle,
Will support her and har husband too, in just
little while.
—Truth.
HER HIGH TEA.
Mrs. X. has not had the advan
tages which Miss X. has enjoyed,
and consequently that young wom
an rather directs the household.
Not long since she decided to give
a “high tea,” and, being still pe
cuniarily dependent upon her moth
er, she mentioned the fact. A few
days later Mrs. X. came in from a
round of calls which her daughtr
had obleged 1 e ' to make, and re
marked with great satisfaction:
“I told every one about your ex
pensive tea.’’
“My what? shriekd Miss X-
“Your expensive tea,”
“You called it high, and high
means dear and dear means expen
sive and I thought the long word
sounded best . .Don’t you?
But Miss X. had fainted.
The Chicago girl who during th®
World’s fair eloped with a roman
tic cowboy, of th® Buffalo Bill ag
gregation, has had her romance
wound up in the courts. She gets a
divorce, says an exchange, from
that city, and ther® is five dollars
alimony charged against him,
which he will never pay, for he
never works and never saves. She
gave up her home and family, for
the worthless cow-puncher, only to
find, as is nearly always the way
in such cases, that her imagined
hero was a fourply, dcubl®-thick
“vag” of the most pronounced
type.
WHEM WOMEN VOTE
O, mother, please mother, come home with
me now,
The afternoon’s slipping by fast.
You said you were coming right home from
the polls
As soon as;your ballot was cast.
Poor father came in for his dinnei at noon
And not a mouthful could he Had,
And the words that he saidas he slammed to
the door
Left a strong smell of sulphur behind.
—Kansas City Journal:
NO DRESSMAKERS NEEDED
A well-dressed Hindoo woman
wears but one piece of cloth ; this
is six or eight yards iu length and
a yard and a quarter wide. It is
wrapped in graceful folds about
.her waist, shoulders and body,
allowing it t > hang loosely iu
some directioos, and tucks it in
here and tnere to keep it in place ;
all this accomplished, our. East
Indian sister is neatly and be
comingly dressed without use of
pin, button, hook or string.
GOODHART’S JOKE.
Yes dear, said Mrs. Goodhart, as
she handed her husband his cup of
coffee across the breakfast table ;
* realize that we simply must econ
omize, and I’m willing to no my
part. I’ve thought of one way of
economizing already.
How is that? asked Mr. Good
hart.
Well I will tell you. I have a
good sewing machine aud plenty
of time, and If you will select the
cloth I will cut and make that new
pair of trousers you want my own
self and save —why, Henry Good
hart, what is the matter with you?
ercy ! the man is going into a fit.
Here Jane, bring some water! Go
for a doctor somebody! Help me
to support him aud keep him from
falling from his chair. What can
be the matter? It looks like appo
plexv. There I He breathes easier
and has opened his eyes. Now,Hen
ry, dear, what is it?
Nothing my dear, only a sudden
faintn*s«. I’ll get oyer it in a few
minutes, and I—l—was «nly jok
ing when 1 said that w- had to be
gin to economize somewhere, on
ly joking my dear.
JOKES ON US.
Mrs. Newwed (.-w*etly)—Now,
Hortense, I’m going to have two
guests for a fortnight and I want
them to have the very best sort of
time. You must surpass yourself.
Hortense (the cook) —Well,
ma’am, I'll do my best, butl ain’t
much at entertaining.
Poetica (sobbing)—The mean
old things reject my verses again!
It's a perfect shame! And there
isn’t a single line that isn’t good.
I know it, because 1 selected them
from the very best poets!
“It’s curious,” reflected young
Mr. Lovelock, as he walked by his
inamorata’s dwelling, “how some
people want to make their feeling
the universal one. Emmeline’s
father was put out about some
thing tonight and so he put me
out.
Mother—lsn’t Dick in love with
you? Daughter—Yes I suppose so-
Mother—And aren’t you in love
with him? D aughfer—Yes Mother
—Well, why ou earth don’t yon
marry him? Daughter—Because I
can’t bear to have cut love for each
other end
“Love,”fi tid she, philosophically
‘ ‘has been proved to be merely a
so of you hfai disease. You’ll get
over it It’s 'ike the measles Young
men have to have it, but they re
cover ” He(the lately iej«cle< ) -
If it were like the measles in being
entagious I should n..t grumble!
JUDGE FRIZZLE DEAD.
One of the Most Prominent Ma
sons in the United States.
Nashville, Tenn., Decembers. —
Judge John Frizzle died this eve
ning at the age of 65 years. Judge
Frizzle was the best posted man
in the South on laws governing
secret fraternities, having held
prominent positions in the Knights
of Honor, Ancient Order of United
Workmen, Knights of Pythias and
Freemasons.
He was a Thirty-third Degree
Mason and was grand secretary of
Tennessee for 25 years. He was al
so past grand master, grand high
priest, grand commander, general
high priest of the Grand Chapter
of the United States and grand
priest of the order of priesthood.
HER AGONY OVER.
The Aged Victim of Alien’s Bru
tal Assault Dead.
Princeton, Ky., D»c., 3. —Mrs.
Hicks, the aged victim of J. C. Al
len, near Providence, in Webster
County, last Saturday, died from
her injuries yesterday. Allen, be
sides assaulting, beat his victim in
to insensibility and then indicted
several knife wounds.
The citizens made every effort to
capture him, bat he lay in hiding
in the neighborhood for three or
four days, until the excitement
partially subsided, and then left.
A reward of S6OO is still out for
him. A man answering Allen’s de
scription stopped Thursday near
Craneville, but he was not detain
ed. AJlen is a married man with
four children, and hitherto has
borne a good reputation.
Must be a Jap.
Anderson, Ind., Dec., 8.-'-Milt
Ring, who shot Leon Ling, a Chi
naman, in this city three weeks
ago and then escaped during the
excitement which followed, fer the
shooting took place on a promi
nent thoroughfare, is behind the
bars of the'Madison County Jail to
await trial.
.... The first of the week he was lo
cated in Indianapolis, where he
had made application and had
been admitted to the regular ar
my. He was later arrested by
Chief of Police Coburn and brought
to this city. He shot the China
man for fun.
JJCKKIMI, IresidtH T. I. Sljbiji, AT.'«; Cashiar
W. I*. SIMrSOX, Vice rreaideut
Merchants National Bank
OF ROME CA.
INTEREST ALLOVED ON TIME DEPOSITS
All Accommodations Consistent with Saf* Banking /\.t"
end cd our Customers
it * '•>
BRICK KILN S
LIME KILNS
HAIR AND SAND
We can furnish fresh Lime in large quani ies
burned from our own Kilns on short notice.
Brick. Lime, Hair and Sand always on hand
George W. Trammell
Fourth Ward Brick Yards,
Mrs. J F Wardlaw,
MILLINERY,
New stock, and a complete line of all the very
latest Novelties. New goods arriving weekly.
No. 208 Broadway, Rome Ga
OPPOSITE FIRST NATIONAL BANK.
LUMBERj
A_ll kinds of Rough
Lumber sawed to or
der on short Notice,
Call on or Address,
JOHN C- FOSTER
Ff oster’s Al ills Gra.
E. C. ATKINS & CO, CHATTANOOGA TENN,
MANUFACTURERS OF
UIUTLAH, BAM), ®ANG,
CROSS CUT AM) HAM)
HAWS. ET(.
WHOLESALE
a imhinery Mill Supplies Repairing a Specialty
A BRAN NE MIfIEISE
Any up to date Enterprise should be encour
aged. Great care will be taken to please my
customers.
Call at the Annex Bathing and :Tonsorial
Parlors, if you Wantto be treated right.
312 Broad Street.
Special attention given to Ladies and Chddrcn
HARRY CHAPMAN,
White Barber.
THE ROMERAKERT
AND
RESTURANT.
J. T. Wilkie, Proprietor. No. 228 Broad Street.
FRESH BREAD anil CAW MADE EVERY DAI
Restaurant supplied with the best the market affords
Special attention to wedding orders and ornamental cakes
FRESH OYSTERS RECEIVED EVERY DAY.-
Polite waiters, Satisfaction guaranteed, give me a call
Jk. -W. THZ-ZLIR,'!’.,
Leather and Shoe Bindings,
Hand made Shoes built to order, Repairing
as pcialiiy,
Masonic Temple Store