Newspaper Page Text
young ladies
who expect to get married this fall
should send to J, P. Stevens & Bro.,
■Jewelers and Engravers, 47 White
hall St , Atlanta, Ga., for samples
•ond prices of J
WEDDING INVITATIONS
also tbeir new Wedding Cokfc B
will be sent free of charge.
ftIERS MAY READ
' Chis Column of Short Paragraphs and
Personal M ntion;
NEWSY NOTES FOB H4STY READERS
Brief Mention of Many Kinds
* Batch of Items of interer*
Cut to the Core
Bring your job printing to the Tribune
Uob office. «
’ A movement is on foot to establish a
race track a; Piedmont park, At
lanta.
1 Have your job printin" dons at The
Tribune job office.
Mrs. Catherine M Winn, one of the
oloesc residents of DeKalb county, died
■on Sunday, aged 80 years.
Curry’s little headache powders wil
cure you personally.
Sam Jones inaugurated a great religi
■ous'bieetiiig at Columbus on Sunday.
About 7,000 people were present.
Pursie M. King is making four large
tin types for twenty-live cents at his gal
lery over Jervis & Wright's.
Maj. Stahlman of Tennessee will de
liver an address at Atlanta if Czar
Reed cannot accommodate the repub
licans.
W. T. Cheney buys notes and lends
money on any good security. Loans
placed on real estate for moderate
amounts. No delay, e.o.d.&wk Im
The new dormitory of the Georgia
Normal and Industrial College has
been named the Atkinson building,
after the governor.
Wanted —Twogentlemen want first
class board in a good family. Ad
dress, P. O. Box 353.
The old “Texas Photo C 0.,” has
changed hands, Pursie M. King is run
( niug it now. He is making a specialty
of tin types at four for twenty-five cents.
Col. George H. Waring is slowing
recovering from the injuries received
last week in the runaway at Cement,
near Kingston, Ga.
Don’t wait until cold weather to repair
6%-reset your grates. Dick Treadaway
will exchange new grates for old ones.
Leave orders at H. D. Hill’s office. ts.
WJII Seats (white), Ed. Clark (col.)
. and Joe Humphreys (white), all
tlftighs of the worst kind, escaped
from the Doughlasville jail on Satur
day night.
WANTED—To rent a four or five
room bouse; good location at once
from owner, prompt pay.
T. W. McCone.
No. 5f4 Broad street sep26 3t
Ed. Murray, a young farmer living
near Americus, shot a negro named
Hamp Jordan on Saturday night
without any provocation whatever.
The case is under investigation.
———.—•
Treatment of Books.
The real beauty of a book is undeni
ably to be looked for beyond the covers,
yet the wealth and beauty of the au
thor’s thought may find fitting clothing
in sightly paper and an artistic binding.
The indifference of many scholarly men
to the outward form in which the great
thoughts of their literary favorites ap
pear before them is as strange as is the
indifference of others to all books that
are nbt specimens of fine printing and
binding.
Ruskin, the lover of the beautiful in
the common things of life, is an offender
where books are concerned. He appreci
ates a book for what it contains and can
appreciate it no more though its outer
clothing bear the mark of the most
artistic skill. It is said that he never so
Jwinch.es inquired in what form his own
SASK the recovered
■3E3M dyspeptics, bilious
t victims of
and ague, the
mercurial diseased
patient, how they re
covered health, cheer-
F ful spirits and good
. appetite; they will tell
—by taking SlM
t/.t.yMONS Lives Rkgu-
LATOR.
The Cheapest, Purest and Best Family
Medicine In the World!
For DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, Taun
dice, Bilious attacks, SICK H E A D A C H E, Colic,
Depression of Spirits, SOUR STOMACH,
Heartburn, etc. This unrivalled remedy is
warranted not to contain a single particle of
MERCURY, or any mineral substance, but is
PURELY VEGETABLE,
containing those Southern Root* and Herbs
which an all-wise Providence has placed in
countries where Liver Diseases most prevail.
It will.cure all Diseases caused by Derange
ment of the Liver and Bowels.
The SYMPTOMS of Liver Complaint are a
bitter or bad taste in the mouth; Pain in the
Back, Sides or Joints, often mistaken for Rheu
matism; Sour Stomach; Loss of Appetite;
• Bowels alternately costive and lax; Headache:
Loss of Memory, with a painful sensation of
having failed to do something which ought te
have been done; Debility; Low Spirits, a thick
yellow appearance of the Skin and Eyes, a dry
tough often mistaken for Consumption.
Sometimes many of these symptoms attend
the disease, at others very few; but the Liver
is generally the seat of the disease, and if not
Regulated in time, great suffering, wretched
ness and DEATH will ensue.
The following highly esteemed persons attest
to the virtues of Simmons Liver Regulator:
Gen. W. S. Holt, Pres. Ga. S. W. R. R. Co.; Rev.
I. R. Felder. Perry, Ga.; Col. E. K. Sparks, Al
bany, Ga.; C. Masterson, Esq.. Sheriff Bibb Co.,
Ga.; Hon. Alexander H. Stephens.
“We have tested its virtues, personally, and
know that for Dyspepsia, Biliousness and
Throbbing Headache it is the best medicine the
world ever saw. We tried forty other remedies
>before Simmons Liver Regulator, but none gave
us more than temporary relief; but the Regu
lator not only relieved, but cured us.’*—Ed.
Tblkgraph and Messenger, Macon, Ga.
m. MANUFACTURED.ONLY BY
J. N. ZEILIN A CO.. Philadelphia, Pa.
looks were so be given to the world; So
long as his utterances appeared, he cared
not in what garments they were clothed.
Ernest Renan was another scholar to
whom the outward appearance of a book
made no appeal. His large library is
said to have contained no fine bindings.
His study was his workshop, his books
the tools that aided him in the attain
ment of his end, and he was not partic
ularly careful of his tools, they say.
Os Darwin it is affirmed that he
seemed unaware of the difference in the
value of books and would treat a Zaehns
dorf binding with the same scant cour
tesy that he exercised toward a penny
pamphlet. Covers appeared to him a
useless weight and decidedly in the way,
and he often got rid of them by ripping
them off. Sometimes the book was bor
rowed.
It is said that in the end his friends
used to give him any book which he
wished to borrow, for they knew that,
if it were ever returned, its usefulness
as a book would be at an end.—Youth’s
Companion.
This is the day of anti-this, and anti
fiat but what people need most nowa
days, is the anti-bilious medicine, Sim
mons Liver Regulator, the King of Liver
Medicines and Better than Pills. “I
have used no other ant'.-biHous remedy
for six years and know from experience
that for ladies of a constipated habit
nothing equals it. ’ ’ —Laura V. Craig,
Ellebury, Fla.
Burney never forgets trunks
Call or telephone Armstrong.
Ells Fatal Blunder.
“Beautiful one,” he said, “can’t you
forgive me? I will try to live it down.
I wil) become great for your sake and
make the world envy you as my wife.”
“N 0 the fair girl replied, and there
was a resolute ring in her voice, “it
cannot be. I must respect the promise
that I made to my mother upon her
deathbed. ”
He knelt at her feet and looked be
seechingly up at her. unmindful of the
fact that the flies were congregating in
droves upon his person.
“Jane, ” he groaned, “do not leave
me out hero alone. I cannot, I will not,
give you up! It would kill me. You are
the only one I ever can love. Say that
you will recall the words that you have
just spoke—l mean spoken”—
"Ah!” she interrupted. "There it is
again! No, no, a thousand times no! It
must not be! I am sorry for you, but
1 we are not in the same class. I hope
that some day you may find another
who will make you happy. ”
Then she bounded lightly over the
. fence and started on a dog trot back to
ward Boston, while the young man laid
his cheek upon an ant hill and wept.
He was from Buffalo and teu minutes
before had said, "I done it.”—Cleve
land Leader.
Don’t you think ot buying
any dry goods untill you have
seen J. Kuttner’s stock and
learn his new prices.
Harvest E icurslo nt to Arkansas and Texas
The "Western and Atlantic Railway
will sell round trip tickets to all points
in Arkansas and Texas at one fare for
the round trip plus $2.00 on the fol
lowing dates: September 15th and
29th and October 6th and 20tb.
Tickets will be good returning twenty
one (21) days from date of sale and
will be good going to destination fif
teen (15) days from date of sale. Par
ties can stop off at any station in
Arkansas and Texas going, but the
return trip will be continuous passage.
For rates, maps and general inform
ation, write to C. K. Ayer,
C. E. Harman, Ticket Agt.
Atlanta, Ga.
J. L. Edmondson, S. P. A.
w-td Chattanooga, Tenn.
Lon’t tail to call in at J. Sam
Veal’s bookstore. Fine Art
most beautiful.
She Admires a Warrior.
The Matabele girl is not devoid of
sentiment. On the contrary, she has the
greatest pride in the exploits of the man
she marries. He may be old, toothless,
with one leg in the grave and the other
feebly tripping a war dance, but if he
can show 011 his assegai the blood of
many victims he is the greatest old beau
in the kraal.
All cotton good- Niich as
bleacbiug, sheeting, prints,
ginghams and checks are sold
at factory prices at J. K tilt tiers
The Severest Test.
The severest test of manhood is never
found in good times, but only in hard
times. It is not the man who has suc
cess when others are doing well, but it
is the man who keeps up his courage
and struggles on when everybody else
is wavering or going down who is the
hero in the sight of God and men. It is
an easy matter to make good time when
both wind and tid,e are in one’s favor or
when one is moving with the current,
but it requires character and skill and
daring to make head in spite of oppos
ing forces or to work successfully against
the current.—Exchange.
A GaHtronoinlcal Experiment That Failed.
Two French epicures living near
Toulouse were not satisfied with the
flavor given to the turkey by its stuffing
of truffles and recently determined to
try whether the trufile flavor could not
be imparted to the bird by a proper sys
tem of diet. They selected a fat young
turkey and fed it fcr two months with
the most delicate truffles that the south
of 1 rance could produce. The turkey
seemed to enjoy the experiment. At the
end of. the two months the bird was
killed, roasted carefully and delicately
and biought upon the table. Each of
the experimenters eagerly took a wing
mid found to bis disgust Unit the turkey
had absolutely no truffle flavor.—New
York bun.
J. Kiitincr i» Killing a goo 1 un
laundred Hhiri> nt S 3. 1
THE HOME TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 2, 1896.
d RICH FEAST:
The Freshest, Most Reliable,
and Most Varied Stock
I
I
OF
i
Dry Goods, Dress Goods
Notions, Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps and Clothing.
TO BE FOUND IN
I
, AT THE MAMMOTH STORE OF
W. H. COKER & CO.
I
The Originators of Popular Prices.
!
I
i We are now prepared to serve our customers and the
’ public generally with a rare, rich feast of bargains, Drives
that will surpass all previous tales of the season.
k A full line of fall and winter Diy Goods, Dress HoodF,
1
White Goods, Clothing, etc., which it will pay you well to
3 call and inspect before the weather gets much colder.
r
J
r
*
I
iHOW TO KEEP WARM.
1
s You will find it an easy matter to keep warm if you
will buy from our immense stock. Cold weather goods
now all in, and we are prepared to keep you comfortable
all winter. Put off summer wear—put on warm clothing.
1 Buy them from us.
Ihe stronger the volume of trade with us the weaker
prices become. Since the weather has settled in away
that warrants the wealing of heavier clothes, we shall offer
great bargains in goods that you want.
Everything the People Want
We make it a special point to keep everything the peo
ple want. EUra bargains in the following departments:
Notions, Clothing, Shoes, Hats, Gents’ Furnishing Goods,
Hosiery, Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Stationery,
Glassware, Tinware, Stoves, Trunks, Valises, Hardware,
Wooden ware, Plantation Supplies.
Besides the above, there are numbers of other depart
ments to which we cannot now even refer. To everyone an
invitation to visit our stores is cordially extended. It is
impossible to enumerate, time and space will not allow us
to tell you of half we have. We are sure our goods will
please you in quality and price.
« •
W. H. COKER & CO.
19 &21 Broad Street.
ROME, - - GEORGIA.
I Chattanooga, home & Columbus
RAILROAD.
EUGENE E. JONES, Receiver.
Passenger Schedule In effect May 8, 1896.
SOUTHBOUND
STATIONS No. 2 No. 4 No. 10
Lv Chattanoo.a 725 am 4 00pm 500 a m
Battlefield 751 427 540
Chickamauga 801 436 625
Lafayette 831 5< 5 730
Trion 9 01 5 34 9 q
Summerville 911 5 41 9 28
Lyerly 9 28 6 02 10 10
Borne 10 26 700 12 25
Cedartown 11 13 -7 45pm 2 10pm
Buchanan 12 02
Bremen I? 20 j
Ar Carrollton.... i 2 50pn.
NORTHBOUND.
STATIONS No. 1 No. > No. 9
Lv Carrollton 115 p m
I Bremen 1
Buchanan...-. .. 203
Cedartown 252 600 am 910 am
Borne 3 39 6 45 1120
Lyerly 4 37 7 46 1 30
Summerville 4 54 |8 04 2 00
I Trion 5 01 >Bl7 2 30
La Faye tt" 5 34 18 48 3 30
Chickamauga 6 04 [916 5 10
Battlefield 6 11 '9 42 5 25
Ar Chattanooga 640 p m‘9 50 a n 615 pm
Noa. 9 and 10 dally except Sunday.
Nob. 3 and 4 Sunday only.
Nos. 1 and 2 daily.
Trains Nob. 9 and 10 arrive and depart from
O. R. & C. shops near Montgomery avenue.
Connections made at Chattanooga, Tenn.,
with all reads for points North and West
For any Information apnlv to
C. 8. PBUDEN, Ticket Agent,
C B. WILBURN. Traffic Manager,
Borne. Ga.
Travel
The Popular
(W. C. de St L. By.)
SAFEST and BEST LINE
—TO—
ATLANTA,
DALTON,
CHATTANOOGA,
NASHVILLE,
MEMPHIS,
The
NORTH, WEST,
SOUTH and EAST.
For information call on or address
O. K. AYER, P. & T. A.
Rome, Ga.
C. E. HARMAN, G. P. A.,
Atlanta, Ga.
»
Special Low Rales
VIA
Southern Railway.
FOR MONTHS OF
June, July and August
Brunswick, Ga. Tickets on
sale daily at sl4, good until Octo
ber 31st.
St. Simons Island, Ga Tick
ets on sate daily at $14.50, good
until Oct. 31st.
Cumberland Island, Ga. Tick
ets on sale daily at sl6, good until
Oct 31st.
Tybee Island, Ga. Tickets
on sale daily at sl6, good 15 days—
can be extended 15 days.
Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
Tickets on sale every Saturday, good
to return Monday following date of
sale; rate of $2.00 for round trip.
Li thia Springs. Ga. Tickets
on sale ever/ Saturday, good to
return Monday following date of
sale; ra’e $1.25 for round trip.
For full particulars call at city
office. 14 Armstrong building, or
write to T. C. Smith. P. & E l . A.,
Rome, Ga
C. A. Benscoter, A. G. P. A.,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
BEST LINE
VIA
ST. LOUIS, CHIBAGO and PEORIA
TO
OMAHA, MINNEAPOLIS, ST. PAUL,
KANSAS CITY, ST. JOSEPH, DENVER. 1
NEBRASKA, COLORADO, MON
TANA, UTAH AND PACI-
FIC COAST.
VESTIBULED TRAINS
WITH
SLEEPERS.CHAiR
and DINING CARS.
L. W. Wftkeley, O. P. A.,
67. LOUIS, MO.
Howard Flliott, Can. fiiigr.,
ST. JOSEPH, MO.
J. N. Merrill, Sen. Agt.,
XZLMLi. 04. I
RAILWAYJUEOULES,
Arrival and Departure of all
Trains from This City.
Western and Atlanta Railway.
ARRIVE FROM DEPART TO
Atlanta 11 25 am - Atlanta 5 15 am
Atlanta 6 25 pm Atlanta 9 lii.ni
-Atlanta 8 45 pm Atlanta 4 05 pm
Chattanooga and Chattanooga anti
Nashville... 6 25pm Nashville... 9 10am
Chattanooga ...11 25 am Chattanooga.,.. 401 pm
C. R. de Railroad.
ARRIVE FROM DEPART TO
Chattanooga.. .10 26 am Cedartown and
Cedartown and Carrollton.... 1026 am
Carrollton. .. 339 pm Chattanooga.... 3 39pm
tChaltanooga.. 700 pm tChattanooga.. 645 am
tCedartown.... 645 am tCedartown.... 700 pm
•Cedartown and -Chattanooga. ..11 20 am
Carrollton.. ..11 07 am -Cedartown and
-Chattanooga... 1210 pm Carrollton.... 12 25 pm
Southern Railway.
ARRIVE FROM DEPART TO
Chattanooga, Clncin- Chattanooga, Memphis,
natl. Memphis and the Cincinnati and the
East 3 45am Hast 100 am
Chatta’ga and the East Chattanooga, Memphis;
Chatta’ga and the East East 10 20 am
Atlanta. Florida and Cincinnati and the
the East 100 am East 4 00pm
Atlanta, Elodda and Atlanta. Florida and
the (Ea5t,....10 20 a m the East 345 am
Atlanta, Florida and Atlanta. Florida and
the East... . 4 00pm the East . ...10 40 a m
New Orleans, Selma Atlants. Florida and
and Bir’hm.. 12 20 p m the East... .5 35 p m
New Orleans, Helm* New < rieans, Selma
and Bir’hm... 400 p m and Bir’hm.. 10 50 a m
•Gadsden and Attalla New Orleans, Selma
tGadsden and Attalla -Gadsden and Attalla
tGadsden and Attalla
-Dally except Sunday. tSunday only. Al
other trains daily.
SCHEDILE OF
soutbeiin railway
In Effect August I, I 896.
9 rains Chattanooga for Rome.
Arrive Leave
Train No 8 from Chattanooga 3.45 a m
Train No 10 “ “ 10.40 a m
Train No 14 “ « 5.35 p m
Trains Rome for Chattanooga.
No 7 Leaves Rome for Chattanooga 1.00 a m
No 9 •• •• •• “ 4.00 p m
No 13 “ “ “ “ '10.20 am
Trains Atlanta to Rome,
No 7 from Atlanta to Rome 1.00 am
No 9 •• •• •»<• 4.00 pm
No 13 •• •• “ “ 10.20 a m
Trains Rome for Atlanta.
No 8 L?ave Rome for Atlanta 8.45 am
No 10 •• 10.40 a m
No 14 “ •• » “ 5.35 p m
Trains Selma to Rome.
No 16 Arrives from Selma 3.50 p m
No 18 “ “ Annistonti2.3o p m
Trains Rome for Selma.
No 15 Leaves Rome for Selma 10,50 am
No 17 •• 11 “ Anniston* 400 pus
Trains for Gadsqen anti Attalla.
Arrive at Rome 10-20 a m
I IQQQ»m
Leave Bame at 2.00 p m
'• “ I 4.30 p m
Arrive Leave
For sleeping oar snace and other information
call at City Ticket Office, No 14 Armstrong Block
or Bast Rome,
W H GREENE, Gen Supt
Washington, D C
W A TURK, GPA.,
Washington, DC,
r A BENSCOTER, A Q P A
t hattanooga, Tenn,
T C SMITH, P and T A
BPPd.Ga.
ItnwW
Western & Atlantic R. R.
(BATTLEFIELDS LINE)
AND
Nashville, Chattanooga & St.
Louis Railway
1 . . TO . .
CHATTANOOGA, y
NASHVILLE,
CINCINNATI,
CHICAGO,
MEMPHIS and
_ST. LOL IS.
PULLMAN PALACE BUFFET SLEEPING CARS
JACKSONVILLE and ATLANTA
.. TO ..
NASHVILLE and ST. LOUIS,
aC through without change.
Local Sleepers between Atlanta and Chat
tanooga.
Cheap Emigrant Rates to Arkansas and
Texas.
Excursion Tickets to California
’ Resorts.
For Maps, Folders, Sleeping Car Reservation and
any information about Rates, Schedules, etc,
write or apply to
C B. WALKER, J. A THOMAS.
Ticket Agent, Ticket Agent,
Union Depot, No. 8 Kimball House,
ATLANTA, GA.
G. K. AYER, X t, EDMONDSON, T.P.A.,
Ticket Agent, Chattanooga,
Rome, Ga. Tenn.
JOS. M. BROWN, CHAS. E. HARMAN,
Traffic Manager, Gen. Pass. Agt-
ATLANTA, GA
Bids Wanted,
Georgia, Floyd County :
The Board o ComniissV're’s of Pnad« -nd
Revenue of eald ci untv neeire to receive blds
for eleepers unocr Second avei tie bridge.
epc<ißc.ati r n- wi l bn found in rhe
•f c> of the Clerk of the Bears. The B aid
rere.vea the rtgh. to reject ar y -nd alt bids.
W'-tursa the Honorable John ■ . F >«tet, ( bair
m nos the Board. Sep'en lr r 7 1496.
'- -3.'d MjX MEYERHAKDT, Clelk.