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NOTES FROM WALKER
Jewish Rabbi Converted to
Christanity
IS PREACHING AT LAYFIETTE
de List Quarter of the L l *Fayette and
Chicainauga Conference Saturday
And Sunday.
LaFayette, .Nov. 19. —Rev. Sigmund
Hagowsky, a Jewish convert, has been
preaching some interesting sermons at
the Baptist church this week. Mr.
Ragowsky was born in Russia and edu
cated in Poland and Germany , for the
Hebrew ministry.
When he was teaching and preaching
id England a Jew who had been converted
to the Christian religion came to see him.
The Christian agreed that he would
repudiate his religion if the Jew could
convince him that Christ was an impostor
and the Jewish Rabbi aereed that he
would become a Christian if the Christian
•Jew could convince him that Christ was
the true Messiah. The Christian Jew
with the aid of the Old Testament con
vinced the Jewish Rabbi that Christ was
the true Messiah. When the Jewish
Rabbi told his wife of his conviction, she
:said that he was crazy.
He gave up the clergy and went in
'business. At the appeal of his wife he
again entered the Jewish rhinistry in
Scotland. Afterwards he gave up his
■charge and came to America, and while
in Louisville, Ky., on business he visited
a mission and was converted. Since then
he has entered the Christian ministry and
has been a missionary in Cincinnati and
Louisville. He is at present contempo
lating missionary work in New Orleaans.
The last quarterly conference on
LaFayette and Chickamauga circuit
for the conference year will be held
here on Saturday and Sunday next.
The trustees are required to make a
report of church property in answer
to some questions on page 50 of Disci
pline. Please attend to this matter,
brethren. There will be a meeting of
LaFayette church on Saturday at 10
a. m. It is important that every
member be present as it is the closing
-conference of the year’s work.
The order of services for Saturday
and Sunday is as follows:
Saturday—lo a. m. Church confer
ence; 11 a. m. sermon by Rev. H J
Adams; 2 p. m. Quarterly Conference
■session.
Sunday—9:ls a. m. Sunday school;
10 a. m. love feast; 11 a. m. sermon by
Rev. H. J. Adams followed by sacra
ment of the Lord’s Supper; 6:30 p. m.
sermon by Rev. H. J. Adams.
A. B. Weaver, P, C.
The Best Way to Cure.
’Disease is to establish heatlh. Pare,
trich blood means good health. Hood’s
Sarsaparilla is the One True Blood Puri
fier. It tones up the whole system, give
appetite and strength and causes weak
ness nervousness and pain to disappears
No other medicine has such a record of
wonderful cures as Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
-Itaod’s Pills are the best after-dinner
pill; assist digestion, prevent constipa
tion. 26c.
JPETITIOX 50 r GRANTED.
•lication to Cut Peminole in Two Refused I
By Ordinary Mattox.
An application was made last week
Ordinary Mattox to divide
"Seminole district in two parts, the
reason being that in the lower part of
the district it is impossible to keep up
fences along the river, and the citizens
•in that part wanted to be cut off into
a district to themselves so that they
could vote on the fence question, and
thus dispense with the great annoy
ce to which they are now subjected.
It will be remembered that the dis
trict voted for fence by a small major
ity in a recent election.
The application for a division was
backed up by a petition of fifty-six
names, comprising most of the lead
ing farmers in the lower half of the
district. A counter-petition was filed
and strong opposition made by a num
ber of the citizens of the upper section,
and when the case was presented to
•Ordinary Mattox last week he decided
to refuse an order for a division, as
prayed for in petition.
Ic is stated that farms along the
Tutt’s Pills
Cure AH
Liver Ills.
ARE YOU >
BANKRUPT in health,
constitution undermined by ex
travagance in eating, by disre
garding the laws of nature, or
physical capital all gone, if so,
NEVER DESPAIR
Tutt’s Liver Pills will cure you. j
For sick headache, dyspepsia, i
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
liver, constipation, biliousness
and all kindred diseases.
Tutt’s Liver Pills
an absolute cure.
river from Foster’s bridge to Gayles
ville are absolutely without fence, as
it is impossible to keep up fencing
along the river. Cattle and hogs are
often turned in before the crops are
all gathered, and roam at will in all
this large territory. The lands are
said to be damaged greatly during
I the winter months by tramping
by stock, besides other in
conveniences; hence the great anxiety
I of those along the line of the river to
I adopt some system by which these
troubles will be obviated, and under
which their farms can be built up and
improved.—Summerville News.
Notice.
I want every man and woman in the
United States interested in the opium
and whi«ky habits to have one of my
books of these diseases. Address B. M
Woolly, Atlanta, Ga., Box 363, and one
will be sent you free.
A'tei d the auction at R imej’s
t table 1’ riday Nov. 20.
DON’T PUT IT OFF.
Get Tour Christmas Photographs Without
Further Delay.
Mr. Photographer Lancaster wishes
to give his patrons a pointer about
their Christmas photos and urge them
to go at once to his studio.for sittings
so the work will be finished by Christ
mas.
It is almost a never-failing habit
with the people to put this off till the
last week or the week before Christ
mas, and many are disappointed’
Let It be understood that cloudy’ or
rainy rainy weather makes no difer
ence. Just as good negatives can be
m&de as when the sun is shining, but
it reuuires good light to print and
finish up.
So don’t put it off. Go and let Lan
caster make some of these beautiful
Platino photos, the very thing for a
nice Christmas present. Prices are
reasonable and the quality of his work
is above the average.
Don’t fail to see his Platino or steel
ingraving finish photos. It is the
only up to-date picture and very
beautiful.
TO THE PUBLIC.
I will continue the coal bus
iness ot my late lather, Col. C
I Graves. I have given up mH
other business and will give at
tentiou to same, and ask ot his
triends and customers a con
tinuance ot their patronage.
Robert W. Graves.
SPIRIT OF THE PRESS.
dußignon could just as easily have
been the senator himself if he had taken
good advice at the time of the Griffin
convention. —Griffin News.
Secretary Carlisle is preparing an
on-slaught on greenbacks and many
republicans are said to be ready to
join him.—Augusta News.
Why should a man desire to go to the
legislature in Georgia if he can no longer
ride on a free pass or frank his telegrams?
Legislative ambition now is all vanity.—
Columbus Ledger.
Alexander Stephens Clay—the name)
blends Georgia statesmanship and Georgia
soil in a neat way. If the man lives up
to his appellation, he will pass muster
without trouble. —Brunswick Times.
A South Carolina newspaper boasts
that it has a paid-up subscriber for one
hundred and ten years, from June, 1896,
to June, 2006. This is nothing short of
down-right robbery of editorial posterity.
—Savannah News.
Col. Breckinridge, of Kentucky,
pitched his candidacy for congress on a
high moral plane, and there he was left
standard when the votes were counted.
He has the high plane and his opponent
the seat in congress.—Columbus En
quirer.
The fresh young fellow who said a
few days ago that the Telegraph was ..
Republican paper was promply told that
he was “either a liar or a fool who did
not have sense enough to tell a hawk from
ahani-saw.” Anybody else that this
cap fits, may wear it. See?—Macon
Telegraph.
Atlanta Ostrich Feather
Works, 691 Whitehall
streer, next door to
High. Ostrich Boas,
Plumes ana Tips dyed
and curled like new at
I. Phillips.
Running For Office.
A gentleman who is usually a home
keeping man, but who was induced to
enter the race for a minor office early
in the campaign was “giving his ex
perience” outside of meeting the other
day. He said: “No, I shall never run
for office again, not if I know it. For
three weeks after I took the stump I
did not see my family, and during my
absence at that time a fellow who was
shipping watermelons for me pocketed
the returns for four carloads and skip
ped the country; a tramp rode away on
one of my best horses; my wife invest
ed S2OO in bicycles; my youngest
daughter ran away and married a fel
low for me to support, and all of our
mutual relatives came to congratulate
my wife on the honor which had been
conferred upon me and incidentally to
spend the summer. Those three weeks
cost me in round numbers S4OO, to say
nothing of the son-in-law, who threat
ened to be permanent, and the office for
which I was striving is worth just S6OO
a year. I won’t be elected, however,
and I’m glad of it. But this has been
a campaign of education to me, for in
it I have learned just how much of a
fool I really was. ” —Atlanta Constitu
tion.
To Cure a Cold In One Day,
Take Laxatioe Bromo Quinine Tablets
All druggists refund tre money ; f it fails
to cure. 25c.
THE ROME TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1896.
Christmas Presents
Those who intend to buy should send
at once for our new
* + * *• ♦ + * + Price List
for the fall of 1896, sent free of charere
J. P. Stevens & Bro., Jewelers,
47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
RUNNERS MAY READ
Rus Column of Short Paragraphs and
Personal Mention.
•
HEIST NOTES FOR HASTY READERS
*<rlef Mention of Many Kinds
Batch of Items of Interest
Cut to the Core.
Pictures are telegraped.
Japan reports several strikes,
The Sot th has i 09 cotton mills.
A boycott mined a ’Frisco firm.
Kansas has a 1637-acre o: chard.
Rockafellow earns $1,328 per hour.
New York has 10,000 unemployed.
Missouri boasts one-pound apples.
Great Britain has 88,000 teachers.
Rubber horsehoes are multiplying.
Nashville anticipates $2 a ton coal.
The musical bicycle plays as itg oes.
New Yorkers pay $30,000,000 a year
for beer.
North Carolina is to have a cc-oper
ative colony.
Denver is promised cheap ’phones by
a new company. -
Ringling Bro.’s great circus will be
in Chattanooga on November 21st.
You can go up on the C. K. & C. spe
cial and see it.
Don’t wait until cold weather to repair
or reset your grates. Dick Treadaway
will exchange new grates for old ones.
Leave orders at H. D. Hill’s office. ts.
On November 21, 1896, the C. R. &
C. will sell round trip tickets from
Lindale and Rome to Chattanooga,
Tenn., at $1.50. Special train will
leave Lindale at 6:15 a. m., and Rome
at 6:30 a. m.
There are some people who never- wear
dark glasses and yet they never see any
thing brigt; it’s the people who are dys
peptic and soured. Everything is out of
joint with such people. “I suffered many
years with Dyspepsia and liver troubles
but have been relieved since taking S:m
mon’s Liver Regulator. I know others
who have been greatly benefited by its
use.” —James Nowland, Carrolton, Mo.
Now is the time to get a bicy
cle cheap, repossessed wheels
good as new for less than cost
E. E. Forbes
Are Yr.u Going; to Atlants,
The Western and Atlantic railroad
and Nashville, Chattanooga and St.
Louis railway have the most conven
ient schedules between Atlanta and
Rome, with solid trains and through
coaches.
Are You Going to Jacksonville, Fla.?
Leave Rome 4:05 p. m. and arrive at
Jacksonville, Fla..the next morning
at 8:00 o’clock for breakfast. Pull
man palace sleeping cars Nashville
to Jacksonville- through without
change. Call on me for tickets,maps,
folders or any information.
C. K. Ayer,
Ticket Agent.
C. E. Harman, Gen. Pass. Ag’t.
FREE lO^~ TT
If sou seuu your name and address, mention
ing this paper, tc Dr. Hathaway & Co , 22% So.
•triad St, 4-uanta, Ga.. you will receive their
vaiuaoi" 64-page Reference Book for Men and
W omen.
This book has just been issued and is full of
va’uable information to those afflicted with anv
of those delicate diseases peculiar to men and
women. It tells how to cure diseases. Dr.
Hathaway & Co. are considered to be expert in
tne treatment of such diseases, and are without
doubt the leading specialists in the line of dis
eases which they make a specialty of.
SPECIALTIES.
Specific blood poi- f
sonlng, nervous de- 7
bllity, kidney and MW
urinary difficulties, fcs/
strictures, varico- | / -v Sttjtey
cele, hydrocel", pim- ,/Skj'
pies, piles, rheuma
tism, skin and blood
diseases of all forms,
catarrh and diseases AsBSSSSs&,
of women. Address
orcalion Dr. Hath-i^aßMW' ;
away & Co., 22% So moan st., Atlanta, Ga
Mail treatment given by sending for symptom
blank No. 1 for men, No. 2 for women, No. 3
tor skin diseases. No. 4 for catarrh
J. B. NEVIN, Manager.
TO-NIGHT
Special Engagement of the Well-
Known Actress,
MAUDE ATKINSON
Supported by a Company of
Players in
Leah. The Forsaken
o
Prices, 10,20 and 30c. Seats on sale
at Trevitt’s drug store.
OUR CARPET COLUMN!
Why is it that we can sell Carpets and
Smyrna Rugs at 50c. on the Dollar?
Eight years ago the McKinley tariff on Carpets and Rugs gave a great stimulus
to these industries in the United States. Scores of new mills were erected, thousands
of new looms put in to manufacture Carpets and Rugs. The strong competition among
these mills; their increased facilities; their improvements in machinery and manufac
turing; then the Wilson bill, giving us free wool, have all combined to bring the price
down to a little more than half the price of a few years ago. Few people realize how
cheaply they can buy a floor coveting —we want every one to know it.
We Carry Better Grades of Carpets
OAST ASTT BEALEK IST
We Carry Three Times the Stock
OF AST nEAXiE.It I.Y RO®.
CARPETS FROM 12 1-2 c. TO $1.25 PER YARD.
Half Wool Carpets Made and Laid for 50c per yd. Wool Carpets Made and Laid for 60c per dy
Wool Carpets, Extra Heavy Grade, None Like Them io Rome, for 75c per yd-Madeand Laid.
(Our 75c. Wool Carpets are sold at retail in New York city for 85c. per yard )
Smyrna Rugs CReaper and Prettier Than Yon Will Find Anyw ? bere--and Better Grate
2x5 feet, A2 50 HI IR Shade Stock
i \ 4- f \tt Hull stnck
6x9 feet, VlO 75 •>-. Chenille Curtain Stock
If jou are priced Japanese Rugs at less figures, don’t buy them,
as they are of poor quality and worthless for wear
M’Donald-Sparks-Stewart Go.
Furniture, Carnets, Rugs, Stoves and Undertakers.
1 3 & 5 Third Avenue & 304 Broad St., ROME, G-EORG-IA
CURRY’S COUGH CURE
Os Wild Cherry and Tar For
Coughs, Colds, and Hoarseness
BRONCHITIS, CROUPANU WHOOPING COUSH.
Curry’s Cough Cure is an elegant preparation of it
Cherry and Tar combined with the best known medicinal
agents for the cure of the above named maladies.
CURRY’S COUGH CURE
Is as pleasant as honey and never fails to relieve and erad
icate all Lung and Bronchial troubles. 25c, per bottle.
Curry's Beef, Wine and Iron
Strengthens and Invigorates. Makes new blood, pure
healthy b ood, replaces lost tissues and makes flesh.
DO NOT START INTO WINTER
With a depleted and rundown system. A whole winter’s
sickness and misery may be the result. Pint bottles of
Curry’s Beef, Wine and Iron at 40 cents per bottle.
STANTON HOUSE
—EE- p- d. J. JONES, Proprietor.
SpecialTermsto Families
ffiWSp Wife Two rainu,es walk f rom Cenifal e
CHATTANOOGA, : : TENN
Chattanooga, Lome & Columbus
RAILROAD.
EUGENE E. JONES, Receiver.
Passenger Schedule In effect Nov. 15, 1896.
SOUTH BO OSD
Sl‘a I'IONS Su. 2 I Ao. 4 Sjo. 1U
-
Lv Chattanoo. a 8 01am 4 10pm 5 (Ml am
Battlefield 8 37 4 36 5 40
Chickamauga 8 41 4 45 6 25
LaFayette 912 ,5 13 725
Trion 9 39 15 49 8 35
Summerville 9 48 5 5u 8 55
Lyerly 10 06 so 08 941
Romell 00 700 12 10 p m
Cedartown 11 41 745 pm 145
Buc*>anan.r.l2 27
Bremerfl2 43
Ar Carrollton.... 1 IOpm !
NOKTHBOtJND
STATIONS No. 1 No. 3 No. 9
lv Carrclit >n. 1 40 p m
Brem»n2 07
Buchanan 2 24
Cedartown3 i>7 600 am 910 am
Borne 3 50 6 45 11 00
Lyerly 4 45 7 44 115
Summerville 5 03 IBf3 155
Trion 5 12 >8 14 2 30
LaFayette 5 3J 18 46 3 35
Chickamauga 6 07 |9 1« 5 05
Bittiefield6l4 ;9 7 520
Ar Chattanooga 640pm’9 55 a u 600 pm
Nos. 9 aid 10 daily excert Sunday.
Nos. 3 and 4 Sunday only.
Nos. 1 and 2 daily.
Trains Noe. 9 and 10 arrive and depart from
C. R. &C. shops near Montgomery avenue
Conuec'ions made at Chattanooga, Tenn.,
with all loads for points North and West.
For any Information annlv to
C. 8. PBUDEN. Ticket Agent,
C B. WILBURN.'I raffle Manager,
Rome. (4a.
NORTH GEORGIA
Ijritutal College,
DEPARTMENT OF THE UNIVERSITY,
As Dahlonega, Georgia.
ripring term begins first Monday in February.
Fall term begins first Monday in September.
FULL LITERARY COURSES.
TUITION FREE
With ample corps of teachers.
TROUGH MILITARY TRAINING
under a U. 8. Army Officer detailed by
Secretary of war.
Departments of Business, Short
hand, Typewriting, Telegraphy,
Music and Art.
Under competent and thorough instructors.
YOUNG LADIES have equal advantages.
CHEAPEST COLLEGE m the SOOTH
For catalogues and full information ad
dress Secretary o* Treasurer of Board
Trustees.