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doht forget the j .QHG DISTANCE TELEPHONE
A WORLD JF TRADE
I Ruling Prices of the Leading Articles
of Commerce.
| "SHE ROME MARKETS FULLY QUOTED
F Latest Price* Given From Daily Corrections
Liverpool and New York (Cotton
Market Fluctuation*.
Rome Cotton Market.
®y wagon
Cotton.
Nnw York Oct. 29 —The following are to
day’s quotation*:
Cotton Future*.
Opening Close Close
today, today, yesterday
•Tannery 5 96 5 87 696
* February 6 90 6 99
March... 6 u 4 6 95 6 <8
L April »99 606
May 6 12 6 03 6 11
■ June 61° 616
F July 613 615
August
September ••••
October 5 90 5 91
November 5 93 6 83 5 91
Livbkpool. Ost. 29.—The following were the
quotation* today: Sale*, 8,000 bale*. Tone
.steady. Middlings, 3 6 Bc.
Opening Close.
January and February 317 315
.February and March 8 17 3 16
March and April S 18 3 17
April and May •••• 3 18
Mayand June 3 19
Jnne and July 3 21 320
July and August 3 21
August and September ....
September and October 3 25 3 24
October and November 3 19 8 18
November and December 3 17 8 16
December and January 3 17 8 15
LOCAL MARKETS.
[CORRECTED DAILY.]
ORA IN AND PROVISIONS.
BOMB. Oct. 29. -The following are the whole
sale pnoee; small lota to consumers are rela
tively higher.
Wheat—New wheat 90c. These are the
prices paid by commission merch'.nte.
Corn—Dealers are paying 46c t acked for corn
-and are selling at su@ssc sacked, delivered on
care in carload lots. Smaller quantities, £@3c
■4higher. Bulk corn, 2c less than sacked. Ear
corn, 55c per bbl., with or without shucks
Oats—ln car lots, No. 2, mixed. No. 2 white
bulk, 29c; sacked, from store, No. 2. mixed,
30@32; No. 2, wuite 35c,
Flour-Fancy patents, $5.75@6.00; straight.
$5.40; extra fancy, $5.00; fancy, $4.85; choice
t family, $3.65. In selling consumers, grocers add
20c to 30e per bbl to these prices. Graham flour,
$5.50; rye flour, $4.00; patent spring wheat flour,
$6.00; wnole wheat flour, $6,00,
Hay—ln car lots, choice timothy, $14,00@16.00;
No 1 timothy. $15.00; No 2. $14.00; less than car
lots, SI,OO per ton higher.
Groceries and Provisions.
Sugar—Clarified, white, 4%c; yellow, 4%@
4 5-16 c; seconds. 3%@4c; standard A. 4.90; gran
ulated 5.40 c; powdered 5.80 c; cubes, 5.25 c; con
fectioners A, 5.63 c; cut loaf, s,vOc; open kettle,
4® 4.25 c.
Gbebn Coffee—Per pound, Rio ordinary,
10@llc, fair to good, 12@t4c; choice to fancy,
15@16c; peaberry, 17c; Cordova. 17%@i8c.
KoaSTed Coffee—Equality plan, fob, New
York basis, 1-lb, packages, per case of 100 pack
ages, Arbuckle’s 11.10 c; Levering* 11.10;Mocha
and Java, 50-lb, tins 28@32c.
Wksten Pork Products—Bacon, sides, ex
tra short, 7%c; regular, 7%c; fancy,
8C; shoulders, choice, B@B>/ 4 c; fancv shoulders,
fancy. 8c: hams, bellies, 8@814c;
breakfast bacon, choice, 10@llc; fancy, 12@13c-,
bologna sausage. 5%@6c; dry salt regulars, 6@
614 c; extras, 5%c.
CARD—Fancy leaf, 6@6%c; choice leaf, 5%@
choice family, sc; refined, sc.
Coal Oil—Georgia t»— 'lie, headlight 12c,
fire proof 1214 c: A”«v sxie gr me, per case, 1 lb
boxes, $2 25; per ease of 8 loz., 2% and 3-lb
buckets, $.00; Meeea axle grease, 1-lb tin
-boxes, per use, $2.26;2%-lb *ll boxes, per case,
$3.25; 314-11 tin boxes, per case $3.86.
Country Produce.
Beeswax - Per pound, zz®23c.
Bacon—From shoulder* 7@Bc; side*,
6@7c; hams, 9@tlc: country lard 6c%7!4.
5 Buttbr—Per pound, 10@20c.
Fbathbrs—Prime goose white, per pound,
30@31c; gray goose, 28c; mixed, 20@25c; old.
20c; mixed gray and white, 28@30c.
Poultry—Spring chickens, each
bene 16c;ola rooster* 10c each; geese, full feath
ered, 20c each.
Eggs—Per dozen, first hands, open market,
12%c®18M.
Tallow—Per pound, 3c
Potatoes—New Irish potatoes, 85@95c per
bushel; from store per barrel, $2.50.
Apples—Home-grown, 40@60c per bushel
from wagons; 40@60c bushel from store.
Tomatoes—New, six basket carrier crate,
75 ; shipped, 20@4Cc basket crate.
Cabbage—Florida or Tennessee $1.25.
BbAns—New Green, $1 00 per bnshel.
Onions—From score, 75@90c per bushel; in
bushel baskets SI.OO.
Hide—Dry flints over 8 lbs., Nos 1 and 2 9c;
-dry saiced over 10 lbs, Nos. 1 and 2 7c; kip hide*
7c; green salted numbers 1 and 2 5%c; green
not salted, numbers 1 and 2,4%c; green glue 2c,
dry glue 3c; skins 20@60c.
Wool—Choice unwashed, 13® 14c; slightly
burry, 10@llc; moderate burry 8@9o; hard burry
5@6; choice tub-washed 22c: dingy tub-washed
sq@2ic.
Georgia Sorghum nFrom wagons, old, 81412 c
per gallon; new 22@26c; good Steck and cooper
age.
Beans—From store, New York navy beans
$1.60.
Meal—Pearl, plain or bolted 48 lbs, to the
bushel,46c; 46-lbs,bnshel, 45c.
Oysters—Standard weight, 1-lb cans, $1,65@
175 per case; 2-lb cans, $2 90@3,10.
Canned Meats—Corn beef, 1 lb, cans $1.25:
2-Ib, $2.10; chipped beef, %-lb cans, $1.60; 1-lb
$2 40: potted and deviled nam, 14-lb cans, 60c;
H-lb SI,OO.
Canned Vegetables—Tomatoes per case of
2-lbcans $1,50c; 3-lb $1,75@2.00; com, $1,25@2,10
Tutt’s Pills
Cure All
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.
For sick headache, dyspepsia,
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
liver, constipation, biliousness
and all kindred diseases.
Tutt’s Liver Pills
an absolute cure.
Itrlng beans $1 00; eyrlyJunepeas B-lb sl,oo®
*,80; marrowfat. $1.60.
Cheese- Half ceam 10c; full cream 1114 c;
Young America, Hl4c;chedaar, lU4<Cj
Sardines—American <inarters>pep case $2.75
®3/0; ditto mustard,
$9,00*12 50.
Salmon—Columbia Rivers, fancy flats per
dozm,*i,9o; tails. $1,75; choice Columbia River
H '. $1.35; tails $1 45; Alaska, tails. 41,10; flats
$l,B : pink sl,oo® 1.16,
M classes— Straight choice, open kettle, new
35-40; prime 32c. good Zee; common centrifugal,
10@2l>c; cane syrup choice, new 350; mixed
goo is 3g4c per gallon lees.
Vinegar—Bo-graln* 10@l2c; 40 grain. 12@15c;
50 grains 15@18c; Mott’s pure apple 20c; ad.
vanue of 2c pee gallon for half barrels.
crackers—XXX soda and picnic, 4%@6%c;
XX -ona. butter and picnic 4140.
Pickles—Bulk, 1200 in barrel, $4.00; 2,4001 b
oarrel $5.00; 1,200 half barrel $3,26; 600 half
barrel $1,75; plain mixed ha’f barrel $4,60@
6,00; sweet mixed net barrel sll 50.
A mmcnition—Shot, buck, $1.60; dron $1.26®
1,30; nar lead 6c; powder, 25-lb kegs, rifle, $4 00;
blasting $1.56; fuse 40®80c.
Rope—Cotton, No 2, 9@10o; No 1, ll%@l2Kc;
sisal, 7%c; manti la. 12c.
SoDA-ln 112-lb kegs loose, 2@2J4c; in ’O-’b,
boxes, 1 lb. packagess3,4s:l-lb, afttl %-lb. pack
ages $3,30® 3,60, % lb, padcages, $3 45@3,76; 5c
size, $3.30®3,60.
Salt- Table salt in barrels of 280 pounds
—Bink $166; 28 10-lb bags $1.90; 60 6-lb bags
$1.90; 1003-lb b<gs $2.10; 140 2 lb bags $2 20;
salt in bags 60@70c.
Candy—Small stick, in boxes and baskets
6%c@ c; buckets half cent higher.
Nubs—Pecans, 9@l2c; walnuts (California),
12@l6o; filberts 9®llc; almond* 12@15c; Brazil
nut* 10c.
Grwiw »a<l Pr.tvl.luin
Chicago, Oct 2$
OPEN OLOSB
Wheat—October
Wheat—De-amber 97J4®97-% . 96+j
Wheat—Mar ... 93M
Cohn—October ... 26m
Corn—December -o?i®J4 ... 26H
CORN—May ... 8 U
Oats—October , ... |$U
Oat*—Decent ber 19J4 ... 19 U
Oats—May ... 2142
Pork—October ... 74;
Pokk—December 7.70 ... 7.47
Pork—January ... 84;
Lard—October ... 4.10
Labd—December 4. 17®4.30... 4.11
Lard—January ... 4.27
Bibb—October. ... 443
Ribs—December .. 4 411
Ribs—January
Navel “tore..
Savannah. Oct. 29 —Turpentine firm, °9)4c;
sales, I, 'M casks; receipts. 1.73 casks. Rosin,
flrm; sales, 2.-’fl ba-r-ls: receipts, A, B,
C, D, $1.21; E, $l.B ; F, $1.3 ; G. $1.36; H. $1 4<>;
I, $1 65; K. $1.70; M. $ . * ; N, $2.3-5; window
glass. $2.60: waterwhite, s3.'*>.
»t ii.aiAGio.v ... 2a.— n.ii m;
strained, sl. 9; good strains 1. sl. 35; receipts,
oi> barrel*. Spirit* turpentine <
2814 receipts, 1 . casks. Tar, me’at $L 0:
r< celpts, ■> 8 barrels. Crude turpentine, >. iel
*t $1.49, $1.99 and $1.90; receipts, uarrela.
Tortured For Months.
“I was tortured for nice months with
nettle rash. I found no relief until I be
gan taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The first
few bottles relieved me and I continued
its use until I was cured. I am now in
better health than for years and my sk n
is soft and smooth.” Mrs. Lucy W.
Bigetow, Bushnell, Florida.
Hood’s Pills are the only pills to take
with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. All druggists,
25c.
The Great White Crane.
The great white crane is a grand,
stately fellow, clean cut and shapely
from the points of his daggerlike .man
dibles to the ends of his slim black toes.
When standing erect, his lean head tow
erjj above the grass nearly to the height
of an average sized man, and his keen
eye can range over leagues of prairie
for approaching foe. Garbed in plumage 1
pure as new fallen snow, with extraor
dinarily long, slender, shiny, black legs
and with the graceful line of his back
ending in a cascade of lovely, curling
white plumes, he always reminds me
of the powdered, belaced, much coat
tails, spider legged gallant of the old
French school. And Grus americana is
surely a gallant gentleman and dig
nified withal, and can he not, like his
relative, ashen hued Grus canadensis,
dance the minuet and dance it as it
should be danced?—Ed W. Sandys in
Outing.
Incontinence of water during sleep
stopped immediately by Dr. E. Detchons’
Anti Diueretic, Cures children and
adults alike. Price sl. Sold by D. W.
Curry, druggist, Rome. Ga.
C ASTORIA
Tor Infants and Children.
Th«f»o-
Atmospheric Weight.
At the sea level, with the bardmeter
marking 30 inches and the thermometer
32 degrees F., a cubic foot of pure dry
air weighs about 565 grains troy. The
weight of a cubic foot of water vapor,
under the same conditions, is only 352
grains. When vapor is mixed with dry
air, therefore, the resulting compound
is lighter—that is to say, damp air is
lighter than, dry air. In stormy weather
the air is lighter than it is in fair
weather and not heavier, as many per
sons suppose. When smoke hangs about
the surface of the earth, it shows that
the air is lighter than the smoke. When
the air is dry, it is heavier than the
smoke, and the latter therefore ascends.
The weight of the earth’s atmosphere,
or, in other words, the pressure exerted
upon the earth by the atmosphere, is
about the same as would be exerted by
a flood of water 33 feet in height over
the globe. At the sea level the pressure
of the atmosphere is about 15 pounds
to the square inch. A man of ordinary
size thus bears all the time a pressure
of about 80,000 pounds, but he does not
feel it, because the pressure is exerted
in every direction, above, below and
around him, and because his body is
filled with air and other fluids that
press outward, thus maintaining a state
of equilibrium.—Philadelphia Times.
To Care a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab
lets. All druggists refund the money
if it fails to cure. sc.
THE HOME TRIB UN K, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1«B7.
GEORGIA MARBLE.
Seven Hundred Car Loads Will go Into
the Minnesota Capital,
A very important deal in Georgia
marble has been recently made, says the
Marietta Journal. As has been here
tofore announced, the new state capitol
of Minnesota, to cost three million dol
lars, is to be built of Georgia marble.
The Butler Ryan Company, of St. Paul
Minn., tbe largest contractors probably
in the United States, have just closed a
contract to open up and develop the
Herndon marble property in Pickens
county, Ga. This property is owned by
Judge Geo. F. Gober, of Marietta, and
the estate of George R. Brown, and
comprises one hundred and sixty acres
of the whitest marble in the state. The
contractors passed through Marietta on
last Tuesday morning and will begin
work at onoe. They are to build a rail
road of probably one and a quarter miles
from Tate, Ga., to the quarry, equip it
put in all needed machinery at the
quarry and operate it at onoe, without
expense to the owners. The owners are
to get a handsome royalty for all mar
ble used, and a certain amount has to be
used annually. It will take 700 car
loads of marble to build this magnificent
capitol, and the very fact that these
people come to North Georgia to get the
material needed shows the superiority
of the marble ia this section over all
others. It will be the means of giving
a large number of hands employment
and turn loose a good sum of money in
this section. We congratulate the own
ers on the splendid deal they have made.
Nervous troubles all kinds cured
with Animal Extracts. Free book
tells bow. Washington Chemical Co.
Washington, D C. For sale by Tay
lor and Nortdn, Druggists Rome, Ga.
Kock Work and Plants In Aquariums.
In the best modern aquarium practice
the rockwork in the tanks is simple in
construction and limited to a minimum
in bulk. Elaborate rockwork is more
difficult to keep clean, and if bulky it
displaces, of course, just so much water,
and so lessens the sustaining power of
the tank, but rockwork in some form or
vegetation is desirable for the comfort
of the fishes. There are fishes that like
to loaf around rocks or perhaps to creep
under them. In nature they find food
in such places, and it may be shelter
from their enemies, and there are fishes
equally accustomed to plants of one sort
and another, and almost all fishes at
times like or places where
they can go by themselves. In an aqua
rium it is a common thing to see a fish
motionless behind some slender plant
which does not conceal it. but does
serve as a place of retreat. —New York
Sun.
Cascarets Candy Cathartic kills yellow
jack wherever they find him. No one
who takes Cascarets regularly and sys
tematically is in danger from the dreadful
disease. Cascarets kill yellow fever
germs in the bowels and prevent new
ones from breeding. 10c, 25c, 50c, all
druggists.
The Stormy Gulf.
The gulf of Mexico is a water of
storms, not frequent, but frenziedly
violent. It is, in effect, an immense
scallop cut from the land, and hurri
canes seem to gravitate to it naturally.
They are bom in the neighborhood of
the Saragossa sea, strike the West In
dies and not infrequently leave those
islands at a tangent, just as a ball
thrown at an obtuse angle against a
wall slides along it for a little space
and again seeks vacancy. These erratic
forces of the air strike the coast of Mex
ico, or tbe coast of Texas, according to
their angle, and death is in their track.
The things called “tidal waves” in that
section are not really tidal waves. They
are not caused by an upheaval. They
are merely local in effect. They are not
vast walls of water moving with resist
less speed and weight over the face of
the ocean. They are waters banked up
against a low coast by wind pressure
until they overflow. In many instances
the submergence is gradual and ample
opportunity for escape is given. Other
times the violence of the air makes them
sudden and people are drowned.—Chi
cago Times-Herald.
Notice.
I want every man and woman in the
United States interested in the opium
end whisky habits to have one of my
books of these diseases. Address B. M.
Woolly, Atlanta, Ga., Box 862, and one
will be sent you free.
freachsr Shoot* and *elf.
Columbia, S. 0., Oct. 29.—Rev. J. L.
Burdine, a Baptist preacher living in
the upper part of Pickens county, who
had been on a protracted spree, shot his
wife through the heart with a revolver,
killing her instantly. He then fired a
38-caliber bullet into his brain. He is
still living, but unconscious. The cook
was the only witness. Mrs. Burdine
was a sister of Major Btewart, clerk of
the court of Pickens.
...
J. C. Berry, one of the best known
citizens of Spencer, Mo., testifies that
he cured himself of the worst kind of
piles by using a few boxes of DeWitt’s
Witch Hazel Salve. He had been troubled
with piles for over thirty years and had
used many different kinds of so called
cures; but DeWitt’s was the one that did
the work and he will verify this state
ment if any one wishes to write him. Cur
ry-Arrington & Co.
PERFECT MANHOOD
■ Tbe world admires tie perfect Man! Not
courage, dignity, or mu€?ular development alone,
out that subtle and wonderful force known ae
SEXUAL VITALITY
which la the. glory u s man hr od— the pride oi’
both old and young, but there arc thousands of men 1
suffering the mental tortures of a weakened
manhooi, chattered nerves, and failing I
aexual power who can be cured by our
Magical Treatment
which may be taken at home inder our directions
or we will pay R. R. fare and hotel bills for those
who wish to come here, if we fail to cure. We have
no free prescriptions, free cure or C.O.D. fake. We
have $250,000 capital and guarantee to cure every
case we treat or refund every dollar you pay us, or
fee may be deposited in any bank to be paid us
When a cure Is effected. Write for full particulars.
STASIS CO*. Omaha,
t-i When Others, Fall Consult
DR. NICHOLS
Nichols Building, 407 Union St.,
’ NASHVILLE, TENN.
The Leading and Most Successful
Neveb Fails to Cube
Syphilis, Stricture, Light Losses.
Piles, Gleet, Hydrocele,
Varicocele, Diseases of Women.
BLOOD POISOII
days. You can be treated at home
for same price under same guaranty.
If you prefer to come here we will
contract to pay railroad fare and
no charge if we fail to cure.
LOST MANHOOD.
Night Emissions, Impotency, the
dreaded effects of early vice, which
SPECIALIST
brings organic weakness. On examining
the urinary deposits a ropy sediment will
often be tound, and sometimes small
particles of albumen will appear. There
are many men who die of this difficulty
ignorant of the cause, which is Seminal
Weakness. The Doctor will guarantee a
permanent cure in all cases. WRITE for
symptom blank. You can be cured at home
by correspondence.
WRITS’ f° r Symptom Blank, correspond
ll Uli D ence private. All letters an
swered in plain envelope. \
vimTvigor. vitality
RESTORED
30 DAYS.
Good Effects at Once.
CATON’S VITALIZES
Cures general special debility, wakefulness,
spermatorrhoea, emissions, impotenty, pare
sis, etc Corrects functional disorders, caused
by errors or excesses, quickly restoring Lost
Manhood in old or young, giving vigor and
strength where former weakness prevailed
Convenient package, simple, effectual, and
legitimate.
The Cure is Quick and Thorough.
Don’t be deceived by imitations: insist on
CATON’S Vitalizers. Sent sealed if yoar
druggist does not have it. Price $1 per pkge,
6 for $5, with written guarantee of complete
cure. Information, references, etc., free and
confidential. Send us statement of case and
25 cts. for a week’s trial treatment. One only
sent to each person.
CATON MED. CO., Boston, Mass
The Rosy Freshness
And a velvety softness of the skin is inva- I
riably obtained by those who use Pozzoni’s 1
Complexion Powder. (
sot
POZZONI’S
POWDER X
•Jy UVMAXS AI.WAYS THE SAME.
The finest, purest and most beauti-
A fying toile t powder ever made. It is 4k
rA soothing healing, healthful and F*s
A harmless, and when rightly used u 4k
r A Invisible. If you have never tried
POZZONI’S A
vou do not know what an 3DEAJU XX
COMPLEXION POWDER is.
A IT IS SOLD EVERYWHERE. A
f E DDIIII’Q FOR EITHER SEX,
LE DHUN d This remedy being in
- ierted directly to the
seat of those diseases
0 B 0 ■B of the Genito-Vrinary
9m Jr* Organs, requires no
H UM B g change of diet. Cure
guaranteed in 1 to 8
days. Small plain pack
-4m TT •<» hkw age, by mail, 81.00.
14 U> Ik Xu Sold only by
For sale by Curry-Arrngton Co
wholesale druggists, Rome. Ga.
Kill to Live.
That living germs oy millions infest
the human system and produce dis
eases of blood and nerves is no longer
a theory but a proven fact. That
King's Royal Germeteur
Cures these diseases in a speedy aifd
pleasant way, is equally proven.
SPBISTG
Is here. Look to your health at the
‘ beginning of tbe hot season. Keep
1 Germeteur on hand. Use it as a tonic
I preventive and cure. Sold every
[ where. SI.OO per bottle.
: Atlanta Chemical Co., Atlanta, Ga.
MANUFACTURERS.
NEVIN OPEHA HOUSE.
JAS, B. NEVIN, iXi
Manager.
I Saturday Night, October 30th.
On acconnt of yellow fever at
New Orleans, local theatre goers
of Rome will have an opportunity
of seeing the famous original
Irish Comedians
Murray and Mack
and their Company.
The largest Faroe Comedy on the road.
Piioes 250, 750 and JI.OO.
"The best and funniest comedy on
the read.”
Why not
Buy a Piano
At Home
Where you are in position to
get one at the lowest possible
price, from ons of the largest
dealers in the South. The
E. E. Forbes Music House
is enjoying one of the most
prosperous year’s in the history
of Its exis'ence, and is better
prepaired than ever to trade
with you in away 'to save you
money. Call on or wri e them
for prices on
CONOVER, KARNICK & BACH,
BEHR BROS, KNABE,
CCHBERT AND KINGSBERRY
PIANOS
Found at
327 Broad St.. Home, Ga.
S. P. DAVIS, Manager
Red Seal Shoes,
Are built for Cash,
Sold by Gash Buying Merchants!
Worn by thrifty people
who want to, or have to,
Make 3 Silver Dollars
take the place of a Five.
Ask for them. Sold at
wholesale only by the
J. K. Orr Shoe Co., Atlanta, Ga,
iPianmii
| Female
| QB
W For al! diseases peculiar to women and girls. $ i
W It Tones up the Nerves, Improves the Ap- $ >
petite, Enriches the Blood, and gives Life, > f
Health and Strength. It is the
f QUEEN OF TONICS B
<(/ MAKES THE COMPLEXIOH CLEAB ( )
it EDCE I A bottle of “ Monthly ” Regulatisg i *
w I lICE ■ Pills with each bottle. R>r sale by , ’
w all dealers or sent direct upon receipt of price ky }'
X New Spencer Med. Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. 1
* LADIES’SPECIAL TREATMENT: m "
JX cases requiring special treatment, address, J '
Riving symptoms. Ladles' Hedical De- ]
partment. Advice and book on Female J I
% Diseases, with testimonials, free. J J
For Sale and Recommended bf
Curry-Arrington Co., J. T. Crouch
& Co., Rome Drug Co., C. A. Treviti
and Taylor & Norton.
Chronic Diseases
of all forms
Successfully Treated.
Bheumatlsm, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Palpita
tion; Indigestion, etc.
Ceftctirirlx
of the Nose, Throat and Lungs.
Diseases Peculiar to Women,
Prolapsus, Ulcerations, Leucorrhes, etc.
Write, giving history of your case and it will
receive immediate attention An opinion, price
of treatment, pamphlet and testimonials will be
sent you tbri
Dr. S. T. Whitaker, Specialist,
205 Nororos* Building, Atlanta, G
Citation —Leave to Sell.
GEORGIA—FIoyd County:
To all whom it may concern: W. H. Ennis,
admlnistrst <r of William M. Barrow, deceased,
has in due form applied to the undersigned for
leave to sell the lands belonging to the estate of
said deceased, and said application will be heard
on the first Monday in November next. Thia 4th
day of October, 1897.
JOHN P. DAVIB, Ordinary.
Citation —Leave to Sell.
GEORGIA, Floyd County.
To all whom it may concern: J. R: Towers,
administrator of Archibald Simpson, deceased,
has in dne form applied to tbe under-signed
for leave to sell the lands belonging to the
estate of said deceased, and said application will
be heard on the first Monday in November,
next. This 4th day of October, 1897.
JOHN P. DAVIS, Ordinary.
“Shall I not take mine ease
t in mine Inn 7” —Hxnby IV.
i Elegant
!/ \ Meals
i ■ \ The Best in the City. Prompt !
i Attention and High, Cool, i
i Airy Rooms. You pay only |
I | for what you order. (
Warner’s
Nonesuch
Lunch Rooms ;
; * For Ladies and Gentlemen. 1
l I Sitting Room and Toilet i
i | Conveniences are provided. i
i i Con Peachtree and Marietta Sts. i
Norcroa* Building. ATLANTA, GA. j
* take elevator.
i rirrH _ F b?^ R :
■Haggard’S
Sold
IF MOT on SALE AT YOUR PLACE
ORDER FROrt
>o^ a?Ga.'-
ONE BOX’ . THREE BOXES
For nervous women that suffer from
menstrual derangement they have no
equal on the market. Sold by Curry-
Arrington Co., and Taylor & Norton.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Surgeon and Physician,
Romo, Georgia
Dr. D. T. McCALL
Office 401 Broad Street,
In Building Occupied by Rome Drug Co
TELEPHONE 157.
DR. JAMES E. IVEY, ~
Physician and Surgeon
ROME, GEORGIA.
Office over Rome Drug Company.)
Telephone 157.
ATTORNEYS.
Wm. J. Neel,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
ROME, GEORGIA.
Office in New King Building.
Win practice in all the Courts. Special atten
tion given to Commercial Law and the exami
nation of Land Titles
Halsted Smith,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Office n City Hall, Rome, Ga.
Chattanooga, R'ome & Columbus
RAILROAD.
EUGENE E. JONES. Receiver.
Passenger Schedule in effect May 2, 1896.
SOUTH BOUBD
STATIONS No. 2 No. 4 N 0.10
Lv Chattanooga 8 01am 4 10pm 500 am
Battlefield 8 87 4 36 5 40
Chickamauga 844 445 625
LaFayette 9 12 5 13 7 26
Trion 9 39 5 40 8 36
Summerville 9 48 6 49 8 5o
Lyerly 19 06 607 940
Rome 11 00 7 00 1210
Cedartown 11 44 745 pm 145
Buchanan 12 27
Bremen.. 12 48
Ar Carrollton 110 pm
KORTHBOUHD.
STATIONS No. 1 No. 3 NO.#
LvCarrol[ton .... 140 pm
Bremen 2 07
Buchanan.... ... 224
Cedartown 307 6 16am 910 am
Rome 3 50 7 00 1100
Lyerly 4 46 7 64 1 06
Summerville 6 03 8 12 1 56
Trion 612 8 21 2 30
LaFayette 5 39 8 48 3 36
Chickamauga 6 67 9 17 5 05
Battlefield 6 14 9 24 6 20
Ar Chattanooga 640 p m 9 50am 6 00pm
Noe. 9 and 10 dally except Sunday.
Nos. 8 snd 4 Sunday only.
Noe. 1 and 2 daily.
Trains Noe. 9 and 10 arrive and depart from
C.R. *C. shops near Montgomery avenue.
Connections made at Chattanooga, Tenn.,
with all read* for points North and West.
For any information apply to
C, B. WILBURN, Traffic Manager,
Rome. Ga.
;or O. S. PRUDEN, Ticket Agea