The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, June 17, 1894, Image 4

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5 ook Over the Passergere Many of Them Will Interest You Hon. Eryel’.Pn e,< I Nannie,was in the city for a lew hourn yester day. Tremendious bargains at Fahy's this week. N» w goods, latest styles, lowest prices. Mr. and Mrs. Phill Dyer, of Adairsville, spent yesterday in the city on a shopping expedition. Mayor John D Moore went down to Atlanta yesterday afternoon and still spend today with Mrs Moore. FOR RENI":—The PreHy five com cottage on Tower Hill. Cot rage high up and coo), rents low .{own and refreshing. 6 14 if Mrs Shropshire, wife of Chief Pink Shropshire, went down to Atlanta eserday, and will spend a week vis i tag friends Mies Sadie Rosenberge, of Rome is stopping at Mrs. Phillips for . i m summer, —Cave Spring Herald. By all means attend Fahy’s bargain > des this week. You will save big ney t and get the newest and the i»ast Those who miss attending Fahy’s i its this week will miss a chance of ife time. His new goods are potr-- .g in. See our $7.50 all ■ 00l worth $ 15.01 .7. M. Gammon & Co. Quite a crowd of Cave Spring izens went to Foster’s Mill this ■ ok on a camp fish. —Cave Sping raid • ,s Sankey Bu’ler has returned to tve Spring much to the delight of t-r host of friends here.—Cave , ring Herald. .Lev. E. M. Dyer will fill his reg- <u- appointment in East Rome > day. Services at 11 A. M. ami 8 M • at Wyatts Chapel. . John Rice, of the Flatwoods s yesterday telling some < d y am-on • . iie“boys” who have n loitering around his fish pond week. Jack and fancy wors ?d suits imported . . ids, only SIO.OO at . mmon’s. - orge Israel tolls, as his latest, < n about a man who ate seven .. i. ii hens and a peck of peas at <• iime.lt doesn’t seem reason e. —Cave Spring Herald. !’t»-re will be no services at the - Baptist church, owing to the uce, from the citv, u s the < r, Dr. lleaddf ii who, preach- ■ Commencement sermon nt ■oe College, at Franklin, this i*ng. i st; There are four rooms and . ion and other accommodations io be rented very cheap, ap o Mrs. \V„ L 1 Dinri Avenue urth Ward. 6- 14tf < John. Goddard, who left Rome .. «. months ago for ChaHaneoga ■d to the city on Friday . Mr rd has been sick for a month ... n- recuperating. He hopes to re .<» his post in a few dayi. > M atts is buisy hauling the ialforthe new buildings and cements at the Georgia School ■ Deaf, and v oik will soon coui- appropriation for ■ |was wisely made, der the suj edntrndence of sor Connor, will be wisely ex- . I.—Cave Spring Herald. , . adA.B.NlcArver&Co’s a advertisementonfrontpage . >UGn 111X1)5 RESUMED. - <nd Ore.. June 15.—Through - to the east were resumed on • rn Pacific ’o lay. Most of tl e . . o done to tl e road by the il o L i, in repaired, and traffic will by . . .ightly delayed. K **** ' t’lg UU. mow' <iituui..... c. • ' " ae* U»-r '■<*’■< -■ •-< ■ "Ills MUH7. S KAOH9 /uo'nrsSTpuiJO's to «.. ‘ *e; i » t -g n ANNIE DELL DOTS. LOCALS GATHERED AND 81RVID FRESH AKD PUKE. Annie Dalle Gti., June 16 —Mr. Webb has begin- thrashing. The yield of wheat oats and rye is very larg". Mrs. C. B. Morton of Annie delle is g >ing on a vis’t to h< r daughter Mrs. Robert N. Hughs < f Macon Prof. J. A. Shaw of Coosa will close his school today, after a very successful term. It is very dry here the corn is suffering a little bu f the cotton is looking finely for the dry weath er. The farmers say 7 that the drouth this far has not seriously damaged the crops but they have uot grown very much. Mr. Sam Johnston is visiting m Rome this week, there must be some attraction in or uear Rome for him, Mr. V. T Sanford visited the Hill City one day this week. Miss Minnie Morton closed her school hist week, at this place. Dr, Paul Reese will attend a country funeral today. Tax Receiver Mc'-Xsker says that only a few move days remain in which tuxes ma l , be returned. Now is the time to see him if you want to avoid the rush. Win. Jones, col., and Cora Lee ' Willar , rol., were married, yest<r day, in Ordinary Davis’ office. The c e:e nony was pronounced by Judge Waner Harris. Dr. T T. Christian, of Atlanta will fill the First, Al thodiskpulpit at 11 oclock service this morning and Presiding Elder Pearce will preach there tonight. ** OATS! OATS! OA7S! I ,000 Bushels of Oats just received and for sale by the Rome Gi'oceryCo. CARE FOR THE BABIES. This is the sort of weather Chat should impress upon mothers the importance of taking good care of babies. Infant mortally rises to frightfully high figures in our great cities during th« summer months ai d the reason why is be cause the babies are improperly nourished, and uot cared for as they should be. It would be a great blessing to the babies if we had a practical philan hropist there like Nathan Straus of New York, whe has uow six milk depots in that city where pure milk is sold fit for the food oi babies. He has enlarged the scope of h e chairty by furnishing powdered barley* with sterilized milk, for children old enough to use it without detriment, and by fitt’Dg up a pier where, she tered from the sun, women with babies may set and enjoy the fresh air All these things are furnished to the poor either gratis or at first cost. —Boston Herald. + ■ ■■ “Oramre Blossom’, is a painless cure for all diseases to women st Id by D. W. Cnrrv Drnirtrist Look up the pi ices in A. B, McArver & Co’s ad -ertise tnent cn front page and go buy your goods from them, 404 Broad Street. Continued btory <KAr ' ll about Bon A mb THE STABLE. Do you wish to clean the metal trimmings on the harnesses, the lamps and glass in the car riages, the buttons '-n the lootman’s coat? Bon Ann DOES IT. The First Regiment of Connecticut, use Bon Ami for their brass buttons, and for the bugles and other Instruments of their band. Note. In order to keep the white dust from the coat take e piece of cardboard, cut a elit ir. it and slide under the button and then polish with Bos Am. It saves new but ton*. THE HUSTLER OF ROME SUNDAY JUNE 17 1894 KLUSTER OF BULL’S EYE SHOTS. B-n Witis, the handsome Rone (Ir.imim r. showed me a curiosity yts t( rday in the shape of a sloq coun icifvit Coub ’b’inte bill. The word “countorfei. ’ was stamped all over lhe lace of tme bill in bold type. S. v t-ral of us were examining the old cuirohity, when Supenntendi u 1 Bui Atkins, of the Pt stal. rtmaikeu that the last piece of business h c ever transacted with Confederate bills was to sell a turkey tor and pay $125 tor a pound of coffee. That coffee settled itself. ♦ V * Stark, the armstrong tailor, has a splemiid line of summer patterns Why keep steaming and roasting in your winter dotuing when '‘Stark the tailor” is ready tu serve you with just what you want, and will put you luto duds Unit wifi make you feel us kool ami kumiortable as you lock handsome? * * * Last Sunday morning I made a statement in these columns setting forth the outrageous treatment to which an age i woman had beeu sub jected. I called no names, but the sketch from my pencil was.recog nized —Low weh, the parties .’Uierest ©i , and lhe masses generally, cun bear testimony. Smee then, on one side, my motives have beeu called in to question, and many covet at. lucks made on my paper. * Liter in the weeie I had a lengthy* private interview with the,chief character on tnat side of the case. Au interview unsought by my self but from which 1 learned, or rath er, in which many things were told me. Statements were wad me and letters shown me tocorjb orale features of ’hose statements. The interview was a quiet one but both sides were iu earnest and 1 said to the “injured’' that I would investigate the other side and if 1 found that 1 had been missiuform ed, then 1 would bank on my man hood to do the right thing. +++ +++ Since then, the only features of this peculiar case taut I found pos eibie to investigate ; I have gone into. 1 went to the fountain head, and 111 the presence of the aged, heart broken mother who has been denied an audience with her daughter, I learned the facts on which I have built my conclu sions, * And right here I want to say, that I know m my soul, that I write noth ing from a fteling es rtvenge or f>r hopeof reward—ami I will say fur ther that the man who says that I wrote to accomplisn political ends is either a stranger to my character or a willful liar. After what has ap‘ peared iu this column _ ,aud after hearing one side and investiga ting the other, i want to correct the first statement, and go on record in this one. * * * 0.1 last Thursday morning, at II o'clock, an rged mother, visit ing this oity, called at the home of her ”‘baby” daughter, that daughter being a wife and mother and a resid-jut on one of the prin cipal streets of lhe city. She ba 1 beeu previously invited by her daughter’s husband to c< 11 when she visited the city. She knew that the universal opinion was. that her daughter was living 'he life of a p-isoner. She knocked loudly on the front door for a time, she then tried the front window blind but finding it sicured she passed around the corner of the house to an end window, where she turned the blind and found the window up. *** Seeing her little grand daughter, a bright little tut. in the vom, she said “Can’t you the d >.»r for m<-‘? I am your grandm- ' “No, 1 cun’v open it 1 r y ou" was the childish reply. “Way can,t you op. n it for me? J want to c uue in and see yuur mama’’ were the appealing nor is from the broken heart ot tlie in )ther. 4 We ca g opeu it for you—ipbody I. i n oU ZJ 7 i V KntlD Y Having 'pnrchtLsed the entire stock: of Fnrniture from Messrs. Tlanks & Roberts, and consoli dated it with my already large stock I am now WITH A_nd n m ready to supply y 011 with anything and everything -{-IN THE FURNITURE LINE - Business is business, and if you can secure furniture now, that you will btiy later on at reglar ori ces and save from twenty to fifty per cent, why —h TRIS IS yiniu 10 bu auDO+F*- 1 respectfully direct your attention to the great bargains that you know 1 must have secured in the ilArmd @ nuDDRIo olvbK Tney are crowding my floors and must be moved and I ern going to move them and move them at once. The first who come to lend me a helping hand will pull in the cash. W A-RHTTDY -_ - ini<aicl Coiep Broa d St ever comes in here.” sai-l lhe prat tlers voice. ♦ * * Seein* the nurse in the room the old mother at the blinds turned to her and said: “You go and te’l Mrs that Mrs.—is here and wants to see he-. ’ The servant went into an adjoining room. Alter a minute she came back and asked: “Can't you coo.e back at one o‘cloc-?“ “No" replied the mother outside the blinds, “I can't, I am too o.d and feeble to walk the distance." She then sent the servant with a second appeal and was on her return asked to come back at 1 o‘clock - ♦ * * From that window she totered to her present home, and since then has been siek-1 have seen her and for my part I believe hei story to its mi nutest detail —How could this old mother, already totering on thevirge of the grave, with her heart hungry an t yearning for the assurance of the happiness of the baby daughter, do that child an injury. Could the angels commit murdei? * * * lam net going to nublish any of the rumors—ugly perhaps because of the impemtrable mystery that shrouds their ditails —but ugly all the same, they are and have been public propeity for years—l am uot going to publish names either—not now, and 1 hope never to be called upon to do so—all lam going to say is, that I know that the coward who shows letters and dout show“all“the letters is betraying the trust of the good old mother who penned them. The cow ardice tuat prompts the showing of a part, ’s only emphasised, when th ■? who have read them know that those that are uot shown would give the lie to ’be impression that the coward seeks to create. Iu conclusion ; I am informed on i- ill egt authority th ah through all these yeart, that old mother has never recieved ’ a let ter or message from that “pecu liarly situated” daughter. These are tacts—and they exist right here iu Lioine. Tn« husband nays his wife is happy—but, since her marriage she has said to to no m <rtal —If she is, all w-11 and good. If she is not —Ah, there’s the sub. * * * Joe Hamilton, of Etna, was in town y esterday. Joe got onto me for my elusions about Etna’s vote in the late gubernatorial k nt st in Polk. Joe is a good ’un, and, about all his side of the Polk kounty political family has to do, is to let him know how many votes they need and Etna goes in bla t and moulds 'em out. Sometimes this arrangement is powerful bandy and then, at times—it aint so konvenien', * * * One of the prettiest things I have.seen lately is a large night blooming cereus at the soda fount of J.T.Crouch & Co. The bloom wan plucked when in its glory and is perfectly preserved m a large jar of alcohol. Cereusly speaking its a blooming bute. OATS! OATS! OATS! 1 ,000 Bushels of Oats just received and for sale by the Rome Grocery Co. $25 FOR MECHANTILE COURSE IN BOOK-KEEPING Inclu-ding I3ooks Call at office tor particulars J.G. HARMISON. ■-f . .. •»»:. <•» I. ’ r »' • -.«».» . I' • - •< t art —* >*H- a. \<<u <hu e« ” . ' -ii-. «-?• - z « ♦ihr all VHurtinji-0, .jrK .. • IV • **Drv. 7 Ju/ Uiv . •very worker. itart you,"fi».-n? -ii*. e’.rythlnj. EAftiiA , PEEDH 1 V I'AKIiCGL«'RB I'KEE. at oiaa, sT***’*' 4k U).. tUUIJLAAh. WMU GOLOB DENTISTS J A. WlLLS—Dentist—2oßl-2 Broad street B over Cantrell and Owens store. ATTORNEYS J AVIES B NEVIN —Attorney at Law Offic Poverty II ul p o&ifloi cir.ior 3rd Avenue CHAS. W. UNDERWOOD-Attorney at law Masonic Temple. Rome, Ga. REECE & DENNY—Attorneys at law.Office in Masonic Temple, Rome, Ga. I WW. VANDIVER -Attorney and Conn sellor at Law—Rome, Ga. WH. ENNIS—J no. W. STARLING—F.nn'S & Starling. Attorneys at Law, Masonic Temple, Rome, Ga. feb23. WH. SMITH, Attorney-at-Law. Office n Masonic Temule. Rome. Georgia. " feb32tf WS. M HENRY, W. J. NUNNALLY, W J. NEAL—M’Hentj. Nunnallv & Neal- Attorneys-at-at Law, office over Hale Davidson Hardware Co., Broad street, lb >ine,G> PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. DM. RA MSI. R— I’byMcian and Surgeon- Office at residence 614 avenue A, Fonrta ward. LP. HAMMOND—Physician and Surgeon- Otfers his j .-ofessional services to the peo ple of Ro.ne and surrounding country. Office at Crouch and Watson’s drug store, Broad street. — —» DR. W. U. UOVT-Odftea at C. A. Trevitt drug score. ‘ f o. 331 Bro Ad street, Telepnon 11C. reside!, >■». No. 21 DR. C. F. GI I'FIN- Physician and -Surgeon —Office nt t Masonic building. Residence 300 4th as ,iue. HOWARD E. FELTON— Physician and Sin geon—Office No. 6 Thirc Avenue, Ar office dav and nigh.. Telephone 62. Frank a. Wvnn, Physician and Surgon office at Tre- itt <ft Johns in drug stor Telephone 13 Resilience 406 Secondl Ave. Prompt attention given all professional cal AGENTS MAKE FIVE DOLLARS A DAY. I Greatest Kitchen utencll ever inverted. Retails 35 cts. 2to 6 sold in every houso: samp Postage paid live cents. McMAKIN & Co. “Orange Blossom.’’ the Cohiidou Sense Female Remedy, draws ou« pain and soreness. Sold by I aUI gold by D. W. Curry