The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, August 06, 1894, Image 4

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ELECTRIC CAR COLUMN Look Over the Passengers— Many of lhem Will Interest You Hon, John C. Forster, »>f Foi»- er'e Millets, >}» nt the day in the city, Capt. R. T. Coverdale has re turned from a business trip to Nashville, Tenn. Ordinary John P' Davis held his i-egular monthly court at the Comt house today. Judge and Mrs Walter Harris re turned from Atlanta yesterday, wbeie they visited Judge Harris sister lor days. Judge Henry held a motion court n the Superior court room this morn j ng, and among other cases disposed of. he denied a new trial to Lorn zo Powell, col. convicted of the mui dir of Peter Teague, col. Miss Leola Williams, of the Gate City is a guest of Mrs. Mayor Moore on Avenue A, Col, J. H. Rhodes, of the great Rome Mutal will probably spend one day in Atlanta this coming Fall. Work was begun this morning on the old Stansbury corner. Mr. Dick Tredaway has the job and will push the work until the old building has been raised to the grt und. FOR RENT: I have 4 nice rooms to rent cheap. Well situated, Good Surroundings. Apply to. C. A. Trivett. 331 Broad Street. Capt. W. H. Steel, is pushing forward the work ot rearranging his Carver & Harper stock ot crockery and China ware at the same time his doors are op°u and the public cordially invited to call early and avoid the rush. Miss Emma James of Cedar bluff, and her brother, W. 11. James, of Arkansas, are guests oi the Central today. Johnson’s Magnetic Oil cures cramps and colic aud internal neu ralgia and headache and backache nstantly. 25 and 50 cts. For sale by J. T. Crouch & Co. Mr. Walker King, of Texas, is visiting Mr, F G. Govan, at the Central Hotel for a few days. When traveling, always take a cake of Johnson's Oriental Soap with you ; diseases are often caught from using he tel soap. For sale by J, T. Crouch & Co. Judges Lumpkin aud Harris wlli convene Justice’s court tomorrow Each officer has a heavy docket for this term. Walter McArthur, col. was tried before Judge Turnbull in the City Court this morning on a charge of disturbing divine worship. The evi dence showed he was only drunk and he was told to go and drink no more, Ben Mitchell, col. was being tried before Judge Turn bull this afternoon for larceny from tha roost. Ben is charged with stealing chickens from Marshall Lindsy in East Rome. It is reported this afternoon that the McWilliams have secured the old Odd Fellows corner and will erect a handsome three story brick block will open a retail branch of the North Rome Furni ture Factory. And so Rome grows. Mr, J. H. Spillman, of Atlanta is at the Central. Mr. Spillman came to Rome looking after a con tract to scrape and paint the County’s iron bridges. GWALTNEYS SCHOOL FOR BOYS, Wjll open on September 10th, Boys prepaired for Jun ior class at college. For circu lar giving full information, Address J. D. Gwaltney Rome Ga, FOR WOMEN FOLKS. .Mix. W. Y. ATKINSON. One of the most distinguish fig-, urts in the great assemblage of the great party ot the greatest Southern State in the Union last Thursday was Mrs, Atkinson, the charming nud in telligent wife ot the great leader of the party She nad bad no intention ol being l seutpre, but was persuaded to come by a number of Newman ladies, who desired to t ;ke advantage of the spe cial run from her husband’s home to the capitol and wanted her to ac company them. During the morning she received ' much attention from the party lead ers in the arcade parlors of the Kim bal, where she was an interested spectator of the busy scene in the lobby-beiow, At the first session of the conven tion she sat in the third row from t’ue speaker’s stand on the floor of tuehouse of representatives, with her brothel- nlaw, Hon. T, A, Atkinson, o Greeneville, on one side, and Col. Burdette of Newman, on the other. Mrs. Atl i tson was becomingly at tired in a black aud whit} checked silk, with aci rs ige b vquet of dark pink roses, and in her hand a number of other roses of the La France shade selected from a mass sent her bv some devoted and eutt isiastic friem 8 of herself and her husband; and the plume on her hat was an ensign by which a thousand representatives as sembled sterling Democrats swore constancy and fealty. She was an interested spectator of the proceedings, all of which she seemed greatly to enjoy, though star tied and alarmed by the confusion caused by Trox Bankston s objections to Mr. Clay's election as permanent chairman. She returned home with her friends on the evening train, and with her departure the convention 1 st much of its life and interest. The Daily Press, the Populist organ, pays this generous tribute to the next mistress of the guber natorial mansion: “Mrs. W. Y. Atkinson, the he roin of Mr. Atkinson’s campaign, attended the convention and was escorted to a seat near the speak er’s stand, amid the deafening ap plause of a thousand Democrats. She is a brave little woman and well deserves the honor given her by the convention.” The Columbus Enquirer-Sun expresses a belief in the second sentence of the following para graph that is well known by many to be an absolute fact, and in the third sentence a fact that was pro phetically announced by the News and Sun four months ago: The enthusiastic convention crowd in Atlanta seems to have nominated Mrs. \V. Y. Atkinson, along with her distinguished hus band and she will share the honors with him. Many belive that she han been the manager, active and faithful, of Col. Atkinson’s cam paign, aud that elie is entitled to a great deal of the credit. As the governor's wife, she will beautify and adorn the executive mansion on Peachtree. Reprinting the Atlanta Com mercial’s splendid tribute to the wife of G?orgias next governor, the South Florida Sentinel, pub lished al Orlondo, says: “The noble little woman refer red to is one of the dearest friends the editor of the Sentinel ever had and it affords peculiar pleasure to witness honors she is acquiring in Georgia. Sheps one of the best knwn ladies in that state, and her work in be half of the woman of Georgia will make her name immortal among the educational works of that State. Mrs. Atkinson is truly a woman in the broadest sense—modest, i77_ tellectual, accomplished, an ideal wife aud mother, and a noble Christian woman. It is not gener ally known, but she is a Florida lady, the daughter of Hon. W. H. Milton, State attorney of the first judicial district, and a sister of Hon. W. H. Milton, Jr„ surveyor general of Florida, and a ‘grand daughter of Ex Gov. John Milton, of this State. She was burn in Mariannn, and spent her chi Idh t d andyuumz womanhood at that place, where she always hail a host of friends and a imirors. She was educated a t the Lucy Cobb Institute, ot Geor gia, and while then* attained 'ba* highest grad* of scholarship in ail departments, H»r success in life is not surprising to those who know her.’’ IT WAS AN ELOPEMENT. Congressman Harris’s Daughter in a Romantic Affair. Hagerstown, Md., August 6. Miss LsviniaL. Harri*, the young and at attractive daughter of Congressman Harris of Kansas, was quietly mar ried here today to M ade P. BonLau on, proprietor of a livery stable at Luray, Va. Miss Barris has been attending school at Luray and duting this sea son was upending the summer there Sometime ago she met Bonhaunun with whom she formed a close friend ship which ripened into love. Saturday, when Mi«s Harris receiv ed a letter calling her to Washington she notified her affinanced and hd elopement was arranged and carried out. The couple reached Hagerstown late Saturday night «nd were married in the parlors at the Baldwin House, the ceremony being performed by Rev. Dr. S. »V Owens, arrangements having been madebv telegraph. Valuable Farms Want nr sale We have On hand a number ot good farms for rent or sale. These farms have come into our hands at very rea sonable figures, and we are in position to offer them at low prices and on most favorable terms. Ten ants and buyeiswould do -weli;to consult us before trading. We can rent or sell. To good parties, wishing time on Farms we are pre pared to offer bargains Come and see us. Hoskinson & Harris. NOTICE. Geougia, IFoyd ITo the Superior County, L Court of said conn- ) ty- The petition of R. fp Draper shows the following facts:— Ist. That petitioner is laboring under disabilities imposed by the granting of a divorce by the Supe rior Court of Floyd county to Nora Draper. 2nd. That Nora Draper ot said county, on the 14th. day ol May 1892 filed in the Clerk’s office of the Su perior court of Floyd county, her application for a divorce, setting north the following grounds to wit: * ‘Saiddefendant wasoitenti.ueseruel abusive and unkind to your petition er, and his treatment recently be came so unkind and cruel to your petitioner, that it became unbearable, for her said busband was continually abusing and ill treating your petition er by cursing her, charging her with unchastity and that in her presence, and in such and divers other ways, making the life of your petitioi r miserable, his genend conduct to wards her being of such cruel char acter that no human heart of any feeling could possibly bear and un dergo by longer continuing in his reseuce and living with him as his wife, aud they are now not living to gether as husband and wife.’’ Upon the trial of said case at the March term 1894 of Floyd Superior Court the fallowing verdict was ren dered, it being the second and final verdict: “We the Jury find sufficout proof have been submitted to dir consideration to author.ze a totalcul voree, and that a divorce, A Viicnno Matrimonii be granted Plantiff, her maiden name, Nora Moore be restor ed to her, and that the defendant, Robert Draper be not allowed to marry again. March 31st, 1894 Wheres >re petitioner prays the re moval of his said disabilities at the next September term of said Court in compliance with the statues in such cases made and provided. And your petitioner will ever pray etc. J. B, F. Lumpkin, Petitioners Attorney Filed in office July 6th. 18'14. Mm. Beysiegle, Clerk Superior Court, “Orange Blossom” is a painless cur: of aH di«eases peculiar women. S«ld by D W. Ciu ry. Announcement i TO THE PEOPLE of GEORGIA and of the SOUTH EAST THE ATLANTA CONSTITUTION make, en announcement »t more than ordinary Inter est Bv special arrangement with the publishers of theit greatest of all reference libraries. The Ency clopedia Britannica. ninth (latest) edition, we are enabled for a short time to place this King of Books within easy reach of every reader. This edition Is bound In ROYAL OCTAVO VOLUMES And is the only complete and unabridged edition of this great work in existence revised Ito date. 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Upon application we will send you description and prices of the various styles, and you may select any style of binding you choose and have the privilege of paying for it at the rate of 10 cents a day, half the set being delivered to vou at once: or. we will deliver the entire set of 28 volumes on payment of $5.00 per month. All charges paid by us to any railroad station in the United States. THE CONSTITUTION, Atlanta, Georgia. -♦PLAINING MILL* W"e AlLe;i,n Busin osrs Cai I and Get < Jitt JHrices Before Buying, We are Seiling SASH, DOORS A N I ) P> BI X L)S Flooring, Ceiling, Moulding, Hallusters and Brackets A-t Bottom Brices HUME & PERKINS Sil OUTER COLLEGE FOR YOUNG LADIES ROME, GEORGIA. f A . ' J ■■ . .wL ■ a 4 l ' Till Mil SMI Oj ill SWIIII3XIB3I. < ADVANTAGES: I. A lofty and healthful site, free from malaria, 2' Charming grounds and scenery—an ideal situation. 3. Magnificent brick buildings—“ The beauty of the colleges.’’ 4. Every material comfort and convenience. 5. 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THEDFORD’S dyspepsia \ s, ct < D ; Indigestion \Nervous- BiLIOUSN£SS\ / Sourness Stomach ■s./ Appetite HoneGenuineWitmoutThe Likeness no Signature ofMA.Thedforo on FrontOf Each Wrappjr. M.A.Thedford Med 6. R □ m e . g a W. L. Douclas $3 SHOE»o CORDOVAN FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF) ’ $ 4. 5 3. 5 - o FINECALF&KANGAU)I $ 3.5 P POLICE. 3 SOLES. *2 BoysSchooiJhqei •LADIES- 52 ’ S "Bes-t?ongoi 4 SEND FOR CATALOGUE ‘ w? DOUGLAS, I -A BROCKTON. MASS. I’ou can save money by purchasing IV. L. Douglan shoe*, Because, we are the largest manufacturers of advertised shoes in the world, and guarantee the value by stamping the name ana price oa the bottom, which protects you against high prices and the middleman’s profits. Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them sold every where at lower prices for the value given than any other make. Take no substitute. If yout dealer cannot supply you, we can. bold by Cantrell & Owens, ■'" ■ I? 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