Newspaper Page Text
I YJ
Is as safe and harmless as a flas
seed poultice. It acts like a poul
tice, drawing out fever and pain
and curing al! diseases peculiar
to ladies.
•‘Orange Blos*>n’* is a pas
tile, easily used at any time; i
is applied right to the parts
Every lady can treat hcrseli
with it.
Mailed to any address upon re.
ceiptofsi. Dr. J.A. McGill&Co.
4 Panorama Place* Chicago, 111.
Sold by
D, W. Curry Druggist.
Valuable Farms for Real ar
I sale
We have On hand a
number of good farms
for rent or sale. These
farms have come into
our hands at very rea
sonable figures, and
we are in position to
,i offer them at low
I prices and on most
favorable terms. Ten
antsand buyers would
do well to consult us
before trading. We can
! rent or sell. To good
parties, wishing time
on Farms we are pae
pared to offer bargains
Come and see us
w Hoskinson & Harris.
I PROFESSIONAL COLIKO
I™' DENTISTS.
| A. WlLLS—Dentist—2oßl-2 Broad street
, | over Cantrell and Owens store.
4 " =
ATTORNEYS
1 . H. Spu lock, Attorney at Law, Masonic
. I Sk-tiurte Hud.lidg
1 ■ Koine
k™ f W«S B NEVlN—Attorney at Law Offlc
. ■ J Maperty Hail postoffice curiior 3rd Avenue
j
W. UNDERWOOD- Attorney at
t 4 Masonic Temple,
M Rome, Ga.
y AEC I. & DENNY—Attorneys at law. Offict
1 j £"\ in Masonic Teumle. Rome, Ga.
] .
| 111 W. VANDIVER—Attorney and Conn
yy a sellor at Law—Rome, Ga.
Ilf H. ENNIS—Jno. W. STARLING—Ennis
i ? W■ & Starling, Attorneys at Law, Masonic
Temple, Rome, Ga. fel>23.
'r*•«
-ffi \A7 H. SMITH, Attornoy-at-Law. Office u
>1 VV . Masonic Tetnnle Bome. Georgia,
rtl feb32tf
' VA7 8 M hknry. w. j. nunnally, w
yy J. NEAL—M'Henry, Nunnally & Neal
- lAttorneys-at-atLaw, office over Halt
A Davidson Hardware Co., Broad street, Rome, G*
, ' PHYSICIANS
I H. RAMSUR—Physician and Surgeon
I * | J Office at reeldeuce 614 avenue A, Fouru
I < ward.
I•’ I P. HAMMOND—Physician and Surgeon-
■i ,f | Offtrs his professional services to the poo
I 1 . pie of Rome and surrounding country
| ,[ Office at Crouch and Watsou‘s drug store, 20
| Broad street.
| \ ’
| T> R - w - D - HOYT—Office at C. A. Trevitt
Il 1 | /drugstore, jpo. 331 Broad street. Telonlion
| \ 110. rosiden m. No. 21
I ■> r\B.C. F. GB.lfhTN— Physician and Surgeoi
■ C I J —Office up. Masonic building. Residence
I I 300 4th av - BV.e.
■ ‘.I - .
I fl A- Wynn, Physician and Surgon
■ ’ f' office at Trey itt A: Johns >n drug store
■ 1 i Telephone 13 Residence 406 Second Ave,
■ Prompt attention given all professional call
■ | take
I M. A. THEDFORD'S
I LIVER MEDICINE.
11;
■ f~bR / gl CasrtVENESS
■, I dyspepsia / fc? . J Sick OR
■ NDIBESTION I \NeRVOUS-
■ BILIOUSH£Ss\ I H&VAC/IC.
I TffUPPESS lo ss D jp S
■ ’ Stomach Appef/te
I
■ one Genuine Without The Likeness, .nd
■ IBNATURE orM A.THUDrORO on FhontOf
H ach Wrapper. M.A.Thcdford Med ®-
■ 4 rt °ME.GA.
■tah. '-“Orange Blossom” is a sure!
■fli |||®e of all diseases pec woiu <i
■ | I »ld by D W.Cuny.
■ 'll Go to A. B, Me.
■ prver & Co and
K| uy Oxford Ties
W li'orth « I 25 for
BJBcfsT
biding
APIANO.
You have'.becn thinking of
buying a Piano fora long
time.
Jf you keep putting it off
you will never get it. Now is
the time to buy, as fall is near
at hand, crops were never
better. Nights are getting
longer, and you have more
time to enjoy music. Call at
store 227, Broad street and let
me show you some fine in
strument®.
I can sell you a new Piano
for $>200,00. A good one fir
$300,00, or a frstclass one will
cost a little more. Terms easy.
If you can't call at the store
write for catologue and price
All 1 want is a chance toprove
my claims. I sell some of the
best make ot Pianos and Or
gans, and wiil save you mon
ey on most anything in the
; music line.
E. E. FORBES,
227. Broad & Anniston Ala,
NOTICE.
Georgia, IFoyd }Ta the Superio
County, Court of said conn-
) ty.
The petition of R. 4 S. 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:
'•Saiddefendantvvasoftentimesoruel
abusive and unkind to your petition
er, and his treatment recently be
came so unkiud and cruel to your
petitioner, that it became unbearable,
I for her said husband was continually
I abusingand ill treating jour 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 petitioner
miserable, his general 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
resence and living with him as his
wife, and 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 authorize a totalcul
vorce, and that a divorce, A Viienno
Matrimonii be granted Plantiff, her
maiden name, Nora Moore be resror
ed to her. and that the defendant,
Robert Draper be not allowed to
marry again. March 31st. 1894.
Wherefore petitioner prays the re
moval of his said disabi ities at the
uext September term of said Cour
in compliance with the statues in
such cases made and provided. And
your petitioner wiil ever pray etc.
J. B, F. Lumpkin,
Petitioners Attorney
Filed in office July Gth. 1894.
Wm. Bey siegle,
Clerk Superior Court
) Colic, Dysen-
’ tery, Diarrhoea, 'fc. ’x '
i or Summer Com
[ plaints, can be quick- ’Mi
!ly kr o.kad out with '
PAIN
KILLER
This famous old remedy has
no equal in curing sickness of
this nature. It is quick in
action and never-failing in
results. Keep it by you. Sold
everywhere. Double thequan-,
tity now sold for the same i
old price. Prepared only by '
PERRY DAVIS &. SON, (
Provid*no», R.
DRAWF RACES.
what Or. Park Thinks cf the Let
ter Africans.
According to Dr. T, H. Prrke.
the genuine pygmy races, whom
tve possess relible imformatiuii, are
the Bat was, discovered ; n ISB6
by Dr. Dudwig Wolf, occupying
ths Sankuru region in the mid-
Congo basin; the Mkaka tribe,
near Lake Akkaa. of Central Afri
ca, with whom Emi i Pashas peo
ple would connect the dwarfs of
the Central Forest.
Os these average height has been
respectively reported to be: the
Mkaba, 4fe 11 inch • the Batwas,
4 feet 3 inches; and the Akkas, 4
Yet 10 inches. Related to them in
shortness of stature are the Bush
men of Southern Africa, overag
ing about 4 feet 7 inches in height
the Andumanlslanders, whose stat
ure is under 5 feet : the Javan Ka
langs, the Malayan Samangs, and
the /Etas of the Philippine Is
lands .
The Lapps are also notoriously
of diminutive stature, so are the
Fuegians, the Ailws,and Veddahs,
although a little taller.
Dr. Park's experiences of the
forest dwarfs of Africa during his
travels were very varied. [He had
many narrow escapes from their
archers,and certainly owed his life
to one of their woman.
He purchased the latter from a
slave owner for a handful of beans
twelve cupsof rice, and six cups
of Indian corn. But of ccurse he
did not buy her into but out of
slavery.
Dr. Parke was obliged to be very
marked in his kindness to her at
first to prevent her running away;
but when she ceased to be afraid
of cruelty, her “devotion knew no
bounds.
Had it not been for her unweary
ing attention and care, Dr. Parke
would have endured absolute star
vation through months of forest
life.
The first of the forest dwarfs meas
ured was exactly 4 feet high. In
marked opposition to the giants,
dwarfs are very often strong in pro
portion to their s ze, ; e 1 ve well pro
portioned, and very intelligent. In
regard to In ova experience, Dr.
Parke says:
“The intellectual iferioiity of the
dwarf specimens whom I have my
self met with was not at all in pro
portion to their relative bulk. I
would rather try to teach a pygmy
than a Nubian any day, and feel cer
tain that alter a few months' i’ tima
cy I could turn him out as reliable
in intelligence and in honesty as his
overgrown negro brother.” —Illustra-
ted Mission News,
A MIRAGE AT BUFFALO
Fully 20,000 People Witnessed
the Wonderful Phenomenon.
The citizens of Buffalo, N. Y , were
treated to a remarkable mirage be
tween 10 and 11 o’clock on the morn
ing of August IG. It was the city of
Toronto, with its harbor and small
island to the south of the city . To
ronto is fifty-six miles Lorn Buffalo,
but the church spire i could bo count
ed with the greatest ease.
The mirage took i n the whole
bredth ot Lake Ontario, Charlotte,
tbe suburb of Rochester, being rec
ognized as a projection east of To
ronto. A side wheel steamer could
be seen traveling in a line from Char
lotte to Toronto Bay.
Two dark objects were atlast found
to be the steamers of the New York
Central plying between Lewiston
and Toronto. A sailboat avas also
visible and disappeared suddenly.
Slowly the mirage began to fade
away, to the disappointment of
thousand who crowded the roofs
houses and office buildings. A
bank of clouds was the disappear
ance of the mirage.
A close examination of the map
showed tljat the mirage did not
cause the slightest distortion, the
gradual rise of the city from the
water being r ndered perfectly. It
is estimated that at least twenty
thousan i spectators saw the novel
spectacle.
'llijs mirage is what is known
as a mirage of the third order.
That is the object looms up far a
bove the real level and not invert
oil, as is tiie ciise with mirage of
the first and second class, but ap
pearing like a ])eri'ect landscape
far away in the sky.
THE BATTLE
Os the Ballot is Being Foueht by
the Admirers
OF THE ROMAN CLERKS
There is a Heavy Vote Being
Polled. Votes Coming in
From Every Direction
and the Favorites
are Leading.
The battle of the Ballot is being
waged untiringly by the admirers ol
the most popular salesmen and sales
ladies of the city.
AH day long the tide of the Hust
ler oz Rome Coupon, the only legal
ballot in the contest, continue a ceas
jess How into the contest ballot box
es.
The favorites are running well
but the changes in standing are,
apparently but slight.
Miss McLain, of Kuttner’s big
dry goods emporium is receiving
lots of ballots.
Mr. Pope Wooten, of Lowry
Brothers, the popular up town
.salesman and prescription clerk,
is doing good work.
Paul Reese, the klever prescrip
tion klerk of Trevitt & Johnson’s
drug store,seems to be polling a
heavy scattering vote with the la.
dies and children —and other folks
too.
And Max Kuttuer, sou of the
house of Kuttner, why Max is just
a hustling and his friends are ral
lying with an enthusiasm that
seems akin to success. He is receiv
ing a heavy vote and is apparent
ly closing up some gaps.
And Frank Kane of Bass Bros,
big dry goods house has th.? woods
full of admiring followers.
And Henry J. Stewart, why
“Scott” is climbing and a hustling
and a hustling up the climb. As
head clerk of the A. B. McArver
& Co dry got ds house Mr. Stewart
has a host of admiring customers.
And theu Charley Greeu of
Trevett’s is polling many ballots
and climbing right alongj
Miss N ;ttie King es Kutners
Miss Mabel Klein of the same pop
ular house, aud Miss Emmie Jack
sou, of Fahys dry goodsand no
tion emporium are also receiving
ballots to their credit every hour
in the day.
Remembor the winner, that is
the one who receives the greatest
number of the following [coupons
will be declaired the most popu
lar sales man or sales lady in
the city and will receive of the
Hustler of Rome a free trip to St
Simons aud a weeks hotel expenses
at the Hotel St Simons.
The trip will be made over the
i great Souteru Railway and c n be
I taken at any time during the month
lof September, to suit the conveni
ence of lhe victor
The week spent at the Hotel St.
Simons’ will be a pleasure and health
renewing vacation never to be for
gotten for the Hotel St. Simon in
every appointment is “the ideal
summer resort hotel of tbe Atlantic
coast ’’
The contest closes Saturday ever
ing at 6 o’clock Sept. 2. Vote now
and often—here’s a ballot.
COUPON.
■ ® ?
4* - •
"O 1 ' : 'a
g I
“i ; t
wo• • c
c : • q
O • • OQ QJ
,E £ m ; S ~
«5£ : 5
ta •
+J T H : 05 2
a) ’ P : -3
’ • O
M -OH
"NOdnOO -
Good Moral*.
Tt Is Impossible for Impure, sensational lit
erature to be constant ly spread before the
minds ot either old or young without its
breeding a condition of filthy Immorality.
The press is a power for good or evil. The
Cincinnati Gazette champions the cause of
virtuous rectitude and social morality. This
excellent family paper is pure in thought and
tone. Each Issue speaks for itself. It is pub
lished twice a week, and its subscription
price is only one dollar a year. Write tothe
Gazelle Company, Cincinnati, 0., fora free
sample copy. You and your neighbors will
like it. You can do good and make money
by influencing many of them to subscribe,
Try It, aud get up a club.
inn n pwptES » BLOTCHES J
Il fl 8 AHD DIB SORES >
X PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT CAIARRH, MALARIA, 4*
£ AND POTASSIUM Kll» TROUBLES
Makes anFDVSPEPSIA'
- $)
Mori/QlnilQ I AreenUi-elyremoveabyP.P.P.
< lIIQITCIuIIO UUI CO —Prlcitly Ash. Poke Root and Potas- Y'
Ju "• fiium, tbe greatest blood purifier oa
\ in Blood Poison X
Zw " -I. i —Messrs Litvman Ukos., Savannah, A.
XT , Ga.: liKAit Bias—l bought a bottle of W
Rheumatism Ithas V dononiemM-ogooiftlian k tAre*
X months-treatment at the Hot Springe. N,
Jkj bead throe bottles C. O. D. -/;
’T and Scrnfuls
Ci HU VviUlLltUi Aberdeen, Brown County, O. )
P. P. P. purine* the blood, build* up Cupt. J. D. JolsnßtOß*
X® the weak and debilitated, n'rei- takani it may concern: I h-Jr*- (L
'V l t , rengt 1 t 1 0 i Wt T> k9 ”° < Ju ll s l 7 e >iTo, x ll < ,..i bV testify to the wonderful proportiee ,
X diseases, giving th* pat lent health and o f p. p. y. for v 1 iptlous of the skin. 1 X
bspnlnoM Where sickness, glwiny Offered for aovowl year* with an un- F l '
feelings and lassitude fit st prevailed. r.vl disßirri'-'tibln eruption oil
1 my t'ine. i trie-1 every known rer’o- z
(gV For primary secondary and tertiary bl , ln valn.ur til F. P. P. was used, U
X syphilis, for blood poisoning, nicrcu- am now enti-'. l.y cured.
rial poison, malaria dyspepsia, and t g4 Kno d by) J. D. JOiIMBTOK.
wr in all blood and skin diseases, 111.0 1 J Eavar.nrtX.Wa. <
blotches, pimples, old chronic nlccrn, x
X® tetter, seaM head, bolls, erysipehm, SLltk Ca’scer Cured.
VP eczema—we may say, without fear of
i x contradiction, that J*. P. 1-. is the best Tstlimotjjrom.'tl ci. -iyor of Sequin,T(.h \
blood purifier in the world, and makes a sens £1
positive, speedy and permanent cure. Feovtw. Tn.».. J. unary 14, IK . tw
in all cases. Messr: . l.tri’i n ir-os sav.-nnan, X
in an cases. .. jie „_i | . ve tried your P. /A.
Ladle* whose systems are poisoned fnown'T, '''fn e. r.cf t'blrty’vearX 'C
and who** blood is in an impure conul- mdinr and .. ■■nd groat relief: it
ttou. due to menstrual Amoves all 1"
are peculiarly benefited by the wou } , ation f . , in tl. mm. <4 the di-0.-.so x
dorful tonlo and blood clean inc PP and prevents nny spreading of the
ertiesofP. P- P. Prlcaly Asn, iota eones. I have taken fivoor s‘x bottles
Root am! 1 otassiuin. an( , j ee j confident t hat another course JX
will effect a care. It has also relieved
SpniNOFlELn, Mo. . Aug. 14th, 1833. ln „ f- om indlerostion and stomach X
-I can speak la the highest t*rms or trouble 3, yours truly, X
yourmeilicino from my own personal CAPT. W. M. RUST, rm
knowledge. I wasaffecteil with heart Attorney at Law. v
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for x
35 years, was treated by the very best Off
ra h r y /tH m siks Dii» Railed Free. T
ALL DRUGGISTS BELL IT.
good*t han anything I have evur taken. UPFfiAAN BKOS.
K j can recommend your medicine to all propriftors Ji
sufferers of the abovo disease®. PKOFKIETUKB,
CouatV. MO. Lippman’. Bloch,Savannah, Ga
1 1., 1 -----w~~ —- ■
nis
•»., decanes, such a--.W-■■>!: Memory.LossWßraln
Kjl-L .-J J Power H.-ad-u-h. -' ak- ; e.Lost Maiilu ..1.,”-ig.n.y 1 missions, Nervous
BCf <. c. 'T7..S ness.all drains tin 11 . s po-.er In Generative Org .>s ot either sex caused
Jl hvoverexertion. V uttvt-al errors, excesslvense < I I rtbaeco.onlum orstlm
xL "(X L ~fonts will !• ci »11 :11V. ('...isumpti. .i or rir-if. fan be carried In
N
wrapper, /.ml,- Ett VBNEED CO.,.bu.so u) cTcmple,CH l CA U o
’ V-r sale >->K — f
ME 11. L OF 611'
ANl>
W-&A R. R.
g ifest i I most desireable liue betw. :n
m? and mm
Chattanooga, Nashville.
No waiting on connections or delayed trains.
All trains leave on schedule time f ••oni Rome
Railroad depot, foot of Broad streets-.
ByOnly one block from Armstrong Hotel.
jr>-*O n >y four blocks from New Central Hotel,.
No change of Gars .Through
Coaches on all trains Be
tween Rome and Atlanta,
Close connections in Union depots at Atlanta
ami Chatttanooga with all trains diverging.
Leave Rome, daily at 9:15 a m 3:00p m
Arrive Atlanta “ “ 12:55 ain 6:25 pin
RETURNING.
Leave Atlanta daily at 8:05 a m 3:01 pin
Arrive Rome “ u 11:30 am 6:00 pm
For maps, foldersand any desired informa
tion, call on oi write. C. K. Ayer,
J. A. Hume, Ticket Agt. G. I’. A.
W.'F. AVERT. M.
HOW’S THIS?
We offer One Hundred Dollar
Reward for any case of catarrh
that cannot be cured by Hall’s
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props.. To
ledo, O. We the undersigned, have
known F. J. Cneney tor the last
15 years, and believe him perfect
ly honorable in all business trans
actions and financially aide to
carry out any obligation made by
their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Drug
gists, Toledo, 0. Walding, Kin
nan & Marvin, Wholesale Drug
gists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in
ternally, acting directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Tetimonials free.
POSITIONS GUARANTEED!
UNDER REASONABLE CONDITIONS.
Our FREE 120-page catalogue
will explain why we 3»n afford it.
Send for it now. Address
Draugbton’s Practical Business
College, Nashville, Tenn.
Book-keeping, Shorthand, Pen «
uiuship and Telegraphy. We
spend more money in the interest
of our employment department
than half the Business Cocleges
take in as tuition. 4 weeks by our
method teaching book-keeping is
equal to 12 weeks by the old plan.
11 teachers, 600 students past year
no vacation, enter any time. Cheap
Board. We have recently prepared
books especially adapted to
HOME STUDY.
Sent on trial . Write us and ex
plain “your wants. '* N, B, — We
pay $5 cash for all vacancies as
book-kei peis, sten og r apbere
teachers, clerks, etc., tp
us. provided wc> fill same,
C R & C R R Schedule,
In effect May 18th, 1894.
PASSENGER TRAINS.
Arrives.
From Chattanooga......... WSJana
From Carrollton.... , 3:31 p u*
Departs. i
To Carrollton ..... 1032ain
To Chattanooga 3:31 pin
FREIGHT TRAINS.
Arrives
From Chattanooga tl :45 p tn
From Chattanooga ....... l:60-piu
From Carrol Iton 4:09 ain
From Carrollton 11:39 a la
Departs.
To Carrollton 11:45 pm
To Carrollton 1:i)3 pn»
To Chattanooga 4:09 atn
To Chattanooga 3:50 a ni.
Passenger trains run into ami depart from the
Union depot at < luetauooga. The freight trains
depart from C. R. & • . shops, and parlies using
them must buy tickets at the depots, anil ac
cept such accommodations as they find in a ca
boose.
The passenger train leaving here at 10:27 a in,
arrives at Cellartown 11;12, and at Carrollton
12:45 p m, The one leaving at 3:31 pm, reaches
Summerville at 4:45 I? in, and Chattanooga at.
6:30 pm.
C. B. WILBORN, Gcn’lSupt.
EUGENE E. JoNES, Reeiever.
Western &
Atlantic,
AND
J, C. I ST. L. EHIWIS
TO
Chicago
.Louisville
Cincinnati!
St- Lous
Kasas City
-M emphis
-AND-
Tho West
Quick time anil Vestibnleil trains carrying
Pullman Sleeping cars. For any information
call on or write to
J A SMITH
Gensral Agent, Rome Ga.
J L EDMONSON
Traveling Pass. Agt. Chattanooga Tenn,
JOS. BROWN.
Traffic Manager Atlanta, Ga.
C E HARMAN
General pass Agt AtJftßta Ga.
WANTED: Three wide awake
i hustling agents to represent us in
• good paying territory Reference
j required. Apply at 207 Broad
. St., Rome Ga .
• 8-19-Gc. The Singer M’f'g Co
>
1 b O’J KE
If you owe Slate and county tux
call at the Sheriff's cilice and pay
up and save cost. I regret to Ad
5 vertise property such times asthesd
3 but will be compell to do a ), unles
payment is made this will be in
> forced strictly this August 22 189
J Jake. C, Moore, Sheriff.
J