The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, August 29, 1894, Image 4

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BEOS SOM Is as safe and harmless as a flaa seed poultice. It acts like a po”*. tice, drawing out fever and paia and curing all diseases peculiar to ladies. “Orange Bios? 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 ceipt of si. Dr. J. A. McGill & Co. 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, 111. Sold by D, W. Curry Druggist. Valuable Farms lor Beal or 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 offer them at low 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 Hoskinson & Harris. PROFESSIONAL COLON DENTISTS J A. WlLLS—Dentist—2oßl-2 Broad stree over Cantrell and Owens store. ATTORNEYS J. H. Spu lock, Attorney at Law, Masonic Temple Buildidg Rome Georgia. J A WKS B NEVIN -Attorney at Law Offic Poverty Hul postoffica coruor Jrd Avenue CHAS. W. UNDERWOOD- Attorney at Masonic Temple. Rome, Ga. R*e.ECF. & DENNY—Attorneys at law. Offic in Masonic Teuiuie. Rome, Ga. WW. VANDIVER—Attorney and Coun sellor at Law—Rome, Ga. WH. K.NNIS—Jno. W. STARLING—Ennit & Stalling. Attorneys at Law, Masonic " Temple, Rome, i.a. ' t'eb23. WH. SMITH, Attornoy-at-Law. Office n Masonic Temuie Rome Georgia. * fe')32tr W 3. M HENRY, W. J. NUNNALLY, W J. NEAL—M’Henrj, Nunnally Ac Neal- " Attorneys at atLaw, office over Halt Davidson Hardware Co., Broad street, Rome, O: PHYSICIANS As O SURGEONS. _ DM. RAMSUR—Physician and Burgeon Office at residence 614 avenue A, Fount * waid. _ _ LP. HAMMOND—Physician and Surgeon- Offers his professional services to the poo * pie of Rome and surrounding country Office at Cronch and Watson’s drug store, 20 Broad street. DR. W. D. HOST—Office atC. A. Trevitt drug store. Fo. 331 Broad street, Telephou 110. residents. N 0.21 DR. C. F. GB.iFFlN—Physician and Surged —Office no v Masonic building. Residence 300 4th av • atte. Frank A ■ Wynn, Physician and Surgon office at Tret itt «S Johns tn drug store Telephone 13 Residence 406 Second Ave, Prompt attention given all professions! call TaKE M. A, THEDFORD'S LIVER MEDICINE. I Sick oh INepvous- I HEADACHE. ] Jaundice YLoss ar Appetite None Genuine V/ithout The Likeness ..no Signature orM A.Thedford on FrontDf Each Wrapper. M.A.Thedford Med.S _ £ RoME .G A . ‘ Orange Blot on' 1 a sure cure of ah diseases pe viDiii i>old by 1) W. Curry. Go to A. B, Me. Arver & Co and buy Oxford Ties worth $ 1.25 for 75cts. I I BUYING A PIANO. You have’bcen thinking of buying a Piano fora long time. If you keep putting it oil' you will never get it. Now is the time to buy, as tall is near at hand, crops were never better. Nights are getting longer, ai d you have more time to enjoy music. Call at store 227, Broad street and let me show you some fine in struments. I can sell you a new Piano for $200,00. A good one for $300,00,0r a Grstclass onewill cost a little more. Terms easy. If you can't call at the store write for catalogue and price All I want is a chance to prove my claims. I sell some of the best make oi Pianos and Or gans, and will save you mon ey on most anything in the music line. E. E. FORBES, 227. Broad & Anniston Ala, NOTICE. Georgia, IFoyd ITo the Superio County, > Court of said conn- ) ty. The petition of R. 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 of said county, on the 14th day of 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: ‘•Saiddefendantwasoftentimescruel 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 abusingand 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 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 Lis 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 restor 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 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. 1894. Wm. Beysiegle, Clerk Superior Court ! Colic, Dysen- I tery, Diarrhoea, 'or Summer Com- 4k plaints, can be quick ly knocked 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. Doublethequan-' tity now sold for the samel old price. Prepared only by I PERRY DAVIS & SON, I Provldnnon, R. |. FOR WOMEN FOLKS WOMEN IN SCIENCE In a lecture upon the subject of “Women in Science,” delivered before the Cercle Saint Simon. Feb uary 24, 1894 Mr. A. Rebiere, a distinguished mathematician, spoke particularly of six female mathematicians and astronomers. The most ancient was Hypatia, of Alexandria, the daught r of Theo, who taught at the school of Alexandria. She was born in the year 375 A. D. She lectured public y upon mathematics and philos ophy properly so called and wrote some treatises upon mathematics. She was widely celebrated for jer beauty her virtues and her great erudition,and people Hocked from parts of the then known world to listen to her teachings. She was assassinated in the year 415 A, D. during a religious re volution. Passing |from antiquity |to the eighteenth century, Mr. Rebiere mentioned a female scientist less virtuous than Hypatia—the March ioness du Chatelet, who was a mathematician, astrouamer, and physicist. In her memoir upon fire, printed in the collections of the Academy of Sciences, she maintained that heat and light are due to the same cause. The other female mathematicians mentioned by Mr. Rebiere are Marie Agnesi, born at Milan in 1718; Sophie Germain, who at the end of the last century became the correspondent of the mathematician Montucha; Mary Somerville, born near Edin burgh in 1780, who was the friend of Laplace and devoted her entire life to the study of astronomy and the physical sciences ; Sophie Kowalevski, who was born at Moscow in 1850, and whose labors upon the rings of Saturn have been completed by those of Miss Klumpke, of the Paris Ob servatory, who was recently made doctor of sciences. Mr. Rebiere is to write a book up on this subject, and, as .a prelude thereto, has published a pamphlet in which he mentions the names of still other female scientists. Without going back to legandary times, to Aglaonice, to Cleopatra, to Marie the Jewess, to Saint Cath erine, to Lilivati and others, the following taken somewhat at ran dom are the names of a few scien tific women; The Abbess Herrade, in the twelfth century, wrote a cosmology, the “Hortus Delicia rum,” which was burned at Stras burg; Saint Hildegarde (of the same century) summarized the sciences of the time in her “De Physica ;” in the thirteenth centu ry, Nontes Sabucco described the role of the liquor sanguinis and of the brain ; in the fourteenth,Thiep haine Regenal, wife of Duguesclin, “was well versed in the science of astronomy;” Eimert Muller, wife of Regionionanus, aided him in his observations; Crons everywhere claimed the decimal system; Du mee defended the system of Coper nicus; Cunitz calculated some as tronomical tables called “Urania propitia;” Ardingheli published some works upon mathematics and the natural sciences; Bassi taught physics for thirty years at the Uni versity of Bologna; Lemire studied the quadrature of the circle; Me rian, after traveling in Guiana, published an important work upon the insects of Surinam; Maria Mitchell and Madam Yvon Tillar ceau were well known astronomers; and the names of some of the con. temporarios are Bignon, Bortnick er, Huggins, Clerke, Lagerdorf, Franklin, Liblois, Renooz, Bonier Clenience. Royer and Prime. A MISSISSIPPI BELLE. Southern wedding was solemnized Wednesday afternoon at the home of Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Phelps, at Nitta Yuma, Miss., where their youngest daughter Miss Mary Pearce Phelps, was married to Count Renato Piol Caseli, of Rome, Italy. The ceremony was preformed at 4 o’clock, in the presence of many friends ot the bride's family. The home was beautified with an abun dmceof Southern flowers, ami was well filled with gal'a.it men aud beautiful women. The bride, a tall and stately brunette, is the youngest of three daughters of Dr. and Mrs A. J. Phelps, of Nitta Yumn, about fifty miles from Vick iu the Yazoo delta. Dr. Phelps was a surgeon iu Gen eral Grant's army, and i« a wealthy planter who has lived in the South since the war. Miss Phelps strikingly beautiful, a great favorite with he friends, ar excellent horsewoman, and a remarkable attractive young lady in every sense. She and her family spent the sum mer at the Graud Hotel, Maikiuac island, three years ago, and met mr ny Chicagoans. Eater the family vis jted here. During the fair Miss Phelps was in Chicago, afid was in troduced to her intended husband by Colonel Charles Page Bivod, whose guest Count Piola-Caselli was while in Chicago. Count Piola-Caselli is <heaide de camp of General Cosenz, the chief of staff of the King of Italy, and who came here early last year as secratary as the Italian com mission to the World’s Fair- He is the son of General Poilo-Casel li, one of the foremost men the Italian army;and is twenty-nine years of age. Count Piolo Caselli. was a welcome guost in our b* circles, and officiated at several large functions. He was ,the best man last June when Miss Marie Huck, daughter of Mr. Louis C. Huck, of No. 575 Dearborn avenue, was married to the Marquis Fred Spiuola, ot Por tugal, at the Hotel Richelieu. He also took part in the tableaux given jat the Woman’s building October 12, on which occasion Miss Phelps, who was visiting here also took a prominent part. Count Piola Caselli had the dis tinction of being the only foreign officer who was mounted in the dedication parade of the World’s Fair, May 1. 1893. While in this couutry has devoted himself to the preparation of an elaborate report to the Italian minister of war on the subject of the army of the Uni ted States,paying special attention to the organization of the nation al guard. At the wedding the bride was at tended by her two sisters. Count and Countess Piola-Caselli, started Wednesday evening for the sea shore, expecting to sail for Europe on the steamship Paris August 15. —Chicago Inter-Ocean. $25 FOR MERCANTILE COURSE IN BOOK-KEEPING Including IBooks Call at office for particulars J.G HARMISON Oxford Ties Worth 125 for 75cts A. B. Me- Arver & Co. GWALTNEYS SCHOOL FOR BOYS, ’Will open on September 10th, Boys prepared for Jun ior class at college. For circu lar giving full information, Address * -4S •» J. D. Gwaltney Rome Ga. Bush Arbor Meeting. The meeting under the Bush Ar bor Bear Chapman’s last night Nias one iu which the Holy Spirit was pres ent in great power. There were ten conv< r ,ions, five oi whom united with the Methodist Church and one signi fied his intentions ot joining the Bap tist Church at his first opportunity* There have been about forty con versions and reclamations up to date. Thirteen have joined the Method dist Church and several will joinPihe Bapii -t at an early date. The meeting will continue through the week. Good Morals. It Is impossible for impure, sensational lit erature to be constantly spread before the minds of 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 to the Gazette Company, Cincinnati,©., for a 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, and get up p. club, SHOPS REMOVED. To my patrons and the public I wish to state that I have removed ms Carriage Waggons and Blacksmith Shops From the old stand in the Fourth Ward to i|J buildin opposite the New Ccurt house wh Qr I am always ready to do guaranteed Carri w ■ 6C t buggy, wagon and Blacksmith work i Repairing and Horse Shoeing a specialty NT. A. WIMPEE, jJ At • - I Blacksmithing. 1 have moved Blacksmith andre-| pair shops from Fifth Ave. opposite! New Court house to my Old standi on Fifth Avenue in The Fourthl Ward. , I W. T.DREXXOX , A.t old. stand- I sth AVENUE FOURTH WARD. I 8-12tf I ME 8.8. OF 01 AND W.&AR. R. Safest 111 most desireable line between ROffi AM Chattanooga, Nashville. No waiting on connections or delayed trains. All trains leave on schedule time from Rome Railroad depot, foot of Broad street. JiyOlily one block from Armstrong Hotel. EBF'O nl y f° ur blocks from New Central Hotel,. No change of Cars .Through Coaches on all trains Be tween Rome and Atlanta. Close connections in Union depots at Atlanta and Chatttanooga with all trains diverging. Leave Rome, daily at 9 :isa m 3:00 p m Arrive Atlanta “ “ 12:55 a m 6:25 p m RETURNING. Leave Atlanta daily at 8:05 am 3:olpm Arrwe Rome “ “ 11:30am 6:00 pm For maps, foldersand any desired informi tion, call on oi write. C. K. syer, J. A. Hume, Ticket Agt. G. I‘. A. W.‘F. AVERT. M. HOW’S THIS? We offnr One Hundred Dollar Reward for any case of catarrh chat cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. ,1. Cheney & Co., Props., To-' ledo, O. We the undersigned, have I known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe Him perfect-1 ly honorable in all business trans-j actions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. West&Truax, Wholesale Drug gists, Toledo, O. 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 san afford it. Send for it now. Address Draugbton’s Practical Business College. Nashville, Teun. Book-keeping, Shorthand, Pen • miuship and Telegraphy. We spend more money iu 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 recent'y prepared books especially adapted to HOME STUDY. Sent on trial . Write us and ex plain “your wants.” N, B, — e pay $5 cash for all vacancies as book-keepers, s t e n o g r aphers teachers, clerks, etc., tyj ua, provided sye fill appae, ; 8‘ G R & C R R ScWiiliij Iu effect May 18th, 1894. PASSENGER TRAINS. Arrives. From Chattanooga From Carrollton 321 p J Departs. To Carrollton 10:32aJ To Chattanooga 3:3lpn FREIGHT TRAINS. ! Arrives I From Chattanooga U:ispn| From Chattanooga laipna From Carrollton 4:Wau From Carrollton 11:33ad Departs. To Carrollton 11 .-45 pm To Carrollton i:o3pin To Chattanooga 4:09 a nj To Chattanooga 3:soaw Passenger trains run into and depwt from tn Union depot at < hattanooga. The freight train depart from C. R. & < . shops, and parties usin them must buy tickets at the depoia, and M cept such accommodations as they find in a cl boose. The passenger train leaving here at 10:2i an arrives at Cedartown 11;!2, and at Carrollin 12:45 pm, The one leaving at 3:31 pm, reacii Summerville at 4:45 rm, and Chattanooga I 6:30 pm. | C. B. WILBORN", G en ’ ,s “J t | EUGENE E. JoNES, Ktciever. I I Western 4 Atlanii AND I N„ C. & ST. UM I —TO — I Chicago. .. I Louisville I (Jincinnatti ■ St* Low CJity . ■ Al ompnis | -AND- ■ The Wis Quick time and Yestibuled * Pullman Sleeping cars, hor any j call on or write to b J A SMITH I General Agent, Rome <*a- H J L EDMONSON I Travoßug Pass. Agt. JOS. BROWN. ■ Traffic Manager Atlan ■ c E General rass Agt Atl*M WANTED: TbreP hustling ag«ids to rP| ’" good pitying territory required. Apply f * H St., Rome Ga. N’f'gß 8-19-6'. Ihebing Pr ■ h()ll(E, ■ n ci..., .b-sb-m yi.l up ?tn<l t-avH coht vpt! i*h propertv sue but Will be compel! to payment is niede this f 2 2« pierced strictly this A . rl « Juke, 0. Moore, M