Newspaper Page Text
, '■!' T"! rc i
"b"' ?y I
Fierce’s I’lew.-ut I' -J
kits excel tie. ordi
nary pili*:
They're smaller;
e’u.ier to take; emier
in their ways?. No
'grilling; no distur
bance; no reaction
afterward.
Their influence
lasts. By tl.. ir tonic
or strengthening el-
’“'■"or
/Wk
<? |\ | /; \
„ thp intestine?, they imre.i-: the
fccts °n **? „ .• ; . bowls, <W<l i- ;«”"t
--n tt ' T ’/, t.i,, tion, Biliousness, Jutin- I
‘i’n !"■ Sour .-tai.u-b. !
£’ or Bilious ’Hootches, and every fixe
d **’ rder, .i,f1.1 takes these tiny, supar-coatod
A n ' *' l i.iv They Te put up in little saaiwl >
Feli ~ts r, ‘ al \.-’ t ' ; t a ] W ayH reliable, while
rials, and ' jA the vest-pocket.
i «■»«>- y »" «*
tbegO" ii >’?" r et that a tricky dealer is ready
NoSU H 1O u’h it maybe better for him to
te as good’’ for you to buy.
w
y *
blossom
Is as safe and harmless as a fia>
seed poultice. I: acts tike a
tice, drawing out fever arid pa*u
and curing al! diseases peculiar
to ladies.
•’Orange Bios’ >n” is a pas
tile, easily used at any time;
is applied fight to the parts
Every lady can treat herseli
with it.
Mailed to any address upon re
ceipt of Si. Dr. J. A. McGill & Co.
4 panorama Place, Chicago, 2'l.
Sold bv
D, W. Curry Druggist
DON’T FORGET
The Cundell Lumber
Co., sells
Cheap shingle sail
grades.
Cheap lumber all
grades.
Cheap ceiling and
flooring, sash, doors,
and blinds. 9-7-lmo£
■■HHEbouMiMKaaraBHBMBMMMnHUMMeas
Tiie Burney
Tailoring Co
220 Broadway.
What about a
a very fine pair
of pants, do you
need a pair?
Burney Tailor
ing Co., has just
received the
largest and best
selected sto ck
of pant goo d s
ever shown in
Rome. We have
bought heavily
of fi n e pant
goods and will
make you a pair
of dants forslO
that will cost
you 12. to sl4.
elsewhere.
We have a MAN
Pants maker who learn
ea his trade in New
ork and is as fine a
Pants maker as ever
South, so if you
n an .f a f’ ne P a ’ r
Pants, made right, call
us and we furnish
nem on short notice.
The Burney
Tailoring Co,
220 Broadway,
NEARLY A PANIC.
i
Actors Rehearsing a Piny Cause Excite*
inent In a Chit ago Hotel.
There came near being a panic in the
reading room of the Great Northern the
other day. Archie Boyd, the actor who
used to play Den Thompson’s part in
“The Old Homestead” and who starred
last season in a new play of his own
called “The Country Squire,” was here
some weeks ago to consult Cow T. Mur
phy, the playwright, as to alterations
in this play. He wanted a new second
act, and after talking inarterg over with
Murphy he left the latter hard at work
on his manuscript at his Lake Bluff
home.
One day last week he wired Murphy
that he would meet him at the Great (
Northern at a certain time and read
over the altered play with him. The '
author was on hand at the appointed I
time, and so was the star. Together j
they repaired to the reading room and ,
set about their task. Mr. Murphy read
quietly until his enthusiasm overcame |
him. Then he threw cautflik to the ,
winds and exclaimed:
“My God, you have stolen my child!” '
A guest from Oregon, Bl*., looked i
up from a letter he was wrllig to the
folks, and then he edged uneasily to
waid the end of the table.
“ ’Tis false, ” roared Boyd. “I am no
kidnaper. ” * •
“You lie!” exclaimed Murphy in
loud tones, throwing the manuscript
aside, and the man from Oregon started
for the door, while a commercial man
from Toledo leaned back in his chair to
see it out.
The author and star had shifted to a '
quiet love scene, when Landlord Eden I
came in at the request of the Oregon I
man to see what the trouble was. When
| he told the latter what was up, he apol
ogized profusely and wanted to buy pop
I for the party. When Boyd plays in
Oregon, the stranger will be in the au
dience. —Chicago Times.
WONDERFUL NERVE.
■ AManVGio Looked on Calmly While the
Surgeons Cut <>lT His l oot.
Thomas E. Byrnes, a molder, had a
portion of his right foot crushed by be-
I ing run over by a Lake Roland car yes
| terday morning, which necessitated the
amputation of about oue-l>aif of the foot.
i During the amputation .Byrnes gave one
i of the most .tolid exhibitions of nerve
and impassiveness to pain twr witness
ed. Drs. R. F. Blake and Geer matte
■ preparations to put their patient under
the influence of chloroform for this pur
pose, but when Byrnes was informed of
what they were about to do he amazed
them by telling them to go ahead with
the cutting, but that he didn’t want a
narcotic. The physicians feared he
couldn’t stand it, robust as he is, and
plainly told him so, but Byrnes was
firm and said he would get through it
all right
Then the surgeons proceeded as gen
tly as possible. The pain must have been
terrible. Just imagine taking a knife
and sinking it down into the flesh, sever
ing bones and joints! “It’s enough to
make one shudder, ’ ’ said a bystander, a
surgeon, too, accustomed to the horrors
of a surgical hospital. But Byrnes never
even winced. He sat in the chair with
folded arms, braced himself against the
back of the seat and watched the move
ments of the knife. There was no moan,
no rolling of the eyes, no twitching—
absolutely no indication of the terrible
pain except the pallor of his face. The
operation over, Byrnes thanked the sur
geons, who seemed to be far more con
cerned and anxious that the job come
to an end than the heroic patient.—Bal
timore American.
r
DUCKED IN SACKS.
But the Saltan’s Affection Made the Opera
tion a Mild One.
Odd stories are coming from Constan
tinople in connection with the recent
earthquakes. One has bens of G jus-
suf Block, physician to tKe sultan. The
earthquake damaged the part of the
palace in which he lives, and suddenly
two favorite wives of the sultan were
precipitated through the ceiling into
the doctor’s room. All three fled from
the building before it collapsed and
found the sultan himself in the court
yard.
The stern practice of Islam left the
'sultan no choice but to tie up his two
wives in sacks and plunge them into the
Bosporus, they having been gazed upon
by a profane giaour. Fortunately the
sultan cherished affection for both of
them, and having consulted the grand
mufti he saw his way to have them pun
ished symbolically. They were put into
sacks which were properly sewed up
and duly taken to sequestered spots on
the banks of the Bosporus, and in the
presence of a number of praying imams
gently dipped into the soft, blue waters,
after which the women were deemed to
be purified. They were then removed to
a new home and restored to their con
| jugal rights.—London Truth.
A Strike Mail Route.
Talk about red tape! The recent strike
was productive of some remarkable spec
imens. Mail matter from this place to
Rosedale has to go via Jewetta, and it
cannot be sent in any other way. As
the trains to the north were blocked,
while there were one or two south
bound, Postmaster Miller, acting raider
instructions, sent mail matter for Rose;
dale to Los Angeles, where it was trans
ferred to San Pedro, took the steamer
to San Francisco and finally was taken
to Jewetta by train and thence to its j
destination, just eight miles from where j
it started. —Bakersfield California.
Pope L.eo’» Mistake. ,
The pope is said to have made an awk
ward and amusing mistake when Mr.
J. G. S. Cox, editor of The Tablet, Lon
don, was presented to him. C atching
of the words of introduction only the
announcement that his visitor was the
editor of a celebrated English paper,
the pope, with a radiant smile, said,
“Il Punch. ” The pope is pardonable if
be doesn’t read all the religious papers
lent to the Vatican. —Boston Transcript.
THE HUSTLER OF ROME. SUNDAY SEPTEMBER, 16 1894.
STUDYING HUMAN NATURE.
Novel and Valuable Scientific Work Now
Being Curried on In Washington.
A new kind of scientific work is lie
ing carried on in Washington, in v> Inch
the testing of 25,000 school children
mentally, morally and physically is the
preliminary step. Dr. Arthur McDonald i
is conducting the work under the aus '
pices of the United States bureau of ed
ucation, and the results when arranged
ami tabulated are expected to throw
valuable light upon a number of mooted
questions concerning the race.
For example, it is desired to know
whether boys of the labo? .ng class are
less bright than the sons of the well to
do. Are they as well nourished? In
, London not long ago investigation
, proved that the children of laboring
' people in that metropolis were better
1 nourished—that is to say, weighed more
j at the same age—than those belonging
, to higher social strata, the latter being
fed on too much candy and cake. (
| The work here being unfinished, con
, elusions cannot be stated. To begin j
with, the height and .sitting height of
' each child were taken. Long bodied I
j races, generally speaking, are inferior. ■
It is desired to know if long bodied i
individuals are less clever or less strong I
! than the short bodied of the same race. [
Are long bodied boys and girls apt to be
| stupid? Long headed children are usu
ally tall. Tall people are most often
long headed. Tall races are superior.
The question naturally follows, Are long
headed children superior mentally?
When it is said that a man has a long
' head, is there not significance in the re
' mark?
i Are tall children, then, superior? No
| body knows as yet. These are among the
: things which Dr. McDonald is trying
to find out. In the classification the
8,000 negro children in Washington
schools have been kept separate, so as to
compare them with white children.
How do they compare in respect to
brightness, weight, physical measure
ments, etc. ? The colored child surpasses
the white child up to 5 years of age in
mental development, then the white
I child goes ahead. Comparisons of girls
1 ; with boys naturally follow. At the
age of entering womanhood girls weigh
more than boys. That age with city girls
arrives a year earlier than with country
girls.—Boston Transcript.
' I
COLUMBUS TOOK A TUMBLE.
■
It Was the Last Day of the California Fair,
and He Was All Broke Up.
■ i Truth crushed to earth will rise
again, but there is no such hope for the
[ I statue of Columbus at the fair. It lay
i on the ground in the grand court xecent
i ly shattered to a thousand pieces. Co
,l lumbus came off his perch about 10
I o’clock in the forenoon, and as he was
i ■ large and portly he struck the ground
; i with a dull thud. His right leg clung
to the pedestal, the indications being
- that that limb had been pulled, the
i fracture being committed at the knee,
j Columbus wore no whiskers at the ex
-1 position, but the wind was attracted to
j i him nevertheless. It sought to lift the
i long locks that hung over his shoulders,
II and in this effort it toppled their big
r owner from his commanding elevation
i, in the valley of the court. People who
3: are affected by coincidences did not fail
. I to comment on his passing way on the
I day that was practically the last of the
- I fair. He had seen the glories of the
3! exposition come and go, and some
>I persons imagined that the memories
he cherished overcame him as if he
. were an animate being. The knowledge
3 that the fair was over and that he was
. to be taken away to some obscure and
strange place broke him all up, they
said. He had been ailing for several
days. When it was evident by the in
clination of his head that he was unbal
anced, measures were taken to keep him
from injuring himself, but he finally
broke from the ropes that restrained
c him, and the fall of Caesar was nothing
in comparison to his. The statue was
made of a sort of plaster and was part
-1 ly hollow, being devoid of lungs and
other internal organs.—San Francisco
’ Chronicle.
i
I, Novel Ground For a Suit For Damages.
I Lawyers are ever ready with new
•‘ methods of procedure and novel grounds
for action, but there is an Englishman
> who has just made himself prominent
’ in his profession as a deviser of a unique
’ I basis for a suit for damages.
I I He has entered suit against a news
’' paper asking damages and an injunction
on the ground that his practice has been
I injured by the newspaper withholding
his name in cases where he has been
1 successful and publishing it only in
1 j cases which he has lost. Eminent coun
sel have been retained on both sides, and
I the action will be bitterly contested.—
II New York HeraM.
I
, Mixed the Babies.
i Among the curiosities of typography
a prominent place must be given to the
I recent achievement of a Chicago paper
in the mixing up of headlines in a most
startling manner. First there is an ar
ticle with this caption:
THE CONDOR OF THE ANDES.
Albert Seaton Hery of Kentucky Hears That
Distinction.
In another column on the same page
of the paper in question is this an
nouncement:
TALLEST MAN IN CONGRESS.
Soars Far Above the Eagle and Reaches a
Height of Six Miles.
I —Buffalo Commercial.
What Senator Hill Said.
With the echo of his defense of Presi
dent Cleveland still ringing in the ears
of his colleagues, Senator Hill walked
into the cloakroom and dropped into an
easy chair to chat with Senator Smith.
Presently a page appeared, carrying a
note inclosed in a large square envelope
addressed to Senator Hill.
' “Ah!” said Mr. Smith, with a tone
of inquiry, “an invitation to dine with
the president tonight?”
Senator Hill looked up from the note
with a twinkle in his eye. “Not at this
stage of the game,’’said he.—Wash
ington Post.
fita H Co Sciiediilo.
To The East.
LeaYe east Home 5 40 a. tn. 4,40 p. tn.
Ai rive Cleveland 7 sft a. in. 7.02 p. i»
Knoxville 10.25a, in. Ji .00 p.m.
“ Bristol ,2.lftp. in. 430 a. in,
Washington 4.02 a - in. 9.40 p. m
“ Baltimore ..5.00a.m. n.ooa. m.
“ Ihiladelphia 7.50 a.m. 350 a.m.
*• xew York lO.Mla.m. 6.52 a. m-
Train leaving East Rome at 5.40 a. m.. has a
Pullman Sleepii g car, Mobile to Cleveland,
where it connects with rhe popular Vestibule.
Dining Car train for Washington ami New York
Th is train also <oi.uects at Cleveland, with
train for chatt: nooga, arrives at it.ftft a. m. The
4,40 p. m. train connects at Dolt- will Junction,
wilh Sleeping car, for Radford, Yi.., making di
rect connection for all points East.
To West. And The North
Leave East Rome 4.40 p. m. 2.00 a.m lo.tOani
Arrive Chattanooga....7.lOp. in. 4 50 a.m. 1 20 pm
“ CincTnati 7,30a. m. 720 p.m.
*• Nashville 8.20a. m.10,55a. m.7.20p.m.
“ Memphis 7.00a. m. 6.10 p. in.
“ S L nts 6 45p. ni. 7.05 a. m.
•• Kansas city 7,25 a.m, 10.25 a. in.
Little Rock 2.30 p. m. 2.45 a. in,
“ Ft, Worth .8:00 a; m.7'80 pm
Trains leaving East Rome 4:40 p in is the pop
ular “Cincinnati & Florida Limited.” It is full
vestibuled and runs solid Jacksonville to Cin
cinnati. carrying Pullman’s finest sleeping cars
and a magnificent observation car from Macon
to Chattanooga*seats free), where it makes di.
rect connection with solid train with through
Sleeping car attached Chattanooga to Memphis,
connecting thers for all points west.
To South Georgia, Carolina and
Florida.
eave East Rome. .250a m 1115 am 402 pm.
Arrive Atlanta 6.00 am 155 pm 6 25pm
“ Augusta ...,,1.20 pm 925 pm.
“ Macon 10 50 a m 725pm10 40 p in.
“ Savannah ... 630 pm 700 am,
“ Brunswick.... 715 p m 615 am,
“ Jacksonville ..9 00 pin 830 am,
Train’ leaving East Rome 2:50 a m runs solid
to Brunswick. Sleeping cars Chattanooga to At
anta, The 11 If a m Gain solid through veeti
buled train to Jacksonville, stops in Atlanta 1,
55 until 730 P m: takes on sleeping car to Brims
i wick and the connection from 4:02 train, The
1115 a m .rain connects with R & D,S AL,A <S
W P anil ca railroad trains in the Union Depot,
Atlanta, It Also has an elegant observation
chai rear (seats free) to Macon,
To Alabama, Texas & the West.
Leave East Rome 9 40 pm
Arrive Anniston ,12 05 right. 755 pm,
“ Selma 530 aru
“ Montgomery.... ,700 a m
Mobile 12 30 noon
“ New Orleans 445 p m
! “ Houston 7<o a m
Leave East Rome 4 10 p m Alpine Accomoda
tion,
Leave East Rome 2,00 p, m, Gadsden and At
talla Accommodation.
Train leaving East Rome 9:40 p m has Pull
man Sleeping car to Mobile connecting with
Pullman car to New Orleans,
For further particulars, tickets or sleeping
car reservations, call on or write to
T, c, SMITH, P & T A, Rome Ga,
L A, BELL, D. P A, Selina, Ala,
j, j, Farnsworth df a Atlanta aa,
c, a bbkscotrr, a gP a„ Knoxville, Tenn.
w, a Turk, g, p, a, Washington D c.
Western &
Atantic,
AND
N„ C. & ST. L. RAILWAYS
—TO — •
Chicago
-Louisville
Cmcinnatti
St. Lous
Kasas City
IVJ emphis
-AND-
The AV est
Quick time and Vestibuled trains carrying
Pullman Sleeping cars. For any information
call on or write to
J A SMITH
General Agent, Rome Ga.
J L EDMONSON
Traveling Pass. Agt. Chattanooga Tenn.
JOS. BROWN.
Traffic Manager Atlanta, Ga.
; CE HARMAN
Genera! pass Agt Atlanta Ga.
G R & C R R Schedule.
In effect May 18th, 1894.
PASSENGER TRAINS.
Arrives.
From Chattanooga 10:27 am
From Carrollton 3:31 pm
Departs.
To Carrollton 10:32 a m
To Chattanooga : 3:31 p m
FREIGHT TRAINS.
Arrives
From Chattanooga 11:45 p m
From Chattanooga 1:60 p m
From Carrollton 4:09 a m
From Carrollton 11:39 a a
"'.Departs.
To Carrollton 11:45 pm
o Carrollton 1:03 p a
To Chattanooga 4 (Ml am
To Chattanooga 3:50 a a
Passenger trains run into and depart from the
Union depot at C hattanooga. The freight trains
depart from C. R. & C. shops, and parties using
Riem must buy tickets at the depots, and ac
cept such accommodations as they find in a ca
boose.
| The passenger train leaving here at 10:27 am
arrives at Cedartown 11;12, and at Carrollton
12:45 pm, The one leaving at 3:31 pm, reaches
Summerville at 4:45 p m, and Chattanooga at
;30 p m.
C. B. WILBORN, Qen’l Supt
EUGENE E. JqNES, Reciever.
[ - 'AXJ
i /
’ p, y y-
Madison - Avenue
HOTEL.
Madison Aven -e and 58th, Street.
NEW YORK.
per da^ 7 and up. American Plan;
FIREPROOF AND FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY'
PARTICULAR.
- . -
Two Blocks from the Third ami Sixth Avenue Eleva Sas: *
Katlromls
The Madison and Fourth Avenue and Belt Line Cars- paeY
the Door.
H M. CL ARK, proprietor.
Passenger Elevator runs all night.
New Jewelry,
Beautiful line of new
Silver Novelties, and
Silver Goods,
J. K. Williamson
Broad Street
f