The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, September 24, 1894, Image 4
REMOVAL.
Afterdoing business
for six years on sth.
Ave., in the Fourth
Ward, I have removed
my stock of staple and
fancy groceries to the
R. V. Mitchell old stand,
recently occupied by L.
G. Todd, at 409 Broad
St. where I am better
prepaired than ever br
fore to cater to t h e
wants of my old cus
tomers and the public
generally.
Yours for the best
to eat,
L. A. Dempsey,
409 Broad, St.
9-7 -1 mo.
W. L. Douglas
C *> IS THE BEST.
MU O NO SQUEAKING,
-S. $5. CORDOVAN,
X. FRENC-14 ENAMELLED CALF
<1 X FINE CALF& KANGAROI
■L. S3.4PPOLICE,3SoIfs.
ST
♦2.*lZ?BoysSchoolShoes,
. LAD IES •
SEND FOR CATALOGUE ’
™ L> DOUGLAS ,
BROCKTON. MAS 3.
You can cave mnnry by pureteimiug W. In
Dougin* Shoe.
Because, we are the largest manufacturers of
advertised shoes in the world, and guarantee
the value by stamping the name and price on
the bottom, which protects you against hig\
prices and the middleman s profits. Our shoes
equal custom work in style, easy fitting and
wearing qualities. We have them sold ever;
where at lower prices for the value given that
any other make Take no substitute. If youi
dealer cannot supply you, we can. Sold by
Cantrell & Owens,
*
What Nerve Berries
have done for other
fK •-*%•/ they will <!<
VIGOR \
OF IftTH BAY. Av
MEM Easily, Quick!/
and Permanently Roster ed. both day
A positive cure for ali Wes . Nervousnest
Debility, and all their train of evils resnltin.
from early errors and later excesses; the remii
of overwork. «ick i<>w«. worry Develop
and gives lone and Ktrengt&i to th .txual or
fan*. Slop* uunarurMl lo»« .•* *.y ulghU
esnlMloiiN caused by youthful error* nr ei
cessive use oi tohnreo, opiiaaM ami ii<|U<>r
which lead to ronMnmption and intmoHy
Their use shows immediate improvement. Accep
no imitation. Insist upon Laving the gvnv ne
Nerve Berries, Z
Socket, •price, fl.oo per box. six boxeN. on. ful
reatm em.K>. DO. (hiamnleeil to cure wiy totae.
If not kept by your druexist we will send them
cj mail, upon receipt of price. In plain wrap
per. Pamphlet froe. Address all tuali orders I*
ATERK AA MEDICAL CO.. CfcoeiuMiUi, <»
For sale by Croucn &
Co.
B iL ti S SOBI
Is as safe and as a fla.
seed poultice. 1_ 'i.ieapo’d
tice, drawing outx= .•#&• ipau.
and curing al’ eases peculiar
to la'’its.
“Orange Bios is a pas
tile, easily -.sed at any time;
is applied right to the parts
Every lady can treat hersel.
with it.
Mailed to any address upon re
ceipt of si. Dr. J. A. McGill & Co.
4 Panorama Place, Chicago, IK
Sold bv
D, W. Curry Druggist
a. gra?;» offer?
EDEI£ MME. A. RUPPERT’S
FACE BLEACF
MVE. A.
Xj says: “J appreciate the lac
< CJk that there are many thou
Biindsof ladiesin the Unite
At wtof States that would liket >tr?
. my Worid-Benow;.ed Fac.
V/v Bleach: but have beei
.V r? kept from doing ho on n<
. jJL % countof prl^,which i r?.(
■**- per bottle or 3 bottk s take.
JrtA.'FfK s f ,$? together, 85.00. In orJi
that all of way 1 j. r
an opp ty » 1 *» ! •»'• *•
to every caller, ataolutci
~ free, a slumps iiottio, am
££ order to supply thoHeoi’
of city.or in any partof lb
World, I will send itsafely packedin plain wrapp
all charges prepaid, for 25 cents, silver or stamp
In every case 3f freckle**, pimples,moth, s.
lowness, blackheads, acne.eczema, oiliness,rong-
Dess, or any discoloration or disease of tire skit
and wrinkles (not caused by facial expr
Face Bleach removes absolutely. It does n<
cover up, as cosmetics do, but is a cure. Addret
MADAME A. KUPPEKT, (Dept.0.)
No. 6 East 14th St.. NEW YORK CITV
DONTFORGET
The Cundell Lumber
Co.,sells
Cheap shingles a I I
graces.
Cheap lumb e r aI I
grades.
Che' p ceiling and
flooring, sash, doors,
blinds. 9-7-Imo
THE WAR AND THE MISSIONS.
Where They Are Located end the Possible
Danger to Thein.
Every one interested in mission work
in eastern Asia will watch with concern
the war which has just broken out,
anxious lest any personal friends be in
danger and mission enterprises be seri
ously hampered. The fact that all thre*
countries involved are mission fields
and that the prominent cities of all an
occupied with a greater or less forco of
missionaries makes it necessary to look
I at the situation fairly and candidly.
In Korea the lYesbytorian bonrd oc
copies Seoul, Fnsan and Gensau on the
east coast and Pyeng-¥ang in the in
terior. Os these Fuson and Gensan are
the only places liable to injury from
the Japanese fleet. But the work in
both places is comparatively recent and
not so well established as at Seoul. The
Methodist board has little established
work outside of Seoul and has with
drawn all its missionaries from the in
terior stations to that city.
The Society For the Propagation of
the Gospel, Church of England, has
wme niisaionarit s at Seoul and Che
mulpo. In Seoul the missionaries are
practically safe, being under the care
of the United States legation and the
protection of United States soldiers
from the ship-of-war at Chemulpo, the
port of Seoul. So far as Korea is con
cerned, therefore, there need bo do great
anxiety.
In Japan tho principal port that may
fear attack from the Chinese fleet is
Nagasaki, occupied by tho Reformed
(Dutch) church, the Methodist Episco
pal church ami tho Church Missionary
society of England. It is probable, how
ever, according to tho latest reports,
that the foreign fleets will protect this
city, and thus tho missionaries there
need fear no attack. Tho same may be
said of Yokohama and Tokyo, where al
most all of the missionary boards are
represented.
Attention will be especially attracted
to China, for there, aside from the dan
ger of injury from the Japanese fleets,
there is the still greater danger of inju
ry from the hostility of tho people. The
action of the foreign governments in
enforcing the neutrality of the ports of
Amoy, Canton, Ningpo, Chiu-Kiang,
Fuchau, Shanghai, Hankow and Tien
tsin, all of which are mission stations,
relieves the situation very much, as
there are very few other cities along the
coast that might suffer from an attack,
almost the only one of importance be
ing Chefu, where tho Presbyterian
church and the China Inland mission
have a large force of laborers and con
siderable property.
The greatest danger, however, to the
missionaries, as we have said, is not
from the Japanese fleets, but from the
hostility of the Chinese to all foreigners
without drawing distinction between
Europeans and Americans on the one
hand and the hated Japanese.—lnde
pendent.
A MYSTERIOUS PROJECTILE.
At a Itecent Test In Rnssla It Produced
Amazement Among the KipertM.
The so called magnetic shell, which
has been used at the trials of English
armor plates at Okhta, near St. Peters
burg, has made an extraordinary record.
The shell was fired at soft St Chainond
plate at right angles, and the penetration
waslO tfc inches. Another shell penetrat
ed 16 inches. One shell was discharged
at a 6 inch Harveyized plate at an an
gle of 20 degrees. Tho projectile passed
through the plate and backing and fell
about 400 yards beyond, a performance
which titled the scientific experts pres
ent with amazement.
Further trials will be made, but for
the present no plates of the requisite
strength are forthcoming, those already
used, which were manufactured special
ly for the purposes of the trial, being so
shattered as to l>e useless for future
tests. The general impression among
military experts is that the magnetic
shell is not a new shell at all, but sim
ply a new invention adaptable to any
modern projectile.
One of the shells that had undergone
the secret process was exhibited. Al
though it had passed through one of the
armor plates, it was in an undamaged
condition, and as it showed no traces
of fastening whereby the new invention
could be attached to it the spectators
concluded that the improvement must
be a cap of softer metal held on to the
top of the shell by magnetism. This
nurses the hard point of the shell at
the impact and so helps it to penetrate
the surface of the plate until it reaches
the softer metal behind. This, at all
events, is one of the guesses at the prin
ciple of the novel projectile.—Pittsburg
Dispatch.
SaL’i 1 ) and Gould Are Out.
Russell Saje and George Gould are
said to have disagreed of late, and their
relations in a business way are so severe
ly strained that there may be an open
rupture at any moment. The Gould
and Sage interests have always been
closely united. George Gould’s wife
and his sister Helen, seconded by the
family physician, have, so runs the
story, induced him to give up working
as hard as he has been doing and to
take life easier. The purchase of the
Vigilant was in furtherance of this
plan. Sage, whose whole being is wrap
ped up in money making, has no sym
pathy with this programme and is much
displeased at young Gould’s long ab
sence in the present critical condition
of business affairs.—Washington Post.
Atlanta's Sensation.
The sensation in Atlanta is the preach
ing of a 13-year-old negro boy, Charles
Johnson of Gibbs, La. He is of a light
ginger cake color. He was converted,
he says, at the age of 8 and felt an im
mediate call. He is now going to a theo
logical seminary, where he is taking a
course in Bible study. He has none of
the awkwardness of youth, and his
voice is peculiarly deep. His thoughts
are of a high character and are express
ed in excellent language. —Atlanta Con
stitution.
THEHUSTLER OF ROME. MONDAY SEPTEMBER,24 1894.
••AN ATTRACTION PARTICLE.”
In term l Ing DiacloaureH Made at the Con
vention of the British AfMoeiatlon.
The annual disclosure of the latest
discoveries in various branches of science
being made at the convention of the
British association, Oxford, is an inter
esting budget. Lord Salisbury’s address
at the opening of tho conference at
tracts widespread attention. He pro
claimed himself a scientific agnostic,
but the most remarkable feature of his
paper was his outlining of the marvels
of unsolved problems to which modern
science is now devoting itself. Ho paid
a sympathetic tribute to Darwin’s great
work, but refused to acknowledge the
jellyfish as his ancestor on any evidence
yet offered. He attacked Weissmann’s
theory of natural selection in evolution
and affirmed that the present day has
brought a return to the belief that crea
tive design was supreme.
It has been in these meetings of the
several divisions of the convention that
the latest discoveries and theories have
been presented. A year ago the biolo
gists, who had believed for years that
they were on the point of solving the
mystery of life, acknowledged them
selves baffled. Now Professor Schaefer,
president of the section of physiology,
announces the discovery in each tiny
animal cell containing life of what he
terms “an attraction particle. ” It should
be remembered that when the biologists
discovered the cell principle of life they
thought it impossible to subdivide these
infinitely small atoms, but the micro
scope has shown the existence of this
small particle in each cell, which is
itself a structure sui generis, having a
definite existence anti a definite function
of its own. It is almost as minute an
object as it is possible to conceive. In
a cell which is magnified 1,000 diame
ters the central particle appears merely
of the size of a pin point. Yet this al
most infinitely small object exerts an
extraordinary influence over the whole
cell, which may be many thousand times
its size. It initiates and directs those
processes which result in the multipli
cation of cells, and indirectly therefore
it is concerned in directing the general
growth of the individual and ultimate
ly the propagation of species. It is
shown, then, that the principle of life
is contained in a particle 1,000 times
smaller than the smallest object which
the best microscopes of a few years ago
were able to perceive, and the latest
name for the unsolved mystery of life
is “an attraction particle. ” —New York
Sun’s London Letter.
WONDERFUL GOLD DISCOVERIES.
Western Australia Stories Wliicli Read Like
Fairy Tales.
The stories of wonderful gold discov
eries in western Australia were con
firmed by an official dispatch Thursday.
The details of the principal find near
Coolgardie had already reached Lon
don. A party of six were returning from
an unsuccessful prospecting tour on May
8. When in camp one night, they sep
arated to test and examine the neigh
borhood. A man named Mills came to
one of the many large “blows” which
are characteristic of the country. He
was astonished on rubbing his hand
across a protruding piece of stone to see
gold standing out prominently. He
knocked a largo piece off a bowlder, and
at his feet lay a magnificent specimen
literally studded with coarse gold, while
before him, dazzling his eyes, was a
magnificent reef of almost pure gold, a
fortune in itself. Mills, taking several
pieces from the reef, placed them in his
bosom, and carefully covering the reef
with earth found his mates. On the
next morning 25 acres were pegged off,
and the adjoining blocks at each end
w< re also taken up. One man went to
town and bought a dolly, the largest he
could procure. In one day they dollied
1,000 ounces, and in a short time had
nearly SIOO,OOO worth of ore. On June
23 they packed it in a cart and landed
the treasure at the Union bank. The
manager weighed tho gold, and it turn
ed the scales at 4,280 ounces.
A few days after the discovery be
came public. One lump has been taken
from the reef containing more gold than
ore. It weighed 240 pounas and is
worth $20,000. Os course there is im
mense excitement in the region, and
many other discoveries are reported, but
there is unlikely to be anything left for
late comers.—London Letter.
Sew York Police Method*.
It came out at the police board meet
ing in New York last month that when
ever any big strike or riot has been go
ing on out of town Superintendent
Byrnes has obtained permission from
the Western Union Telegraph company
to tap its underground wire at Broad
way and Houston street and receive
prompt news direct from distant points.
Little of importance during the recent
Chicago strike came into the Western
Union office that he did not know about
almost as soon as it reached the new
paper offices. The superintendent admit
ted that this arrangement had been of
immense service to him, and that had
the strike extended to within reasona
ble limits of New York city his arrange
ments were all perfected. The Western
Union people have consented to make
this arrangement permanent.
Huntington's Superstition.
It is said that Collis P. Huntington’s
desire to sell the $2,000,000 palace
which he has just completed in New
York is his belief in the old supersti
tion that old men who grow rich build
fine houses for their funerals. He ex
pected to move in three years ago, but
it was only last year that the house be
gan to get near completion. In the
meantime his health had become less
and less vigorous. His age and his years
of hard work and worry began to tell
upon him. The superstition came back
with renewed force, and he began to
think a great deal about it At last he
became absolutely convinced that should
he move in the first function to which
his friends would come would be his fu
neral. Then he decided that he would
not even keep the house in the family.
—Brooklyn Citizen.
READ IT O-VER,
Examine Our Bargains,
then
G-ETTISr THE RUSH;
20 per. ct off of Manufacturers cost.
In order to make room for our enormous stock
which is arrivingdaily, we will for the next ten days
give 20 per. ct. off of Manufacturer’s cost on all
ladies and childrens Slippers, [Oxfords, Low Cuts
and Operas.
-WWe Have An Elegant Line Oft-4
These goods bought late and at atremenduous dis
coUnt and when you get them of us at 20 per. ct.
off of Manufacturer’s prices they cost you fnext [to
nothing.
ALL E-ARLY FOR THEY H:AVE>-
I
HOT TO GO.
W. H. COKER & CO;
No's 19 &21 Broad Street, I
E.O3VLE GRORGIA!