Newspaper Page Text
jjiiKi. m co i turn.
To The East.
pF „ tll ome 5.40 a.m. 4,40 p.m.
Cleveland 7.55 a.m. 7.02 p.m
■Arri'fC ..10.25a, m. 10.00 p.m.
6 ...2.15 p.m. 4.30 a. m
’* Washington .4.02 a-m. 8.40 p. m
„ paitnuore 5.00 a.m. 11.00 a.m.
„ JhiWphla 705.a.m. 3.50 a. m
J ,rk .10.50 a, m. 6.52 a. m
«. yew
in leaving East Rome at 5.40 a. m.. has a
T sleeping oar, Mobile to Cleveland,
I>uUina "connects with the popular Vestibule
" ' .. ear train for Washington and New York
’’jl/is train also connects at Cleveland, with
in for Chattanooga, arrives at 9.55 a. m. the
4 n m.train connects at Ooltewrh Junction
lii Sleeping car, for Radford. Va„ making di
r eet connection for all points East.
To West. And The North
, „ ave East Rome 4.40 p. m. 2.00 a.m 10.40 am
? rr vecnattanooga....7.lop. m. 4.50 a.m. 1.20 pm
• p Cincinnati 7,30a. m. 7.20 p.m.
' Nashville 8.20a. m.10,55a. m.7.20p.m
u Memphis.’.’ 7.00a.m. 6.10p.m.
< „ R t Louis 6 45p.m. 7.05 a. m.
„ Kansas city 7,25 a. m, 10.25 a. m.
Little Ruck 2.30 p. m. 2.45 a. m,
y Ft . Worth B:W> a: m; 7’50 pm
Trains leaving East Rome 4:40 p tn is the pop
„iar ‘ Cincinnati & Florida Limited.” It is full
ve9 tiiuled and runs solid Jacksonville to cin
■inn iti carrying Pullman’s flnest sleeping cars
Lm a magnificent observation car from Macon
~, ctattanoogaiseats free), where it makes di
reet Connection with solid train with through
sieeidng car attached Chattanooga to Memphi -
connecting there for all points west.
To South Georgia, Carolina and
Florida.
eade East Rome. .250 am 1115 am 402 pm
Arrive Atlanta 6-00 am 155pm6 25 p 5
u , Augusta 1.20 pm 9 25p m.
Macon 10 50 a m 725 p m 10 40 p m.
» Savannah.... 630 p m 700 a m
.. Brunswick.... 715 p m 615 am,
“ Jacksonville ..9 00 p m 830 am,
Tiain leaving East Rome 2:50 a m runs solid
toßrunswtck. Sleeping cars Chattanooga to At
anti.. The 1115a m train solid through vesti
bule 1 train to Jacksonville, stops in Atlanta 1
55 I mil 7 30 P m : takes on sleeping car to Bruns
uiv : and the connection from 4:02 train, The
111.1a in .rain connects with R & D.S AL, A
WH and Ga railroad trains in the Union Depot,
Atlanta, It Also has an elegant observation
chair car (seats free) to Macon,
Th Alabama, Texas & the West.
Lcajre East Rome 9 40 p m
Arrive Anniston ,12 05 night. 755 pm,
Selma 5 30 am
Montgomery...., 7 00 a m
Mobile 12 30 noon.
Newllrleans 4 45pm
‘c Houston 7CO a m
Ijeave East Rome 4 10 p in Alpine Accomoda
ot,
Leave East Rome 2,00 p, m, Gadsden and At,
talla Accommodation.
Train leaving East Rome 9:40 pm has Pull
man Sleeping car to Mobile connecting with
Pullman car to New Orleans,
For further particulars, tickets or sleeping
cat reservations, call on or write to
T, c, SMITH, P & T A, Rome Ga,
LA, BELL, I), P A, Selma, Ala.
j, j, Farnsworth d p a Atlanta ua,
c, a BE.xscOTER, a gP a„ Knoxville, Tenn,
,w, a Tukk, g, v, a, Washington » c.
Western &
At ntic,
AND
I, I;! ST. I. BM4TS
—TO —
Chicajjr :>
-Louisville
Cincinnatti
St. Lous
Xasos City j
A J emphis
—AND—
Tlie AVest
k t !” ic . a,,< l Vestibuled trains carrying
llla " b eeping cars. For any informatior I
<-all oa or write to
J A SMITH
General Agent, Rome Ga.
J L ED .HONSON
Traveling Pass. Act. Chattanooga Tenn.
JOS. BROWN.
Traffic Manager Atlanta, (la.
C E HARMAN
General pass Agt Atlanta Ga
—■HTV | inIIIJUIU I.HJRMJWM.I
Tax Levy.
11 eof Hoard of Commissioners of Roads 1
a "<l Revenue of Floyd county, Georgia.
Ti Rome, Ga., September 13th, 1894. I
tin-i,. r ' llaV ' n;r tak '”’ into consideration
t , "mg of taxes for the present fiscal year ,
f ril , ", 1 '' l ' r "l , erty of tee oonnty being found |
< 7 - ' ,lx ’•**> i ' , ‘st to be for the present year I
tlw'lof' U ' Genera ’ tax being 4.37—100 mills on
' lih j ' U tlle f <>re E°ing, making the »u:n of
Tl ' e following tax is hereby levied:
To . • Si ‘®cific Tax,
17f . ' ' r ' ll ' 'l' a ' end interest on bonds
I'' 1 ''n l 'nth«n?7 tatelax 85 - y&0 -°°
0„ h p CMngang 33.13-lflt) per cent
Toßr,',' '‘, aX 11.277 58
"" e fund, Nothing.
*■>•ll County Purposes'
tax luu<1 > 33.19-100 percenton Sat I
To j nrv 11.277 58
Toj lnf| 25 l ,er cent o>. State 8 499.48
T “ d " fund io percent •• 3 403 13
10 “oorfuml m. o.wj.xo
>unaiop ereeilt .. 3,400.13
Thj st, . $43.804 90
ah l t UXab 0 Hi" Uert 10,1 ,nil ' s on the dollar)
■*"’ for State an ? t,le county, making in'
fl”’ dollai t-ouuty purposes, one cent on .
Grdered forth
H'ven of this lev' a tllat Hucb legal notice be
b.^J?. 1 " 1^'1 Statute.
* VI! vXI Foster, Chairman.
.vieverhakdt, Clerk.
PROFESSIONAL COLUMN
dentists.
J A. WILLS— Dentist—2081-2 Broad street
B over Cantrell and Owens store.
- • __
ATTORNEYS
J’ TJ.nA’ml A ttorney at Law - Masonic
Temple Buildidg
Temple Building Rome Georgia.
I AMES B NEVlN—Attorney at Law Ofllc
I overtf Hall postofticd ooruor 3rd Avenue
CHAS. W. UNDERWOOD— Attorney at
Masonic Temple,
Rome, Ga.
ReECE & DENNY—Attorneys at law. Office
in Masonic Temule. Rome, Ga.
WW. VANDIVER—Attorney and Com
, sei lor at Law—Rome, ua.
WH. ENNIS-Jno. W. STARLING—Ennis
a & Starling,Attorneys at Law, Masonic
Temple, Route, Ga. feb23.
WB. M HENRY, W. J. NUNNALLY, W
a J- NEAL—M’Henry. Nunnallv & Neal-
Attorneys-at-at Law, office over Halt
Davidson Hardware Co., Broad street, Rome, Ga
PHYSICIANS APO 3UROEONS.
DM. RAMSUR—Physician and Surgeon
Office at residence 614 avenue A, Fount
ward.
LP. HAMMOND—Physician and Surgeon
, Offers his | rofessional services to the pec.
pie of Rot re and surronnding country
Office at Crouch anti Watson’s drug store. A)
Broad street.
DR. W. D. HOYT—Office at CA. Trevitt
drugstore. 331 Broad street Telephon
110. residen >9. No. 21
DR. C. F. GFlFFlN—Physician and Surge l <
—Office n< r Masonic building. Resideucs
300 4th av sue.
Frank A. Wynn, Physician and Snrgon
office at Tie - itt A Johns in drug store
Telephone 13 Residence 406 Second Ave,
Prompt attention given all professional call
«cr»vK T:!i-7iT imi»Biii ~iiwiii »
Commissioners Sale.
SV. F. Ayer ) Rule to partition
vs. jln Floyd Superior
.T.W. Barnwell Guard’n. ( Court.
G. C. Longstreet et. al.)
Under and by virtue of an order granted at
the Marell term of the Superior court of Floyd
county. Tlte undersigned Commissioners ap
pointed for the put pose, will sell for partition,
in the above stated cause, at public outcry be
fore the Court house door in Koine, between
the usual hours for poblic sales, on the first
Tuesday in November next, the following de
scribed real estate, to wit: “That tract of lana
known as the Oak Hill farm, on the Etowah riv
er, abouteight miles from Rome, formerly occu
pied hy Dr C. K. Ayer, in the 23rd. District and
3rd. Section of said county of Floyd, comprisi
ing *he. whble of lot No-299 and those portions
of lots No’s. 300, 301, and 302 which Le on the
North side of tbe Etowah .river containing
about 440 acres. Terms of sale, one third cash,
the balance in equal amounts in one and two
years with interest at 8 per cent from date of
sale. The title will be retained until all the
purchase money is paid. September 18th. 1894,
J. B. Sullivan,
W. W, Brooks,
Smily Johnson,;
Commsss'ouers
V \ /
\ \* /
\ /
The comparativevalue ofthese twocards
Is known to most persons.
They illustrate that greater quantity is
Not always most to be desired.
• •
These cards express the beneficial qual
ity of
Pipans • Tahutes
As compared with any previously known
DYSPEPSIA CURE.
Ripans Tabules : Pric< , 50 cents a box,
Os druggists, or by mail.
RIPANS CHEMICAL CO., 10 Spruce St., N.Y.
———g
jHave
you
a baby |
* that is making you old*
< before your time with wor- »
«rying ? Is it weak, deli-;
< cate, puny ? Are you fear- j
«ful lest it be taken from J
« you ? Mother ! Will you J
read this letter about £
Brown’s Iron Bitters
* It is genuine—not paid 5
<for or even solicited —and£
’the writer is the happiest J
* woman in New Orleans. J
< 509 Dvfedes Street, I ?
<| New Orleans, La. J J
« Enclosed yon will find a photograph of
4my youngest boy, Clarence. He was sick
* about seven months; nothing cured him but J
► Brown s Iron Bitters. He is now a year ’
« old, well and heartyl 1 cannot say too much J
4 in oraiseof Brown’s Iron Bitters. J
4 ,n p Mrs. L. Leveringberg. P
< This letter was written*
<on July 25th, .this year J
« Have you a delicate child . *
sLife for many children in*
« Brown’s Iron Bitters! *
3 The Genuine has the Crossed *
Red Lines on tde wrapper. *
5 Blown Chemical Co., Baltimore, Mttfc
ftrw
THE HUSTLER OF ROME, SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 30 1894
W- C. T. U.
For God and Home aud Native
Land.
! CIGARETTED TO HEAVEN
The WeeKly Column From the
Penoflhe Gifted! Woman,
Appointed by This No
ble Society at
Rome, to Edit it.
A sacred burden is the life ye bear;
Look on It, lift it, bear it solemnly,
Stand up and walk beneath it steadfastly.
Fail not for sorrow, falter not for sin,
But onward, upward, till the goal ye win.
—E. A. Ktmble.
There can be no such thing as
barrenness in human life. Some
thing must grow. Something is
developing into either honor or dis
honor. If bad habits are to be con
trolled or conquered, good habits
must immediately be put in their
place.
The one protection against the
contamination of evil is the activ
ity of good. Idleness generally fos
ters mischief, which is the activity
of evil. Industry in virtue makes
it difficult for vice to get a foot
hold.
As long as compassion controls,
arrogance cannot lift its head.
While kindness operates, anger
will be powerless. During the
reign of humility, pride will be in
■ chains. While patience lives, irri
tability must be dead.
And these virtues are to be ex
. ercised not always consciously in
1 self-protection. They may unebn
eciously become the defenders of
our higher nature against the ag
gressiveness of our lower powers.
By our using them for the benefit
1 of others we shall discover to re-
■ lax influence upon ourselves.
I
» The very best work for a re
; formed drunkard to do is to make
> an attempt to reform others The
; very surest way to keep one’s faith
is to carry the message of mercy
to other lives. That which is
worth possessing is worth using.
That which is good for us is pret
ty sure to be good for others also.
If we have no desire that others
may have it, we may properly be
accused of not thinking very much
of it ourselves.
The secret, then, of self-control
lies in receiving power from on
high, and in using it first ourselves,
and then in helping others to use
it.
Facts of Heredity.
“I hav« drunk whisky every
day for thrty-five years,” remark
ed a gentleman of sixty, proudly,
“and I don't see but I have as
good a constitution as the average
man of my age; I never was drunk
in my life.”
He was telling the truth, but to
learn the whole truth you would
have to study his children. The
oldest, a young lady, had perfect
health; the second, a young man,
was of a remarkably nervous and
excitable temperament, as differ
ent from his phlegmatic father as
possble; the third a young lady of
seventeen, was epileptic and al
ways had very poor health. Did
the father s drinking have any
thing to do wsth those facts? The
instance may. bo duplicated in al
most every community. Think
over the families of your acquain
tance in which the father has been
a’long an 1 moderate drinker, and
observe the facts as to the health
of the children.
The superintendent of a hospi
tal for children at Berne, Switzer
land, has found, by observation,
that only forty.five p>r cent, of
those whose parents use intoxica
ting liquors habitually had good
constitutions while, eighty-two per
cent, ot the children of temperate
parents had sound bodies. Ot the
children of inebriates only six per
cent, were healthy. —The Quarter
ly Journal of Inebriety.
An evangelist of provincial rep
utation, young in years, most en
thusiastic and laborious, died re
cently. A t his memorial services a
speaker took advantages of the
occasion to sound a note of warn
ing to laborious and consecrated
evangelist who was present as to
the danger of excessive ardor and
effort in his.
This other evangelist spoke out
at once and said “It was not the
excessive labor which took the be
loved brother evangelist so soon to
heaven, hut cigarettes—sitting till
two o’clock at night and smoking
cigarettes.” This beloved brother
may have the cigarette route to
heaven, but we warn all the evan
gelists and preachers that it is a
risky route. —Nashville Advocate.
O living will that shall endure
■When all that seems shall suffer shock,
Rise in the spiritual rock.
Flow th.ough our deeds and make them pure 1
That we may lift from out of dust
A >oice as unto tlim that hears,
A cry above the conquered years
To one that with us works, and trust
With faith that comes of self-control,
The truths that never can be proved
Until we close with all we love I,
Anu all we flow from, soul in soul
—Tennyson.
Cockney Harmony.
The number of English girls
among the Salvation lassies make
their expressions and even their
hymns sound strangely to Ameri
can ears. This is how one of their
favorite choruses sounded from
one of their wagons yesterday:
Glory! glory! ’ow the angels sing—
Glory! glory ! ’ow the loud ’arps ring!
’Tis the ransomed hariny, like a mighty sea,
Pealin' forth the hanthem of the free!
—Philadelphia Times.
His Mother’s Picture.
A lady sat for a Paris portrait
painter. Wearied by constant soci
al exertion and tortured by a hid
den family trouble which threat
ened momentarily to burst like a
volcano through the crust of their
social position, she unconciously
allowed her face during the timeof
sittingto regular from the rigorous
mask of pleasantness which she
forced her features into for the
world to see-
Three times the artist faithfully
painted the face before him on th e
canvas to discover each time that lit
had lined the face of an old woman
haggard and drawn with pain
The last time, with a dash ot hie
brush aero's' the picture,the artist
set it aside, and haveing guessed at
some temporary mental anguish ot
his model, which, though making
such an unpleasingportrait, had not
destroyed the likeness, suggested
that she defer the sittings for a few
months and resume them ader a
a short rest.
Rumor makes the rumantic con
tinuation of the story send upstairs
the prodigal son who was one of
trie immediate causes oi the care
drawn lines, which the unwilling
artist had copied into the mother’ 0
likeness, and staggering with intox
icated blundering into the open door
-way of the painter's studio, iustea 1
of that o’one of his cronies on the
next floor, was confronted by theface
of his m <ther above the long, white
shrouc-iike blur, which was meant
to have also obliterated th) face.
The shock is said to have sobered
the young fellow, and after convinc
ing the artist of his sincerity, he per
snadeed hem to carry home the dis
figured paintig, where, within the
year, he hung it on the wall of his
own room,and besid it a little minia
ture of the same face with all tin
nain smoothed out by his owe re
formation S
Arkansas Against Liquor
Little Rock., September 28.-The
complete returns ou the liquor
license question in the recent state
election have been certified to by
the secretary of st'<te. Ti e vote
stands: For license 47,662 jagainst
license 49,595,a majoi i y against
the continuation of the liquor traffic
of 1,933.
STRONG,
if you’re a tired
£2 X-iz out or “run-down - ’
qfr woman, with Dr.
V vz- Pierce’s Favorite
And,
kJvj'b-w y° u su fier from
Afos any “female com-
plaint” or disorder,
r X you get well. For
these two thing:-:
to build up wo
men’s strength,
and to cure wo
men's ailments
this is the only medicine that’s rjuarantecd.
If it doesn’t lienefit or cure, in every ease,
your money is returned. On these terms,
whnt else can tie “just as good” for you to
buv I
The “Prescription” regulates and pro
motes all the natural functions, never con
flicts with them, and is perfectly harmless in
any condition of the female system. It im
proves digestion, enriches tho blood, brings
refreshing sleep, and restores health and
vigor.
For ulcerations, displacements, bearing
down sensations, periodical pains, and every
chronic weakness or irregularity, it’s a reme
dy that safely, aud periuaueutly cures.
FAREWELL.
Farewell. two shall still meet day by
day,
Live side by side.
But nevermore shall heart respond to heart.
Two stranger boats can drift adownone tide.
Two branches on one stem grow green apart.
Farewell. I say.
Farewell. Chance travelers, ns the path they
tread.
Change words and smile
And share their travelers’ fortunes friend with
friend.
And yet aro foreign in their thoughts the
while.
Several, alone, save that one way they wend.
Farewell. 'Tis said.
Farewell. Ever the bitter asphodel
Outlives lore’s rose.
r . h<- fruit and blossom of the dead for us.
Ah, answer me, should this hare been the
close—
To be together and to be sundered thus?
But yet farewell.
—Augusta Webster.
BESSEf.ICR ON BESSEMER STEEL.
Marvelous Quickness In Converting Cast
Iron Into the Hardened Metal.
In The Engineering Review Sir Hen
ry Bessemer has an article on the steel
industry which bears his name. He re
minds us that a third of a century ago
Sheffield steel made from the costly bar
iron of Sweden- realized from £SO to
£6O a ton. Now, by the Bessemer proc
ess, steel of excellent quality can bo
made direct from crude pig iron at a
cost ridiculously small compared with
former prices and in quantities which
the old steel workers never dreamed of
dealing with at one operation.
In lieu of the slow and expensive
process of converting wrought iron bars
into crude or blister steel by 10 days’
exposure at a very high temperature to
the action of carbon, cast iron worth
only £3 a ton is, Sir Henry says, con
verted into Bessemer cast steel in 30
minutes wholly without skilled manip
ulation or the employment of fuel, and
while still maintaining its initial heat
it can at once be rolled into railway
bars or other required forms.
The article gives a vivid picture of
all that has been brought about by this
revolution in a manufacture in which
up to our own time there had been no
change since blades of matchless temper
were wrought in the forges of Damas
cus ami Toledo. Steel is now adapted
to a thousand purposes of which our
ancestors had no conception.
Byway of giving some id. a of the
enormous production of Be. s< met- steel
now, Sir Henry asks us to imagine a
wall 5 feet in thickness and 20 feet
high, like a gigantic armor plate form
ed into a circle and mr.de to 'surround
London. The inclosure so made would
extend to Watford on the north side, to
Croydon on the south, to Woolwich on
the east and to Richmond on the west.
It would contain an area of 795 square
miles, and this great wall of London,
weighing 10,500,000 tons, would just
be equal to one year’s production of
Bessemer steel.
Oratory and Wit,
“A curious thing about political ora
tory and wit is the side light I got upon
one aspect of it years ago in Buffalo. ’ ’
Thus Mr. Cleveland is quoted by a lis
tener. “One morning a quaint looking
old chap came into my office and said
that he had read in the newspapers that
I was to speak at a mass meeting tho
following night and wanted to know if
it were true. When I told him that
it was so, he revealed to me a new
method of gaining oratorical distinc
tion. He volunteered to interrupt my
speech at stated intervals with a remark
that should be agreed upon between us.
To this interjection 1 was to retort wit
tily, and thus, as the old fellow pointed
out, I would acquire a reputation as a
witty speaker.
“My first impression was that he was
amusing himself at my expense, but he
repeated to me several things I could
reply to wittily and wanted me to pay
him roundly for helping me to a reputa
tion. But I told him I was indifferent
to that- kind of fame, and he went away
disappointed. Not very long after that
I was seated on a stage listening to a
speaker, when who should arise in the
audienca but my quaint visitor and
bawl out one of the very things he
wanted me to pay him for interrupting
me with. The orator answered him with
the same retort that I was offered the
privilege of making, and the audience
exploded into laughter, and I heartily
joined in, but my amusement had not
tho same foundation, I fancy, as that of
the rest of the laughers. And during
the rest of the evening the old fellow
made an occasional interruption from
different parts of tho house, and the re
torts were of the same manufactured
sort. lam a trifle skeptical now on the
subject of witty retorts.’’—Cincinnati
Commercial.
Collecting Astor House Rents.
Possibly it is not generally known
that the Astor House block has two own
ers, w’hose relations are strained, to say
the least—John Jacob Astor and Wil
liam Waldorf Astor. Although the rent
of the hotel itself is necessarily paid in
a single check, that of the stores aud
offices at one end of the building is col
lected by the representative of one As
tor, while the revenue from the other
end is garnered by the representative of
the other. —National Hotel Reporter.
Unjust Discrimination.
Officer Phaneygan—lt’s thin you’re
lookin, Mike.
Officer O’Morphy—’Tis the fault of
the chief, be hanged to 'im.
Officer Phaneygan—How’s that?
Officer O’Morphy—Shure, an he put
me on a beat with never a fruitstand
on it, the discriminating blaggard!
Chicago Record.
Knowledge will not be acquired with
out pains anchapplication. It is trouble
some and deep digging for pure waters,
but when once you come to the spring
they rise up and meet you.
Empress Josephine owned the finest
opal of modern times. It .was called
“The Burning of Troy. ” Its fate is un
known, as it disappeared when the al
lies entered Paris.
THE PEOPLE
NORTH GA.
♦ALABAMA.*
Hard times and the
the scarcity of money,
bns forced the price of
cotton down to 6 cents
Wages and every
thing else is low and
we propose to put the
price of Groceries and
Dry Goods, Etc, down
in proportion.
We are the only
large dealers in our line
in Rome that dont
belong to an associa
tion or combine of
some sort to keep the
prices of goods up.
We have been in business in
Rome about 15 years, anti
have never joined an asso
ciation of any kind, that had
to cut prices for us to sell by.
vVe began with a single little
grocery store,but by selling
clieap for cash and never try
ing to’get more Tor goods
than they are worth.
We h ive built up a trade
that any body might feel
proud of.-
We now have six stores ib.
the Fourth Ward. Two with.
Groceries, two with Dry Geods
and shoes,and one with Cloth
ing and Gents Furnishing
goods and one with Crockery ,
Glass Ware and Stoves.
An I in addition to these
we have one at 236 Broad b'
with a Mammoth Stock of.
Stoves, Crockery, Glass, Tin
ware and House Furnishing
Goods,
We buy ; n large lots aa>
cheap as any whole sale mer
chant can buy and sdl them
as cheap as we please.
We Wholesale and Retai[
and it you havaa little mone y
to spend, we can and will sell
yon < hcaper than any body
this city.
Look Ata Few Prices.
Good Green Coffee 6 lbs for $1
Good sound Tobacco 11 inch plug
at 5 cents. Good Rad Flannal
Guaranteed all Wool at IQcente yd
Heavy J ans 10 beuts a yd,
Cotton Check 3| cenhe and up
Sheetng yard wide 44 cents a yard
Cotton Flannell 5 cents a yard
Bleached Cotton yd wide 5 cent yd
Dress Gingham 44 cents a yard
Flour, Meat, Sugar. Etc. I 1 uder
the prices of the Association
If you are a merchant conn
to see us, and we will save you:.
money by giving you our lowest
prices.
Lanham & Sons.,
316,318,320,322. 3-
24, 326 Fifth Aw
ANDi
236 Broad « S’_