The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, November 02, 1894, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

PKOFBSSIOHIL GOLD! dentists i WlLLS—Dentist— 298 1-2 Broad swee J over Cfint.ii’ll and <lwena s'ern. . -- *• >—• - "- attorneys JH, Spu lock, Attorney lat Law, Mason ' Temple ftuildWg Temple Building Rome Georgia. JttlESB NEVIN— Attorney at Law Offii Poverty H.ul poeU'ffiou coruor 3rd Avenue C\HAS. W. UNOICHWOOD- Attorney at » Mason t" temple / Rome, Ga. R - r K('E* DI NNY—Attorneys at law. Ufcc in Masonic Temvle. Rome, Ga. w. VANDIVER—Attorney and Com sei lor at Law—Rome. Ga. WH ENNIS —In<>. W. STARLING—Ennit & Starling, Attorneys at Law, Masonic ’ Temple. Rome, Ga. teb23. PHYSICIANS SURGEONS. DR RAMSUR —Physician and Burgem Office at residence 614 avenue A, Foun.i • ward. L P HAMMOND— Physician and Surgeon Offers his I zofessional services to the pen * pie of Rente and surrounding country Office at Crouch and Watson's drug store, 20 Broad street. Dr W. D. LOYT-Office at C, A. Trevitt drug store. ?'o. 331 Broad street Telephon 110. reslden »a. No. 21 Frank A ■ Wynn, Physic iau and Surgon office at Tre- itt & Johns >n drug store Telephone 13 Residence 406 Second Ave, Prompt attention given sJI professional call MBTI Ry. Co Elfifflfi. To The East Leave East Rome 5.40 a. m. 4,40 p. m Arrive Cleveland 7.55 a. m. 7.02 p. m “ Knoxville 10.25a.m. 10.00p.m. “ Bristol ,2 15 p. m. 4.30 a. m " Washington .4.02 a - in. 9.40 p. m “ Baltimore 5.00 a.m. 11.00 a.m. “ Philadelphia 7 05.a. m. 350a. m <■ new York to. 50 a, in. 6.52 a. m Train leaving Eastßeme at 5.40 a. m.. has a Pullman Sleeping car, Mobile to C leveland, where it connects with the popular Vestibule Dining car train for Washington and New York This train also connects at Cleveland, with train for Chattanooga, arrives at 9.55 a. in. The 4,40 p. m. train connects at Ooltewrh Junction with Sleeping car, for Radford. Yr... making di rect eminection for all ooi“ts (■‘‘s*’ To West. And The North Leave East Rome 4.40 p. m. 2.00 a.m 10.40 am Arrive Chattanooga... ,7.10 p. m, 450 a.m. 1.20 pm “ Cincinnati. 7,30a. m. 7.20 p,m. '• Nashville 8.20a. m.10,56a. m.7.20p.m “ Memphis 7.00a. m. 6.10 p. m. “ St. Louis 6 45p. m. 7.05 a. m. “ Kansas City 7 f 25 a. m, 10.25 a. m. “ Little Rock 2JO p. tn. 2.45 a, m, “ Ft, Worth 8:90 a; m. 7 -50 p m Trains leaving East Rome 4:40 pm is the pop alar "Cincinnati J£ Florida Limited." It is full vesttbuled and runs solid Jacksonville to ciin cinnati. carrying Pullman’s finest sleeping cars and a magnificent observation car from Macoa to ohattanoogacseats free), where it makes di rect connection with solid train with through sleeping car attached Chattanooga to Memphi-- onn ecting there for all points west. To South Georgia, Carolina and Florida. eave East Reme...2soam llj.iaro 402 pm Arrive Atlanta 6.00 am 155 p m 625 p “ Augusta ....,1.20 pm 925 p m. “ Macon 10 50 am 725 pm 1040 pm. “ Savannah ... 630 pm 700 am “ Brunswick.... 715 p m 615 am “ Jacksonville ..900 p m 830 a m Tr* a leavin 'Els', R >:ne2:s 0 a ra runs sol 1 toJßninswick, Sleeping cars Chattanooga to At anta, The 1115 a m train solid through vesti buled train to Jacksonville, stops in Atlanta 1 55 until 7 30 p m : takes on sleeping ear t® Bruns wick and the connection from 4:02 train, The 1115 am train connects with R & D,S A L, A A >? P anti c.a railroad trains in the Union Depot, Atlanta, It Also has an elegant observation chaircar (seats free) to Macon, To Alabama, Texas & the West. Leave East Rome 9 40 p m Arrive Anniston ,12 05 night. 755 pm, “ Selma 530 am “ Montgomery.... ,700 am ’ >le 12 30 noon " New Orleans 443 pm “ Houston 7co a m Leave East Rome 4 10 p m Alpine Aceomoda on, Leave East Rome 2,00 p, m, Gadsden and At talla Accommodation. Train leaving East Rome 9:40 pm has Pnll ffian Sleeping car to Mobile connecting with Pullman car to New Orleans, Tor further particulars, tickets or sleeping car reservations, call on or write to T, c, SMITH, P & T A, Rome Ga, L A, HELL, D, P A, Selma, A a. J, J, Farnsworth d p a Atlanta oa, ®> a, BENscoTKR, a G P a,, Knoxville, Teun, w, a Turk, g, p, a, Washington n c, J>ay my friend why this exceeding good humor? Did your lot tery tickt win? No but Hfn away ahead on this outfit you see. High*Price” used to thargeme $20.00 for this style suit, and $5.- C 0 for this Hat, and 5>6.00 for those shoes --Well I got them as joker’s for $18.50 all told. Suit $12.50, Hat *f-00, Shoes $3.00. Oh! I see. THE HUSTLER OF ROME, FRIDAY NOVEMBER 2 1894, IFORWOMEN FOLKS THE GOOD HOL SLKEEI’Et. How can I tell her? By her cellar. Cleanly shelves and whitened walls I can guess her By het dress r, By the b ck staircase and halls. A d with pleastue Take her meastii e By the way she keeps her brooms; Or the pee; ing At the "keeping” Os her back and unseen roon s. By her kitchen’s air es neatness, And i.s general completeness, Where in cleanliness and sweetness The rose of odor bloou s. HOW TO BE VIGOROUS IF OL A happy and vigorous old lady, when ftbked the secret ol her b;i years of health and enjoyment said . “I never allow mypalf to fret over things I cannot help. I take a nap, and sometimes two of them every day. I do not carry my washing, iron ing, dressmaking or baking to bed with me. And I try to oil all the friction out of my busy life by sb implicit belief that there is a brain and a heart to this great universe and that I can trust them ,both.” FOR BRO AD-CH INNED WO MEN The headgear has acquired in width what it ha-Jost iu height. Women with broad, heavy chine will look better than they have for years, for broad head adornments are eminently to them; but alas for the women with clas sic, oval faces and wedgelike chins who indiscriminately don the broad ha‘e and bonnets and give their pratty the charac teristic modeling of earthen flower pots! Fortunately, the styles are such that they may be modified to indivualneeds. LITTLE GIRLS’ GOWNS. Children's clothes are always in teresting and quite as important to mothers as their own if they value their peace of mind, for the young men and maidens have be come very wise and critical on the subject of dress. It is not enough that their gar ments are whole and tidy; they must be quite up to date as well, or the lit.l© ones are made unhap py the disapproval of their school fellows. Thia spirit of criticism has de veloped wonderfully within a few years, and mothers are made to re alize its effect with every turn of fashion’s fancy. The small boy’s hat must have just the right turn of the brim and his coat the re quired length, no matter how fast he grows, and the little maid of 6 years looks with scorn upon a sleeve which is not of the latest propor tions, and so it goes. There is very little change in the style of gowns for little girls, ex cept that the waists, sleeves and skirts are -a bit fuller, and the touch of bright color, which is such a noticeable point of fashion in general, shows more and more in children’s frocks. A very pretty school dress is made of dark blue serge in pina fore style, to be worn over a blouse of bright red silk Brown serge and bright green is another combina tion. Plaid and mixed tweeds make very serviceable school dress es. NEW ARRIVAL FROM BABA LAND. Dr. and Mrs. William T. Bull’s (Mrs. James G. Blain, Jr.) new «on is having a nice time of it. Ev erywhere its pretty blue eyes turn they are greeted with oceans of flowers that have been sent by friends from all over the country. It is said to be a very pretty baby, is a blond and weighs nine pounds. The child was born at Dudley place, Newport, and there was no cradle ready for it save the old faahioned affair in which the great surgeon was rocked, and that has been relegated to the garrett for many years. The idea of the nurse is to fetch this out. and, old-fash ioned as it is, te put the baby in ■ Xt Mrs. Bull, in purchasing the | wardrobe f< r !:?r baby, set an ex- imple to many a mother. She was oarticvlar to select the plainest of everything, while she got The iioQst materials. A soon as the baby and mother can stand the tr p they will return to thsir New Yq k home. MISS DE WOLFES BUTTER- FLY DRESS. Elsie De Wolfe of the John D'ew Compel v wears some drcssei. m ‘‘The Bauble Shop'' that :re in 'he very height of French fashion. Oue marine green toilut is mads • ith the new skirt, that measures, at a guess nin - yards round. It falls in folds at every seam and betw; eu seams. The only dec >ration is black lace butterflies, applied in flocks about the front, betwsen the hem and knees. Others on the wing, ornament the front o the bodice. The design is rather plsasiug, arid certainly unique, but the superabundance of the skirt material is an impediment to grace. There must be three patterns in the model. TO CLEAN BLACK DRESSES. Here is a preparation that is ex cellent for cleaning soiled black dresses: Take two parts of soft water to one part of alchohol, or if there be paint soots on the stuff, s .irits of turpentine. Soap a sponge well, dip in the mixture and rub a b'eadth at a time, on both sides, stretching the goods on a table Iron on the wrong side, or tha 1 which is to be the inside when the stuff is made up . Sponge off with water hot bu; not scalding, before you iron. Iron while damp. This proceeding will make the material appear like JEWELS FOR HIS NURSE. The Queen has presented a valu able diamond and ruby brooch to Mrs. Green, the fortunate nurse engaged at the birth of Prince Edward of York. Mrs. Green has also received sev eral other handsome gifts from members of the royal family, in cluding a diamond and sapphire brooch from the Duke and Duch ess of York, and a gold broooh locket containing a loek of the young Prince’# hair from the Duke of York, and a silver cream jug and sugar basin from the Duke and Duchess of Tech, and is now the envy of all her sisters in the profession. TO BLEACH YELLOW LACE. To bleach lace first expose it to the sunlight in soapsuds, and after wards dry it upon a cloth, pinning the points in their proper position. Then rub both sides of the lace carefully with a sponge dipped in suds made with glycerin soap, and rinse free from soap with clear wa ter in which a little alum is dis solved. Next pass a small quantity of rice water over the wr mg side of the lace with a sponge, iron with care, and lastly pick out the flow ers with a small ivory stick. WHAT THE COLLEGE GIRLS COST. The girls are flocking to college and papas are handing out money. A clever.girl can live at Vassar on S7OO a year or spend $2,500. At Wellesley |s6oo upward is the fig ure. At aristocratic Bryn Nawr, SBOO is a scant figure for a year. Mount Holyoke, S3OO to SSOO. Al most all the colleges are crowded with freshmen, and hard times dosen’t seem to interrupt girls’ ed ucation. MELBA’S HEALTH RULES. “Skip the dining room,” Mme. Nellie Melba said one day last winter speaking about flesh, “and you can waigh what you like. Eat ing is a fascinating vice. “I may go to a dinner or a lunch party with a pledge done up in a £SO note that I will not eat a morsel. Do I? Os course. Nothing but a muzzle or a gag tould check my appetite. “I can’t i u dess lam well; my health is halt my talent, and rnv face and figure depend upon my health ; and yet I don’t trust inyxf’lf at a dinner table. I know the foods to let alone. 1 eat in my own room, and that's my salva tion.” The fiery Mme. Calze weighs p obably 1100 pounds. She has height enough, however, to cany her flesh, but all that keeps it down is her stocial resistance of tempta tion. She even denies herself the the afternoon teas, and takes only two meals a day—dinner and a breakfast of coffee and roll. Her bedroom occupies a suite—one room for the bed and another for the fresh air. A fire is never made in her apartment. She dislikes society affairs because of the bad atmos phere that prevails. Her theory is that a woman or an artist can li v e very well on a small quantity of food, provided the lungs and the blood have abundant pure air. A S uk of clothes from Cokers means $2.00 to $5.00 Clear, cool Cash saved to you Con siderthat. What Nerve Berries have done for other* IO W ’H f ° r yQU to IST DAW. ; V? 1 -NMW VIGOR \ OF 15TU DAY. M E hl) Easily, Quick!/ and Permanently Rostered. 3oth da *' A positive cure for ali Wei Nervousness Debility, and all their train of evils resr.ltim from early'errors and later excesses; the resui of overwork, eick/ieN*. -worry ..Ac Develop and (jives tone and io t” o< Stops iii'iEap'or:»l lomr .-n nicki!' einiMMion.s caused by youthful errors or ci cessive use oi tobaeeo. option and dquor which lead to coißMianptioti and Their use shows immediate improvement. Accep >lO imitation. Insist upon having the gvnv ne Berries, pocket. Price. !?J.OO per box. six boxes, on ful t/eatmi. fKS.tX). <>■ uaranlecd to euro auyv a&c. f not kept by your druggist wo will send them 0} mail, upon receipt of price, plain wrap pei. Pamphlet free. Address aH mail orders t'- AN MKOICAIw CO., For Sale by J. T Crouch & Co. Warter’shand made is the finest smoke on the market-—and then it is Rome made;Fruits of home Industry. Ask your dealer for one. NOTICE. The attention of the readers of The Hustler of Rome is directed to the advertisement of E. C. At kins & Co., manufactures and re pairers of all kinds of saws. This is one of the very best and most reliable houses in this line in all the county. Their saws are the very best in quality and the most reasonable in price. They make a specialty of mill supplies and re pairing. When in need of a saw or anything in their line write to E.- C. Atkins & Co., Chattanooga Tenn. NOTICE OF LOCAL LEGISLA TION. Rome. Ga., October, 30th. 1894., Notice, is hereby that ap plication will be made du ring the present session of the Leg islature of Georgia, for the pas sage of an act entitled, “An Act to Amend the Charter of the City Electric Railway Company, of Rome, Ga., so as to authorize and empower said company to furnish electric lights and electric motive power, to the city of Rome, and to other persons and companies who may contract for the same. J. King, Pres. BACK AT THE OLD STAND. We have opened at the old stand of W. H. Edmondson & Co., on Broad st., with W. H. Edmondson as manager of the business. Our goods are fresh and nice, and we are going to sell them very cheap for cash. Send your child or servant to us, and they will be treatod as well as f you came yourself (but don’t forget to send the cash.) If you want to buy groceries at retail and wholesale prices come to see us. We want all of W. H. Edmon sons & Cos old customers and a great many new ones, so come and do your self good and please us. Respectfully. Edmondson Grocery Co. «The wiser steam Eye works« 530 Market St. ChattanoogaJ W. C. SMITH Agt, Proprietor E | LADIES & GENTS CLOTHING CLEANEDI I DYED OR REPAIRED, S AT LOWEST PRICES. I PROMPT PROFESSIONAL WORK. | '■ '”■ .. . - ■ ■ ■ ■mill I—WMWW* I R. ’j I W B- ? n _ I. ' T~ r ' ■ 1 I■- - Madison - taoe. ■BxutoM auJLMMnJI Madison Aven 1 e and 58tF ,Siree\ NEW YORK. per day and up. American Plar£. FIREPROOF AND FIRST-CLASS 'N EVERY PARTICULAR. Two Blocks from the Third and Sixth Avenue ElevaAw*- Bad roads The Madison and Fourth Avenue and Belt Line Cars twmk the Door, H M. CLABK, proprietor Passenger Elevator runs all night. D E> D PIMPITSi BIOTCHES a* B B BB AHO OtD SORES > PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT CATARRH, MiURU, 2 AND POTASSIUM KISMET TROUBLES 3 Walt3 S and DYSPEPSIA Marvelous Cures * alum, the greatest blood purifier oft \ in Blood Poison ABP’tnsß'Y. 0.. July 2?., 1891. Jji, S'X Messrs Lirpi./.N Bnoe.. Savannah. ■pr'' *• «.. . Ga.: Dear Sirs—l a bottle of Rheumatism months’treatment at the Hot Spring*. Bend tareo bottles C. O. D. x and Scrofu a M.3BU VU-UiUaLi Aberdeen, Brown County, O» Sk P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds up Cajpt. «f. D. Job.aatoilr the weak and debilitated, gives t wP" strength to weakened nerves, expels . Ja diseases. Kivlng the patient health and pV f p t?t nsnr the akin I happiness where sickness, yrloomy of £• J;, I ,’ L°f iiX .. n’r.! •F ami laHiJtnriM nrovnilpd lUuered fOF RGV6I3! J Ears. Witt! R!1 UQ X I'< lings and las.itudi. Hist |t<a .uh .1. slghtly tad di;ja g roeEl ,i o aruption on For primary, secondary and tertiary SV valn^m*i'i pl> syphilis, for blood poisoning, mercu- cured * rial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and “‘laigne'd bv) in aft blood and skin diseasea, like (Signed by) J. h ■“V blotehe.;, pimples, old chronic ulcers, D ““ ‘ ’ Y tetter, scald head, boils, erysipelas. Skin Cancer Cared. eg-, ecxemft we may say, without fear of contradiction, that I’. P. P. is the best Tsttimony from the May or of Sequin. blood purifier in the world, and makes positive, speedy and permanent cures Sequin. Tbt. , January 14, IS9B. jk fn all cases. Messrs. Lippman Bros. , Savannah, ~ bom : Gentlemen—l baxo tried your P. Ladles whose systems are poisoned of thirt'yyeerle Y. and whose blood is In an impure condi- ’’ great MifefT% d r“ull‘. O rU won- J, S»TJJS O ? ) nra/ndblood o cleansinKPron- rltatlon from the seat of the disease n.' p p p-Priiklv and prevents any spreading: of tt>» fl ’’T Riiit undPotissltim y ’ sones. I have taken five or six b-ttlee ST A Root and > otassium. and feel confideht that anothar course it will effect a cure. It has also relieved x? Springfield, mo. , Aug. 14th, from indignation and sunxiaoti X -I can speak la the highest terms of *“”J*JJ* ““““ “““ j, . your medicine from my own personal WOUW»«. xoh™ truly. knowledge. I was affected with heart AttorSo'y«La.Uk. “ >, - disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for _sk O' 35 years, was treated by the very best : lars* tried every P known remedy with- Book or. Blood Diseases hoim M ’L WUlSot ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT. aood*?ban anything I have ever taken. LIPPMAN BROaU dr loan recommend your medicine to all _ apfferera of the above diseases. PROPRIETORS. Springfield f Greea County, Mo. S-fipipiiaaa’o FJRSALE 3YD.W. CURRY.