The Rome hustler-commercial. (Rome, Ga.) 18??-????, October 30, 1898, Image 4

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THIIUSTLER-COMMERCIA F.HUS.T LEEC F R < / I Established, IK9O. ’HE ROME COMMERCIAL Established, I!W>. ned every evening, except Saturday. Sunday and weekly. PHIL G. BYRD, EDITOR ANI MANAGER. i . .-j ■ _ .. The daily race war is now the issue of the hour. Thirteen Georgia counties are operating dispensaries. France may do a little blus tering but she is not going to fight England. The dull pupil in the school of experience has many sharp corners to round. Sir J. T. Lipton’s attempt to capture the America’s cup will cost him nearly $300,000. Blanco is taking away every thing but Cuba, and is getting all the “dust” off of that. l'he Newnan possum supper of last year will doubtless be the last of its kind. So mote it be. Speaker John D. Little is one of the coming men of this great commomwealth. Mark that prediction. The poor may be with us al ways, but they are never so close as some paupers who have money. If North Carolina white men don’t redeem their state they ought to be deported to Patago nia or Liberia. i Ex-president Harrison has re fused to yield to the pressure put upen him to speak in New York state. Editor Loyless says he has an idea that Lieut.-Col. Berner wold like to have Mrs. Col. My rick courtmartialed. Ex-Gov. Altgeld denounces Gov. Tanner of Illinois as a lib ertine, gambler and murderer. When thieves fall out Col. Wiley Burnett is now fig uring in the columns of the At lanta Constitution as the “Au rora Bort alls of Georgia Poli tics.” Croker claims that the demo crats will carry the state of New w-> zm - * - *^ r -* *jx~* -w-w A horse in the lead pulls in vain when the wheel horse lays back in the breeching. A man’s body is a good deal like a team of horses, and must work harmoniously. The bead may want to work, and strive ever so hard to work, but if the body is balky and •lek the head will make no progress. The man who is opt of condition physical ly may as well give up trying to work men tally. He will not be able to do g9«d work, or satisfactory work, and in the endeavor to do so will only do himself further harm. The reason that men have nervous exhaus tion and prostration is that they try to work the brain when the body is balky. The right thing for a man to do when he finds he is out of sorts physically is to give the mind a little rest, and promptly resort to the right remedy for his physical ailments. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery is the best of all medicines for a balky body. When the head aches, the appetite is poor, the sleep is restless, the nerves are shaky and botn body and brain suffer from dull ness and lassitude, it is time to resort to this great remedy. It restores the appetite, corrects all disorders of the digestion, makes assimilation perfect, invigorates the liver and purifies and nourishes the blood. It is the great blood-maker and flesh- Dtijlder It is the best of nerve tonics and restoratives. It makes both body and brain alert and active. Medicine dealers have nothing “just as good ” “ I suffered five years with an ulcer and the doctor here could not do me any good.'’ writes Mr John Jenkins, of Haywood. Madison Co.. Vs "I took twelve bottles of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and lam well. I would have been in my grave if it had not been for your medicine.” y For constipation and indigestion, Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are the most nat ei r.ral and perfect cure ever devised. They act gently but surely, and effect a perma- Royal Baking Powder Made from pure cream of tartar. Safeguards the food against alum. Alum baking powders are the greatest tnenacers to health of the present day. ROYAL BAKING POWOtR CO., NEW YORK. York by 100,000 majority. Dick must have been bitten by a rabid populist. The Seventh Army Corps, now at Savannah, will in all proba bility remain there until Janu ary Ist before embarking for Cuba. The civilized people of this nation are watching the results of Roosevelt’s introduction of Wild West circus raovations into the realm of politics. There is one lone populist in in the senate. They ought to convert him before they let him go.—Summerville News. He is too gross for that, j jjy -j. L lu the new Georgia senate there are .went -two lawyers, three doetois, puree bankers and the remainder of the forty-four are farmers and merchants. The “smart set” in London have started an “anti-scandal league.” A sort of mutual pro tective association, as it were, suggests the Savannah News. Judge Maddox’s speech last Tuesday was a fire brand in the political world. He has the nerve to express his honest convictions regardless of the powers that be in Washington.—Ringgold New South. As the ides of November roll around the day for the burial of white political renegades in the Eleventh approaches. Brantly will bury them deep—mark that prediction. President McKinley has prom ised to attend Atlanta’s peece jubilee on Dec. 15th. ’f it rains about that time, Atlanta will have a naval display in and around her car shed. ■ "2 Let’s hurry and get through with our little Yanko-Spanko entertainment so that we may get a front seat Lr the grand spectacular production now* promised by the Anglo Franko aggregation. Jesse Janies fell into the meshes of the law a number of times for holding up trains, and now Jesse Janies, Jr., has been placed under arrest for bolding up the reputation of the family. —Fitzgerald Leader. Yesterday ended Bri adier Bill’s official life—but just now Mr. Atkinson is doubtless study ing the strange case of David B. Hill, and while enjoying his own wake is longing for a second life. “Yes,” said young Mrs. Homewood.to liar dearest gid friend, “George and I first met while out cycling.” “Then it was a genuine bicycle attach ment,” added the friend. —Pitts- burg Chronicle Telegraph. Mrs' Peckson—“Where were you last night?” Peckson—“l was—er —at a stag party.” Mrs. Peckson —“It must have been a whole menagerie party, for I heard you talking in your sleep about n buck and a tig a ' kitty.” Speaking editorially _ < vannah Press says “we think.” After readingtlu colutins of that paper o readily see how natural i to a smart man to write b things without thinking. The First Tuesday afte first Monday in Novembei day fixed by congress so congressional elections in where no previous time been set. This will be the s Tuesday in next month ar be on the Bth. Remembe Tuesday, Nov. Bth. inconvenience. I have taken Hood. , With the negroes paying very small per cent of the t^„ ce taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla and and drawing out the larger Hood a Pina T faave [of the school fund, the col( lcher an d purer blood. I have always brother should remember>een bothered with Bcrcfula ’ m rid of it. Before my last child was time to let well enough ak" rn j tool: Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and Georgia Democrats are treatiygiri baby was fat and Bt '°“*» + l 1 „ M 1- jy other Child was not well and lived the negro better than his repr y ( two yeiir3 old.” Mrs. e. f. lican brother of the North treEAL, Box -119, Sii-soun \ai lowa, him—and that’s no joke. 1H O Sarsa — S panlla The election of Hon. John Lu best-in fact the One True Blood Purifier. -*■ V i/waaxx JVOt *** Little as speaker of the Georg, oo( j’ s Pills ' House of Representatives is oi> ~ of the highest compliments evecause be believes it is a duty paid a young man in this state owes to civilization to swin- Speaker Little gives promise o> an Indian whenever he has a great public career, and hitj opportunity, and he never success is a source of great prideg to do it. to his thousands of friends throughout the state. —Macon qin TED PARAGRAPHS News. Roosevelt is touring New York accompanied by a squad of Rough Riders and a inrnbgel uniform. The Chicago Chronicle can fancy the long drawn, quav ering howl that would go up were some democrat—William J. Bryan, for instance—to intro duce this military feature into a political campaign. The very foundations of the republic would begin to wabble.—Albany Herald. The last of the Delaware tribe of Indians, now located in the Indian Territory, despairing of getting justice from white men, are preparing to go to Mexico. These Indians first sold lands to William Penn, and they have been in the real estate business ever since with disastrous re sults. The Chicago Times Herald says that they “always have been peace Indians. They have not only kept peace with the white men, but they have been his allies and protectors against the savage tribes of the west.” The white man, however, does not stop to coniider these facts Woinen’sJßeliancr After Many Discouragements They Turn to Munyon. Mrs. J. El Wood, 37 Auburn Avenue, Atlanta, Ga., says: " I have been a mar tyr to dyspepsia for years. Everything wl i \ v SI J ats distressed me, an-.l I was rapidly becoming: weak and debilitated from m? Inability- to partake of a nourishing d‘e« i A few weeks' use of Munyon’s Dyspep sia Cure cured me completely. It acted Is a strong tonic to my stomach, and built up my strength In an almost mar velous manner.” Munyon has a separate cure for each Cisease. At all druggists. Mostly 25 cents t vial. Personal letters to Prof. Munyon, 1,505 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa., an swered with free medical advice for aajf disease. Woman's Friend The Great Medicine that Gives Nerve Strength Mood’s Sarsaparilla Mak'.* tho Blood Rich and Pure, C reates an Appetite and Restores Health, Vigor and Vitality- feel that I ought to writ, a few words in praise of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which baa done great things for me. 1 I WS h in a delicate condition and was ck at my stomach and constipated. 1 tried J remedies highly recommend, d for female I weaknesses, but tho medicines brought 7n other troubles. I was bo weak 1 6 could not attend to my h ° ußeh ° ld 9l and I then determined to try 1100 - n Jairilla- After I had taken this medicin a short time I began to gain strength. Br Crew Strenger Each Day „in IO work ou can always tell a donkey ' lis lack of horse sense. here are certain times when * ietty girl doesn’t act that , ie true measure ot kindness i»e certainty of its continu a. is often as well to know heto hold your pen as your toie. 9 harder times are the r»tial life—the principle of d'oton to flag and countrj wch forms so proud a part of tirecords of the best American fiilies She did more than a'ply maintain the record of hown family. She illumined itith a new glory that will nerfade.St, —Louis Republic. POLITICAL GOSSIP- i EX-SENATOR SAWYER. Esenator Sawyer, of Wis- f cons;, who recently celebrated ] his B.d birthday, is still active | in pities and looks much . than he really is.— ( American. ■ < “ SENkT .»b tillmax ab-bnt. Senstor "'■illman advises the shotgun as a political remedy id North Caplin i. It is to be tted tha public men who ta’k in this fahion are so care ful to absent 'Jiemsclves from tht firing line —St. L inis Globe Democrat. WHITE MEN AK. DETERMINED. “We hope tha no troops will biisent to North Carolina, but whether they are ir not, ourpeo pie are going to cary the elec tion, and calk of federal inter ference will only serve to put the devil in them.” —Charlotte Ob server. I NORTH CAR 'LINA RKVUBLIOANS . The disreputable republican psliticians in North Carolina in North Carolina lid not have wit enough to learn anything from the experience of their fellows in other southern states. The indications are that they wil now learn something from their own. The white people of the state evidently mean business. Charleston News and Courier. DEPEW FOR SENATOR. The report that Platt has agreed to bestow the next United States senatorship upon Chaun cey M. Depew, in the event that the republicans have the major ity in the next legislature, has the aspect ot probability. He is immeasurably more likely to dispose of the office in this way than to allow it to go to Joseph H. Choate, as some republioans have been sanguine enough to ho o. Mr. Depew deserves well , of Platt. He has done his bidding pretty faithfully for several years. —Boston Herald. ’ STIOMING The Presiheit Now Goasents To Retain The After Men are Ordered Home And are on 30 Day Furloughs- Washingten, Oct. 29.—Senator I Bacon ot Gtorgia, today obtained the consent of the president to the Second Georgia vo'nuteer regiment _ in the United Stat-is service. Senator Bacon was accompanied by Col Oscar J. Brown and Capt. c Wilcoxon, of the Second Georgia. The First and Seeond Georgia re giment were ordered mustered o ul L some time ago, but a largs num- L ber of men in both regiments pre- I ferred to remain in the servies. The order of the president will allow the men of both regiment who want to go out to do so, while I those who wish to remain can go into the Second. It is thought t’> ere will be more men vacauciet in the regiment. J WELL PLEASED CUSTOM ERS. We have sold hundreds and hundreds ot the McCall Bazar | j Patterns since we have taken the 4 agency, and upon inquiry of the II salesladies in the department,we find that, not one pattern nas ever been returned as unsatis factory, and with hundreds of sales, not one word of criticism has ever been heard against the McCall Patterns. On the contrary many ladies are delighted with the McCall Patterns, because reliable, and because the prices a:e only 10 and 15 cents each —None High er. Lanham & Sons 245 Broad street, Bass old stan 1. J What Shall h iße Done J ' FOR THE DELICATE GIRL < I ( You have tried iron and < i other tonics. But she keeps < • pale and thin. Her sallow • • complexion worries you. Per- ' | • haps she has a little hacking ; i ' cough also. Her head aches; i H ' and she cannot study. Give her i • : Scon’s Emulsion I I I I i The oil will feed her wasting i 1 body; the glycerine will soothe ' • her cough, and the hypophos- ' ' phites will give new power and J ' vigor to her nerves and brain. ( [ > Never say you ** cannot i ( take cod-liver oil * until you I , have tried Scott’s Emulsion. I i You will be obliged to change | • your opinion at once. Children ■ ' especially become very fond • ' of it; and infants do not know | ' when it is added to their food, f 50c. and SI.OO ; ill drugfisti. I I SCOTT A BOWNE, ChemilU, Niw York. I ft^H***^*****^*******^***^ 1 No morphine or opium In D r Miles' PAM Art.irt Curb All Piu«>. "Gue a doso. HOW’S THIS? We offer One Hundred Dol lars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, ©. We, the undersigned, known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him to be financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Drug, gists, Toledo, O. Waiding, Rinnan & Marvin Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,©. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is take* internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials seat free. Price 75c per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. , Coke cheaper than * Coal* Can be used in stoves for heating and cooking purposes. No smoke or soot. Olean and economical. For further particulars see ROME GAS OO PROnSSIONIL CiRDi ATTORNEYS. J. ERANHAM, Law Office 20C, B st First reet.Bt, CHAS W. UNDERWOOD Artornay at Law, Homa* I Crcporaion Law Onlyr -w. J. NEEL Attorney at law. Will practice In all oourpi. Special 'attention given to commercial l«w and the examicatlon ct laud titles. office In King building. Rome, Ga. WALTER, HARRIS Attorney at law and J. P. Office over F. J. Kane & Co.’s. LIPSCOMB <Bc ;WII LIMCI HAM Commercial Law}BM« Office In Armstrong hotel bu‘)(Ua it. Rome, 6* M E3 EUB/.NK 3, Attorney at law. OfficeK ..Aiding. Rome, ua. -W H ENNIS, Attorney at Law. .Will Practice in all court* Office, Masonic Temple, Rome, Ga. J. SA.NTA CRTWF > X Attorney at law, Rome, Ga. Collection! * specialty. „ Masonic Temple. Rome, Go. . - •»r MOSES V RIGHT. HARPER HAM|LW« WRIGHT & HAMILTON Attorneys at Law. Office: No. 14 Postoffice Building DENTISTS. J. A. WILLS, D.D.5., Office 240 1-3 Broad. * Over Cantrell It J. L. PENNINGTON. D D S.,M D. ENTIST’ Office. JO6 1-3 Broad street. Over HanUs Inr niture Co. ~PHYSICIANS. O HAMILTON. M D- Physician and Surgeon ©fflee, Medical Building Rome, Ga. On ee ’phone Ns. «*• I_i F>. HAMMOND- M- D . Physician and Surgeon, Otßce In Medtea building. Residence, No. 4<*3 iVest Hr* l ce’phoNo 6 TONSORAL PARLORS- LEWIS BARRETT, Tie ‘Old Reliable.” operating the <>n»r» hotel Barber Shop, Invites yo« to give trial, and promises to do the rest. Only • 1 I men employed on the chairs. HOWELL C. TAYLOR, Himself a skilled barber, employs e..ly' £• very best artists in his tonsorai H, u °» curry Building, opposite the Armsiraig. I vou are made comfortable while your I b-iing done. PASTEUR FILTERS The cub Gei» Prfoi Filter in th* world. Makes wat ol, pure and clear for ; sale by The Hanson • Supply Co i< ■ i any person Wishing to lealth should not fail to Mid for a fkkß 1 new fii-page Booklet w-uUi '*„,,tinn tbtePhP*' . for a short time to those who. n ‘ o "uXJ ad phf ß *'. This book is published by ciane and specialists Dr. Hathaway S, Broad St.. Atlanta, Ua., whom you ■uidrees- Write tx?<l*U.