The Rome hustler-commercial. (Rome, Ga.) 18??-????, November 13, 1898, Image 6

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SE W Os BUSINESS’ We Have Decided to Quit the Clothing Business AND OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK "OF 4R Y M YY Y WY W ■ VWV H ■ ■ ■ a K' ■ 9 H ■ ■j ■ w B J ■ ■ ® ■ ' •■£. ? * ISyM £,•:.' !■■. f .j'U • ■• '*’ ■r JEwtI SA . 1 S&' •’;£ • HR'’ &.<•' a EcRtJ IKI XU hfc'JQj •}-.%! K*. Ujj. it. lu S® Hi B©'' $ rS! wv* ’Sw H B M_B B B | Bill W BLH 1 JHH JBL. bI > HI FURNISHING GOODS aqd HATS! AT PRICES THAT WILL SELL THEM YOU CANT AFFORD / S THIS SALE J M jk Jfe < JHSk H. wi jfißk Sw t ht ; JI ■ ■ !■ ■ I oEHms MmFnun mviAi nL Ji WMBi L•. • • \<<G STfp ZTX% of < It is uot thought thnt many of the hirst Georgia volunteers will remain iu tin* service. The First Georgia will be mustered out about the li:h inst, o o o Jutaro Komira, the newly-ap*- pointed Minister to this country from Japan, graduated from Har vard iu 1875. It is generally be lieved, hewevsr, that his know ledge of this country, its people and its methods extends beyond the field of foot-ball. 000 The announcement of General Dodge, chairman of tho War In vestigation Commission, that he “can” begin to see the end of the long inquiry, is unsatisfactory be cause in the absence of any au thentic information of th® gener al’s knowledge of grammer it leaves doubt as to whether be has begun or shortly will begin, nor ia there, indeed anything to indicate his inclinations in the matter. As for any significance in the fact that publication of the general's statement was coincident with the publication of the elec tion returns it may mean that now the elections are over the see ing of the end may be begun at any time without doing much harm, 000 When the Rev. Dr, Robert Collyer was in last sum mor he went down on the strand one hot day to a place where he had seen Amarican soda water lhe clerk gave me some.” he said ’’and grinnad at me. I grinned back and smacked n*y lips, it was so good. When 1 had finished coi glass I said, Giv.- another.’ regardless of ;the J expense—it was such a hot, day. He grinned at me again as he gave it to me and I grinned back. After I bad fidished I said. ‘How much?’ He answered,J ‘Nathin’’ I know l you, I come from Chicago.’’’ 000 We regret to learn that Senator H. D. Money, of Mississippi, is , threatened with to tai loasof sight, For maoy years his vision has' been impaired and now a crisis seems to have arrived when, in the very height of bis success and | usefulness, the light of his eyes I may vanish. 000 By’ no means the bast ’remark able thing about Geu. Kitchener's . Soudan campaign was its low cost. According to his own account, the whole expense of the movement j during its two and a half years of cont nuance was 12,500,003 say $12,500,000 and this included not I only the transportation and main tenance of the troops but the building of 700 miles of well-equip ped railway and .2,000 miles ot telegraph. It would have been an 1 extremely low price for rhe rail e . way alone, even conceding that it was built, as much of it was by ) . . . * merely laying the railsand ties on the level sand with little or no 1 j grading. The economic feature of ' i the sir jar’s campaign is of inter -1 est to both civil and military’ ens *lgiueers. i 000 Mr. Secretary Alger was quite ; careful not to make General Miles’ I report on the war with Spain pub lic before Lhe election. While the report makes no direct reference to t I I the Alger-Miles controversy, it J contains the sta'em nts heretofore i credited to General Miles, which ! reflected sharply’ on Alger. r, ouo i The absurd imqualities of the laws was illustrated yes- j terday in the fact that soldiers at I I Manila and soldiers on transports ien route to the Philippines voted, ‘if they wanted t>, while the 2d Texas, stationed at Dalles, prevented from voting no’with standing the fact that some of the n en were at their home precincts —Savannah News. 000 If Gen. Shafter is “every inch a s Idier,” as some of his friends say, there is more sddi-r in him than most any other man in the army —Nashville Banner. 000 The Savannah Press take- no stock in the story that the desper ado Cooper killed the Woolfplk family’ in Macon . o o o “This dog, madam, would be cheap at $100.” “I would take him, but I am afiaid my husband might object,” “Madam, you can get another husband much easier than a dog like that. ” —Life. 000 Lieutenant Hobson is said to have waked with joy in the middle of the night, after having retired at the Army and Naval Club, New York, to read a telegram from Washington ordering him to go and float the Maria Teresa all over again, if it be really that vessel that is ashore at Cat Island. boo A Iluvana paper soberly’ assorts that “in many of our cigar facto ries the workers hire men and wo men to read and sing to them while they work, so that they’ will not talk to one another and neglect their tasks.” 000 Two rival papers of Greenville, Miss, —The Golden Rule and The [Delta Light House, edited by I Brethren Mullieon and Chapple, [respectively—are engaged in a*lit tle controversy to which The Light [ House has contributed the follow 'mg: “The Golden'Rule says she 1 had a rod in the pickle lor The ! Delta House, but decided I not to use it, and winds up by say ; mg- that Brother Chi pple ought to [ know the difference between the ‘ views of a correspondent and that o! an editor. I would like to ask the world, how iu the thunder dots Brother Mollison expect Brother Chapple to know who writes an ar ticle in hi? piper. unless Ke puts the perso He name to it Th tfuth of it is that Brother Molli son is waiting for that rod ). g ow large mu pi f.r him to h ide be hind.” o o o Joe Sib ; - y w som of the lucky Democrats in Pennsylvania. He is a smart fellow and, though rich, and a manufaalurer, the .idol <4 working men, because he dealo generously with them. o' o o The music committee of a Devonshire church recently adver tised in one ot the Lond m papers for an organist and music teacher to instruct the choir. Am mg the replies received was the folio ying: “ c eiiVleuien—l noticed your ad vertis ment for a.n organist atid mu ic teacher, either lady or gen • leman. Having been b >’h for ?ev er»lyears, I off ryou iay services. ” 000 The New York Sun sums t< think that the Democrats vould have done better if they had .lot dodged the Chicago platform, and the Journal intimates something of the same sort THEY WERE GONE. “I was troubled for years with rheumatism and pain in ray back and side. Afer taking a few bottles of Hood’s Sarsa parilla the pains were gone. I have not had any trouble from rheumatism since and can do my work without suffering as I formerly did.” Mrs. A. E. J. Hunter, Craigsville, South Car olina. Ho<>d’s Pills are the only pills to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla ■— No morphine or opium in Miles’ PaiM CCBE All Pfcin. “One . u?nt a dose.’ 1 ORF STLE AND ( OMFOLT a’nd for a jolly good time with family or triends, there is nr th in" like an open suriy for < iihcr Winter or Summer. Our stock of stylish carriage-is unrivalled and our spider phaeti ns, runu bout y , buggies, traps, certs, wag c rettes, canopy top. or open sur reys, « r e light, easy, - comforta ;>!e and beiii/itul in consti no tion, trimming.-, and finish. We a’-o lepair and overhaul vehicles; also carry a big line of fin) harness and lap robes, Rome Buggy Co, 5509-511 Broad street,Rome Ga, Satterfield & Williams, A ; euts. ic ® |,k ° V Pen taking nso’s Cure for Consumption since LHS.i ioi-( ' iti iis and Colds. I had an attack of LaGrippe i c>< • -**7 fin have had others since. In the Winter of IS.lb- 1 , I h i!( j spell of Bronchitis, lasting all winter, anti leaving a troublesome cough, until I again tried Piso’s Cure, which relieved me.—Mrs. M. B. Smalley, Colorado Springs, Culq., August 19, 1898.. nigh Syrup. Tastes Good, Ki time. Sold by UVER f, SALE AND FEED stablest Offers the public tho fiiiait tovni, bitc> tv ances and most polite and courteous driveis lhe best stock of horses and mules ou ssle co stantly. B CANDY CATHARTIC . CURE CONSTIPATION 1 toe i 25c 50c --DRUGGISTS I -MW