The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, January 12, 1894, Image 1

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THE HUSTLER OF ROME. THIRD YEAR. KEVIN OPERA BOUSE Matinee and Night. MONDAY JAN. 15. MATINEE Credit Lorraine NIGHT Good-Bye, Sweetheart. BY MISS Lillian Lewis, the big storm Beal Thunder, Lightning, Wind, Rain, Trees. the scenery. The Terrace at Night The Pal ace Scene. St Petersburg Illumi nated the Siberia Scene, the Shower of Sparks, St Petersburg on Fire, the Heaven Scene, the Vision of Angels, and all Cal cium effects. the incident. The Midnight Festival, The Dane 0 of the Mazurka, the Street Singer and Child, the Nobleman and Child, the Convicts of Si beria, the Copper Crucifix, the Angel Mother, the Horseback Elopement, the Burning of St- Petersburg, the Electric Storm, tho Vision of Heaven, The apothesis. THE MUSIC. The Serenade. The Santa Maria, the Hosanna, the Jubilee ano “Good-Bye Sweetheart,. Prices: SI,OO. 75c and 25e. Seats now on sale. Application foa Letters of Dis-’ ni’iSß : on. BEOrTIA—Floyd County Whereas J L Chainnipy tat”'*’! it Agnes LtChambora represents to the court in hi* peti Won duly filed that he has Agnes L Chambers estate. Thsi is to cite all persons •oncarnad. kindred and creditors to show if any they can, why said adiuinistrajo should not be discharged from his administra and receive letters of dismission on the first Monday in April 1894 This Jan Oth 1894 J ohn P bavis Ordina-y Floyd Co, Ga, Letters of Administration. GEORGIA,PIoyd county I*may concern: notice is hereby w lven thrt on the first Monday in Feb. next I shall appoint an administrator cd the estate of J A Stansbury late ol said eounty This is to •ite all all and singular the creditors 1 and and ■ext of kin of j. a . stausbury to be nnd appear «my office within the ti £ e allowed by law and couse if any they cen vh- -wnrr mtari tilnistration sqoujd not be '<> wUn Derwood or some other fit or proper porsod on Stansbury’s estate, witness my hand and ®Cial signature this Bth day-ofJJanuar;- 1894. JohnP Davis, Ordinary of Floyd county • Letters of Administration. GEORGh, county , havin'?i^ Om “ may ooncern :-W a Bbudy Mnt l.nt llr " l ? er fwrin applied to me for perma- Ffonrv if” ° a< ' mil ‘istratioh on tho estate of Z all :? hil1 ’ ia, « of Baid This is te Henrvßer ’iT t la h Cre<lltOrßanrt ” eXt kin °‘ within tu ,l h toheantl appear at iny office if any thev allow,: d by uiw and show cause, should n, r I 1 ”' Wh> p, ' ru ‘anent administration Bernhii? t sX antedt ° WA Rh ’ ,dyon ” enry • this Tth'di'y'of" Jam Wld “ John P Davis, Ordinary F oyd county. Letters of Administration. G X G b' , '° Uvi in OIU h n ' ai eoncern: Cei r Stallins '"mtletters of i / a| ’f lie(l to me for perma ■^MSUllin, ad ’“ lnißtrati ”« on the estate of ’ iteall and siu,i t ° h fßaid Connty ' Thiß is to 0fT empyßtanin. . J creflitors *»‘i next kin w ithi n the time n ° and a l’l lear at my office wh e " by law and Bhow caUß ’ ,110 ' 1 'd not be er, ' perm anent administration Pl Stallins estate * d t 0 Cezar Btallins <m Tern ’Wtnre this u,U'Y‘ tneßs my han<l and official n * 9 10lh 'Kv or January 1894, John P. Davis’ Ordinary Floyd County IS jrijfehfrT'TOM'S The Best ’’’’"‘’‘wplSwvuLrSL ROME GEORGIA. i iiauii. Has a few Words te say anent Jthe Present Campaign, GOV,ATKINSON & GEN. EVANS Will ba Neighbors aad Dwoll Togat h or In Peaco *a< Harmony on Poach tree. “Th»m« my SoatinonU” is the Password. To ths Editob or Thb Joubmal: You hero a ao®i®iy column and a Polygraph column. Now I suggest you have a column set apart to cards of defeated candidate 3 known as Sorehead Column. I have seen several cards from this class in the last few days, ventilating their spleen on a man simply because he aspires to fill an honorable posi tion in his state. While many know thorn, yet by having this column it wouM only require one card to let the people know how they stand, and of course vote accordingly. I know of a Marietta Cadet writing so strong that he should tee allowed to go side by side with Col, John Willedgoand Gen. Evans on their charges with cocked hats and sword, at the head of the funeral procession. You have seen them. By the way, if Gen. Evans should be elected as some of the city folks think, I don’ know what you all would do for somebody to take his place unless yoa select a friend of cine from West End. Mr Editor I am sorry that one democrat would so far forget him self as to write a card signed by Rob ert L Rogers. Why use such terms? What has Mr Atkinson done to him? Why denounce the people as stump suckers Does Gen. Evans endorse the sentiments? We -d® not live in Atlanta. But we claim to be loyal, honest citizens of Georgia. We spurn such a statement as unworthy to class the country people as court house cliques cross road stump suckers and trick masters of militia districts, who came to the party's aid only when, by so doing they can promote their own political fortunes. The country people dono the lighting when in war. They done it when the party was on trial in 92 And no dirty fling will deter them in 1894. I would like to know if the Peachtree candidate endorses the card. Let hiir come out and say whether he thinks the people Oi the country wuu aie opposed to him are cross road stumpsuckers or npt. I did not know it was a crime far a Georgian to aspire io effice and if Gen, Evans is going te endorse the card writers in the serehead column he had bet ter take some of them in the back yard of training. While >e» are fcr Atkinson, we wont get rude and let ourselves say hard things about the general. We think him a nice Christian gentleman on his way to glory, and we won’t hinder him from getting into a po litical fight. Or we might say to him: On what occasion did you raise your voice for democracy? When the party needed your service where did you aid it? Where, oh! where did he ever raise hisjvoice in its defense? Echo says, “Where?” By the way we wont say anything hard; we will gently and quietly remain and in the Peach tree mansion he owns and lek Bill be his neighbour; then when Bill writes anything the general can say them’s my views. Gen Evans knows he wont go far wrong when he endorses what Bill Atkinson writes. Did you ever thik of the predicament of friend Rogers? When Atkinson announced Gen. Ev ans endorsed it, and said, Those are my views; I so expressed myself last summer, then her® comes my triend Kogers and condemns the whole thiig. Friend Rogers, living in a city FRIDAY EVEMIND JANUARY. 12. 1894. practically solid democracy, has no more conception of the work don® to earry this state in 1892 than the horn guard had of the real dangers and parils of the lata war* He shall at teak, unnoticed, the work of those bravo democrats who laboured from Tybee’s lights to Rabun gap to up. hold the demoeratio flag. If all had, like Nero, fiddled while Home wm burning, the democratic nomination would not be worth seeking. This h no time to abu • the party leaders, nor to dipeouht the work of those who led its host to victvty and bore the blunt of its battles. If the cross roads stamp suckers fail to nominate their man, they will rally, as they have ever done, to aid the party; but they do not expect to fail. T R Whitliy Douglasville, Ga., January 10 1894 —Atlanta Journal ——- ' W-VW WILLING TO HOLD THE BABY nr. Gilbert Obliged a Smiling Young Woman, Who at Once Left the Train . Abraham Gilbert is a worthy citi zen of the neighbouring village of Branchville. He is married and is the father of a small family On Thursday, while returning on the train from Danbury, he noticed among his fellow passengers a young and rather attractive woman appear antly a widow, who held in her arms a handsomely dressed infant about 5 month old. As the train slowed up for the stop at Bethel the woman asked Mr. Gil bert if he would be so kind as to ho I her baby while she spoke to a friend who was to be at the station. Mr Gilbert jumped at the chance, for he is very fend of pretty babies, and while the train waited he hand led the youngster on his knee, called it a little tootsy wootsy and sadly dis arranged its fine apparel The train started and Mr Gilbert prepared to surrender his charge, but the mother did not appear. Mr. Gilbert was ceriain she had missed the train by accident and that at that minute she was fretting her self almost to death about the child, but the older and more experienced travelers smiled grimly and conclud ed that Mr Gilbert was the victim of un old trick. When the train reached Brandb ville, Mr Gilbert tried to get the train hands to assume the child, but they asserted that there was nothing of the rules and regulations of the itoad that compelled them to do so, and nothing remained but for Mr Gilbert to take the baby homtf and plaae it among his own. He did so, and the little stranger is in excellent hands • The child is a boy. Tke woman was handsomely dressed and ware a veil which almost completely hid her featuses. No effort has been made tofiudher.—Norwick [Conn. ] Die patch. ASA JOHNSON’S CAKE. Marshal Jim Erawn and the Police force was presented with a handsome pound cake this morning by Asa Johnson of darktown. The cake was a daisy, covered all over the outside with “baked ice cream’’ and locked too tempting for anything. Asa has the name of being a good cook and while the officers looked at that cake longingly they each waited for the other to make the first pass at it—and the cake was put away for future use. A “FIFTH WARD” TICKET. Hustler of Rome : —I would like to suggest the fol lowing ticket: For Mayor, Jno. J. Seay. Ist Waid Henry Harvey. 2nd “ D. W. Curry. 3rd “ J. L. Camp. 4th “ Walter Harris- sth “ J. H. Hoskinson, This ticket will receive a hand, some majority in the .Fifth Ward Business men of the F ifth Ward. OS A SIR The Nashville, Chattanooga . and St Louis. GENERAL TIE UP THREATS NED Traiu monalalm that It is unauthoriz ed and that must ratal* disnstreasly T»tho man who Ur ike Naahvili®, Tenn., January 12. Tho Nashville, Chattanooga and St, Louis railroad ha® a strike on its bauds, similar to that on the Henderson division of the Louis ville and Nashville a few weeks ago, in that it is unauthorized. The freight conductors and brakemen this afternoon declined to take out thwir trains and the two sections of No. 9 ou the main line and one train on tho North western division that should have left this evening are still in the yards, The road has about two hundred conductors and brakemen, but most of them are new out on the road aud it is not known wheth er they will joiu the strike or not. All trains are reported on timo tonight, however, and the passen ger service is not affected, A SURPRISING VERDICT, Proven Gui t of Counterfeiting, Yet the Jury Cleared Him, Knoxville, Tenn, Janunry 11, — A most surprising verdict was giv en in the United States court here today, when Cleo Berry, one of the most famous criminals in Hawkins County, failed of conviction, Berry is past fifty years of age, and was indicted for counterfeiting, The neighborhood in which he lived was flooded with bogus half dollars aud dollars, the manufacture of them was traced to him and uten sils necessary to their manufacture were found ia his house . It was proven ’plainly that he had pasted countless counterfeits, but he piayed the innocent racket on their manufacturers and failed of conviction through ajury’s ver dict that was anything but pro per. Berry had long posed as a Drunk ard preacher, in faot has pulled the woel ever the pyes of the un suspecting mountaineers with the greatest regularity. United States Marshal Condon says Barry is guilty of every crime in the calander, murder not ex cepted, for on p. high mountain peak, near Mooresburge, there to day stands a lone gravestone on which is the i ascription "Murder ed by Cleo Berry.” Who this vic tim is bo one knows, but it is known that this stone marks the last resting place es but one of Cleo Berry, the Drunkard preach er’s many victims. A BIRTHDAY PARTYJ There was quite a delightful par ty given at the residence of Mrs. James M. Jenkins last evening in honor of the birthday of her daughter, Mibb Ada, the parlors and dining room were decorated with holly and hot house plants. One nice feature was the untangling of the “spider web,” which everyone enjoyed immensely. * Those present were, Misses Luta Cooker, of Marietta. Laura Moore Leila Hardin, Belle Cato, Nola’ Bridges, Mamie Lumpkin, Hattie Montgomery, Kate Perkins, Grace Stroud, Maud Allen, Eldora Wads worth and Bettie Stroud. Messrs. Harry Williamson, Jo® Glover, George Allen, Chas, Mc- Kinney. A, R. Stroud, Walter Per kins, Coleman Bryan, A. G. Har din Jno. Joues, W. J. Gordon and J. A. Jenkins. DO NOT AGREE WITH WAITE. . tub Committbe Thu Is Thbrm is mo Occasion for an Extra Smbiom. Denver, Colo., Jan. 12. —The sen- ’ ate special committee, to who was re ferred tho governor’s message, have agreed upon their report. They do- ; dare there is no occasion for holding an extra session and recußunend an adjournment some time tomorrow. Upon the governor’s Mexican dollar scheme they say they ar® obliged to reeogniz® th® sovereign authority of government in all matters of coinage and that the suggestions of Governor Wait® are not practible. In the house much time was taken up in reading petitions from various parts of th® stat® for and against ad journment. Two or three of the foi mer bore 5,000 signatures, while the latter petitions were generally sign ed by the Farmer’s (Alliance and in several instances reached 3,©00 nam es, ANOTHER RAID. Revenue Officers run Down M irz Moonshiners. Deputy Marshal Bud Turner and a posse took the six o’clock train here Fiiday evening and went to Resaca. They left the cars there and struck across th® country to Conssauga Riv er, following up that stream to the the line of Murray county, they found a still. It appears that the oprerators were expecting a raid, for the fires were out and nobody was around the building. The officers took possession of the still, and they also arrested Jeff Collins and John and Joe Smith, and destroyed quite a quantity of beer. The prisoners and the stills were brought to this place Saturday moil ing, and created quite a ripple of ex citement. Th® prisoners were carried to Atlaata and the still was shipped to th® same place bj express.—Cal houn Times. WHITE CAPS AT WORK. A NEGRO EADLY BEATEN NEAR ADAIRSVILLE. One night last week the store of Glossuo <fc Bowdoin near Adairs ville was broken iato aud robbed. A negro named Josh Bennett was suspected aud a warrant was sworn out and he was arrested and placed in the calaboose. During the night the calaboose was broken open and the negro wan taken out and car ried about three miles from Adairs ville to the place of Mr. W W. Trimble, in Gordon ceuuty. They cirrisrt him into the woods and strip; d hinn and beat him unmor-. ciruLy, and also placed a rope ar iud i his neck and threatened te hang hi® if Ise did not confess to breaking into the Btore-hous®. He refused t® do thia. Th® negro flays th®r® were eight men in the party and each of them gave him about twenty licks. He returned to Adairsville next day and demand ed atrial eu the charge of robbing the store, but no prosecutor ap peared and he was detained no longer. Many of the citizens of Adairsville are very indignant over the treatment he received. The negro man claims that he rec ognized his assailants, and the ohanees are that the end has not been reached yet. —Calhoun Times. EDWIN FIELD TO STAND TRIAL. Buffalo, Jan. 12.—Edwin M. Field, son of the Cyrus W. Field, was releas ed from the insane asylum today and was taken to New York to stand trial for ruining his stock firm by forging stock certificates and engaging in fraudulent financiering. He was ar rested, adjudged insane and sent here for treatment under order of the su preme court two years ago. He is un der many indictments and his baij aggregates SIOO,OOO. His crookedness ruined his millionaire father, who died shortly afterwards of a broken hear.. g* 10 CENTS A WEEK- ■ THE WEW Os The Rome Electric Street Car Company IS ALL THE TALK TODAI Dr, Lawrea®® sseas t® ©wb b© stoefc i* th® o®a>aay at all while Baaker Jack Kiag, anfi Mr J®t Camp ©w> B® »•!*• the® lhay did b«f®r© Th® Reoaivtrsh.p of th® Elec tric Street Car Company “is all the talk in Rome.” Where ever men would collect together thi® subject would be the “business before the bouse.” Ev«xy man had his opinion and rumoiF flew thick and fast. Dr. Lawrence, who owned $49.- 900 of the stock and Col. Doan who owns SIOO of the stock are both out of the city, bnt Mr. Jack King who owns $49,900 of tho stock and Mr. Jot Camp who own»‘ SIOO are in the city and were seen, by the Hustler of Rome today. Mr. Camp had but little to say preferring to make bis showing in court first. When aeked if th® Electric Light Co, owed the $3,000 claimed by the Car Co., he smiled, a significant smole —that was all. At the Merchants National, Mr. Jack King vas seen, but, further than to say that Dr. Lawrence had precipitated matters iu a most un called for manner, he woqld not talk. Mr. King said that he would prepare to make hie first reply to the charge set fourth in the bill, to the court after that he would givo the Hustler of Rome a brief history of the whole cane AN INTERESTING STORY, Toe Hustler of Rome, after gathering all the points it could, collect, from, all sources, think that when the facts come out in court, aud the hidden history ia revealsd, that the public will find) , that Dr, L-wrsuce tried to de too much on too small au amount of capital. t -.fj He pus up hk stocks and bonds fqr? money and when the paniek ahttt dawn be failed to recognize Ew was indulged from timo to tim® and 1 finally the indulgence had to termi nate Hi? collafieral was sold an 1 nei ther Jack King or Jot Camp bought one dollar of it. Dr Lawrence does not own a dollar on tho ®tree ear OS’ Light Co Dr. Lawrence may olaim that ! the company owes him $5,000 for z. r.b !>. n in Rome I Knows anything about it. As to the claim of the Street Car Company for $3,000 against th® Electric Light Co. we ar® told that a complete answer will be. made in open court next Nonday. The case will be tried on Monday at Summerville before Judge Henry,, and all parties from here will hav® to go up there. Trier® is much business, of a similar natur® to thi®, iu the Rom® circuit and therefore the Hubtlbr thinks Judge H®nry by moving to Rome would remove the only objection that any one in the cir cuit can possibly have to him as Judge, In the m«aatime tbe cars ar® running on scedule time aud. will continue to do so regaxdiesß, of receivers. BEST GOODS- LOWEST Just received from Thurber’s New York. Best goods on tbe market. Best Col. River Salmon 15c Imported Sardines, with key, 15e French Mustard, A G. brand, 10c- Fancy Tomato i up 10c Best mixed Pickles 1 New Sardines in Salad oil 5c Fresh Teaflake crackers 15 Fresh City Snowflakes 10c- New Dried Currants 5c lb California Evp. Peaches 16c New Orleans Syrup 40c gal Breakfast Bacon and. Hams< Best Matches 10c. doz box. A l to b found only at Lloyds Fmd I