The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, April 11, 1894, Image 2

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THE HDSTLR OF KOffiEE. r ce as “amt-cl am ona-v nss Mail 'Jitter. ..x’l.n (Editor, and 1 HIL <»• B\ “■*.), ( M <t . ua ge r . I>ULY AND SUN DAT- TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTIG 10 cent .... w<-k or ssOOper annum FFICE Corner Broad Street and "■ifth Avenue. Official Organ Os the City of Rome, and Foyd, the “Banner county NOTICE Thirty d iv* from tills date all advertising yerlaiiiing to the office of Sheriff of Fl'yl •■omity will lie •I'-ne in the Hustler of Rome. TH is April 3, is'.H, •>. C. .MOORE law*a Sheriff? F lod Co -> Ga M \K E ¥Ol R APPLICATION. “Tbo man whose business is -to interpret the Bible is likely to make a .-ad mine of interpreting a platform “—| Atlanta Journal, Ev ans organ.] * W- - ■*“ * • \ 111 I US appointments Lhe following is a list of appoint t , i?ii , * , i il >n. \V . 't Atkinson; JI tin lit >n, Jl'tiT'is county, on Mon day, Apt il 9 th- Ellaville, Schley county, on Wed nesday, April 11th. Blakely, Early county, on Friday, April 13th. Albany. Doughtery county, on Sat urday,. April 14 th • Any <>t these dates are subject to euncellation, should they conflict with dates selected for subsequent dint debater. The coward fights his enemy with slahder. Never swallow a de’.lar with a hole in it—it woit pass. The graceful conductor is often an t-xpert on slick knock downs. \\ ire-workers should wear rubber | gloves it often prevents .shocking rt suits. Here is a pointer for Evanssporh-, aid are being offered on Atkinsons, no takes. The oftoner a man falls the worse it is for him, the oftener he rises the raore deserving he is of success. His Son’s shine breeds many a cloud over the fanners life—some hme. * Irwinton lias a ‘‘peticoats” pic nic duo and its object is purely drauiat ic. The county of Floyd is still solid tor Gub Bacon for Senator. Ami Bacon will win too. The Evans boomers are at sea, — but they will never get sea sick enough t<> “throw up” a majority. Govern -r Northen will offer Gov. emor Tillman a position on his staff during the next Waycross War. This is the year when lecturers lecture without notes, and actors act without cent.i, and the editors have the "devil” to pay. A vheck for 5,333,650 poui ds, on the Bank of England, in pay ment for the Kimberly diamond mines, is said to be the largest ever drawn / When General Evans was made Presiding Eldei of the Griffin cir cuit, he continued to dwell on Peachtree street. He is a true Atlant iuu but will never boss the Governors mansion. The man wuu "Knows it all’ ought to listen to a half hours combat between the owner of the dog ami iue papa of the baby The "crying shame” man often laid i.ver with ‘‘pointers.” F.v Governor Robert L. Taylor has completely captivated the peo pie f Albany and all the visitors to Georgia Chautauqua whose f pn Pg-- t was to bear his charm mg lecture at the Tent Tabernacle last night. He said so many good things, and said them so well! THE HUSTLER OF ROME. WEDNESDAY APRIL I 1.1894. The gold bug draws the line on j the Keely Kflre. Its nicer co allow a girl to kiss you ; \nd then kisser back tlmu it is to go around back-bi hti .ig. Now is the time to subsetil>e. _ Manv a mi n who stands erect is ‘crowd* ’in ’ I 'lie man of back bone wa i , though he follows ; a mule ovc at» i acre field. The only wave we have seen in the Evans camp tor, these many weeks Las not been a wave of e ithu-iasm, but the Generals wave of the ‘‘bloody shirt.'* To Col. Hal Moore: See to it sweat Hal that “Uncle Cleru“ apologizes to the Macon Telegraph—you just sim ply can't afford to allow him t* neg lect it. A Possum Trott koan stole a plough mule and carried the har ness with him—siid he did it to re move all “traces.“ The case is a har rowing one. If the county of Fulton does not act before July there will be Atkin son delegates sent up from Atlanta to the State House on August 2nd. Mark that predict! m. In the language of Trox Banx ton, “it has indeed been a long ;ime siuce Vesuvius or Seat, Wright erupted” or since Max slipped his “muzzle” Big Bethel., the new $50,000 negro church of Atlanta—-a building that was erected by negroes, is said to be unsafe by the building inspectors It will have to come down. The Constitution's phuany man nas not “gotten oil" a single jeke about war records and titles, since Geqpral Evans entered the race. Coaie, Stanton, spin us a yarn. General Evans is now very busy looking for even a small peice ui I ■•Spom.iiiiit.y. ” In a lew weeks he wi' ! be seeking the man who said that "there would be a popular up rising.” Now is the time lor Mayor John I). Moore and his aidermen to settle the dust question. The best receipt tor such municipal trouble is a sprinkler properly loaded and operated. The ‘Brewvers ‘ of trouble and “Breeders" of discord should hold a national convention. We suggesii Tinman for president, Col Moll Lease for secretary, with Waite, Coxie and Tom Watson for trustees. The man who recited “Curfew shall not ring tonight,*’ delivered it in ringing tones—Augusta News "The man who first recited ’‘Cur few shall not ring tonight” is believed to have been a woman —which rings a change on the tone of the above. A portion at least, of the money said to be lost by Steve Ryan can be accounted for. He paid SSOO for a dog.—Waycross Herald. While the editors were waiting for their receiver—ship Steve was rushing hie own growler and pad ding his own “back ’ The good people of Georgia wou’d honor General Evans more, if he had political man -hood enough to cor rect the erroneous statement about the Macon Telegraph. The Telegraph has behaved most amiably toward the General and is doing so yet—Let Hal Moore's “Oriflame” emulate its example. To the honorable Northern*!.- — Georgia welcomes you to her terifo nes and bids you make your home on her soil and persue life just as you choose. You can vote for whom you please and are not to be inti mi dated by •eneral Evans bloody shirt fiasco. Don't notice him for in a few more weeks he will his pul pit. He will. It is ail right for Gen. Evans to talk abeut his war record, but when Col. ? tkinson, who was a boy in knee breeches in the fighting days, touches on services to the state in time of peace, that is egotism, and calls for the irony of the Evans or gans. It just shows how hard pushed they are for campaign material—Mii lidgeville Chronicle. Indians are now taking the gold I c ue for drunkenness and in Guthrie Ok’a.. whenever one of the nibo be. - j conics ; ■fi’ieuced by intoxicants, he". Is ci mpi n ed to take the gold ci eat ; onee. — Gen. Evans and his •'con' , i.itfeeof friendo“ have not yet replied to Mr. -V.k’nsou's challenge for a j nnt de bate in 20 of the principal counties of the state, t o is there any likeli hood of an acceptance. Gen. Evans j knows when he tias had enough, and | tlie nearest he will get to Mr Atkin son during the balance of the cam paign will be 300 or 400 miles.—Sa vannah Dispatch. Dr. Paxton, who clandestinely married Congressman Breckenridge and Mrs. Wing, is practically a fugi tive from justice. He violated one ot the recognixed laws of New York re lating to giving publicity to marritg md ■ notoriety be his gained then if great scandal does neither him nor his church any ccdit. If he re turns to New York he will be arrested and knowin it he wisely rema'ns awaq THE RACE FOR GOVERNOR. At the joint debate at Gi'ffin Coi. Atkinson fairly wiped up the Atlanta’’ ring’s candidate. The same might ap ply to the ones that followed the Grif fin ep B >de. —Statesboro Star. If there is rea 1 y io much ‘ sponta neous spontauiety ’ about Gen, Evans’ b >oin, why does ' become necessary lor him to contribute a cool $1,0(10 to ms campaign fund?—Adel News. Doul 11-ss, it i Gen Evans’ great modesty tha. k ups him from refer ing to his own legislative record- But the News and Suu does not propose that modest merit shall thus conceal itself iioiii an appreciative public.— Griffin News. In 1892 the people of Emanuel county invited Gen. Evans to speak at Swaimb iro when his help was greatly needed. But he could not be induced to “dabble in politics’ then but be is engaged now, it seems, in politics on a grand scale.—Swains boro Pine Forest. Ger. Evans made a mistake in his speech at Hawkinsville when be re ferred to several newspaper people in Georgia as having come from the Noril , Georgia needs more Seiferts a jd Glessiiers, whether we get a gov ernor this year or not. —Valdosta rimes. When tteti. Evans first started on his fruitless chase after gubernatori al honors, bis friends asserted that he was not running on sentiment;but those who heard his Hawkinsv’lle speech wi’l bear % witness that he worked his war record for all there was in in it. The general has, doubt less, been convinced ere this that that “popular uprising” wasn’t as mighty as it was when it was first hatched in Atlanta. —Dublin Post, THE TWO RECORDS. WHAT EACH CANDIDATE DID WHILE IN THE LEGISLATURE. Hon. W. Y. Atkinson was a ! member of the legislature from ( Coweta county from 1886 to 1894. Hon. C. A. Evans was State’seua tor from Stewart county in 1859 60. Here are the records the two mon made, by which we may im par ially judge their character as stateamen : ATKINSON’S RECOWD EVANS’ RECORD. 1. Introduced 1. Voted to al i a’bill, whiehjwas low banks to sus- nassed, to make pend specie pay tbe office of com - meats when there missiouer of agri was no panic, culitire elective. 2. Introduced I the bill establish 2. Voted to mg the Georgia abolish all laws Normal and In- against usury, driftrial school for girls. 3. Helped draw 3. Voted to the b 11 by which pardon a worth- i the S.ate roadless and c®ld betterment qnes- biooded murder lion was sei tied, er of a man who with a saving to ! was executing the the S ate of $750 law. 0(E). 4. Introduced a 1 bill, which was 4. Introduced i passed, by which a bill to abolish uie State is an-trial by jury . miai t v saved sls , (.>•') for the in- spection of oils. 5. Voted to re- 5. Aided to m- peal all laws ap crease the com- preprinting mon mon school fund ey or aid by the • from $400,000 to State to educa sl,2so,ooo per an t ional purposes. , num. 6. Aided to in crease the Confeo 6 Voted agairst ate soldiers am illwwing Confed soldier’ widowt Tate privates to pensions iron ;hoose their own $19,000 annual!} dficers. .u $460,000 annu ally. The H: B. Parks & Co. STOCK OF CtOODS We 'bovtsrlif it to sell quickly and this we will do if prices prove a factor in the distribution of desir able goods. We bought the stock cheap— away down nnder value, and xve can afford to sell it AT AND BELOW COST. and at and below cost we will sell this immense stock of dry goods, trimmings, n o tions, furnishing goods, hosiery and shoes—more than one half of them new goods, bought recently in the east by « Mr. Powersforthe springtrade. WE REPEAT IT These Q’oods will be sold at op below cost. Tvdh clerk will have unconditional instructions to them that wav and now if you want to save nioitfV on what you buy go to the Parks &Co St ore- It' v 11 fail to find what you want there go to our old stan for it as, prices will alsobe cut in two there in to reduce our present enormous investments i 111116 chandise. No changes in Parks &Co’s force. t o see us We will save yon big money- Bass Bros &Co ;:i