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THE HOSTLR OF ROME.
nice as “nrst-clasb
SBCufMl-Cl&D* Man letter.
HULG.BYRD, | B iJX“ d
DAILY AND SUNDAY.
TERMS OF SIJBSCRJPTIG
10 cent u week or $5 00 per annum
FFIGE' Corner Broad Street and
‘•'iicn Avenue.
Official Organ
Os city of Rome, and Foyd, the
‘Banner county” of Georgia.
NOTICE
Thirty days from this date all advertising
IparfcUning tv tbeofllce of Sheriff of Floyd county
\*€ll be dm* in the Hustler of Rome.
This A;>ril 3, 1894. J-C. MOORE
lawiw Sheriff? Flod Co., Ga
MAKE YOUR APPLICATION.
“The man whose business is to
interpret the Bible is likely, to
make a wad mi>-s of interpreting a
platform “ —| Atlanta Journal, Ev
ans organ- ]
COL. *TK INsON’s APPOINT.)! EM S
Dalton, Whitfield Co., on Mon
day, April 16th.
McDonough. Henry Co., on
"PueeCrtv ,April 17 th.
McHae, Telfair Co., on Friday
April 2!>hh.
Riedsville, Tatnall Co. on Sa’ur
,ay. April 21.
Any of these dates are subject
to cancellation, should they con
flict v ith dales selected lor subse
quent | nA debit s
ANNOUNCEMENT.
To the votere of Floyd county. 1
I hereby announce myself a can
didate .or the office of representa
tive ' Fleyd county in the next
Leg shin re. My candidacy sub
ject t’> the action of the democratic
primary te be held ou May 26th.
Moses Wright.
To the voters of Floyd county, I
hereby announce myself as a Can
dida' j for the office of Representa
tive i ) the next Legislature, my
candidacy subject to the action ot
the Floyd county Demociatic pri
maty to be held May 20th,
C, W, Underwood.
NOTICE.
Mr. F . J. Evans, has been ap
point "1 collector and superinten
dent of circulation for the Hust
lep. of Rome.
Ail parties indebted to us are
requested to pay no money due
this | aper to any one except our
authorized collector.
1! vou fail to receive your pa
per, please notify the office and
we will we that you get it.
A :i subscriptions are payable
WPP I unless otherwise arranged,
and vou are expected to be ready
when the collector calls on you, as
he can’t call three oi four times
for a ten cent subscription.
Everybody who gets this paper
18 existed to pay for it as we car
ry no deadhead list,
Respectfully,
Phill G. Byrd. (Editor.)
Fowl habits are inherited by many
Koons. t
The idlest tongues are generally
he busiest.
Cone has fired the “unKnown ’
and given him Jessy.
Koxeys Karovan of Franks Kon
tinue- to Klimd, Kuss, Kovort ano
Klainor.
Ever” well regulated family needs
hush money—with which to buy
sootning syrup.
The LniiEzlers* 1 have successfully
‘wuzzled“ the daddy and wet nurse
of the Evans Club.
Ike Baliff may have a bard time of
it l. vt just think of what the chicken
thief puts up with.
>. x cents a pound cotton stares the
farmer in the face, yet he goes right
> ahead jfianting it. —Thomasvi le Ad
vertiser.
A negro rapist was lynched in
Ohio on Sunday night. The ‘ Buck
eye” bv'- s are profiting by lessons I
tau"’ii them by Southerners. 1
A LONDING.
Oh ! gull* ho fleet o'er d irkling deep
Ye fly with white, white, wings aisliiue
On, on, to greet fond mates asleep,
What wa t we for, oh! heart of mine?
Sweet breezes wandering mid the mist,
That yon blue hills doth i-till entwine
Ye reach the earth by heaven just kissed
What wait we for, Oh ! heart of mine?
Are violets bent beneath the dew,
Bereft of hope ami left to pine?
Xo, mnon beams b right their love will woo
what wait we for, Oh ! heart of mine?
Caressed are snow flakes by the earth.
I pon her bosom they recline,
Rejoicing there thev bless their birth,
what wait we for, Oh ! heart of mine?
Shells of the sea mourn tor the shore,
B«l, when the long curved straud they line,
Content they be as they adore,
w bat wait we for, Oh ! heart of mine?
Ethel Hillyer Harris.
What’s the difference between
•‘Whatley’s baby” and its object in
life? The baby has hot a-parent
while its mission is not ap parent.
While the Evans people are snort
ing over Atkinsons fee let
them pause long enough to say
whether the Evans Record in another
column is correct'
A good sewing machine will do
.is onic* “sewing” as a dozen wo
men. but when it c mes to “ripping
and charging” why one mother
:n-law can out run a kowpen full
of machines and mind the bars.
Gen. Evans refused to continue
tie joint debates. He prefers a
still hunt. A man who wants to
be governor of a great State-like
Georgia shouldn’t he so timid. —
Oglethorpe Echo
It is said that General Evans faih d
to get up any enthusiasm during his
sj eech at Jeffersonville last Mondaj
Twiggs is said to be safe for Atkinson
—Dublin Post •
Clark Howells action in not call
ing the committee together to con
sider the advisibility of further joint
debate confesses the weakness of the
Evans people and their fears for the
| General.
If O’- M"'! and Mr, Lease
Are bouafide Leases,
Would not their kids be kno ■ n as rents'.’—
They re chips -but Leaser pieces,
There,s a transnarent differance
between Specticles and Spectackles.
The specticle rests on your noze, while
the spec —tackle is the connecting
chotd. toe lie that binds, ones eye
glasses unto or es self, see?
Bill Glenn, the space Killer on the
Atlanta dailies has erupted a column
and a half letter that appeared in
several of the Georgia weeklies
Mr Glenn is like the canine and the
ie.ine, when they meet in the sausage
—Kinder mixed.
Extensive corset works at New
Haven have resumed work after a
long shut down, this is prosperity
that has come to stay. —Columbu.
Ledger.
True, but the entire out-put o:
the plant is going to waist —of corsei
it 18.
Col D. B Hamilton is very uneasy
bit the Atkinson people of Floyd,
will undertake to vote republican,
negroes, in the coming primary.
Lie Atkinson people of Floyd have
never dreamed of such a scheme
They will go into the primary and
win .tby fair means, or be defeated
an 1 they will not be defeated in
Fioyd, Colonel. M ill they Max?
i
The editor iu his den a writing,
While hungev knaws and knox,
Outside the flies and fish are biteing
Aud skeeters swarm iu flocks,
1 Mr. Atkinson wants to be Gover
nor and is of course going on accoun'g
>i Lis stewardship, General Evauo
’ wants to be Governor and having no
1 experience as a democrat and no
democratic record, he undertakes to
draw the public gaze by ridiculing
the record of his opponent. The Gen.
is unfair and his unfairness is so
apparent that the masses are flock
ing to the Atkinson camp .
Tne war between the States prac
tically ended thirty nine years ago ,
last Monday, lien Gen, Robt. E.
Lee surrendered to the superior t
force of tlie'enemy at Appomatox.—
Waycross Herald. ,
Just ten years ahead of time, c
Brother Perham, but it would be dif
ficult to convince the Atlanta Con
stitution that the war is over at all.
—Albany Herald.
THE HUSTLER OF ROME. TUESDAY APRIL 17. 1894.
The “Seven to one” Evans boom
ers are “hacked ‘ and have gone into
a hole and pulled—the wires, but in
vain.
Heie's the record as published by
Georgia editor: It is said that and
editor once appliad at the doors of
hades for admission. “Well replied his
hable majesty, we let one of your pro
session in here many years ago, and
he kept up a continual row with his
former delinquent subscribers. As we
have more of that class of persons
than any other, we passed a law pro.
hibiting the admission of editors. ‘
The Columbus Enquirer-Sun is
right when it says that “The Demo
crats of Georgia are too intelligent
fair minded and patriotic to allow
themselves to be carried away by the
clutter of those that are hostile to the
Democratic administration, and seek
to discredit it and break it down. In
the calm reflection which they give
to the political questions and public
affairs, their judgment, expressed at
the polls, has heretofore been almost
unerring in reaching the truth.’’
Judge Hines, of Atlanta has
joined the third party and may be
the candidate of the ‘'soreheads’
;or governor. Now watch the Con
stitution, after August 2nd when
Mr. Atkinson of Georgia is nomi
nated, and see how it Hops from
Evans to Hines, and you will see
how easy it is for an Atlanta pa
per to swap men —where both men
are Atlanti*uis. But then there is
precious little difference between
(he democracy of Evans and Hines
auvway.
The boomers, with nothing else
to harp on continue to swear that
Mr. Atkinson should be defeated
because he earned a SI,OOO fee by
helping two other good lawyer.?
save the state hundreds of thous
ands of dollars. This argument
will not affect a vote and can only
interest the mind of the little 2x4
partisans who oppose the demo
crat who has a record. Vaporiz
while you can, little ones —after
August 2nd you will either follow
Bill Atkinson or go off and flock
with the soreheads.
General Evans' supporters, among
them the Savannah Morning News
and the Brunswick Advertiser, are
trying to make capital out of the
:act, that Georgia will be poorly rep
resented at the coming Confederate
reunion at Birmingham. They claim
that if General Evans were to under
take to organize camps that the At
kinson people would accuse him of
trying to ride into office on the old
soldiers vote. This is very unfortu
nate for your man, boys, but re«. ly
now dont you think if he can’t do the
office of chief justice that he ought
to resign it to some other General
who does not want to be Governor
this year? Remember the privates
genera) and dont try to get all the.
offices.
TOM COBB’S PAPERS,
When the campaign opened Mr.
Torn Cobb, of who is said
to expect a good oflicti if Gen. Evans
be governor, got out a number or
two of a paper which he called the
People’s Will.
Being told so often that the
people’s Will was Will Atkinson,
he took off the heading, changed
it to the People’s Choice, put the
new head on and stiuck off a new
edition, using hie first editorials
is extracts from the People’s Will
ihus endeavoring to create the im
pression that there were two differ
ent papers while really there is
but one.
The new edition contains ex
tracts the old one had from country
papers favorable to Evans while
many of these papers now are fa
vorable to Atkinson. We noticed
the old edition with the new head
circulating around Hamilton last
Monday while the readers were
laughing over tho old extracts from
papers now.battling for Aikiusoi .
Voters and papers may change
to Atkinson but Mr. Cobb’s little
paper is so deaf and so blind that
it never hears of nor sees the
changes.—Meriwether Vindicator.
lliere’s music iu ’he balmy breeze,
That through tie blooms come swishing,
Behind the smoke house on hi» knees,
Jim digs—to go a fishing.
ONE HEAD TWO BODIIS.
Express Messenger W, O. Wil
liams has brought up from a point
down the narrow gauge a curiosity.
It is two newly-born pigs, joined to
gether at the stomach, but with one
head. The monstrosity lived but a
very short while after birth- It will
be preserved in alcohol. —Augusta
Herald:
The Atlanta ring has given birth t”
just such a political monstrosity, but
on August tne 2nd Atkinson will
s, orate the Evans branch of it and
next Fall he will slaughter the other
or Hines body—and the head of the
two —Atlanta—will drink up the alco
hol and keep on rooting.
TEXAS SWINES.
Gov. Hogg, of Texas, is a very
large man. He weighs about 350
p >unds, and is affectionate’}’ cal -
ed by his lovin’ constituents
“Fatty” or simply “Fat” Hogg. He
has two daughters jocularly named
Ima and Ura, and a son called
Wilby. The application of these
names is obvious. Hogg has been
Governor of Texas for two terms,
and is opposed to the powerful
faction in the democratic party.
They agree on principles, but dis
agree on Hogg. Recently they
came together at Dallas and Hogg
declared that he wouldn’t take
either the governorship or the sen
atorship, This.meeting was called
the “Hogg and Harmony’’ meet
ing.—Albanv Herald.
NORTHERN MEN WELCOME.
Gen Evans' distaste for North
erners who do not bow down and
worship at bis political shrine is
not generally shared by the good
people of Georgia The Hustlr of
Rome has this to say on the ques
tion :
“To the honorable Northener:
Georgia welcomes you to her ter
ritories and bids you make your
homes on her soil and persue life
just as you choose. You can vote
for whom you pleas? and are not
to be intimidated by General Ev
ans’ bloody shirt fiasco. Don’t no
tice him, for in a few more weeks
he will return to his pulpit. He
will.”
This is simply a sample of the
utterances of the great majority of
the Georgia papers. Georgians, as
a rule, want Northern people to
come to the State. They know they
have the greatest state in the Un
ion aud that any man
here with a. little capital can, if he
works hard aud intelligently, in
crease it. They know that every
Northern man that comes here in
tho proper spirit adds to the
wealth and prosperity of the state,
and, with a few exceptions, they
are not imposing either religious
or political tests. —Macon Tele
graph.
O’BRYAN AND THE CAMPAIGN
FUND.
Mr. Frank O'Bryan, of Atlanta,
was up to Dahlonega the latter
part of last week, on political bus
iness. He was endeavoring to get
up a kind of an Evans revival in
this county, but didn’t seem to
make much speed, for we will
state as one not looking through
eyeglasses, and one that is not “in
it.’’that if looks to ue just now like
Mr. Atkinson will carry off the
democratic banner of the county,
provided one is hoisted, for the
simple fact that the leading men
of that party here an* for him,
because they say, that war times
are over now and an ex-officer is
not desired on the Gubernatorial
stool.
Mr. O Bryan went on to White
county. There is a broad field of
labor for a political drummer of
the democratic variety to perform
m White county after they get a
mile or eo from Cleveland, not
withstanding brother Glen up
there tries to teach us different.
The majority of the voters of that
county are with the reform move
ment. —Dahlonega Signal.
O Bryan i,s the Atlautian who
did the spending of the General
Gordon campaign fund . It is not
known, on the outside, how much,
of the Evans campaign fund Mr.
0 Bryan carried to the mountain
counties with him.
REPRESENTATIVE MOSE WRIGHT
In another column of the Hust
LER of Rome will be found an an
nouncement card, signed by Moses
R Wright. The Hustler of Rome
knows whereof it speaks, when it
states that great pressure from all
sections of the county has been
brought to bear on Mr. Wright.
Audit is to this pressure as well
as to a laudable ambition that he
yields and enters the race. That
Moses Wright wi.l lead his ticket
goes without saying as docs the
prediction that he will make Floyd
county one of the best representa
tives she has ever chosen. Mose
Wright is the People’s choice and
the people will nominate and
elect him. “Mark that predic
tion. ”
HAL DEFENDS ‘UNCLE CLEM’
The only wave we have seen in
the Evans camp for these many weeks
has not been a wave of enthusiasm,
but the general's wave of the ‘ bloody
shirt.’'
To Col. Hal Moore: See to it sweet
Hal that “Uncle Clem” apologizes
to the Macon Telegraph—you just
simply can't afford to allow him to
neglect it.—Hustler of Rome.
General Evans has done nothing to
apologize for. He made a astatemeut
in regard to thejproprieior of the T
e having belonged to a negro
regimeat during the war, based upon
what he regarded a? reliable informa
tion.
When this was denied he took occa
sion to state publicly that it had been
denied, and that he accepted fc the
statement as correct. General Evans’
at tact upon the Telegraph was pr> -
voked by the disrespectful terms em
ployedtoward him by this sheet. He
has never waved the bloody shirt, but
during the war he held the Conte !er
ate standard aloft and subsequently he
has pursued the paths of peace. There
is no us® trying to boost the black
haired statesman by the cry of per
secution of the Telegrapn. That's a
mighty old trick, but in this instance
it won't work.—Macon News.
Tut, tut! Sweet Ha), since when
did the General wave the flag aloft—
Why Hal, dont you know that the
general's rode horses and did their
shooting with swords—very often
from points of vantage well in
the rear?
And dont you know further that
the standard was held aloft by color
bearers who, on the Confederate side
were generally along with the fight
ing privates somewhere near the
front?
And, after all, don't you know that
your veaable uncle did, in the fresh
ness of his Democratic campaigning,
go off about h tlf cocked when he he j -
ped onto the Telegraph and Grifliu
News?
And again,Haii, uncle Clem is some
older than “Our Bill”—he admits
that doncherno, in fact he srvs he
is a go< d bit older—and that being
tae case, why is it that he does not
shingle jiorne of his own long locks.
Eh? Or had you never thought of
that. Now Ha 1 , yru know that
we boys haye treated ‘ mcle Clem’,
with a deal more respect than you
reated Bill Atkinson? Come down
won you.
REFIECPED BY THE ATLANTA
LOOKING-GLASS.
One of the staunchest Evans ’pa
pers in the State is the Atlanta book
ing Glass, bnt in one of its com
mints upon the joint debates, the
Looking Glass says:
But the events of the debates
have discovered unexpected strength
in the Atkinson camp, and it be
hooves the friends «f Gen. Evans, to
be up and doing if they desire to in
sure success. If they rest on their
oars, aud rely on the general's name
and fame to carry him through they
will bear something drop o» elec
tion day, and it won't be Atkinson
either. It is the opinion of unpreju
diced men who heard all the debates
of the seriefi. that Col. Atkinson got,
to say the least, none the worst of it'-
Put B inks county down in the
Atkinson column. The most ardent
supporters of Gen. Evans, admit that
that is practically solid for Atkinson.
—H rmony Grove Echo.
F«by.cb«rmi„ k , pri
are not hanging fire . but **
like hot cakes.
EAT BREAD.
Made of Gluten Graham Flour •*
wholesome and nutritious f° O L
yspeptics, Brain worker. ch Sl ,or
contains the phosphates and i
nos the Wheat. For «U e J
222 Broad St. J “ i8 ° n Br °»
Shaving after this
Sate will be | sc .a t
eardS bab ’’
Lewis Barretts
old stand
Recommend Johnson’s Magnet
Oil for rheumatism, neural
sprains, bruises, lame back it
quickly relieves pain ’
-■
“Orange Blossom.” the Co mmo n
Sense Female Remedy, draws out
pain and soreness. Sold by Ham.
mack Lucas &, Co,
Application for Homestead.
Georgia Floyd county: I
T. R. Mothershed has applied for Exempts I
of personalty, and setting apart and valuation
of homestead, and I will n aBB upon the sauj it
(10 o’clock A. M,Oi the 21st y of April
Instant) at iny Office
John P Davis,
Ordinary Floyd Bounty, I
GEORGIA FLOYD COUNTY. I
TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN; |
Mrs. Ida Va diver having applied sot Gua- I
dianship of the persons and property of L mWn
Mi <h 41 Vandiver aud James Thomas Vandiver I
niinoi children of James T. Vandiver late J I
said County, deceased, noticeds given that said I
application will be heard at my office at 19 I
o’clock am., on first Monday in ]\py Mtt I
This April sih. 18114. I
John P Davis I
Ordinary and ex officio Clerk CO I
4w. I
GEORGIA FLOYD COUNTY. I
TOALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: I
Mrs. Sallie F. Turner having applied for Guar- B
dianship of the persons ami property of Donald B
Fleming Turner and John Water Turner, uu- B
nor children of J. Walter Turner late of said ■
County, deceased, notice is given that said ip- B
plication will be heard at my office, at 1" 'dock ' ■
a in., on the first Monday in May next, This ■
April 6th, 1894 ■
Johu P. Davis B
Ordinary and ex officio Clerk C,O. fl
4-w or 30-d ■
Road Citation. S
Georgia, Floyd County : H
Whereas, T. J.Glenn, et al havepetifaedtie H
Board of <'ommissiotiers ..I lloww
of Floyd County, Georgia for a idi.«i;e in the
Bass Ferry road at blue Pond, so as tn ""
the east side of Z. T. Carver's tield, and the
same having been favorably repor'.c l by the
reviewers: This is to notify .ill persons having
objections tile re to or claims for <;.un <- ■
therefrom to tile the same with said Boardot
Commissioners at 1 heir regular riei-ttiij ttß
first onday in May, 1894,
Witness the Hon. John C. Foster, cbaimw.
This March 7th,1894.
3 7d-30 d Max Meyerhardt, clerk.
For the finest Teas’ ana Coiiets
a reasonable price none can
those at Lloyd’s Fair. ( Illy
ne trial to be convinceu.
luflan-ied itching, burin:
fy and scaly skin am 1
funds, soothed and cuthu oy
son’s Oriental Soap.
W Curry Druggist. M
It will be an agiecible "Ht.
persons sub] ct t • tiitacls d
.‘•one to lAir'n ilia! nioiupt
1,... obtained by taking
Colic, Cl.oli'ia and
■ dv. Ln many instances
be prevented by taking a
soon as rhe i'nst . i
osease appear. 25 and te “
ties for sale by Lowry 1«"=
H
Fine
al leaf tobacco lo G W;
n?r pound, at '■
Turnieys & CoCen
, Hotel LSIOCK.
We have no Soil J
Drummers SamP leS
. offer our
We only handle Ciea ®
. New Goods, We
at lowest cash
A. O. GARRARD■
“ fpft
1 Someihing i><! r ,.
ed bv a Rome n < rcliaH' - .•
i ne done? Tlim i'<'
-ver .«.ly o Hi... 1 :.. I
best goods lor tin-.oi-* ; (
secured coinroil o. ■
' brands of GraO'd I ' '.‘n
• in 25 case lots, ai.-t i-gM
- his regular oust->:u'
j can, really wort :
Try Turnley’ 3 S
salable Limm *
Rheumatism
' gia,. spral H S pai nS ®
■ bruises,
J eny partoi theo n «
• Hmbs, f ° r W
Turnley, B|