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THE HUSTLER OF ROME
'third year.
fUMSM®
x Foul Charge MP He by the
Javans Boodlers
tIIEI
—» y
Bul the b "” " ' b " C "”"“
Tl,e P '”' e
,1,1,.. be fooled It, the W « !
Tl „ At «.i» ero«J campaign
1 anil bummers who are un
iE ™ nsby
X»oo. l m g tlle«oun 1 e«ountsw.lh«mrou 5 w.lh«mrou
Iftr , of which the following man ex
tract'
w Y. ATKINBONB RECORD.
Some of his acts as a Legisla.
tor Favored the payment of fraud
ulent bonds—several votes against
Confederate Veterans. A bad
record as a legislator.
ATKINSON AGAINST THE OLD SOLDIERS
Mr Atkinson in all his speeches
boasts of his love for the Confder
-Bt9 Veterans and of his efforts in
their behalf.
How does his record compare
with these professions? He voted
against the acceptance of the Sol
diers Home in any term.
The House Journal for 1889,
page 1003, shows that he did not
vote on a bill to amend the acts
in reference to disabled Confeder
ate \ eterau s.
ATKINSON FOR FRAUDULENT BONDS,
In 1893, while he was Speaker
of the House Representative, Hon.
W, Y. Atkinson came down out of
the Speakers chair and made a
speech in favor of the payment of
|42,C00 of bonds which the state
has repudiated.
The people will not be fooled
by the cry of Atkinson against the
old Soldiers. Atkinson against
the Atlanta Soldiers poor house
is the way it should be put.
The same Atlanta crowd who
tried to intimidate, and brow-beat
and force the Georgia Legislature
into accepting the poor house, are
are now howling themselves hoarse
against Atkinson.
The wool-hat boys in the coun
try are onto the racket They dont
expect to take their politics from
such kid-gloved, downy-faced
chape as Tom Felder, and Frank
O'Bryan and Albert Howell and
Tom Railroad Cobh. Your boodle,
and your brass and your brag
cant stand against plain facts. We
know you, boys; your methods
may have worked once, but they
ar« getting thread-bare now.
Suppose or analyze just one of the
above charges aganst Mr. Atkinson
t ley raised the cry*’ for Corpora
tions-ugamst the people—He favor
ed the payment of fraudlent bonds.
Did he? what were these bonds? they
were certain.
Bond issued by the State in 1840-1
in uid of the Y&A R.R. and known
as the “Scott bends.” Signed by
Chas J. Mcdenld, Governor and J.
raw ord. Prost Y &A.R.R; also cir
tain other bonds issued by the State
111 1 t>G,known as“convention bonds'*
Bl oLed by Charles J. Jemdns.Gover-
n °band Jokn.Jones President.
lie legislature was asked to pay
ese bonds after pending before thnt
o( .' orsevera' years the matter
Petered to the Attorney,General
9 State for an opinion. That opin
''as rendered and presented to
, e le g lsl atnre in 1892. The conclu
that al| U is my opinion
legal bonds referred to are
State m Vo^es obligation of the
opinion wag reac {j e j a f( er
fact? XhaUßtiVe review of all the
bonR 6 fiUeßtlon of Paying these
lature.No’ 11 before the ie S lB
fouiul'f ' V& * d reaßon could be
hutoutoVal 081 ‘7 tO Pay them ’
ttat fer was rpf UUda l Ut Caution tho
of the legisi . ferrfid to a committee
from a,Ure ’ com Posedof one
t«> mah e an<o°i llgreßßlOnai
Ration. Thia SParch,u gi uves
committee was com-
. ROME GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY EVENING MAY 16.1894.
po8«d of Candied, Guerrard, Jones
Felton, Buttle, Alle.i, Nee! of
Bartow, Turner, McDonald. Litue
and Ashburn.
These gentlemen made a unani
mous report recommending the
payment of these bonds. They
could not find a single objection
to them, but reported thit they
were an honest, valid, binding ob
ligation of the Slate.
These are the bonds that Mr.
Atkinson said the State ought to
pay. Ihe Atlanta boudlers nov *
call them fraudulent. Mr. Bacon
advocated their payment. Mr.
Fleming advocated their payment.
Milton A. Candler advocated thei
payment . Judge Turner said they
should be paid. Are they corrunt
men? Are they for corporations
against the people. The Atlanta
Constitution then said they should
be paid. The Atlanta Journal then
said they should be paid.
This sweet scented crowd of At
lauta dudes are hard pressed for
campaign material when they put
such lies, and slanders as this in
to print.
The peop'e of Georgia are hon
est. They believe the State should
be so, Mr. Atkinson will never
lose a vote for favoring the pay
ment of an horest debt.
SWUNG HIM TO A LIMB .
LYNCHING OF THE BRUTE WHO AT-
TACKED MISS WEIR.
Ocaln. Fla., May 16.—At 7
o'clock this morning Nero Young,
ihe negro who assaulted Miss Liz
zie Weir, near this place yesterday
waj tasen from jail by a mob
composed of several hundred citi
zens and lynched. The mob bat
tered down the doors of the jail
with sledge hammers and the jail
er seeing that resistance was use
less, surrended the keysto the cell
in which the negro was confined
The negro was taken to the out
skirts of town and speedily swung
to a tree. Before being hung he
contessed the crime.
A LUNATIC.
Berry Klug, colored, was tried
for lunacy tn is morn,ng in the
Ordinarys court and found to be a
tit subject for the aeyulm. He took
great interest in a revival meeting
near his place some tinn ago and
since that time his mind has been
unbalanced. He will be kept in
the county jail until room can be
made for him at the asylum at
Milledgeville.
COUNCILMAN FROM THE
second ward.
At lhe request of a number of
citizens Mr. D. R. Hamilton Jr.
has consented to al low his name to
be submitted to the voters for
eleciion as councilman from the
Second Ward. Those who know
Blount, know him to be an earn
est intelligent gentlemen, active
in his work, but conservative in
his views upon public matters,
DEMOCRATS IN SESSION
Kansas City'May If.—The Dem
ocratic state convetion met here to
day and got no further than organ
ization. There is a prospect of an all
night session, while * the platform
committee is wrangling over the
question of free silver' but it is not
probable that nominations will be
reached before tommorrow.
CEN. COXEY FOR CON*BESS
Columbus' O ‘ May 16 —The popu
list of the eighteenth congressional
distret today nominated Jacob S.
Coxey for congress.
ROME ROYAL ARCH CHAPTER
NO. 26.
Attend called convocation of Rome
Chapter No. 26 Royal Arch Masons,
this, Wednesday evening at 8 o’clock
TLe M. E. M. degree will be cou
sered. A full attendance requested.
M. Meyerhardt, H. P.
B. F. Clark. Sec.
so iimwffl
Jln Business Circles Mer
cnants and Traders
HAND TO MOUTH BUSINESS.
STATUE OF COLUNBUB UNVEILED IN
CENTRAL PARK. THE COAL STRIKE.
OUR REGULAR NEW YORK LETTER.
New York May 14, —There is lit
tle if any improvement in business
circles. The weather has stimulrted
farming operations and caused an in •
creased demand for seasonable goods
but merchants and traders of high
and low degree are paralyzed by
tariff uncertainty and do only a hand
to mouth business.
Bankers who are in close touch
with various parts of the country are
dishatit ned by the letters of tbeic
correspoi eafr,'enitory affected by
tne great coal strikes being in a par
ticularly unfavorable condition a
About 175,000 men are involved
in these, and many works that are
dependent upon a cheap supply o 1
soft c ial have shut down, Con.
gress does not dispose of the tariff
question during the coming week
Congress is going to be scoldt d in
a good, sound democratic way. Spec
ial meetings f the Manhatter Cub
and Dt mo rat.e Club have been ci li
ed to consider the question. The
Democratic Club will meet on Men
day. May 21. and the Manhatb n
Club will meet on Thursdi y, May
24. The meeting of the J a ffiatten
Club promises to ba one of the
stormiest known for years, and if the
present intention of the members is
carried out there will be some dan
ger of a split in the organization.
Under the Constitution and by
laws thirty (members of the club can
have a special meeting called. A
notice was posted on Friday evening
asking ths Board of Governors to
call a meeting for the purpose of
considering lhe political, situation
and urging upon Congress early
action up n the tariff question.
The call was signed by thirty
members of the organization and the
pos’ingof the notice caused a stir
among the .other members. Little
else was talked about thut evening.
There was enough oppositio.i ex
pressed to indicate that there would
be a very lively row and not a little
plain talk if a meeting were calhd
The Board of Governors, in obedience
to the notice, called a meeting for the
evening of May 24.
The statue of Columbus, after
the original by the Spanish artist,
Sunol, was unveiled Saturday af
ter noon at the lower end of the
Mall in Central Park. There were
more than five hundred guests on
the benches, which had been ar
ranged in semicircular form about
the grand stand on which the
speaKers were seated.
The platform was decorated
with American flags, and among
others seated there wer° Vice Pres
ident Stevenson, Major Gilroy,
Bishop Potter. Cornelius Vander
ilt, Admiral Gherardi and Ben
hain, Baron Fava, Chauncy M
Depew, Mrs Julia Ward How and
several officers from the Spanish
war ship at present anchored in
the Bay.
The statue is a copy of a figure
of Columbus and stands on a base
designed by Napoleon Le Brun. It
is of bronze, and represents the
navigator as he lands on Ameri
can soil. He holds a cross and lhe
Spanish standard in his right
hand, and the left is outstretched
in invocation.
The face is of the type famil
iarly shown, being beardless, with
high retreating brow and broad
cheeks, almost Indian in its char,
acteristics. Suuol has many stat
ues of Columbus, but this is con
sidered to be hie best work.
A WILD PREACHER.
HE DENOUNCES THE PRESIDENT AND
CABINET AND FAVORS COXEY.
Jacksonville. Fla., May 16, —A
lively sensation has been created
at Inverness, Fla. by a sermon
which the Rev. Dr. Biggs, of the
Christian chuich, delivered last
night.
The doctor's subject was tV
‘‘Movement on Washington by the
Commonweal Army.” But he made
do reference to Coxey beyond say
ing that congress should grant his
demands.
The doetor then proceeded to
attact President Cleveland and
cabinet. He said that the presi
dent was now living in open adul
Uy, and that Secretary Carlisle
was a drunkard and debaucher.
Nearly every member of the cab
inet was also attacted most bitter
ly. Many people left the church
during the delivery of the sermon
and there is much indignation ex
pressed against the minister.
ATKINSON IN GAINESVILLE.
HIS SPEECH WAR WELL RECEIVED BY
A LARGE AUDIENCE
Gainesville, May 15.—Hon. W.
Y. Atkinson delivered an address
here last. Saturday to an audience
of at least 800 people, and not 300
as reported by the Atlanta Consti
tution. The court house was crowd
ed full, quite a number of ladies
being present akso. and the audi
ence manifested a great deal ot
enthusiasm and cheered the speak
er throughout.
From present indications ths
result rill be that next Saturday
Hall county will join the Atkin
son column.
A PROMINENT PLANTER SHOT.
MASKED MEN GET IN SOME DIUTT WORK
AT GREENSVILLE
Greenville Ala , May 15 —Masked
men went to the house of Milton
Nash, a prominent planter, last night
and shot him through the right lung
in the presence of his wife and chil
dree, Nash is a prosperous farmer and
resides five miles from Greenvill. He
was peaceable and quiet and no
cause is assigned for the deed. The
Murderers then went to a nearby
negro house,and robbed the occu
pants of what money they had The
assassins are at large. Nash will prob
ably die.
GAINES HIS POINT.
«
CONGRESSMAN MADDOX WILL GET A
MIDSHIPMAN FOR THE SENENTH.
Wnehington. May 16. —Judge
Maddox won his fight for a naval
cadet from his district today. He
had an amendment inserted iu the
naval appropriation bill allowing
a cadet for every congressional
district not represented iu the
acadamy at present. It did not
provide for turning those out who
were illegally appointed, but pro
vides that in the future when a
congressman fails to make an
appointment that the secretary of
the navy shall fill the vacancy
fiom his congressional district.
Judge Maddox made a splendid
fight and won a victory which aeanv
members of the house have been sigh
ing for years.
JEFF DAVIS NEICE MARRIES,
Canton, Miss. May 15 —Mrs. An
nie Darts Smith, widow of Hen
R. C. Smith and niece of Jefferson
Davis, was married this afternoon to
Mr. W. A. Gunning of Natchez. Miss
The Rome Light Buards will
laave Monday for Camp Northern.
The Ladies Home Missionary
Society of Ist. Methodist church
have bought the exclusive right to
sell refreshments at tie picnic
Friday. Every one that patronizes
their stand will help a worthy
cause.
ran leads
Ik Carries Talliaferio County
“Four to One”
AND HAD EVEN VOTES
With the General While be has ”np
tnred Eijhtout ol the For Ven
Counties. The Wool hat boys Will
Win.
I
Atkinson captured another,
county yesterday, and last night*
the vote and counties stood :
STANDING TO DATE
Atkinson. Evans
I
Meriwether 4 Elbert 2
Baldwin 2 Terrell- 2
Ceffee 2 Bartow. .... 4
Clinch 2 Lincoln 2
Douglas... 2 Tellfair 2
Cherokee 2
Oconee 2 12
Talliaferio 2
18
is doubt Riclnnoßd 8
When it is remembered that
the Boomors hrve claimed Talliafer
ro county, up to within a few days
of its action and when it is known
that the county weut for Mr. Atkin
son” four to one, tlisn it is that the
Atlanta boodlers know that they
have heard a noise and that noise
was'* somethiug draped"
Mr. Atkinson will go into the Sa -
u rday fight with eight counties and
and eighteen votes aganst General
Evans with rix count es including
Richmond and eighteen votes.
And the Boomers with their Ev
ans Clubs and their boodle and the
"Spontain" will go down to defeat.
Mark that prediction.
As for Floyd county, there is no
set of Evans Club Executive com
mittee, nor is there enough Max
Meyerhardts to coutrole the unter
ifield democrats and carry the
county against its sense and con
fictions.
Put Floyd with her six votes in
the Atkinson columns. It will
never be changed.
Let Floyd county democrats
Aho believes iu Democrat Clubs
alone keep an eye on the Evans
Clubs of 1894 and remembering
where Evens was not ‘at’ in 1892
let them vote according to convic
tions.
Mr. T. W, Martin, of Tullaho
ma, Tenn., is in the city to day.
Mrs J. W. Knowles, of Greens
boro, Ga., is visiting her son Mr
W. A. Knowls, on East Secoi d
Street.
\V. T. McWilliams has almost
fully recovered and his many
friends are glad to lea rn that h< j
will soon be able to bo on’.
Mr. J.T. Corley, Jr. a very pop
uiar young man of Atlanta, is id
the city today.
Will Wright, who is now in 11;"
employ of the Southern Express
Co., is at horns for a short vaca
tion.
James Kendrick, one of Chattoo
ga, count.es m«st prominent young
citizens, is in the city on busi
ness,
Rev. J. T. Gibson returned t lis
morning from a short visit to Rev.
M . L. Troutman, J r.
Rome aud Cave Spring, will
cross bats this aftsrnoon at the
North Rome park.
LOOK AT THESE POINTS,
■ ' or sirengxnening es-
sects on the Intestines, they increase the
natural action of the bowels, and perma
nently ours Constipation, Biliousness, Jaun
dice, Indigestion. Dizziness, Sour Stomach,
Siek or Bilious Headaches, and every like
disorder.
Any child takes these tiny, sugar-coated
Pellets readily. They’re put up in httle sealed
vials, and thas kept always reliable, while
they can easily lie carried in the vest-pocket.
Nothing else at any price is as cheap, for
they’re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or
your money is returned. You pay only for
the good you get.
No substitute that a tricky dealer is ready
to urge, though it may be better for him to
mU, can be “ just as good ” for you to buy.
IO CENTS A WEEK
showing where Dr.
Fierce's Pleasant Pel
■ lets excel the ordi
nary pills :
They’re smaller;
easier to take; easier
in their ways. No
'griping; no distur
bance ; no reaction
afterward.
. Their influence
lasts. By their tonic
nr Ktr«n£rt.hAninor
MR.
THOS.
FAHY
THB
AAER —
CHANT
BECOMES
POETICAL
Ir. F.ahys poetry may not b®
fraught with that melody and sweet;
ness winch characterizes the verses
ol Frank L. Stanton, or Montgomery
M J Folsom, but every line ,that
flows from hie pen proclaims a fact
far more valuable »han the sweetest
sentiment. Sentiment is sweet and.
all right in its place, but it does not
cloth the naked or feed the hungry.
It v. ill be of profit to all the Hust
lir readers to peruse with care and.
consideration the lines from the suc
cessful merchants pen. He starts
out thus.
We have dry goods and notions,
Os every imaginable kind,
High prices, low prices,
Dr.ces that will suit the times .
for Dress Goods ami Trimmings,
whether fancy or plain,
All wool, or half wool,
we best them al! the same-
Aud seemingly with rjnewe*
inspiration he continues.
Our goods are of the latest styles
The most beautiful in design,
French goods, German goods,
Goods of every kind.
In any kind of underwear
we are ready to supply,
The young, the old, the rich, the poot,
No one need pass us by.
The new born poetical talent
seems to grow brighter and bright
er as he proceeds.
Now is the time for yon to buy
Mattings and curtains for your wives.
Such an assortment people say
They never saw in all their lives.
This Summer will be lang and warm,
So prepare for it in time,
Don’t put off bat come at once,
And supply your needs of every kind.!
Once more he soars aloft and
the fires of bargains is seen co*
flash his pen.
Every one should have a trunk
Os zinc and patent tray,
Now don’t forget when joubuy
To come right staight this way.
Umbrellas are always needed,
whether sunshine or rain,
And don’t you forget we have them
Gold headed, silver headed and plain.
Mr. Fihy has for over twenty
years been regarded as a prince
among merchants. His goods al
ways of the best kind and hia
prices always the lowest. Crowds
stand before his counters every
day aud thousands cf bargains are
issued from his emporium every
week.