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THE HUSTLR OF ROME.
.fiatered at the Rome Post O'ce as ••nrst-cl*s*
seconu-ciass Mail Hatter.
zs to vpit (Editor, and
jPHIL G. BY KD, | Mauagei.
DAILY AND SUNDAY!
TERMS of SUBSCRIPTIG.
0 cent a week or $5 00 per annum
<FFICB: Cogger and
Official Organ
•-Of the city of Reme.and Foyd, the
“Banner county * of Georgia.
W’’"'"”““ — "" ——
‘ MAKE YOUR APPLICATION.
x ‘The man whose business is to
interpret the Bible is likely to
make a sad miss of interpreting a
platform “—[Atlanta Journal, Ev
ws organ.]
CoL Atkinson is “doing very
well, thank you .”
Pie has a sticky way of putting
a printer in the soup.
Will Wilson be able to identify
his Bill when he meets him agaii ?
The Gordon Citizen and Chat
tooga News r.re two of the best
weeklies m the bloody Seventh.
This cold summer weather is
aock-ing it to the treeses whose
little mistie-tozes ate out in the
kold world.
The vote in Carroll stood 819 f< r
Atkinson and 499 for Evans. The lat
ter carried only a single precinct,
< that of Villa Rica.
It has been many moons since
Hal Moore’s Macon News has men
tioned Bill Atkinson's back hair.
Come, come sweet Hal! No sulk
ing.
The San Francisco police arc to
oe equipped with bicycles. Oi
course those “Goldes City" cop
pers will ba recognized as “rounds
men.”
japan has ordered to be built in
London a first-class battle ship oi
over 12,000 tons displacerifent, 11.
000 indicated horse and 18
knots speed.
Your uncle Lon Livingston is en
dearing hiuiself to the average Allan
tian.just now Lon is after a big build
ing for the Gate City. We hope he
will get it too
Hie Detroit Free Press thinks that
one of the unmistakable evidences
of hard times is that the house of an
occasional editor in this and other
State s is being burglarized.
A Methodist preacher was made
a whisky gauger at Peoria, 111. and
when the churchfolks got after him
he said that to the pure, all things
were pure,—Fort Worth Telegam.
The Augusta Herald in a strong
editorial opposes Gen. Gordon’s in
terference in the gubernatorial cam
paign. The Herald is for Gen. Evans
but its a paper that believes in fair
play.
The Detroit Free Press thinks
that one of the unmistakable evi
dences of hard times is that the
house of an occasional editor in
and other States is being burglar
ized.
\V hen a widow woman marries
a widower, gentlemen its a clear
case of business and evidences a
belief that in union there is
. strength. Now is the time to sub
scribe.
Populist in Georgia have built a
platform declaring against rail
road free passes for officials. Noth
ing is said about s’eaiing railroad
trains by the Populist of the West
—Augusta News.
Retail advertisers have a tend
ency to generalize in their adver
rising. This should not be done;
the public wants to know some
ing definite regarding the g iods ad
vertised, Ads should be made to
resemble, as closely as possible,
the arguments that the merchant
would use in bis store.
If General Evans has any love
for music he should pause when a
South Georgia county goes into
action and listen to the soul stir
ring tune of “Billy in the Low
Grounds.”
Ta-R;-Ra Cobb has written a
letter to the Constitution to cheer
the desponding followers of the
Evans forlorn hope. Ta-Ka Ra is
still there but the Booxr-le-sy is
gone.—Griffin Nsws.
Scientific men have demonstrated
that a speed of 200, miles an honr
can never be attained by anything
that moves on yet in a
continued effort to reach that speed
many a high roller sets the place
that kills.
Atkinson carried Carroll Coun
ty by 350 majority and now is the
time for the Constitution to hunt
up its old flasks of “Balm of Gil
liad” and seek out Jack Majors
and kondone with him in a little
secret kommunion,
Mr. Atkinson does not flock
with the one eyed Bill Tillman
biand of Palmetto, but when he
gets to Fannin through the moun
tains, General Evans thinks he has
sighted a cyclone a id knows that
he feels an earthquake.
The Atlanta Journal wants the
Goulds to move to its city. Let’s
see, wasn’t it in Atlanta that Jay
Gould was so grievously snubbed,
—Augusta Herald.
Yea, verily, and by the hero of
the Waycross war at that.
While the Alabama state con
vention was in session at Mont'
gomery ex-Governor Bob Taylor
delivered his celebrated lecture.
“The Paradise of Fools,” Our Bob
is always present when urgently
needed. —Chattanooga News,
The Consitution keeps putting
Atkinson counties into the con
tested list. The Constitution mus.
hope to have enough delegates of
thev Max Meyerhardt partizan
stripe, to unseat the Atkinson del
egates from oir-third the counties
of Georgia.
Uncle Treetop—“ That heifer is
two years old.” City Niece—“ How
do you know? ’ “By her horns.”
“Oh to be sure; she has only two.”
Life •
And then her country’ lover felt
like he did the day the bull calf
run over him'.
Advertising is the sluice which
leads the stream of custom into
the mills of trade. See that your
sluice is not defective, for in these
hard times it is important that ev
ery drop of the pecious stream be
made to turn the wheels of your
business. —Printers Ink.
The big majorities go for Evaus ;
the wormy little nubbins fall ou
the Atkinson side of the fence. —
Macon News.
Oh Hal! How can you say such
hard, mean old things about
General E v ans’ counties, just be
cause he lost them! First thing
you know Telfair will be kicking
about being tricked onto the
wrong side of the fence—and re
member “Uncle Clem” has not a
kounty to spare.
There has been a notable decrease
during t' e last three years in the
amount oi shipping passing through
the Suez Canal. Last year the net,
tonnage decreased 52,960, as
compared with tl at of 1892. and
1,039, 7(9, tons as compared with
1891 Last year 8.341, vessels passed
through the canal, of which 2,405,
carried the British flag.
The Columbus Enquirer-Sun
says that it will not come with
good grace from Geu. Gordon to
stump this State for Gen. Evaus
for the purpose of arousing the
people to a proper sense of grati
tude to the old soldier. They do
not need such an arousal. Gen.
Gordon is himself a living monu
ment of their gratitude. Georgia
has followed him with love and
honors all through his public ca
reer. He certainly can trust them
dow, and he shou'd remain at his
post where they have called him.
THE HUSTLER OS ROME. FRIDAY, JUNE 1. 1894.
Gen Gordon was elected against
the efforts of the Atlanta Constitu
tion and now he proposes to turn
in and aid the Constitution against
those who elected him. But thei ,
what more could be expected at
the hands of a man who. for years
has not missed an opportunity
to prove recreant to a frisud or
betray a trust.
Geu, Evans carried a county
yesterday. Those who think that
this fight for the nomination is
over are mistaken by many jug
fu's .—Augusta Herald.
Os course its only sacrimental
spirits that fill those Rev, C, A .
Evans jugs—aforesaid of course—
of course. And yet there were
“blind tigers” in Hall.
Col. Atkinson makes a pathetic
appesl in describing the scant fur
nishing of hie home in compari.
son with the room occupied by the
Young Men’s Evans Committee of
Atlanta. —Brunswick Times.
Read what Mr. Atkinson said on
that subject and stick to the facts
and uo one will even think that
you seek to lie or even misslead.
Mr. Sam Ennis, of Milledgeville
is building a floating saw mill to
run on the Oconee river. The engine
and boiler were hauled to the riv
er last Wednesday’ and is being
placed in position on the flat boat
lying opposite the city. There are
large quantities of fine timber on
the O conee which will be brought
to market by the enterprise of Mr
Ennis.—Griffin Call.
The Macon Evening News, an
noucing General Gordon’s appoint
ments for speeches, says: “He is the
most brilliant campaigner iu America
and Evans’s election is assured.’.—
Constitution.
So its Gordon’s record and abilities
that make the results for ths Alla nta
Candidate assured is it? Does the
News believe that uncle Clem wi’l
carry 100 connties? Please answer
Breach of promise cases in which
a woman is the plaintiff are quite
numerous, but Wilkesbarre, Pa.,
has a case in which a woman is
the defendant. John Lazzar, a
grocery-man, wants SIO,OOO from
Elizabeth Goalader. The plaintiff
claims that the defendant prom
ised to marry him on May 14th.
Her failure to do so has go un
nerved him that he sayshe cannot
do business, and that the broken
engagement will injure Lim with
his young lady acquaintances.
THE TWO RECORDS.
WHAT EACH CAND IDAT DID WHIL
IN THE LEGISLATURE.
Hon W Y. Atkinson was a mem
ber of the legislature from Coweta
county from 1886 to 1894. Hon
0. A. Evans was State senator
from Stewart county- in 1859—60.
He re are the records the twomen
made, by which we impartially
judge their character as statesmen.
ATKINSON REC OR EVAN’s RECORD.
1 Introduced a 1 Voted tc allow
bid which was banks to suspend
passed, to make specik paymem
the office of com- wholl there wag
missionerof agri uo pabic<
culture elective
2 Introduced the
bill establishing
the Georgia Nor . v J to a bol
mal and Indus- 181 . al laws
trial school for a £ aiUßl, usury,
girls
> elped draw q v . -. .
« 11 by »h.ob d „ DS „ ortb '| eee
Btate , road '»ud cokl blood
b.llern,eutquesLdlnur<|
tlbb was settled „ h(J
with a saving to, ~ ,
the State of »750 C “" g the law
000.
4 Introduced a
bill which was j ,
passed, by which b.. 1 u^ a
the etate le aniiu . 1 ", b ° llab
ally saved »15, tlla ' by W’
000 for the in
spection of oils.
D Aided to in- 5 Voted to re
crease the com L 9al all JaW3
,, i' ro P r ‘ a 'ibg
i -Snnm 000 f :^or aid by th
1 200,000 P'r state to educa
U p UU . m ’ , tpual purposes
6 Aided to in
crease the Con
federate soldiers
and soldiers wid 6 \ otcd against
ows pensions allow ng Confed- j
from $19,000 an-erate privates to" .
Dually to $460, choose,their own
000 annually. officers
Os the counties that are to act this
week, the Evans papers only claim
Fulton, Clarke, D ide Polk, Mclntosh
Putman, Mi chell, and Warren. Tiley
claim these out-right, and say that
Macon county, and Jones are doubt ul
Last week they claimed that Gen
Evans would not only aatch up with
Mr. Atkinson, but get a majority
over him Mr. Atkinson’s was ei,
for the week. So far as we have
learned the Evaus people have laid
no claims to any counties in
Alabama. —Cnlnmlaua Ledger.
The desperation of the Ev: a
cause may be judged from the fact
that General Evans is booked to
make three speeches in Stewart coun
ty next week: at Omaha on the night
of June4th, at Lumpkin on June
sth and at Richmond on the night of
the Sth. It looks pretty serious when
a candidate has to make such stren
oi 8 exertions to carry his home
county.—Coweta acts tomorrow and
Mr. Atkinson has not made a
speech within its borders during the
campaign.
COBB ENDORSED "OUR JOHN”
The Cobb County Democratic
Executive Committee, which met,
i in Marietta last Saturdy passed
> resolutions endorsing the record
i in Congress of Hon John W, Mad
dox, of this district. Mr. Maddox
; has stood faithfully by the Demo
; ocratic platform and has never
> failed to vote for the right. The
i people of this section are proud of
the record made by Mr. Maddox,
and he will be re elected by an
overwhelming majority, no matter
who enters the race against him.
Acworth Post,
’ ITS PHUNNY VERY, VERY.
PHUNNY.
The Times Recorder g ves a bit
of political history that is inter
esting at this juncture, Editor
Myrick points out that “in the Ba
con-Gordon campaign nine years
ago Major Bacon got thirty-eight
votes out of the first forty-two that
wore instructed. Lie and Dooly
being the first counties to break
fram the solid Bacon procession
and go for Gordon. And yet be
fore the campaign ended, nearly a
hundred counties had instructed
for Gordon. Atkinson is making
nothing like as good a race aS Ma
jor Bacon made, since, at about
this stage of the campaign. Bacon
had a lead of nearly ten to one
over General Gordon. The cam
paign of 1894 will be a repetition
in its final results of that of 1885.”
The above from the columns of
the Constitution, would make
amusing reading did the papers
printing it, not seek to d r aw such
a ridiculously missleading lesson
from that old campaign.
The great mass of Atkinson
counties are yet to move forward
into action. Mr. Atkinson, just
now, is devoting hie time to the
winning of the race in the Evans
counties, and this over, his
strenght will sweep forward and
the power of the wave can never
be stayed by Atlanta boodle, At
lanta politicians or even a Uni
ed States Senator who proves one
of the men who helped elevate
him.
Bill Atkinson will be our next
Governor of Georgia. “Mark that
prediction.”
LHE“PRINCE OF LIARS.”
A special from Dallas to the
Constitution of last week in regard
to Col. Hill’s speech, said that the
crowd was about equally devided
between Evans and Atkinson,
There could not be anything much
further from the tiuth. The crowd
contained several populists who
were of course, for neither of i
these men.
As for the democrats, we do not
know of over half dozen who ex
pressed themselves for Evans
There were some others in town
who are for him, but they were
not in the bouse; and hid they
been there the Evans crowd would
still have been in a hopeless mi
nor ty.
The Constitution must have been
misinformed as to the facts. If it
were not, it might well be called the
prince of liars.—Paulden New Era.
THE FUN THAT ADAM MISSED.
That Adam v as a lonely man
I’m ready to believe,
Although his many days were blest
With nature’s fairest Eve;
By maidens, aunts and cousins fair
The man was never kissed,
And yet 1 often think about
The fun that Adam misled.
It seems to me his life was like
Au oft-repeated dream:
He never treated girls and paid
Three dollars for ice cream;
He never, when a little boy,
By grown-up girls was kissed;
And when he died he never knew
The fun that Adam missed
He neves went security
And had the note to pay;
He never saw his bank's cashier
Steal gracefully away;
In all his life be never by
His uio.hei -iu-law was kissed
But why go on and 'numerate
The fun that Adam missed?
Perhaps if hs w< e living now—
But, then, why speculate?
He'd be too old and not inclined
To play with fickle fate.
For centuries the wanton winds
His unknown g ate have kissed;
Pe.h.ips lie rffeepsthe better for
The fun that Adam missed.
—From the New noon.
ABOVE ALL OTHERS,
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis
| covery is tho medicine for the
blood. You'll be willing to believe
i this, perhaps, if you think of the
way it’s sold to you. On tried—
that’s wliat it amounts to. In any
case where it fails to benefit or
cure, your money is returned.
With any doubtful or ordinary
medicine, this couldn’t be done.
And it isn't done, except with the
1 “ Discovery.”
In every disease caused by a
torpid liver or impure blood, this
medicine will certainly cure. For
the most stubborn Skin and Scalp
Diseases; the worst forms of Scrof
ula, even Consumption (or Lung
scrofula) in its earlier stages; and
for Dyspepsia, “ Liver Complaint,”
A
and every kindred ailment, nothing ap
proaches it as a remedy.
Nothing else, at any price, is really as
cheap. You pay only for the good you get.
It’s more than mere relief—it’s a perfect
and permanent cure, that you get with Dr.
Sage’s Catarrh Remedy. The proprietors
offer SSOO reward for any incurable case
of Catarrh.
th reTew notice
-1894-
For the purpose of receiv
ing the Tax returns of Floyd
County for the year 1894, I
will attend at the Militia Dis
trict Court Giounds at the
following dates:
Last Round
June
Barkers Fri “ 1
vans Valley Mon “ 4
CaveSdringTu “ 5
Foster’.? Mill Wed“ 6
Li vingston Thu “ 7
Rome Fri “ 8
Will be at Roms dates men
tioned, and on every Satur
day, and during the month oi
June except dates as above,
at the Court House
AU urgently requested to
make their returns at the
earliest date, saving a rush at
the close. Defaulters will be
returned for Double Tax in
every District where they neg
lect to give in their Taxes.
Very respectfully,
M. D. MCOSKER
r \ v
500 mens line suits
fresh bought at one
half the cost to make
will be closed out re
gardless of value. W.
M, Gammon &. Co.
See our $7750 all
wool worth $ 1 5.0.
W. M. Gammon & Co.
Persons who sympathize with the
afficted will rejoice with D. . E Carr
oi 1235 Harrison street Kansas City.
He is an old sufferer from inflamma
tory rheumatism, but has not hereto
fore been troubled in this climate.
Last winter he went up into Wiscon
sin, and in consequence Las had an
other attack. ‘lt. came upon me again
viry acute and severe.” lie said.“My
joints SM'el>e<l an I lec one inflamed;
sore t> tm •!) or almost to look at.
Upon the urgem request of my moth
er- in law 1 tried Cburnb< rlain’s Pain
Balm to reduce ihe swelling and ease
the pain . and to my agreeable stir
prise, it did both . I have used three
filty-oent bottles and believe it to be
the finest thing for rneumatism,pains
and swellings extant. For sale by
Lowery Bro’s Druggist.
A GRAND OFFER!
EDEE MME. A. RUPPERT’S
■ DEE FACE BLEACH
y-tsnak MME. A. RUPPERT
B ? yB: ■ appreciate the fact
*, rTc/cp a z JA that there are tunny tbou-
VjX'-.j,- Bandsof ladlesintbeUnlted
(VSbSJawttr Statesthat would liketo.try
* ’Sai' lay World-Renowned Facb
4b* Tpj Bleach: but have been
jg£i£i •: r kept from doing so on ac
ffiEM W* CountofpriO which 15¥2,00
fTtfe Per bottle or 8 bottles taken
‘eßether »b.oo. In order
’■»?nkt NL 4?Mi that all of these may have
sfjsi!'* . an opportunity, I will give
Wk to every caller, absolutely
free, n sample bottle, and
£j to supply those out
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all charges prepaid, for 25 cents, silver or stamp.’ 7
In every ease sf freckle*, pimples, moth, sal
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at ‘° wrinkles (not caused by facial expression)
Facb Blbach removes absolutely. It docs not
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madame a. bvppebt.(!>w<.o)
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y T
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bold by
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