The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, June 18, 1894, Image 4

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gCA« GILGO er the Passengers— of Them Will Interest You j,L. M. Fish, of Atlanta, is Ae city today. oficeio Cleghorn, Jr., of Sum merville, is io the city today. . Superintendent Ctias. Wooc ruff, of the Western Union, is ei / joying a vacation out at Conway, ’ __ ReadA.B.McArver&Co’s newadvertisementonii ontpage Col. Walker King adistinguish- ed young Georgia—Texan is hue on a visit from the Lone Jti r State. Mrs. A. E. Elliott, of the Fifth ward died very suddenly today a, 12:30 o’clock her remains wi 1 be taken to Kingston on the 9:15 >, m., train tomorrow for interment RECORDERS COURT. A GREAT CRUSH AT THIS MORNINGS FALL OF NINEVEH . This mornings session of Re. corder Spullocks court was crowd ed to overflowing, A large number of sinners were brought to the bar of justice, ano the city treasurer}' replenished with some of the needful, while !be street force secured severa now recruits. Old Matt Stacey, a favorite with 'he police, was the first sin ner hauled over the coals, she was dued $2 50 or 5 days, for disorder v conduct. Sam Beard was ordered to pay $5. for a plain drunk without any .1i minings. Gus Clarence paid $1 (or cross ing the dead line at the Borne, R.R fiepot he wont do it any more. Lizzie Gj tlin got $4 or 8 day i : the Cooler for Sashaiag up and down Broad Street iintid after 10 o'clock Saturday night. Lula O’Neal, got it in the neck for $750 for disorderly conduct Bud Williams a Stripping young kt>on threw ire in on old Auntie's ve, he will drive a city dump cart ;. r the next 10 days Bob Nelms drew a sld.oo prize fo t shipping his wife's face and burning er clothes. After an hour’s session court adjourned until the next time. “Orange Blossom.” the Common - vise Female Remedy, draws out i u and soreness. Sold by Ham . d by D. W. Curry A HORRIBLE DEATH. • x :gro fiend litterally shinned I. live for assaulting a lady, ■•'■ aycross, Ga., June 13 .—A ne • assaulted a highly respected .1 ig lady, daughter of Mr. Mose • ; rington, of Pierce county about • •uiniles southeast from Black ar, early Monday morning. r accomplishing his purpose , scaped to the woodjj, but was r ued and caught by a mob . inhering twenty or thirty men, t after hanging him a while, - •• him down and skinned him •>, He lived six hours aft< r • kin had been taken from his lere is great excitement, but ■ urther trouble is expected, as - the general opoinion of both . e and colored people that he ..is deserts. • rsone who sympathize with the ed will rejoice with D. . E Carr . .85 llarrison street Kansas City. j an old sufferer from inliamma rheumatism, but has not hereto been tronbled in this climite. winter he went up into Wiscon md in conseqreuce has had an , r attack.“lt <anie upon me apiin acute and severe,” he said. ‘My in swelled and became inflamed; to touch, or almost to look at. > a the urgent request of my moth nlawl tried Chainberlaids Pam i to reduce the swelling and ease >ain and to my agreeable sur >se, It did both. I have used three cent bottles and believe it to be finest thing for rheuma 1 ’em, ••« and swellings extant. For .. Lowry Bros. Druggist. KLOSTER OF BULL’S EYE SHOTS. Ifieagreat source of gratifica tion and satisfaction to run a newspaper and have its subrcrip t on rolls grow larger everg day — I am tawkm from experience now, and I have nevef w orked on any paper save the weekly Rome Cou rier and the daily Huitler of Rome. Now is the time to sub scribe. *** A friend of mine—just home from Atlanta tells me that it is interesting to witness the Evans boy» around the Kimball’House as they try to “hedge” on guberna t >rial bets. He says that many of the Atlantians are offering and making compromises on the amounts, up, and getting out just iri easy as they can. They have read the hand writtir.g on the wall * * * The rumor that Dr. Paul Reese was struck by lightening, while at tending a country funeral on yester day, is not based on facts, but grew . •in a report which stated that Dr. Paul was struck with the beautiful ‘lash of a dark blue eye —and he was electrified—not shocked. Afterwards lie swam three creeks, got his horse buggy and dutch collar i early Irowned and came home in the •dorm. He will recover. * * * Mr. Sam Stanfield returned from i visit to his father yesterday, she elder Stanfield lives at R* saca. Abaut three w eeks ag ), while >ut in the woods on the old battle field, a half mile North of Resaca, vlr. Stanfield saw a bright speck ■>n the ground and kicking the lirt off discovered a watch. H» rave it to Sam yesterday and I ■aw it this afternoon. The watch s one of ye old timers, and has no timber or manufactures name up •n it. It is an open face, key wind er and—well you will have to see 1 it to appreciate it. • * s * * Lightening played a pretty prank yesterday, when it str ick the pony phaeton of Mrs. Warsham, daughter of Mr, Jetse Green. The mysterious t ore the top from the buggy and dashed out via 1 the dashboard. Os course the fellows in the wheels were so tired that they hard’y noticed the shock—The stroke was not fatal as ' recovery is possible, * * * Another f oiicsom kaper kut by lho lightening yestreday afternoon . was to split achinney in the twosto rv reii fi .< nee of Di £Ebin Hillyer on College Hdl The ladiea of Dr.Hiil yer'sfam 'y were sitting about a lire place when the Hash smote the chimney and strange to say, no one was shocked. The chimney was split down through to the first floor and a pair of metalic va ces and a heavy clock were hurled from the mantle in Mrs. Ethel , Hillyer Harris’ room, she top oi the chimney above the roof was badly torn. Dr, Hillyer thinks that when the current struck the roof that the metallic gutterings and gas and water pip.s each re' ceived a portion and the great force of its power was devided and made harmless. * * * Mr. Thomas Fahy, Rome's dry i goods prince and veteran jner- chant, arrived home from New York, on Saturday night. I drop- t ped in to see him this afternoon t and was shown tnrough the beau , tiful line of novelties just opened. Mr. Fahv says that he purchased onlv a line of real novelties in wash fabrics and that every ex press coming in for the next few days will bring to his h >use ship ments from the very cream of the Eastern and European markets* * * * Talking about “pretty things” I was completely,captiavted when he dropped, in artistic folds, a fig ure in figured Org« n lies, or with woven French Swiss and dotted swistf with figures. These goods “have to be seen”—at least I think they will for I could never begiujto describe their subline and other ‘ kinds of beauty. Mr. Fahy his ‘also ransacKed the east for laces - land he has got them with a big G, THE HUSTLER OF ROME MONDAY JUNE 181894 FOR WOMEN FOLKS CLEVERNESS OF UGLY WO MEN* The ugliest women in the world > are the cleverest, according to Sir » Crichton Browne.. He feajs that • what women gams intellectually » by the higher education now in ' vogue she will lose m beauty and • grace. F Among the Garo nation, a peo - pie dwelling on a range of hills between Brahmapootra and the Soorma valleys, the women are su- R prema. s They woo the men, they control H the affairs of the home and the B nation, property descends through them, and in everthing they are ‘ dominant, but —note the sequel 1 they are the very ugliest women 9 on the face of the earth. t 9 THE DRINKING BELLE, New York Recorder. At a luncheon the other day the girl who sat next to me did not touch her wine, and as I had known her to be devoted to the y glass that sbghtly stimulates, even I if it does not inebriate, I asked her why she was not drinking any -3 thing.. “Well, she said, with a burst of r frankness, “I have been tipsy so , many times this winter, that lam atraid that I’ll get talked about if 1 don’t pull up. Lent is a good time to do it—but, gracious! You don’t know how bard it is! I don’t believe I will be “hie to keep it up for the whole forty days ” This young lady, whose papa is a milliouair, is a great society belle. There is not a day during the season when j don’t see her name among the most distinguish ed guests at the sweliest social functions. HOME-MADE COLD CREAM. Ine ba is of cold cream is always mutton tallow. You can gat this at the butcher’s and you te” him wiiat it is for be will select sunie very fine tallow. Cut the taUow into bits and put it into a saucepan without any water, Set the taucepan into a jar ol boiling water, and let all remain un till the fat is thoroughly “tried” out of the tallow. Strain through a fine seivt, and while it is still warm stir jU a teaspoonful of the essence of camphor to every cup of tallow. Next a tablespoonful of your favorite per I fume and stir until all is sweet-smel. ling liquid. Before it has had time to cool pour in a little toilet jar and set upon the ice over night. It. will keep indefinitely, and wi'l be found one of the best remedies lor sl-’u that gets lough and ■ winter sore.’ M HERE TO MARK LINEN. Regarding the proper place to put the mark on different articles, it is usually understood that a handker chief is to be marked only in one corner, and that, when ironed, the distinctive c nner is to be the one ex posed. Table cloths are to be mark ed at the middles of the end—if with small letters, they are placed near the hem; if larger, at a correspond ing distance from the edge. In any case, there should not be less than rhe height of tne letters between thei, lower edge and the hem of the cloth. Napkins i” e marked diagon d'y acros s the corner; towels at the middle oi one end, just above the hem; sheett on the middie fold, two inches from the top hem; long pillow cases at the end an inch or two Lorn the hem, and square cases at the middle of the top. PRETTY Faces behind VEILS. Writiuy about Moorish women, Richard ilurdmg Davis says: “There it jouietuing con'inuaily interesting in the miiffl <1 figures of the women. They makw you al most ashamed of the uncovered faces of the American wuih«u m the town, ami, in the Im.uk of tvi deuce to the contrary, m.u begin ■ o believe every Moorish girl .you meet is as beautiful as her eyes w»uid make it appear that she is ‘ .hose of the girls whose faces I >a v were cicipl h mdse,. e; they were the won e B* n unin Constant W. A. EHHBV Having 'purchased the entire stock of ITurniture from Messrs. Hanks & Roberts, and consoli dated it with my already large stock I am now WITH And am ready to supply y 011 with anything and everything -MN THE FURNITURE LINE - Business is business, and if you can secure furniture now, that you will buy ] at er on at reg lar ori ces and save from twenty to fifty per cent, why 4THIS IS I respectfully direct your attention to the great bargains that you know I must have secured in the HANKS & ROBERTS STOCK Tney are crowding my floors and must be moved and la m going to move them and move them at once. The first who come to lend me a helping hand will pull in the cash. K inkaid Corner Broa dSt in the once. paints in his pictures of Algiers, and about whom Pierre Loti goes into ecstacies in his book on Tangiers. “The robeor or cloak, or whatever ti e thing is they affect, covers the head like a hood, and with one hand they hold one of the folds in front of the face as high as their eyes. The only time I ever saw the faces of any of them was whe.i I occasionally eluded Mohamed and ran off with a ptt.'e guide called Isaac, the especial protector of two American wom>n> who farmed him out to me when they preferred to st.iy in the hotel. “He is a particularly beautiful youth, and I notice I that whenev er he was with me that the cloaks of wemen had a fashion of coin ing undone, and they would lower them for an instant and look for Isaac, and then replace them se verely upon the bridge of the nose. Then Isaac would turn to ward me with a shy, conscious smile, and then blush violently. Isaac Bays the young men of Tau piers can tell whether or not a girl is pretty by looking at her feet. It is true that their feet are bare, but it struck me as a some what reckless test for selecting a bride.” Frank Taylor's Broad street Barber Shop is the place of places when you wayt your cheek made clean, your chin curried or your hair > licked ui> according to Hovle. Frank has only skilled artists, among them th t old reliable knight of the razor. Lewis Barrett. 4-25-ts Ad mi a i strators, Sale. GEORGIA, Floyd Counts. Pursuant to au order of the court of Ordinary Will be sold before the Court House doot.in the city of Rome said county between the lepal hours of sale, on the flrat Tuesday in July 1894, the following prope.ty towit. The, South, west, quarter of lot known as lo: No. (228) Two hundred and twenty eight in the 23rd. District and 3rd. Section of Floyd county Ga, containing 44 acres more or less, said lot sold as the property of Samuel. & Lu crctia, Thompson, Minors. This June «th. 1894. Anderson, Thompson. Guardian for Samuel & Lucre' ia Thompson. ALUMNIUM. It is true that every brick in a house and every bank of clay con tains a considerable amount of that beautiful metal alumnium. But science has not yet discovered any economical way of extracting the metal from clay, because in the form it now exists, namely, alumnium oxide, it is combined with silicon oxide, and these two substances behave like a pair of Siamese twins; they are so strong ly bound together it is next to im possible to separate them. There fore iu the production of alumni um, chemists do not use clay, but turn to some material which con t; ins the oxide of aluminum free ’ from silica. The bwst material is a mineral known as cry solyte, which comes cniefly from Greenland It j is a fluoride of alumnium and so dium aud au artificially prepared of alumnium; these ■ are tuspended iu a bath of molten | chlorides of the alkaline earthi and then subjected to electrotrol ysis by powerful dynamos. The sodium salts are decomposed, the metalic sodium seizes eagirly upon the oxygen that was iu com bination with the alumnium, and as a result the white metal a um uium is freed and settles to the bottom. G'•f '5 Americas vv; ,• 1 ~ • I - ■ / g.-v . . Fo” Jnfcrm.Jion end frn-3 Uandbo* '< ■■ to CO.. Imadway, Nev, York. Oldest onrenu for s<y;.xriTtg It? In America. I Kvery patent trikon ont 'ey us is .’ rought before the public by a no .icc given free of charge in th a Larseex eircnlr.ttnn of nnv scientific paper in tho wund. Splendidly Illustrated. No Intellicent man should oe without it. Weekly, WJ.iH) r. year; fI..W sir m inths. Address MUNN .4 CO.. , VVBLISHEKS. lilt Broadway. New York. THE NORTH ROME REVIVAL. CONTINUES ITS GLORIOUS WORK. The revive 1 at the North Rome Baptist church continues to grow in interest as it progresses. There has been to date seveu additions to the chu-ch, besides others who have pro fessed conversion but have not join ed. Sunday was a red letter day at their meetings, aid the pastor Rev. Jesse Hunt was most happy in the deliverance of a grand sermon that went with spiritual power to the minds and hearts of his hearers. Last night the service was con ducted by Capt- A. b' S. Moseley, who talked on the “great Salva tion’ as the sinners only hope and only escape. Twenty anxious, burdened sou’s came to the altar, signifying their desire for their great salvation. The service this morning was iead by Rev, Mat Reese and was a go«d and profitable one. Service lonight at 8 o’clock and tomorrow morning al 9. A cordial welcome is extended to all. OATS! OATS! OATS! 1,000 Bushels ot Oats just received pnd for sale by the Rom© Grocery Co. MW. R For u er of Atlanta is doing up the Hill City today ■ Hon. W. C Bryar was in the city a few hours this forenoon. Mr Fry a® report s heavy rains at Six Miles .ion and says .that lie understands that good rains have fa’len in North Carolina district. Look up the pi ices in A. McArver & Co’s advertise ment cn frontpage and g° buy your goods from them. 4 1 Broad St uet.