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’THE HOSTLER OF LOME.
He/vino-c lsa* Mall Matter.
PHIL G. BYRD, j E MX'g‘“ d
daily and Sunday.
TERMS OF SIIBSCRIPTIG
10 cent U week or $5 00 per annum
FFZCE: Corner Brood Street and
C|fLh Avenue.
Os the city of Rome, and Foyd, the
“Banner cou'-ty of Georgia.
For representatives bt hloyd:
Major Bob Fouche,
Capt. John Reese,
and plain
“Mister” Moze M right.
And they will be elected, — lo
-nark that prediction-’
The fellow who run- in debt knows
the Handicap of Lis race.
The seat of war is being kicked
-from Chicago to California.
No, Maud, dear, the weather bu
Teau is not bill d’t liko a refriger
ator.
Skaggs of Alabama, is becoming
knotoriously known in a knutional
way.
One reason the town bull —y hates
the Hustler of Rome, is because it’s
S o yead.
Money may not bring happiness
but it has away helping a fellow get
In s bouse in order for its arrival.
When a young man, Debs broke
into the legislature, now he seems to
’want to brake every thing in sight.
Pullman may know all about sleep
ers but be will have no haiboi-trator
business in hissen.
Japan has had another earth quake
Chicago is still wrestling with th 1
strike
lie fired our devil on the glorious
Fourth, and today enjoyed the echo
of the r >rt of his discharge.
’Eariy county has a fair prospect
'tfor 8L abundance of hog and hom
iny.- Blakely Observer.
Let Tie Geo: g'.a farmer think on
then >t s’tua ion and return to
his o. love —the famous “Razor
back
The Chicago women will never
jforg.. ? Debs. Since his advent
■‘•trains .re not as long as they
have been.”
Men '■w'bo reoet on a political
fence may not have to hedge, but
Shen, they dunt have much fun
eyether.
If you want whipped cream and
milk Shake, apply ai- the city
pound promptly with “New arri
vale.”
The most extensive mines are those
■of Saxony. Toe galleries have 123
miles of length. The pit must be clean
ont of sight.
Home should and must own her
own electric light plant Her
streets can be lighted fur one third
it he cost,
■ Santa may have been cool and
cjollscted all his life but one of
the Jest things he will do will be
to “loose his head.’
The-fell owing bill is posted in
large letters at the door of a thea
tre in Brussels: ‘Moral pieces
every Sunday end Tuesday,’’
Sixty socialist deputies hav* been
added to the French Chamber during
the last.tcu yeaid. But Santa was
nearer Carnot tuan any of them.
Col. Ramsey showed us a enap
bean, this morning nine inches
long and he Las a patch just like
it. —Valdosta Telescope.
A man never knows what he can
do until he tries; and then, after
ward, he is often very sorry Hat
he found out, —Arkansaw Thomas
Cat,
There is a young fellow named Debs
Who weaves some industrial webs,
But wait till the gunnirg
Beg..is, and 111 b running
Will show how some fortitude ebbs.
-Augusta Chronicle.
You will never see Debs on the run,
For his kind of a sun-of-a-gun
Sets the other man hooting—
From afar sees the shooting,
While he reaps all the glory and fun.
No wonder the “Jeaver Slid. * btaf
has a feeling akin to vinegar when
she gazes ou the officer on his beet
—and knows that her mother is in
the “jug.’’
Ihe Greek Church employs two
rings in the marriage service—one
of gold, the other of silver A kase
where pair is more essential than
parity.
Albany and Americus will soon
be connected by telephone. And
Mclntosh will doubtless advise
Myrick to quit talking through
his hat.
A New York violinist was find $3
for proposing Io a young lady, lie
should return thanks for his deliver
ance and Jet female women aloue
here after.
Betsy Shelton, of Henderson, Ky.,
is ‘JG yeais old and-the parent of 14
children, 117grandchildren,282 great
grandchildred and 19 great great
grandchildren.
Se;ve my icecream on a saw—sir,
said the karpenter as lie filed his or.
der. The waiter ‘‘saw his teeth”
and knew that he had nailed a plane
man,
“Kahssinmer Perrygay” with
the accent on the final “ay,” is the
way sticklers for the exact say
tii<- new French president's name
must be pronounced.
ihe Tillman-Butler Kilkenny affair
over in the Palmetto state seems to
have dropped beneath the Lethean
waves since Debs has railroaded hi e
\V mdy City wake on the country.
A set of chimes, imported from
the old country, will be placed in
the magnificent clock of the new
Cathedral in Savannah. The clock
and chimes will cost about $7,000
An old mai l would not exchange a
properly manned court ship for at
whole, fleet of yachts, i’he cute old
sister has an “Ohl Salt’s” eye for mat
rimoiiial seafairing.
“Valkyrie” the ‘‘avenger of the
slain.” Wnen last heard of the Valky
rie was slain—out of sight, and th®
briney tears of the ocean were bath
xng her wounds.
Iho water-drinkers of Rome
kuss the Ooßtanaula more in s
minute then The Hustle of Rome
“dams the Etowah” in a mile—
who ruint them water-works any
how?
Pleasant Beach, Conn., yester
day raised a monument to Captain
Kidd, the pirate who earned hi?
bread two centuries ago by “kid
ding” the plutocrats of that day
and generation —Augusta News.
She must be a swan-necked bute
that Laps Walker, of the Chatta
dooes Eveniug News, is paying
couTv to these days. Listen:
1 he longer the neck, the happier
the girl these good old sizzling ice
cream flays’.
The Augusta lieraid says that
all Democrats will vote for Mr. Al
kiusou, whether they desired Gen.
Evans’ nomination or not. Those
who prof, ssi d. to bo Democrats,
but who won’t vote tor Atkinson
now, fooled themselves. They nev
er were Democrats.
Just as sure as tno Press of the
state reflected tne nomination of
Hon. \\ . Y. Atkinson for Gover
nor, juot so sure does the same true
mirror now reflect the election of
Hon. A. O. Bacon, to the United
States Senate.
The Possum Trott Gazett man
comes forward with a dung hill
rooster and offers to rua a him
against any Floyd county negro,the
best two miles out of three. He
wants a kite shaped track and w 1
kivver the kasn. The rooster runs
from tcialch.
THE HUSTLER, OF ROME MONDAY JULY, 9 1894
The Louisville Times says: It
took the Senate from Ground
Hog Day to the Fourth of July to
formulate its bow-legged hump
backed and warp-eyed conception
of a Reformed Tariff, how long
will it take the Conference Com
mittee to lick and kick the the dis
torted thing into Buch ehapo that
both the House and the Senate
will accept it? Qtiien sabs?
This is the right doctrine com
ing from as it does from the Au
gusta Herald, one of the staunch
est Evans’ papers in the late cam
paign;
All this talk about Democrats
not supporting the nominee of the
August convention is to cur mind,
bosh. Any voter who cannot sup
port Mr. Atkinson and bis state
ticket never was a Democrat and
has been fool mg himself all along
We have recently heard several
farmers Bay they never saw cotton
lake on as much “fruit” ,to it’s size
as it is .taking on now but the
troub e as there is not enough
weed to hold a sufficient amount of
“fruit” to make anything like a
crop- Several are of the ’opinion
that the July crop will be about
all that will be made this year.—
Oglethorpe Echo.
Reports from different sections
show’ that the rain has fallen pret
ty generally throughout the cotton
districts during the past week
The growing crop has been greatly
bem flitted, but there is consider
able complaint that the yield will
not bo up to the average ou ac
count of the recent freeze and con
tinued drought. In Terrell the
crop is far belcw the average for
the season. —Dawson News.
The reason why such recent suc
cessful English novels as “Ships That
Pass in The Night” and “Dodo’huv
been pirated in this country to the
loss of their authors.is because those
books did not obseve ihe copyright
law which demands that the plates
be set up in the United Slakes. There
is, to be sure, a good deal of dissat
isfaction over this provision and it is
of doubtful wisdom but so locgasit
is law, foreign writers must observe
it or lose their American rights.
By a dispensation of providence
Georgia fruit growers lost their crop
this year, and now by a dispensation
of Debs the Georgia melon growers
are ‘‘in the soup.” This is sure Laid
luck.—Macon Telegraph.
Yes, and then comes one Thomas
E. Watsor, who, in his paper, says
that these noble strikers are the good
men of the West with whom these
same melon growers and other Soutn
ern farmers must unite for a common
redemption. As usual the West
rides the carriages in the procession
while the South foots the funeral ex
penses.
IT W AS A FAILUE.
It appears from reports concsrn-;
iug the speeches of Watson and
Hines at Macon that the affair was
a failure. It was boasted that ten
thousand populitts wouid swarm
into Macon on that occasion, but
the crowd reach two thous
and despite the fact that excur
soins were run into Macon by the
different railroads. By the lime
the campaign is over, ihe gentk
tnau from Coweta will couvence
(hem that their vote m Georgia
wiii bear about the same propor
tions as the real crowd at Macon
did to their boasted expectations.
—Athens Banner.
WHITTIER’S ONLY LOVE.
It had to come. A romance con
nected with the Quaker poet was
ouo of the things inevitable. It
Miss Elizabeth Peabody could not
escape the search-light of posthu
ni us curiosity, or the inventive
power of enterprising comui-mti
tor«, how can anyone hope to es
cape to great sensation? Not only
isitliu- that “Love rules the
camp, the court, the grove,” but
Lai l.e finds bis way beneath the
pb-cid urab waist-coat, and pene
trates the prim i'olus of the Pun
tan keichief,
In the days of 1827, Whittier
saw and loved a maiden, a school
mate at Haverhill, Evalina Bray,
She, too, felt the sweetness of
“love’s dream but like the gay
wife of John Milton, Whs not pro
pared to eacrafice the gajetiea of
her life to the restraints and dull—
ueßß of a Quaker household. She
married an Englishman (who had
■Mtled in New England) ami has
ived for many years a widow. In
he early days she gave a minia
ture portrait of herself to Whittier
which bung in his home at Ames
bury until taken down by his ex
ecutors and sent to the original,
Though the poet never spoke of
bis love, it is supposed to have
bqen the inspiration of eome of
his“poetry—
“How thrilU once more the lengthening
chain
Os memory at the thought of thee !
Old hopes which long in dust have lain,
Old dreams come thronging back
again.
And boyhood live* In me again I
1 feet the glow upon my cheek.
Its fullness of the heart is mine,
As when I learned to hear the speak,
Or raised my doubtful eye to thine!
I hear again thy low replies,
I feel thy arm within my own,
And timidly again uprise
The fringed leaves of hazle eyes
With soft tresses overblown.
Ah! memories of sweet summer eves
< waves ami willowy way,
Os stars and flowers and dewy leaves,
And smiles and tones more dear man tUtey.”
And as a matter of course, Mr’
Whittier was musing upon his lost
love when he wrote —
“For of all sad words by tongue or pen,
The saddest are these: -it might have
been
And—
“ God pity them both, ‘and pity us all,
Who vainly the dreams of life recall,,'
HOW’S THIS!
We offer One Hundred Dollars
Reward for any case of Catarrh that
•annot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO. ’Props.,
Toledo , O.
We the undersigne 1, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years
ind beli««e h’m perfectly honerable
u all busme 8 transactions and fi
lancially able to carry out any obli
gations made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggist,
Toledo, O.
Warding, Kinnan & Marvin, W hole
itde Drngirists, Toleds, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, acting directly upon blood
tml mucous surfaces of the system.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggists Testimouia s free.
GROCERIES AT COST
Ag we are going to
move soon.
We offer our entire
stock at cost, you can
buy anything. We have
at wholesale priceswe
mean to sell you if you
want to buy. We think
that we bought our
goods as cheap as the
same kind of goods
can bo bought by any
one. So come to see
and save yourself
money.
Very Respt.
Morris & Bro.
Opposite Central Hotel,
A. B- McArver & t.. 0.
have decided to make
a change in their busi
ness and have thrown
everything in their
house on the .market
at New York Cost. No.
401 Norton Corner.
Read A. B. McArver
& Co.s new advertise
ment. Everything will
be sold at New York
Cost for Cash.
“Warter’s hand
made” is the latest
production from the
Rome Cigar Factory.
For sale by all dealers.
Pry one.
TO RENT:—A five room cottage
with clothes presses, wash room am:
■xli conveniences Most central am'l d< •
sireable location. Vv’iii take boar i in
nart for rent if Halibfiictory. Addresk
7-8 6t F. E . A., Rome Ga.
I nrw -ir i l -itw ■th r— w ii mm-nmn mu
Have you tried
“Warters Handmade?
if not. ask your dealer
for it.
ABIC
KNOCK DOWN
Our prices are now down where
none teed stand back. Huge bar
gains within the reach of all. Stamp
ed upon the fuce of every article is its
merit, its beauty and its cheapness
VV hat is the use of paying great big
pt ices for goods when we can fur
nish you the same thing so low the
they go at first sight.
Lovely Fabrics
“Oh! How charming, ’ is what alj
the fair sex say about our lovely
summer fabric. l . The designs are
Bewitching, the pattern , are tyliih
and unique, the prices winning in
cheapness.
Tremendous drives this week in
Dimities, Organdies, Foulards, Gren
adines,Swisses, Mulls, Challies,French
and German Ginghams, Pe sure and
see these goods, for in them there is
great profit to the purchaser.
A A’ x<
vUlingS.
Now is time iur Outings and we
have them in . -. usiun.. Dainty,
comfortable and able. They add
to the beauty of th. fair maiden who
wears them. Os ct se.
Linens.
Io the housekeeper we would put
the question, have you seen our stock
of Table Linens, Napkins, Towels,
Doylies, Tray Cloths &c? If not you
should see them, for they are charm
ing. Just here we can give you some
big drives.
Hosiery&Gloves
A more varied or standaid stock
of these goods cannot be found any
where. We carry the most reliable
dyes made, and therefore can guar
antee our goods to the trade.
Don’t Waite
For a mere convenient season, bu
eome now and cast your lot for bar
gains. You will be sure to draw th<
lucky number, for al are lucky.
THUS. FAHY
» -a -
~,-3 \ j •'• &
X ,-Q' /
.Rpot'k- -m
rtG-ucc the !:oir.r cf.nv ..
< a r ’ vril l ‘ l '“ -Dn,’ ' i ' '-■ !»
■ '■ ::
loos. Bo sure f'E ,j’
Sold everywhere, v ‘‘ " ■
The Chas. E.HireT:
1 Bond ‘Aj t v . ' 1 I E
J
4 EQUAL 1 2
I. e. Four Wer-ks bv our mptk
of teaching book-keeping is
t” Twelve Wcekßh y ' b^1(l
Positions "guaranteed wnder 1
tnin conditions, Be ßt n..f rnn -7
J?.™'” B .’ C ol'«S» in th, s» ut „
StudM Bin attend.,,,, ..."
year. Eleven Teacher,. N M bS
IS the educational center of h,
South. Cheap Board.
Enter at any time, Home stul?
Me have recentiy prepared books
on Book-keeping, Shorthand and
Penmanship especially adau J
to homestudy. Send for our Free
ipuatrated 80-page catalogue and
state your wants. Address J E
Draughon, President Draughon’g
Practical Business collet and
Schoo, of Shorthand and Teleera
phy, Nashville Tenn.
N. B— We pay $5 cash for all
vacancies of Stenographers Book
keepers etc,reported to us orovid’
ed we fill same.; (mention thi
paper when yon write.)
eWhat Nerve Be r fi es
have done for others
/$®V heywill d ®
for you.
V ° j
VICO .' : < JL
OF isthTXF k~J).
M easily. Quick! a . ' ■
and Permanently Restc cd. kicoxt.
n SlhM.™ co f e n r all W ' B •■' ■■'• - x ervousneis. I
Debility and all their train of evils resultin' I
from >nrly errors .nd later ex. \-ses; th" resuf I
of overwork, Mick ies, ’s•■!>v • Develop] I
and gives tone ar 1 nlrensth ' - *»ialoh I
S?opM kiana'jii-31 low* - utrbib I
pmiMMioiiH cause , i.v yeuihiVi er/o-u or ei I
cessive use of tobu.vo. oj?hi » ?-<nor I
wnlcn lead to consumption a 1 invaattr, i
1 r show - v ,. p ; I
rt itatiua. Insist upon having I
Swerve Berries, I
pocket. Price. per box. six b res. on fulf I
L'^atme?'i, $6. no. iiiuarruitced Io eurvanysjue, ■
' ( 'lot k ■ ■ ':?a ■
b\ uiaii. upon receipt of pr ■ ■ in pli.,n wrap* ■
pei Pamphlet fn . Addn rdovw ■
A'AKBK.’AS AL <O.. (aHCznnatisO. ■
For sale by Crouch& I
Co. I
A GRAND OFFER! I
I
S'> : - ■ "Ji’i'EN H
t>ny.< "i
t' c chei-: .‘"''“J M
B -Vrorla-.-' ■‘•wiHCl M
V— &•>? I'.TACi:: t>.:' buvfl been
**’*• V> r . fr-'-■ -A"’” * M
S<dL L. /'j « V..UT.;-, :s- ■■■■•■;”
bx S' ■
W’ tn every caller, aWUeIJ
free, a r-.e '■"' blitlll ’' an J
Jy z> /?
World,lwu.iCaJ i . ....C ;."
rJ)cbarttesprepaid,for'.!'< ' ~a | .
Jn ev< ryen«e" p rwiw>.; , utl .
i, ■.•ru'.'S.bi'.. <a,
IK-.,-, or any da-<; iou:. ~w ll;
tud wii..’-h.s ; .:o ■l* : ... r .ot
tACB Bl.toCHne'iov.'s a. • resd
covcrvp.ascosiueu-. do, I"” i • i
M IDABIE HVX'iS' o' w
No. G East 14th St., *'*- ■
t Mg
I
Atlaiiifl
N Ad K’
N, C. & ST. L.
— to ~~ ■
Chicago „ K
( JIIU-mN l’;' W.
f\ us <s C itv , . HI
-ANO- m
I
Q.;;< k ti < ;»n«iV< •;
Pii-hnan S 1 1 • SUH
call ou or write to
J A SMJTH ri V
General Agcut.
J I. ■
Traveling Ta-. A.J fIH
JOS- 'O'.ov A- M
Traffic Man;.;a -'tun. MM
c I- hakaMW
Genera pass
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'••• St.b low x-ree 'y iAßMix ,u.S. J‘ r,:Mki * 1U BhME