The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, August 01, 1894, Image 2

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IRE HUSTLER OF ROME. secona-clMn Mail Matter. PHIL G. BYRD, j K Man r^" d . daily and sunday.j T ' MS OF SU3SCRIPTIG IO cent - week or $5 00 per annum FFICE: Corner Broad Street and •rifth Avenue. Os the city of Rome, and Foyd, the "Banner county * of Georgia. For representatives of Floyd : Major Bob Fouche, 'Capt. John Reese, and plain “Mister” Moze Wright, And they will be elected, —To mark that prediction.” The naked truth and Ida Wells are not on iut mate terms. The white people of Romo don t ’believe in dying during the month of July. M. Dickinson has wone the ititte' of 1 The White House Phono ; graph ” While you "Dam the Etowah’ 'Chew your Oostanaula mud and igrow Tat. ‘ Living wont be in it with the Democratic show at the State •Capitel tomorrow. Bacon is as fresh as a d+isy and keeping id. the m ddle of the road many laps ahead of his competi iore. “With W, ¥. Atkinson nominated for Governor,Hines, Watson, Wright A Co. will have to go west and grow up with tbs countr', A Bill'recently submitted to He House by Strauess of New York wa?> bound in oil cloth and tied with a .-silk bow. Dozens of “B inner county” detno- • crats will attend the grand democrat ic rally at the Gubernatorial conveu. ition in Atlanta tomorrow, ‘•Protective'” tariff is a combination •of greed and selfishness. It is a rob bery of the many for the benefit of a ;few.—Griffin News. The Possum Trott Gazett thinks that all dowering plants are of the female sex —because they wear ‘‘Bloomers’’ Duly one death, a two weeks old colored child, occurred in this city during the month of July, just passed—think of that. Hon. Seab Wright says he has 'not been, is not nor will he a candidate for congress. We know tha,t Joe expressed him self as *''ove, The American people, who a few weeks aero were anathematising Gro ver Clexdiand seem to b r , like a pen dulum, swinging back into the demo cratic line. The legislature will have to elect a when it meets in November and we Lave beard no better man for the place than Hou. A. <0 Bacon.—Covington Star. The’first sweet potatoes brougot ■ about-$2,20 a bushel in Atlanta — ’think of that! No potatoes are • small when they get into vthe’GfttO'City hill. Jt *was 611 a mistatke about the restoration of the fast train on the Centra! betweeu Atlanta and Savanah. There will be uo Nancy TTupdrs on the track thia year Savawh Press. A many imjdiries are made <4 lo what Tom Watson expects out of the present campaign. Sub- P*P er aud ; Uuited States Sen« JzZJranawick Times,’ 7 „ Deerfoot, the Seneca Indian, who in 1863 was hailed as h > champion ranner<of the .world and who was set fat Ainarica and England, in still do the reeatvatibh‘(of his peo tool for from Irving, N. Y. Our ‘ Devil’ wants to buy a yourg whale with which to experiment, lie says he will put him in his daddy’s fish pond and feed him on dried ap ples and butter beans and see how big he will grow. The honey guide is an African bird which flies before hunters, leading them to trees honey is to be found. When the men get all the honey they need the birds take their share.—Chrouich. While- the Japs are sweeping Chinese to the bottom of the Seas and the Chinese officials are ewear ing there is no war —we foel re minded of the Constitutions cry of “Come Down Mr Atkinson!'' Tuffaintit? Leadville was called California Gulch from 1859 till 1861. It was then a golc producing point, aud from 1861 till 1876 was almost abandoned I’he discovery of the great beds of carbonate gave it new life. The hot summer month of July has passed and gone and not a single death has occurred among the white population of the “Im perial City.” How is that for a town of 15.000 people? Alkali Ike—Going to the debitin’ society to night? Blizzird Bill— Guess so. What is the question? Alkli Ike— Whether it is better to be a Sanator or to have the three card mo’e priv ilege at a country fair,—Cincinnati Tribune. The Cincinnati Southern shops at Chattni o »ga required all members oi the American Railway Union to give up their membership iu the order un der the penalty of discharge, and the fifteen members yielded their cards. This ac:ion has led to considerable comment, but it broke up the league. JA'— ■■■ ' Prince Roland Bo napart, who fr now the hope of the Bon ipartists Prince Victor being poor and in exile is building a palace on the Avenue d’lena in Pans of so spendid a kind that it will be one of the show places of the capitol Hiresancu ii iland for the R {publics poor Oliver. Hon. V , H Fleming is receiving warm endorsements all over the Stat, in his race foijthe Speakership It is probablejthat he will betunanimously chosen, a compliment which he richly deserves. —Augusta Chronicle, Will the Chronicle please tell us “Why"’ Who is Bill Fleming any how? Highwayman (to Mr. Levy, sec ond-hand dealer in miscellaneous property) —Your money or your life. Mr. Levy—Mine friendt, you can not exbect me to gif you my money for nodiugs, and mine life von’dt do you no goot. But I tells you vot I vill do—l vill buy dot bistol off you at a fair brice —Tid-Bits. A Lexington (Ken ) woman has ordered a five hundred-dollar mono ment for a deceased poodle. If her husband were to die, says a pepery contemporary, it is a question wheth er she would wreck the estate to erect a suitable monument to bis memory, or let the same shaft do for both. He would be fortunate to get in on the ground floor with the purp Judge Hines spent yesterday at ot. bimon, and in the poetic attire >f the beach sported with the z u si '.-f an eighteen year old, riding the graceful waves and spaying mists the foaAing breakers.—Brunswick Times. “The Judge” seems to want to kinder get use to the “salty”—for his urctic trip up the historic cur rent of Salt River. In a letter written from Florence in 1860, and recently sold iu London Robert Browning speaks enthusiasti cally of the liberal treatment his wife received from American publishers. They paid her SIOO a piece for heir poems and ofiered $2,600 a year for an amount of labor which would cost his wife and himself but a single morning a week. Since 4 then, how evei, Americans have read Stanton, Field, and Ri«y, and are wondiring 1 ow the/ could have been such foola A TAME AFFAIR. Judge Hines is not proving him self to be a leader of suffiicient magnetism to arouse enthusiasm iu the ranks of the populists, IU is making a verv tame campaign Unless he does better than he has yet he wi’i not poll as large a vo'e as the populist candidate for guv ernor did two years ag >. The truth appears to be that Judge Hiues isn't quite so much of a pbpuliet as some of popuiisi leaders would like He recogniz s the truth and strength of the prin ciples of the grand old Demo, cratic party, and that fact hampers him when he begins to talk popu lism to a crowd of populists.— Athens Banner. transparent bricks for hot HOUSES. Experiments with glass bui ding bricks were begun in 1891, by M.T'al conier, au architect of Lyons. Thes«- brick are hollow, being blown like bottles, and are given forms—juch as cubes, hexagons’etc.—that permit of ready laying. A bituminous cement, with a base of asphalt, is used with them. The bricks serve as double windows, giving protection against both cold aud heat; they are good in sulators of humidity aud noise, am 1 , they lend themsolvos readily to the decorations of buildings, either b their form or color. Many applica tions are foreseen. The bricks are neater than marble in meat market , ind especially adapted for baffi hal’s > hothouses, hositpals, refrigerating es tablishmes s, and buildings in which ibsence of windows would be an ad vantage. A hothouse of glass bricks is of,about ordinary cost, saves fv.e’» and resists hail.—Ashton, Enlatd Reporter. No, woman aint “in it,” Along with the Senate, When talking with the mouth is the racket The sisters wouldn't rair if The House tired the tariff— If she could wear her own skirt and jacket. DULCIN Dulcin or sucrol.a new sweetening tgent wnichissiil to ba from 290 co 250 times as sweet as sugar, was first produced by J Berlinblau. Structurally it must be described is ptra phauacetol carbainid. It is an aromatic uric acid derivative rela’- ed to phenac- tn. It is a white pow ier which melts at 173 degrees C. to 174 degrees C., and is soluble in ab >ut 800 parts of wafer at 15 deg.C fifty parts of a cold 90 per centsolu t *on of alcohol, These p trticulars are taken from a oontrbution by Professor Robert, of Dorpat,tothe Centralblatt fur Innere lledicin Particulars as to its physiol ogical effects are afro given, Dog seem comparatively sensitive to dui ein, dying with such evidences of blood destination as icterus, while rnbbits appear to be quite impervious to its influence. Professor Kobert rela es his own experience with the drug in the case of ca’s. These animals reveal no evi dence of blood destuction but seem to die with symtoms of cerebral para lysis; this is alsojthe maimer of death of froge subjected to subcutaneous injections of dulcin, These are. us corse, the extreme effects of poiso nous doses. In the relatively small doses neees sary for sweetening the food of dia betic patients and the obeoe, Proses sor Kobert considers the agent ham. less, and mentions a case iu whic i eight grammes were tuken daily f r three weeks with impunity. The Lancet savs it is quite evidei i however, from the physiological ex periuces related that some is neces sary in the use of «liis article. ro /fn a ... « . n,eu ’’ ailments only medicine that's guaranteed. lx *• do©sn t *lxHwfit or cur®, in •vory cmuo youn money is returned. Ou these terms’ what ebe can be “ jqrt as good" for you to’ "she “ Prescription" regulates and pro- ? o ‘*“ «»• natural functions, never con Diets with them, and b perfectly harmb— fai any condition of the female system. It im difstion, enriches the blood, brings refreshing alssp, and restores I—Uh and JU GET STRONG, if you’re a tired out or “run-down” woman, with Dr. Favorite “Preecriptioa. And, if yon Miff er from any “ female com plaint * or disorder, you get well. For theee two things— to build up wo men’s Btrength, and to euro wo- TTlMe.’■ •THE BIGGEST FURNITURE HOUSE SOUTH.* iww 102111 IHBHr - , i S'gp '-Tr- L i'F-’WTT 'SUOI ® JIM Oiw fealML, fawJ ®5.00, ® 3 0,00 515.00, Why should Romans orcitizensof the surrounding country an f Atlanta, Chattanooga or any city except Rome when they want to purchase furniture? The Hustier of Rome asks the question inai seriousness and after you have looxed over the cuts of b*antfi household furniture, as presented on this n^ge,and noted the remark ably low figures that set forth the selling price, we think vou wHI un derstand why we ask the question. " A." - \ ;pagjj S ' K i' gb teoi 520.00, SIO.CO- kz...TJ iat lu e McD >na d-Sparks- b’ewart Go., is the bigges 1 furniture in the scuta, all you have to do is to call and enquire for a piece and 4- h u en J ook i thr grand assortment and make H-°FoHo e + ectlo 2' e y. st l er of , Rome knows whereof it speaks when jyXZ, s ts reader t 3 that the goods advertised by this great firmare Hi iISI si «TinW i irttiw ! ■ i ill? ’Bt.® « • Ui wJ/ Ki' ®llh ' 1 ’5 —M &L J|||l B 53.50, SBS.OO, .w -4»»McDonald-Sparks-Stewart Company,**’ “ROME G-EORGIA/