The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, August 03, 1894, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE BUSTLER OF I OHB. B6ConQ>clA*4 M&il MBtter. „ .X’iv.'k (Editor, aud PHIL Ct. B\ R•). I Managei. DAILY AND SUNDAY. ▼ 'i MS OF SUBSCRIPTIG 10 cent - #eek or $5.00 per anuum ®FtCE’ Corner Broad Street ano u'lii.n Avenue. nMhPcliv of Rome, and Foyd, the ° f county’’ of Georgia. For representatives of Iloyd. Major Bob louche, Capt. John Reese, and plain “Mister” Moze Wright, And they will be elected,—To •3)ark that prediction.*' “N,. ; ,r Ibmliam. Tex - H ll " l> ‘ Ated a sensation by walking into a chuich while service was go ng on. The animal was with, difficulty driven from the building. A negro whose name is Robert ‘ Howell, and who lives at Capville. a station on the Florida Central -nd Peninsular railroad, about miles from Rochelle, claims <o have invented a perpetual mo tion Machene. A farmer from Wayne county, .North Carolina, says he has heard twenty farmer* in that county say that so fie are their crops that if •Ihey can get 7 cents for their cot ton they will be able to pay their Af'efcts, A tanner in Columbiana county, O .who rejoices in the rather nucom •iion name of Fi Restone, has a hob for figure 1 . Everything in natuie suggests numerals to him. lie lies t wake o’nights trying to calculate the number of Lairson a horse's hide and a’moys his family by 7 continually • counting them. The jailor of Clinton county, •Kentucky, has a bloodhound whici •_s a remarkable animal, although , 3ite young. The dog was recent y sent to Missouri to ferret out a !iad Peen assassinated in field near Kast I’rairi* in that state and the dog took the trail of the inurdei and tracked him down. The exportation of beef has- g e .tly ■enlarged in late years, although tin j,ok»' for 1893 was »ee ledly reduct c an ■cone parison with several years pre viously. In 1890 the total reached ? »y.O( ('.OOO nounds.the maximum re soeded; for ten vears ending with 18 >2 the annual average was 26>,000 -oQ p winds; in 1893 it was 290,000, pounds, having a value of nearly $25,906,000; the annual average ex „?«x.ts for ten years ending with 1892 1 »as $21,000,000. —Cincinnati Price • • 1 If the Tribune of Rome groom- S a a‘> Wright as an independ it candidate for congress? If not, Hion what doos the following edi tLoE' al paragraph, clipped trom its ,*colum ns, -mean: The whele state it- looking to ' .wards ibe'Seventeh for a big row 1 his tall. They shall have it.’’ -Several paragraphs, of the same general import, have appeared io as’columns in the last few weeks, • T T b:ch from a Democratic stand . point are very suspicious. What s the politics of the Tribune, any how? —Chattooga News. 1 One of tne liveliest men in ths 'little city of Dycusburg, Ky , is ...ark Hurd. His fii-udliness ex i.et’df : >r only to human kind but ho .domegtic aninfals seem to un dtsrstand and appreciate his sun xay disposition. He has a Trained rat that, readily answers ‘'mew’ • •* his question, that hands out his ut footjwhen the lefthand is cal I for and the .right when it is ■jKtiited he can count five aud do her iutel'igeut things. Then Lsrkin has a rooster that has been H»a.ued to crow to play dead to .feel despondent and to tell hie politics. Jk. young lady who recently heard r*2C. Jouea tells the following: Br ‘ ioreiaeginaing his sermon, if one of bis harangues may’ be so called,' he proceeded to rebuke late comers: j ‘•Now what m ikes veu women late?, I’ll tell you—primpin All the late cjmers who didn’t stay at home to primp, stand up.” No one rose ex cept a very ugly old woman, Sam looKed at. her in silence a moment aud exclaimed: ‘‘Weil, God knows, sister, you need primpin , aud it dont make no difference h>w late you come hereafter. I’ll m ike uo fuss . From a commercial point of view the new South of today is a quarter of a century in advance of the South of ten years ago, where ten years ago cotton seed went to ■vaste, today 500Jcottonseed mills are transforming this waste into a handsome income for the plant er. These milk exported during the year ending May 2, 1894, s4l, 033,000 worth of cottonseed oil; $6,084,200 worth of oilcake and meal,and $5,203,675 of other grades of oil. This industry aloae adds about $53,000,000 annually t > the wealth of the South, —Kansas City Times. It was clearly demonstrated ( during the recent strike at Chica go that your Uncle Sam is ready for war if that .is what is wanted and needed to carry out law and order. It’s a fool idea for us la boring people to be talking war when we know that the standing army of the United States could lick us the first round, and just think of the misery and privations it would bring upon our families? Instead of provoking the military we should remain within the strong arms of the Union for protection of life and property, and bethank ful for the protection.—Buchanan Banner. A woman's college has just re ceived a unique gift, in the shape of a largo c diecteon of photo graphs of babies of university wc aiou. The obj ct of the collection .3 to prov, by ihe well-fed and weli-cared for >ook of the youthfu' •<u>'j -ct=, that the higher educ - Hou d >es not necessarily unfit wo pitr'fahTduiy as mothers, and that the cultivation of the feminine brain is not detrimental to the rear ing of sound ami nealthy children. The idea of such testimony is a mvel one, hut if the collection c-pretenls a lair percentage, it -is i con elusive argument,’—Bal ti more American. The theory that most criminals are illiterate and that education alone is a prevenative or cure of crime is not sustained by statistics. The report of the Superintendent of Prisons in New York shows that ot 3,304 convicts in the three peni tentiaries of that State, 352 are illiterate, 81 have a college educa tion, 191 an academic education and 2,623 a common or public school education. This raises a question whether greater pains should not betaken to instill prin ciples of honesty and virtue in public school pupils, and it also suggests that a great many youths who leave school with sharpened wits, but without any trade or landicraft, drift from idleness in to crime.—lndianapolis Journal. The Buff Jo Commercial says that R tdeliffe College, formerly Harvard Annex, has among its undergraduates this year the first Japanese girl who las come to this coun’ry to be edu cated. She is a Miss Shids Moti, and she is described as a charmiug combi nation of Japaimsw features, English dress, American coiffure and ‘ Japa nese-Anglo” language. She is the daughter of a wealthy banker fti ' Yanagaw , T a pau, who was converted i to Christi nity some years ago and has educated his s-ms aid daughters in that faith. Miss Mori will stu ly in Engl nd and France, is well as in the United States, and will then return to Japan to devote herself to education 1 al and missionary work. She is nearly 20 years old. The Normal and Industrial In stitute for the colored people at, Tuskeegee, Ala., has just closed , its thirteenth year. The institute began with just nothing, except an appropriation of $2,000 from the State for tuition. It began in. a little church ami shanty, which it did not own, with one teacher and 800 scholars. It now holds property to the amount of $200,- 000 free, including lands buildings, live stock, apparatus, etc. It has 791 pupils and 48 teachers in the various departments. It has grad uated 166 students, who are doing good work in the various depart ments of life as teachers, farmers, mechanics, etc., and its influence is felt among the colored people all over the South.—Public Opin ion. A CHURCH GOING ROBIN. A few Sundays ago, says the Lon don Standard, the family of Mr, \V A. Wykeham Musgave,enteting then pew in Thayme Park C-iapel, Oxfon - shire, wer-j surprised to see a parti ally built robin s nest on the book ledge against a prayer book and : hymn book. The family immidi.telt decided to occupy another seat an i to leave the little redbreast uomolest ed in its strange.abode. On the io - lowing Sunday the nest was comp:. •- ed aud contained five eggs, and on the succeeding Sunday the bird sa on the eggs during rhe whole of the servics. It has now been found Ih.it the bird has hatched four young ones, and the mother flew in and out of th< chapel c uring the service vsitia food for her younsf. ■ i ' ; > -r: -i '.221 s Bjl rMW M.V.U OLE A'.' that’s the way yow skin will be, it you . take Dr. fierce's G-okkr. Medical Discover v Dimples, bion hes, erup rious, and humors are utterly baiiisl.c-;! by thh me Deme. It talcs away, more thoroughly and certainly than anything else, the blood poisons or impurities that cause them. For every Skin, Scalp, ind Scrofulous affection, no matter how it came, the “ Discovery ” is a direct remedy It cleanses, builds up, strengthens, and in vigorates every part of the system. Eczema, Erysipelas, Salt-rheum, Totter, Boils, Car buncles, Enlarged Glands, and the worst Scrofulous Sores and Swellings are com pletely and permanently cured by it Unlike ordinary spring medicines, the “Dis covery ” works equally well at all seasons. Practically, it’s sold on trial. If it ever fails to benefit or cure, you have your money back. You pay only for the good you got. No cheap substitute, urged by a tr’.cky dealer, though it may be better for him to M.I, can be “ just as good ” for you to buy. LITTLE i naiue The Haoeas Corpus case of L l * Davidson, came up for hearing l» • ore Judge John P. Davis the morning and was continued until 2 o’clock tomorrow evening. A young Miss Camp died out at West Rome this morning. She had only been sick a flhort time and her death was a great shock to her many friends out in that commu nity. Died tins morning at 4 o’clock Henry, the infant son of Mr.and Mrs. Edwin Clark. It had been sick only a short time, and its death was a shock to all, Its remains will be laid to rest at Au tiocli church tomorrow morning. Editor John Cain of the Chatanooga N jws pass d through the city todax enroute from Atlanta where he had been attending the big Democratic Convention. Hon Felix Corp t >f Cave Springs stopped over in the city today he i enroute howie from the Big Convei - which nominated Georgia’, next gov emo } Judge t, R. Lumpkin has returned home fom Atlanta, where lie as been atieudijg the Georgia Justice Convention. Mrs. Weatherly and her charming Miss May Marshall returned t< the city this morning alter a .deiight ful visit to friends in Chattanooga, Judge Adams, of the Seminole dis. trict <>i Chattooga passed through the city today after attending übou t six co .ventions at Atlanta. Postmaster Pepper, after a short business trip to At anta returned to the city today. Col, Jim Wyatt and his cl arm wife and sister returned to the ci y ' from At'aa’a, this morning. Col. R. M. W. Glenn, of Walk, er was in the city today, enrou e home from the Democratic con vention. Col. 1). B. Hamilton, Floyd's “war horse ot democracy” after several days in the city and at the Gubernatorial convention where h»' was a conspicuous figure, has returned to the city. -.THE BIGGEST FURNITURE HOUSE SOUTH,. 1E!!| ' -w' iM'Brw w ' S5-CO, . $15.00, i Why should Romans orci :iz&ns ibe surrounding country got Atlanta, Chattanooga or any otht r city except Rome when u>y wai to purchase furniture? The Hustler of Rome asks the question in a seriousness and after you have looKed over the cuts of beautif household furniture, as presen ed on this eage, and noted the remarl abiy low figures that set forth «-h - scdiiig price, we think you wiiiui derstand why we ask the question. T*’".?"' Or?* WjizJ -- '' $30.00, SUWO’I '"'hat the McD maid Sparks - -tewart Go., is the furnitui Ful-'f, J:p r S£,?.d? 1 th * “ > ° d * dv • , ““ 3 ’ b ” »“»1 Itewli I 9 I ' Iml i Wfc ■ MMB« O'K' iHwM >4 it gig—f ]|| Eggggl • iwl ' ' ■ SS.Q D, .-cDonald-liark-Swart Gm. ♦ROME GEORGIA..*