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SE HOSTLER OF ROME.
Becona-cIAM Mail Matter.
PHIL G. BYRD, ’
daily and Sunday.
T MS OF SIJBSCRIPTIG
10 cent - week or $5 00 per annum
/•STICK: Corner Broad Street ana
fLh Avenue.
Os the city of Rome, and Foyd, the
'•Banner county” of Georgia.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
-
For Governor,
W. Y. ATKINSON, of Coweta,
For Secretary of State,
ALLEN D. CANDLER, of Hall.
For Treasurer,
R D. HARDEMAN, of Newton. |
For Comptroller-General,
WM. A. WRIGHT, of Richmond
For Attorney General,
J, M, TERRELL, of Meriwether
For ommissiouer of Agriculture |
R. T. NESBITT, of Cobb.
For Congress.
John W. MADDOX, of Floyd.
For State Senator,
(BARTOW'S CHOICE )
,¥or Representative, Fioyd Co,
ROBT.T. FOUCH,
JOHN 11. REECE,
MOSES R. WRIGHT ’
Tty»*'* good Anarchist are all I
dean.
date kontinuesthe national flour
01 Ala bam a .
Kolb knows what it means to
run “agin the grain.”
Now for business, the Senate is
prepairing for a vacation .
—. .
Its not only natural but proper to
S put U in the soup.
That “fruit of the caucus" —Dr.
Wit. H. Felton.
Talk about your rings, McGarrity
ofT’aulden don’t know what hit
him.
No' ycis can’t catcb the hay fever
-from kissing a grass widow. —Augusta
News.
Democracy is proud of Speaker
Crisp and “Mr. Maddox, of Geor
gia. ”
Day by day the showers fall and
corn and cotton bloom and
shoot.
While Hines is hustling for
notes, Watson is looking for sub
scribers.
Santo, the red handed murderer
□ f President Carnot will git it in
the neck on tomorrow.
Tne Texas cotton crop is in no
danger from boll worms, reports (■.
*he contrary n<»'withstanding.
The cost of running a big oceui |
..inei from New York to Liverpool
and buck is (something over $90,-
000.
Railroad collisions are some
what like life’s reverses— they oc
cur on the curves. —Albany Her
ald.
Many of the ‘•pops’’ were paral
yzed with surprise when the name
of W. H Felton was sprung upon
*hej’ j esterday.
l/ov—■ Dr. Felton remember to
have e- t- r called the boys he is now
leading,“lor the use of another,”
‘Norway rates?”
,s Seab really going to stump
•she district for his old enemy Dr,
Wiu, H. Felton? If he does what
‘he consideration?
Hal Moore says that while corn
’as advanced in puce, roasting
ears continue cheap, miking it
hard for the mule and “soft” for
the man.
When will the city lathers grade
the street in front of the elevated
houses ou lower Broad St. Como
geutlemeu"tote fair” with the“way
town town folks. ’
An Avilla (Ind.) man says that
when he went fishing last the mos
quitoes were so big they took thebaif
oft’ his bock before he could throw it.
into the water.
F‘ ur years ago Dr. Felton was
calling them the ‘ Couna-Hany ’’
party, and now they are beseech
ing him to sa v e them from politi
cial ruin—and the Doctor, he is
flopping with them,
Voltaire, when be liegan the study
of English and found tliaf'ague”was
pronounced as two syllables and
‘ plague” as one, said that he wished
that half the English bad one disease
and the other, half the other.
If there ever was a convention
from which there departed a lot of
disappointed delagates that cou
veutioa was held in Rome yester
day, and was the convention which
“Unanimously ” endorsed Dr. Fel
ton for Congress,
The Acworth Post says that the
Tom Watson Cartoonist is the
only paper in the state that does
not belong to the “ring.” The “Car
toonist” was the only paper to re
produce the Peril’s slanders on
Steve Clay.
Forty-one new industries were
organized m the South last week,
devoted to the manufacture of iron,
steel, glass, brick, lumber et' •
Crops in the South are promising
and a spirit of inierprise prevails
—Macon News,
By cyclist Zimmel man’s great suc
cess is said to be due to his abnor
mally large heart, which ’3 declared
by the doctors to be two inches lon
ger than the average. —Perhaps
Zi> '.lies big heart helps his wheel
along by giving an occasional big
bound-
Zeke Clotts, of Mobile Ala , is the
owner of an ox with a natural knot in
the middle of his tail. Several veteri
nary surguns have tried to untie it>
but there efforts caused the animal to
emir a strange, hoarse cry. Tue ita
is so shortened by the knot that it isl
I tactically valueless to switch off
flies, Here's a new wrinkle for the
lovers of Oxtail Soup.
Jerry Simpson says the Kolb,
ites in Alabama “got what they
might have „expected." The states
man from Kansao may be a bit pe
culiar in the selection of his foot
gear, but he lacks a great deal of
being a knave or a blooming fool.
—Albany Herald.
If Dr. Felton had intended
making this race to a finish, after
he had “accepted” the nomination
he would never have missed an
opportunity to ring in his“halla
luja lick” on the delegates. No
Doctor, there’s “a string to it” and
Mr. McGarrity would doubtless
like to know who holds the “out of
sight” end cf the string.
“Our John,” is on the track with
two vetterau flippers entered
against him. But let them run
tandem or tautum, relay or riot,
“Our John” is the peoples favorite
sod he is bound to come in with a
bigger majority than he won from
“Poor John” Sibley in 1892. For
ourrtasun B we refur you to his
magnificent record fer the past
two years.
If the Hines—Watson combina
tion have not seen the hand writ
ing ou tne wall, they can read it
in the complete overthrow of the
Koi bite movement in Alabama.
—Milledgeville Recorder.
The trouble with the Hines-
Watson combination is that they
can’t read writiu’ of that kind and
haven’t even got sense enough to
make their “mark.’’ Watson want's
subscribers.
By soaking a ] eck of tv hi at in a
gallon of whiskey and scattering it
among his broom corn, Patrick Flynn
of Ellicott City, Md , and his neigh
bors were enabled tc catch ’several
hundred sparrow*, which they had
made into potpie. Was it acampaigne
scheme of the prohibitionists? ]t
seems so, and more, that even probi
bitiomst might well sparrow gallon l
gallon to accomplish such s—wheat
eßultF« i&rjte
66 At 3®
Man
Suspects
Himself
. A Fool; <
* Knows it
At Forty,
And Reforms
His Plans;
At Fifty ,
Chides His
Infamous
Delay—
Resolves and ' i
Re-Resolves, ’ •
Then dies
The Same.”
When
The
Poet /C
Young •«
Wrote
These
Lines.
The
Man
Was,
Perhaps.
More
To be
Pitied
Than
Blamed.
But
Since
Constitution :
Offers z .
The Great
Encyclopedia
Britannica
At Ten Cent®
A Day
There is ‘
No Excuso
' • ■ For Such
A Failure
In Life.
Order
While
Introductory
Rates
( Are On. .
Write B
The Constitution,
Atlanta,
Georgia, .
Fgf
Application Blank.
NOTICE.
Georgia, IFoyd) To the SupeEox
County, >- Court of said conn-
) ty-
The petition of R. S. Draper shows
the following facts:
Ist. That petitioner is laboring
under disabilities imposed by the
granting of a divorce by the Supe
rior Court of Floyd county to Nora
Draper.
2nd. That Nora Draper ot said
county, on the 14th. day of May 189-
tiled in the Clerk’s office of the Su
perior court of Floyd county, her
application for a divorce, setting
north the following grounds to wit:
‘•Saiddefendantwasoftentimesc.ruel
abusive and unkind to your petition
er, and his treatment recently be
came so unkind and cruel to your
petitioner, that it became unbearably
for her said busband was continually
abusing and ill treating your petition
er by cursing h«r, charging her with
unchastity and that in her presence,
and in such and divers other ways,
making the life of your petitioner
miserable, his general conduct to
wards her being of such cruel chai
acter that no human heart of ;.nv
feeling could possibly bear and un
dergo by longer c-mtinuing in Lis
resence and living with him as his
wife, and they are now not living to
gether as husband and wife.’’
Upon the trial of ai d case at the
March term 1b94 of Floyd Superior
Court the following verdict wi.s iou
dered, it being the second and final
verdict: “We the Jury find sufficout
proof have been submitted to dir
consideration to author.ze a totalcul
vorce, and that a divorce, A. Viienno
Matrimonii be granted Plantiff, In r
maiden name, Nora Moore be restor
ed to her. and that the defendant
Robert Draper be not allowed i<
marry again. March 31st. 1894
Wheres >re petitioner prays the re
moval of his said disabilities at tLt
next September term ot said Conn
in compliance with the statues u
such cases made and provided. Ano
your petitioner will ever pray etc.
J. B, F. Lumpkin,
Petitioners Attorney
Filed in office July (ith. 1894.
Wm. Beysiegle,
Clerk
4HE BIGGEST FURNITURE HOUSE SOUTH]
mliil' IKSM
wjlbj wQ.
A v wl fi/WW WRI
ib| I
85Z O, SIO,OO $>15.00, I
Why should Roiy ans or citizens of the surrounding country so l
Atku St. Ch A'anrcga’or any other city except Rome when they wal
fO pu’ Tase •'•'hture? The Hustler of Rome asks the question ini
seriousne s and after you have looxed over the cuts* of beautil
household 1 n n lure, as presented on this page, and noted ihe remal
ably -c v i i ■ ires that set forth the selling price, we think you will J
.derstand why we ask the question. I
1 8rjeh ■■ LtWSI
F--- -■ ft c l r
th llhuhKH xl
kLW
t£i'i
S -20.00, u. SIO.OO,
Thot h-} M :9onald-Sparks-Slewart Go., isjthe-bigger furniiui
house n t j sou h. all you have to co is to call and enquire for a piec
offurni’ iii ® a i c t eri lok through the grand assortment and mak
yourse’ec on. The Hus+ler of Rome knows whereef it <ks whe
it tells ts -e id nr s that the;goods ad ver tised by this gicai inm ai
just as represented.
I IS|
WBF ; iwIF
: Mil ;
f-I '.r--AV l
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$3.50, SS.OC, ,s-g;.50.
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