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W MSTLER OF ROME.
Mai’ Hotter.
(Editor, 811(1
ff*S3JX< r Gr. BY hD, Manage!.
DAILY AM) SUNDAY.
‘ MS OF SUBSCRIPTIG
10 oeuf » reek or $5 00 per annum
♦
<TKC2B Corner Broad Street ana
s'tfch Avenue.
• ST? di-ie city <>f Rome, and Foyd, the
■’Banner county of Georgia.
fIMEMOCRATIO TICKET.
For Governor,
W.. 1. ATKINSON, of Coweta,
For Secretary of State,
LEN D. CANDLER, of Hall.
"For Treasurer,
■aL> HARDEMAN, of Newton.
'for Comptroller-General,
A. WRIGHT, of Richmond
’For Attorney General,
i . JK. TERRELL, of Meriwether
Commissioner of Agriculture,
J?_ T. NESBITT, of Cobb.
•For Congress,
.ciu W. MADDOX, of I loyd.
For State Senator,
<BARTOW 8 CHOICE )
'Fer Representative, Fioyd Co ,
ROBT. T. FOUCHE,
.JOHN H REECE,
MOSES R. WRIGHT.
'T- . -W - - " - - ~
iJiJs the .resignation you don’t
to tender that is generally the
> osghest.
stjenae men are too mean to be
aatpjij, and others are to happy to
icie su-een.
Throughout the entire world
fjifcsra e.re annually about 'IBO,OOO
•jauiiteides.
'’Brevity is the soul of wit,” and
wfeo ; s“esaorter”thau the funny
C" <»n a newspaper?
•'Like the cane Mills, the fre a h r<\
vz .’cv?^r‘ 4 grinds” away—the product
r each is better,“boiled”
Tiie Jmia-donary who lands a cai -
shore generally finds away into
lie 'interior. ”
The wicked flee when no man pei
-jjs'th'l —They will fly when a Rome
ysoticeman hits their trail.
Mudge Hines may be a smart
. but you can’t prove it by any
• duaetnber of his Rome audience.
LUha United States uses nearly one
ixalf of the quinine produced in the
Os course but for the fool sen
ate sve would never have been so
• .shakey,
s?f k Hustler of Rome aint no sen
itar but it it was it would vote for
ULh Civftoi, the “ Aar horse of Chat
.for secretary of the Senate. So
fi. -SFUIIIS..
The man who .subscribes for a i
u •?*’*; neper .and reads it is better
fualified for citizenship than the
stelk’w who borrows bis neighbor’s
-and - eals the news it contains.
•oUI 1. Sullivan gat boisterous in ;
New York a few nights ago and a
savy set waitor blacked his ere.
5 udliran should match the waiter
Gorbett and get even with
>• zb bruits
j‘).e United Slates boasts I. Q ,000.< "b
men of military age—bat most of
ii.se who live ab <ve the Mason and
Exxon lines are enrolled on the pen
<«* lists and would be exempted
few duty.
■. While United States mints are'
auuiung $&3,000 daily we do not ;
iheact the third party tawkiu it any
f’ariiapp ee Tom Watson has been
jalet on the subject they don’t be-
r j.eye a word of it.
■hell | circus is coming to Rome
jt. September 18th and the advent
•<. 4s e bill poster has caused great
43. ‘ le Hill Citi .It is c'aimed thf f
Ik w Selle buys haye a larger circus
tkafii e.«r, and are charging bu'Jifty
<wuts a- M iss on this year. The may
or end cecmcil should meet and ex
evd th-aui aminvitation to> come to
Gs-iEcr ..It. is a long time- since we
Ls,h*' , x? a circus.—Griffin News.
No, Maud, dear, the young men
you ste riding the street cars should
not be called dogs because they are
•‘setteis”—But its their more polite
brothers who are the “rising gener
ation’
If Seab is going to stump the
seventh in behalf of Judge Hines
or Hopper Felton.it seems like it
was about time he was at it. It’s
but*a few weeks now until Hines
willbe everlastingly snowed under.
.. i
Now doth the thirsty voter seek
The candidates galore,
And with a most beguiling wink,
He gently muruiers.— “more!"—MaconTel
graph.
John Hays Hammond, an Ameri
can engineer in the British South
African Company, receives a salary of
$(>0,000 a year. Think of that SS,OOU|
a month! Why if he would give us a
day and a half we could enlarge the
paper.
Mr Jesse Sims, of Walker countj,
cm a poplar tree recently,out of which
he got thirty two saw logs, each of
them seven and a half feet long
Jesse should saw wood and say
nothing ere he grows un-poplar and
gets “cut up.”
The influence of the social current
has the same effect upon human na
ture as that produced by the constant
friction of the sea upon the pebbles
on the beech. Rough corners ate
polished and sharp angles smoothed
down into symmetiical proportions.
Like crowded forest trees we staad
And some are marked to fall;
The axe will smite at G'od’s command,
And soon shall smite us all.
If Judge H ines is depending on
the votes of disaffected democrats
to elect him governor, he might as
well be making his arrangements
to continue the practice of law for
the corporations fur which he is at
present attorney ; —Lawrenceville
News.
li. Syracuse, the street on which
several of the newspapers have
offices was formirly called Robbers’
Row. Since the newspaper located
there, it h-ts been called Newspa
per Row, and now some people are
unkind enough to say that the old
name is more appropriate.
No, Maud, dear, the expression
■‘Dam the Etowah” is not a pKraze
from a profane history—but one of
those days the Historian will write
that the Hustler of Rome said ‘‘dam
it an the river will be dammed. And
Rome will be a manufacturing met
ropolis See?
How is it that the third party
claims to desiie a large per capita
circulation when everv third partv
congressman voted against the repeal
of the tax upon state banks? Let some
third party man that understands all
about it rise and explain.—Meriweth.
er Vindicator.
The Blairsville Herald tells of an
ear of corn which was brought to its
office on last Tuesday by Arthur Cole
man. There is one large ear in the
center of the forty small ones all con
nected together. We have not counted
the grains, but suppose there must
be twenty-five hundred on the forty
one ears. It is indeed a curiostity.
If you have any kind words
about you anywhere, bring them
out now and then. Say good things
about somebody. The people are
not ail as mean as you think thev
are when you have the “blues’
Most people are good—in spots at
least. Look at those spots and
make ’hern brighter—oven if they
pint very spotted.
Tne Columbus Enquirer says :
-Parson Felton, the Populist can
didate for Congress iu the Seventh
has refused a challenge from Soli
citor General A. W. Fite of his
own country, Bartow, to meet him
in joint debate. The parson throw's
himself on hie dignity, stating that
Col. Fite is not a candidate for
any office, and has no claim on
him for a joint discussion, Ths
fact is, the parson is particular
about the kind of fight he will get
into on the stump, and he is not
looking for A. W,
Neyther is he looking for John
W.eyether— Are you uncle Bill?
1 One of the best things ever said by
the patriot. Kossuth, whose body has
at last been laid to rest in his mi',
five Hungary, in answer to enquires
about hi« financial condition. ‘‘My
hands are empty, but they are clean.
What is a life of honesty and integ
rity these noble words represent! In
finitely better such a legacy than an
inheritance of millions of dollars.
AN UNNATURAL DREAM.
“I dreamed of you last night,” said
the preacher to the editor.
“And what was your dream?’’ .
“I dreamed,” said the preacher,
“that you went to glory, and were an
angel!”
“Nothing else?”
“That was all.”
“Wasn’t there anybody trying to
levy on my wings?”
The Rochelle New South says Hint
in one of Georgia’s counties a magis
trate was caked upon to perform a
marriage cermony, and knowing the
couple to be poor in this worlds goods,
the presidings officer joined them a s
man and wife in the manner of this:
Jim, will you take Bet,
Without regret
To love and cherish,
Till one of you perish.
And be laid u der the sod,
So help you God?
Charles ?, Culberson, who has
just been nominated for governor of
Texas, is a young man of 35, a fin
ished scholar in lajv and literature
and a fluent and eloquent speaker.
He was the choice of young and pro
gressive element of the Democratic
party in the State and defeated the
viteiau John 11. Reagan for the nom
ination. It is a very close parallel to
Georgia’s centest for the nomination,
and it is carried out by the fact that
Mr. Reagan will help make a deter
mined to fignt his opponent’s elec
tion.—Griffin News.
Alarming in exigence
from Lee county The Smithville
Enterprise says: “The Populist
nave increased in numbers in Lee
county since the election of 1992.
They onlv had eight then, now
they have eleven. Macon Tele
graph.
There, now'! Them’s Fioyd
county’s three pops done gone < ff
way down in the Wire Grasss.
We had missed um, but didn’t
thiuk they had sense enough to get
t iat far from the “Banu r Coun
ty . ’t
NOTICE.
Georgia, IFoyd) To tie Superio
County, > Court ot 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 ot May 1892
filed 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:
“Saiddefendantwasoftentimescruel
abusive and unkind to your petition
er, and his treatment recently be
came so unkind and cruel to your
petitioner, that it became unbearable,
for her said husband was continually
abusing and ill treating your petition
er by cursing her. charging her with
uuchastity and that in her presence,
and in such and divers other ways,
making the life of your petilioner
miserable, his general conduct to
wards her being of such cruel char
acter that no human heart of anv
leeling could possibly bear ami un
dergo by longer continuing in Li
resence and living with him as Lis
wife, and they are now not living to
gether as husband and wife.’’
Upon the trial of said casat th*
Alai ch term 1<594 of Floyd Superior
Court the fallowing verdict was ren
deied, it being the secund and final
verdict: “We the Jury find suffieout
proof have been submitted to dir
consideration to authorize a totalcul
vorce, and that a divorce, A. Viienno
Matrimonii be granted PlantiU, htr
maiden name, Nora .Moore be restor
ed to her. and that the defendant
Robert Draper be not allowed u ’
marry again.. March 31st. 1894
Wheres >re petitioner prays the re
moval ot his said disabilities at the
next September term of said Court
in compliance with the statues in
such cases made and provided. And
your petitioner will ever pray etc
J. B, F. Lumpkin,
Petitioners Attorney
Filed in office July 6th. 1894.
Win. Beysiegle,
Clerk SuperiorjCourt
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*THE : O LT FUdMfJRE HOUSE SODTHj
. /
WSOSsSHi kxnSSS f 1 • nil.i Tr- _. rtr
Jfegflr Inn ’ IlfW
—~"*ni, ii,'. ibAFwf wfl
SiSSp Borw liiSßfflfl
Why s'l u’d Romans O’-citizens of surrounding country c o + c
Atlar. L. Ch t anooga or any oth r city except Rome v. hen they J an
to purchase fur Uurp? The Hustler of Home asks the quesfon in al
seriousne 3 a-»d ■•f?er you hav i looxed over rhe cuts of beautify
hoaseh >ia u n tineas presented on this oage, and noted the remark
abty low r - nat se { f or th soiling price, we think you will un
’dersta io wi v we ask the question.
IIR i
> » hit
Ft" P 10 ft
■■IW
520.00, e 10.00-
That h° McDonald-Sp Go.,!isjthe biggest furniture
house n ■ he south, all you have to do is to call and enquire for a piece
offurui t»e a r c’tH n lok through the grand assortment and make
your so 1 “C 1 on. The Hust'er o1 Rome knows whereof it r when
it ceils it? readers that th i goods advertised by th s firm are
just as it presented.
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