The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, August 28, 1894, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

HOSTLER OF ROME. nocona-claa* Mail Matter. raiLG.BYBD, S E mX‘"''. ! DAILY AND SUNDAY. ▼*F MS OF SUBSCRIPTIG 10 ceut « week or $5 00 per annum • FICS: Corner Broad Street ana w an Avenue. Os the city °f Rome, and Foyd, the “Banner county” of Georgia. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Governor, •iV. Y. ATKINSON, of Coweta, For Secretary of State, ALLEN D. CANDLER, of Hall. . For Treasurer, f a. D. HARDEMAN, of Newton, f For Comptroller General, WM. A. WRIGHT, of Richmond For Attorney General, J, M. TERRELL, of Meriwether ] Tor Commissioner of Agriculture, 1 R. T. NESBITT, of Cobb. For Congress, c John NY. MADDOX, of Floyd. For State Senator, (BARTOWS CHOICE ) I £ IFor Representative, Fioyd Co, ROBT. T. FOUCHE, JOHN H REECE, MOSES R. WRIGHT. 1 The city <>f Pullman was built r autos sleepers. — i No Maud, dear, book worms, and * fish weruis and still worms are no t Jan ’ Life insurance is more popular ia America tnan in any other 8 country. 1 . ..! . i Almost five eights of the steam- ’ its in the world are under the Brit- 1 Ash :fi ag. A man does not have to be “full” nor on his “last quarter” to .he “jnoony.” The d iys are avowing shorter, but the prospects for Snorter college are iengthtmug as the days <dide by. F’- -nel’. eb ■■‘mists make rubies out •«f clay.—The American counter feiter makes money “out of sight.” Seventeen cities in the United States are each of larger area than Berlin with its population of 1,- 579,000. The River Axe, in England, has tf< source in a cavern known as Wokey Hole, from which it emerges in full volume. A natural formation in the Yel lowstone Park is known as “The Devil's Cat,” another as “The Devil’s Slide.” eat has six feet. The great gee! think of that feline st aling the gamut and climbing the air on your back fence. The Philadelphia Times says that'since the policemen are not to be permitted to talk he is no long ■r a coppt r Silence is golden. An advocate of electrical cook og claims that of every 100 tons .1 oca! used in a cooking stove mnety—six tons go to waste. Au archaeologist declares that ‘relics of a lost race exist,on the master Brittany.” Perhaps the Vigilant'-, center-board has drifted uiahore there. Last young men continue to run were.il established bicycle records with impunity and pneumatic tires There a no “fall oil” on the race track Barnes of Dalton, puts up a ■stable argument against his par ty’s jocky, Tom Watson—and he ices not do it on the in-stall-ment /plan eyether. The papers of the tenth district «ays<that Hon J. C. C. Black, will beat Tom Watson worse than he did i u 1892. So mote it be Tom is a disturber of the public peace and ought to be sent permanently to the TOST. The popu’ist party is dead in the west, and in the south, too, but its I tail is still wiggling.—And the “ores < heads” are listening to its tale of v I wee. c It is said that Col. J. A. B. Ala- j haffy. the third party candidate for secretary of state, has abandoned the practice of'aw and tak°B the stump ( ] for bis party. Well, that’s all right, | He will have plenty of time next M year and the year after to practice j law.—Lawrenceville News. All that is needed to equip’ a first . . a class populist spouter is ignorance and mendacity.-The lesser lights <J are only rigged "one barrel,’’—an 1 • are “muzzle loaders” at that. “Howto Treat Tramps,” is the subject of an editorial iu the Phil- 1 adelphia Call. If Weary Waggles 1 were consulted the answer would 1 be : “Early and Often .” = C There is a well at Scarpa a vil- 1 lage near Tivoli, Italy, which is • 1,700 feet deep, all but 26 feet be- 0 ing cut in solid rock.—Truth, at h the bottom of that well, would be t out of sight. r ~ 0 The Philadelphia Athenaeum a has on its shelves a city directory i for 1794, among its names being that of Washington, George, Pres ident of the United States, No. 160 [ High street. ] _ 0 “Summer flirtation is a viper,’ says a Boston minister. The sum- a mer girl who engineers the flirta- r tion, can undoubtedly charm equal » to a serpent, but. her bite is said f to be not at all dangerous, 6 An historical writer of recent dute says that in the year 1820 it was nothing to see teams of trained bisons in Illinois and Missouri. Later he will mention the Mexican Liofi of North West Georgia. The famous “Cold Wind Cave” is in Corea. It is a cavern of large size, from which it is said “a wintry wind perpetually blows.” The Japs and Chinese, ovei there, need just suck a! breeze as this to kool ’em off a bit Trox Bankston believes in heap ing coals of fire upon the poor de* linquents. He says: Should the devil ask us what to do when a de linquent dies in this world, we would tell him to shovel in a little more coal. John Ingram, of West Cnester/Pa. has come into possession of an g lish spit, with clockwork attachment for turning a fowl while roasting be fore the fire. This relic had lain for ; over a center/ in the loft of an old mill in Upper Oxford township. A farmer in Lino conn‘y.Kansa°. > drilling for an artesian .tell s'mek , a cave filled with hot air . But i‘a the one just below where the brim stone burns, that he wilUhit tiex*. . though from a life in Kansas the 3 change will not be a very marked r one. Mr. Warren Youngblood, oue of 8 the carpenters of the city, fell > f rom a scaffolding at Mr. W. J - Gordon’s residence on Fifth Ave, late yesterday afternoon and was seriously though not fatally injur. • ed. Sil vet Creek and Rome will meet on the North Rome Diamond this afternoon and the“ Mexican Lions’’ t will try to put the Rome hunters in a hole. 3 • j “Wood’s Hole” was the original nameftfa place ou the coa->t of Massachusetts. When it became i a fashionable watering place the b name was changed to Wood’s“Holl, a as being more genteel, although meaningless, The National ernment has just revived the first i name officially and the genteel . folks are indignant, as others of ; their ilk were when the Goveru- L ment refused to change the name of New York’s dangerous w« terway. “Hell Gate” jto the idiotic “Hurl t Gate.” This Miss Nance delicacy 1 recalls the Vermont purist who re- * placed vigorous of By l ron,beginning “0 God I’’with what j he thought the moie refined "O Gosh!” . Hard are life’s early steps; end but that j »uth is bojyeut. confi dent and strong in hi>p«, men would behold its lbr«shuld »ud despair.—L. E . Landon. As it is he looks up >n th»(laugh ter us Eve and des-p t'rs an) how The commissioners of the tax depart ment of New York City huve valued its real estate for 1894 at $1,618,057,735, an increase over last year of $50,475, 842. Tin* to tal personal estate of the metrop olis at $8911,274,‘>02 an increase of $1(5,599,110. This is only a small percentage of the | personal property supposed to be owned in New York City. An estimate regarded as relible places the aggregate welth of lead ing countries at the following fig-1 ures: Unined States, $60,475,000, 000; Great Britain, $48,600,000; 000, France, $40,300 ,000,000, Ger-1 many,s3l,GOO,ooo,ooo; Russia s2l 715,-000,000; Austria, $18,065,000 000 Italy, $11,755,000,000. No of her nation is credited with more than $10,000,000,000; The next in rankto Italy is Spain, with $7,965- 000,000, while Greese, the last and lowest in this classification Ls given 1 ut $1 055,000,000. Masses of petrified wood and Bark, which show the lines plain ly marked of the different stages of growth, are reported to hive been found in the regulatiou form ation of a sandstoiifl reef iu the mines at New Castle. Washington “A remarkable point about both specimens is th it ou the inner side of the bark is a deposit of a whi'e crystalline substance, and running in the veins through the wopd is the same material. It is harder than steel and cuts glass like a diamond, but seems to be nothing but crystallized pitch. An.ther specimen is fire wood iu a more advanced stage toward coal, with peices of petrified resin im bedded in it.’ I At Winger,in New South Wales there is a burning mountain. It is 1,820 feet in height, and is sup posed to be a large coal seam which has in some unaccountab'e way become ignited, and has been burning for many years, certainly, long before tl e advent of the white man in this portion of the colony. The course of the fire can be trac ed a considerable distance by the numerous depressions or chasms occasioned by the falling iu of the ground from beneath which the coal has been consumed Smoke is continually issuing from the 1 sides of the mountain, and iu the vicinity of these openings the sur face is hot, and has a dry. ed appearance, while sticks thru.,! into these opening? are readily ig -5 nited, * DeVinne It is the name of the in in who probaS’v the highest in th- printing craft. It is, therefore, right that the m >st handsome type ever cast from a type tom ier’s matrix should bear the name of I Vinne. There ara r four styles of DeVinne now being cast by the various foundries. ” DeVinne,” j ” DeVinne Slope,” ** Dt*VinneShaded” and ’* DeVinne Outline ” g ■. DeVinne Outline Is the style used above, and is by far the most refined of all the ham.lsoine DeVinne t faces. There is something about its modest beauty that seems especially to attract to its 8 use the advertiser who Is conscious that ’> the article he wishes to present to the public rests on its own intrinsic merit, and does net S therefore need the bombast of black-faced type to emphasise its claims. You May Have Noticed That literary works of the highest character, such as the Encyclopaedia Britannica. f Century Dictionary, etc., invariably choose a modest type, such as this, to advertise thetr merits. This is especially true of the first g named work, which is almost invariably brought to your notice by a line of Ums " L>« Vinne Outline.” “ AP, H “ I Good Sense, Some men show better sense than others, f It is good sense to keep your family supplied with good reading. Good reading makes civ ' Ulzatlon secure, makes mankind happy. One good tiling about the Cincinnati Gazette Is that ft publishes nothing sensational, noth , Ing impure, nothing hurtful to the morals of society. Write to the Gazette Ctfcppany, I Cincinnati, 0., for a free sample copy. r Examine its news pages, its editorial pages, its story pages. Its home and farm pages, its . market pages, e»c., etc. Then, if you fancy It, why. subscribe and make money by urging - your neighbors to subscribe. You can get It , a whole year, twice a week, for only one [ dollar. Every Issue intensely Interesting. It gives you all the best news of a metropoli tan dally, and comes to you fresh from the press on the day it Is printed. 4HE BIGGEjT HIRMIURL HOUSE StWlh • ’ Bfswr- ’ ■i H CTtnl ! JgHslL > Mil.- F®£33S[ ©5.0 ©IO,O 0 oku ax; Why should Homans o-citizens surroundingc< untry go to £^rchas^ Hust.er of Home a ks rh • in all seriousness and sfieryou hav i c-emark hous°h Id furnitu’e, as presented hn ,ag,<n . r . e remark- figures that set rortn the se iir.g price, w.. th: y u wnl un derstand wbv we ask the question. . uh .. x'- 0 -■ •.‘rfwpriL. til 520.00, 10.00. ThatFthe MeD .'-te”/art Go., is the Bigges’’ house in the south, al! you have ”O o<is to cal! am enqu re . ( r _ of furniture ar c H i lek 'hi < u;- grand a sort mer <. a ~,up n your selection. The Hustler of Ro” e knows wnerecn. -j a ; s it tells its r e-;d o rs that the goods ae ver Used by u s £ reiAt lirm just as represented- I (■I ' 111 if t > /'■ ■ nßjww i 1 h n WlWMrz @W’|« k®.? ® /I®7 A Kill I W Im i J L Ifril S i oC. ; ie * re A-siwDonaM-Sparks-Stewart Ccisjiny, ■■ •ROME GEORG-IjV.‘