The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, September 10, 1894, Image 4

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THE BfISTLES BE IMS. s necona-cl&ft* Mail 'latter. fHn.G.BYUI), jXX' DAILY AND SUNDAY TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION •10 ceut u. week or s•> 00 per annum LFFICE: Corner Broad Street and inh Avenue. ONLY OFFICIAL ORGAN. Cf the city <>f the “Banner county of Georgia. . .—.Il '■ DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Governor, sV. Y. ATKINSON, of Coweta, For Secretary of State, .&LLEN D. CANDLER, of Hall For Treasurer, Z D HARDEMAN, of Newton. For Comptroller General, A¥M. A. WRIGHT, of Richmond For Attorney General, Jf, 1,1. TERRELL, of Meriwether ,'Fgt Commissioner of Agriculture, R. T. NESBI I T, or Cobb. For Congress. a .iju W. MADDOX, of Floyd. For State Senator, W. H. LUMPKIN. 1.3‘0r Representative, F<oyd Co , ROBT. T. FOUCHE, JOHN H REECE. MOSES R. WRIGHT. Chicago’s Masonic has a a population of 5.000 aud fifty jan ■i- tors. in Finland and East Tukestan thunderstorms are wholly uu tnown. Doolin’s Savannah Dispatch is j ■one of the brightest afternoon! sheets J n the Georgia winds. — If is stated that “the Czar uses j trunks.” But the statement be only a trunk Ivin. If facts and figures count for .prosperity and democratic success,: then recommend us to the south. made of oiled paper are used in Cor-a. Au “opeu and «huC” case of oriental ingenuity. Let tb.e flannel mouthed Anar chists remember that. Eight mil lions people in the United *3 wu their own homes. VThe Pope has pearls left by his valued at SIOO,OOO. But the pearl ot great price he had to hustle for him self. » - The “Young Harris College,’’ at Young Harris Georgia, opens its eighth session under most favora •ble auspices, with an enrollment o ;26fc‘ pupils. Tom Watson, enjoys reading “Mr. Barnes of New York.” moie Ilru as does facing Mr. Barens ot Georgia. Tommy knows what's what. A The early autumn >s find Xhe straw hat still on the head, aud the same wind blows through the whiskers of the R there mv Oysteß j okelet. 'The ■editor of the times Eurter '.prise says; “We'd bet more <>n the •defeat ot Watson by Black th .n on ahorse racg’” We bet that you can’t gpf a bet out of “D >g Law’’ - Tommie. The Dixie Interstate Fair will opeu in. Macon on October 23rd, JEverykody get ready to ao, for its .going to be one of the biggest °ehows the south has had upto date. * There is little danger of a fam- i me. There are still 750,000 bush-; els of 1893 wheat in store west of Wiwi peg, while the oat crop of. . Alabama is th< j heaviest known in <yeu rs .Rev. Uldward Beecner. the oldest (Surviving member of that famous family. has just celebrated his ninety-first birthday. He is living a t Brooklyn, enjoying good health » n hie declimug years. Sixty thousand acres in this cou - try are devoted t<_ celery growing. There must be a m'lli<m(head) a ches “raising” Coca Cola. 'la king about casting pearls ' l’< torn swine, our devil weitf vis iting yesterday and was stufled up on angel fond. Paper carpets are cheap. So are about half of the big trade e<lito-| rials that fill the long felt want under th« other kind of karpets. The dog davs and the growler ■ do not go together—the dogdtys go while the growler days who, like the poor, we have with us al ways. A trade union of ballet girls has just been formed' Let them make the baldheaded row eligible to membership and nothing will suc ceed like the success of that union. Here's an arid joke from the Augusta Chronicle. A telegraph line now traverses the Gobi desert, in China 3,000 miles in length. The news must get very dry in transit. The Madisonian says that “the ratio in Morgan is 16 to I—l 6 Democrats to 1 Populist.” The ratio is all right but “barring the sound” there is no parity in the mediums circulating. The poet Keats, it is said, was born in a livery stable. Which fact does not make Mr. Keats a “barn stormer” though it may account in a degree for the stable poetry he served the world by install-1 meats. A court in Toledo, 0., has ap pointed three women to act as appraisers of a descendent’s estate,. probably the first time women i have been thus officially .recog nized. We would travel a day and night to hear a joint discussion ! between Bob Burner and Tommie Watson. As to a performance le tween Atkinson and Hines why we can visit a well arranged slaughter house right in the surburbs of the ■ Citv. , On what day will Watson pull | down Felton and put up Seaby Wright, the Silver tongued orator of the 7th?—Douglass New South. Old Dr. Flopper Felton dont want to come down in favor of Col. Flopper Seaby. The old “Flop per” is to be sacrafice. The courts of Kentucky—the state of the original and only Bil ly Breckinridge—have decided that a man is not obliged to sup port his mother-in-law. This, of course, does not prevent a woman ‘ supporting her son-in-law.—Sa-, vannah Dispach. Says the Augusta News: Presi dent Cleveland has promised if if possible to be present at the Dixie Interstate Fair, and should he decide to come to Georgia he would rece ve a warm aud enthusi aatic welcome from thousands of his Democratic admirers through out the South. Every Paraguayan gentleman is bound to kiss every lady to whom ho is introduced. On Easter day in Russia, thoy kiss all around from the Czar to the lowest peas ant the E kSter kiss is exchanged throughout the Empire,—There’s not much Eas-ter kiss some girls and widows too, in this necs of the woods. Felton may carry a county in this district, hut. we will have to see the returns first. —Hustler of Rome, Dr. Felton will b» overwhelm ingly defeated. He is no populist the yoemaury ot the 7th. know it. and w'li not support him. McGar rity was the candidate of the pop ulist and Dr 1 Felton the candidate j of the Watson party. Watson Lae gobbled up the Alliance and now he proposes to gobble up the popu | list ami drive them into the Wat- ; son party. Great Czar he is i Douglas New South. THE HUSTLER OF ROME, MONDAY SEPTEMBER, 10 1894. Durham, N. C., turns out 300,- i ihk).(MX) cigarettes a year. But the best cigars on earth are made hv Thomas Warter., of thiscitv. Rome must be an excellent, town for good newspapers. The Hustler of Rome is now an eight-page pa per—Columbus Ledger. The Ledger is right, Rome is m e I of the b >st little cities in the union. I All she needs now is for a few lev el headed men to get together aud i b ‘dam the Etowah.’’ Hon E P. Price, who represent ed Floyd in the last house, is a candidate for door keeper, of the next house aud has strong bucking for the place. “There is no sranch«r democrat in Georgia than Mr. Price,” said Hon. Will Neel, of Rom«, who served with him in the legislature, “and I hope he will be elected doorkeeper. Hh is a man about whom you cm say every thing that is good, for he deserves it. He will have strong support from all over north Georgia 1 ’ —•Constitut'ion. Let those who know tell the tale. Here is what the Dayton (0) Times says about the decline in wool. The Tinu s says: “It knocks trie ordinary republi can silly to expose his demagogy on the wool question. Just pull it off his eyes long enough to show that Ohio wool has declined from 51 cents a pound when practically free in 1867 to 13 cents under Mc- Kinleyism, and it makes him ‘ba ■ili.' "~ IT 1 j! '-- 5- . . r; 1 -A ‘ . -AG. W K ; * ? ...A “Ooiir Fiiends” Says Dr. Oliver WcnJeJ. HoLnes, “are the milestones wh.t.by iih our progress through Do you want to u>‘ - •mebody? It you do, there is no timx. to lose. This is the oj “(io*'” »',.e r .ui io Joes not know things will b» a , surely left in the race as a horse wao starts w »h a bucket of water in his interior department. Your friends will be sorry, but th v can not stop to wait for you. The re is no m J ! e course. We must go forward or backward. In the crisis of lire, the man Who Hesitates Bs Lost How to succeed—that is the great question. The most important thing is to know what you want to do, and then 4o it well. No half-measure. Whatever your business, trade or profession, make yourself master of it. No useful knowledge comes amiss. Study the practical part of your business first and ornament your mind atyiyard. But you will say. I work salary is small; I have no room nor money for a library wherewith to educate myself, and no time for lectures ot lessons. Now Listen: If your room is only six feet by four and your income the smallest, you cxn-furnish it with the best library in the wo'J at a cost that will surprise you by its insignificance. That library consists of one wor l * snly. But that one work covers the entire field of human knowledge. It is a work worthy to be your guide through life. It is the new up-to-date edition of the Great Encyclopaedia Britannica, and if you are a subscriber to The Constitution you can have it as your own by the simple saving of 10 cents a day. Write for application blank, The Constitutnon, ATLANTA. GA. — — n ■ —— Notice Administrator’s Sa/ j GEORGIA, Floyd County:— Agreeable to an order from the Courtof Or dinary will be sold between the legal hours of sale on the First Tuesday in (September next, before the Court House door in said County, the following property to wit: One vacant lot of land in the Fifth Ward of the city of Rome • Ga., fronting 60 feet on i’ennington Avenue; and running back 125 feet, bounded on the North-east by t. I). Woods laud andon the South-west.by vacant lot of Isabella Carroll’s estate. Terms cash. , Tims. F. Carroll Administrator of Isabella Carrol), Aug. 7,-30<l. . Deceased Administrators Sale. GFCRGIA, Floyd County : Pursuant to an order of the Court of Ordinary will be sold before the Court house door in the I City of Rome, -aid County between the lega. hours of Sale, on the first Tuesday* in August I 1K94, the following property to wit : Ona lot iy ; DeSoto, (now Fourth Ward) City of Rome, Floyd | County, Ga., known as the former residence of J. P. M. Byrd, fronting on the Alabama Road or Bridge Stre, t i i the said Ci y 90 feet and ex j tending back, same'width 140 felt, and being the property, conveyed by deed of Mrs. Mary T. I Freeman, to Mrs. M, E. Knox. Dated Febuary I Ist., 1889. Recorded in Clerks Office Superioa 1 Court said County in Book ••¥.” of deeds, Page , 498, Xo. 448 ou .1 nue 28th. 1879, and also (inscrib ed in deed of M artha E Knox, to said R. B. Me ; Arver, Dated April 20th. 1881 and I.ecorded fn j Bork“C. E.” of deed-, Page 282 No. 187. i Goo <1 lot sold as t»e property of William T. Sa on deceased. This July rd. 1394. W. J. Gordon, Administrate! De’Donis Non with will annexed of Win. T. Gordon deceased, Estates THE BIGGEST-t THING rq/v\ e *4'*flcDonaM-Sparks-Stewarl-Compaiiy.U4- Huie, Carpek, -Hugs & ♦ We carry the largest stock in the state. We buy cheaper than any house in the state We sell cheaper than any other house in the state. We do business on business principles. Our customers arealways pleased with their purchases. We have The Best Goods l I LOWEST FRIGES. We are always pickicking up big bargains for our customers. Once a customer always a cus tomer. Solid Oak Suits $15.00 to $25.00 Call and see our #20.00, PARLOR SUITS. f We are just overflowing with bright new Furniture It is a pleasure to show you these goods. Call and see us. 1. 3 (5. Third. Avenue; o