The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, September 17, 1894, Image 4

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• HOSTLER OF HOME. •eevnu-clttx-a Mail 'fitter. ttCSULG. BYRD, | - daily and Sunday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION oey t— #eek or $5 00 per auuutn UT-ZiOE: Corner Broad Street and F'li h Avenue. e.XLY OFFICIAL ORGAN. 0f tiio City of Rome, and Floyd, the “Banner county" of Georgia. DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Governor, > W. Y. ATKINSON, of Coweta, For Secretary of State, JALLEN D CANDLER, of Hall For Tieaeurer, • D HARDEMAN, of Newton. i'CFor Comptroller General, .■ WM. A. AV RIGHT, of Richmond For Attorney General, £7, • M, TERRELL, of Meriwether A-Joc Commissioner of Agriculture . li. T. NESBITT, of Cobb. For Congress. John W. MADDOX, of Floyd. •For Senator, W. 11. LUMPKIN. utlcf- .'iepresentative, Fioyd Co , ROBT. T. FOUCHE, JOHN II REECE, MOSES R. WRIGHT. English asylums and homes for t- IW.aged and infirm cost annually ■ jm ,000,000. The two Populist candidates foY -the legislature in Coweta have with :Brawif 'wm the race z .The best proof of the illness of th« czar of Russia is he Las expressed the ■ wish for penes with all the world. Mclntosh’s Albahy Herald, of I ' ‘.aifef’ Saturday assumed and grace •F;iiy ware a metropolitan air. The Savannah Morning Call, »®t All but sprightly, has made its appearance on our exchange table. The MississippLv.irnmt sensa tTloii turns out to be nothing, but TDiere plate matter.—Register. Berlin mahout to absorb suburbs I i wvlh 200,000 inhabitants, which <*;jll bring its population up to 1,- 'XXi,OOO. An Alabama Negro sold himself J w -S6O, and was led off by a rope. ./More work for that English “in- I *. .'Z’tt iga?ing "omniiftee.” .Hons. .Charles F. Crisp, A. O. Ba- , *fs»t And Gen. C A. Evans will tx- - | ; • ymuAl pure Democracy to the untei- , x.of old Crawford, in Knoxville, B Sept. 21. 1 i ufSbe Americus Timee-recorde ggesrs to the Atlanta Journal '.k at gold is a had conductor, the ( Journal building having been ■ struck hv Jjchtning. •-- - . 1 indication points to an over, wkrhnrrg - Democratic triumph in ' in the coming fall elections. 1 M f^jEthceiasm is intense. Harmony pre. v-uls. according to the Walton News II ~— ==! I -Tae Kaiser may have a divine 1 B| night to rule, but he continues - Ac - review and maneuver his I iroOps and keep his gun carriages ‘ rell oiled. There is nothing like I' I ’Tsnking after little things, a - ....... ! A Nc personal difference will ever n ] ueuce a man whois true to his i< H jpoiLticaLpriociples to cast a single s I v»'tbo .against any one of the r f wanitarees of hie party. It’s a mat- ? .< t terof principle agsinst prejudice, i S- r .. Juce more the Russian czar. ♦ llfir fhxowgh one of his ministers, re- j zMSHtires Europe that he stands for . vxsace: “Outlie u.th’er hand,” he ] j|t| “the bellicose speeches of i ■ (kh< r monarchs must be reniem- I - jered.” This is a dig in the ribs at ■ t <jnw'WTfiiaru Hoheuzollern, whose W | «s«Wttlike v/Aerances are a matter of b HcOTSord. and William will have to Bk •Lt<e.n.o’ - e careful when he talks It is said that Pennsylvania railroad nolv owns B.SOO miles <> track, has a share and bond capi tal of nearly SIS,OCX),(MX), with an j annual grots earning soi s'-lOiXX).- (XX) and net earnings of S4O,(XX),- 000. Let Alabama’s motto be chang ed to “Here we hustle.” It will be nioreapp ropriat*?.—Mobile Reg ister. Yes, give the old motto to Reu ben For-hiinself Kolb and let him press the but ton. The despised 16 to one silver dollars, so worthless in the eyes of the goldbugs and bloated bond holders, are good enough for the Herald in payment for either ad vertisements or subscriptions. 'They come in mighty handy Satur day evening when the payroll has to be met. —Albany Herald. It is now learned that Mr. De Leon’s burlesqu i of “ Ships that Pas j in the Night” will be issued on the twenty fourth instant. Gossip Print ing (J .mpauy yesterday returned the Lit prools of text and comic illustra tions. The skit is thus dedicated: ‘To my serious friend, the Average Am- rican, who gets rich too fast, laugh too little, and lias too man., national drinks, for the sanity of his liver, these pages ar in cribed.” LETTERS FROM ; THE PEOPLE. A Lawyer's Apostrophe. Il is well ejnut'm s to tranpuily ’’ thing, not merely to dwell upon fnviluus subjects and conjecture their cause and affect. But it be hooves man as the noblest of God’s creatures,endowed with reason en ough, passions imagination and conscience to contemplate man an f lie is --as we find him—‘he various ol j -cts which excite to aatiou the man/ intellectual concomitants I of the< human brain While it is both plea.-urabie and . profitable to study attributes, yet it is not the intention us these rambling though.< to roam through the entangling labyrinth of Meta- j physios nor to lead the reader jntol the by ways of moral Philosophy, i Is man by nature a pessimist or .in optimist .which while the world and its happenings through the visivn of calm ret son or erratic impulse,ygreat man has said “we are confronted by a condition” Yes truly but don’t we often liv e in a world created by imagination which partakes- in ita character more of seut j mental fiction than an actual reality. Tj take a casu al glance at the lives of some peo ple we are driven *te>a conclusion tljey surely do uot five in actual reality but theypropeHy belong to seme ficticious perhaps to Scott. Bu'were or .Dickens. The opti mist lulls the knowing soul to dream of pleasurable delight by , seeing in all things virtue; many times magnified while the pessimist 2 depreclater and minimizes all good things, see ing in them countless erro-ss and gross inaccnracies. The on* says. J “Ah ! poor drunkard he has a. good heart,” the other, “yes he ought , to be transported, there is’noChing good in him.” “The clouds of financial storm have never been very heavy., and those that we see will soon blow away to give place to peaceful pros perity,” sings the optimist. “Oh no,” tlie pessimist exclaims, t; thi s is the most terrible panic I ever saw, and it will continue for months and months' to coeoi-. ” Now,there is an individual often named, seldom seen, who practices midiocrity: taking a position be tween the extremes of j£optimist and pessimist. , He is to speak generally, the peacemaker, the compromiser of measures which have excited two factions to bitter contest. Henry Clay was possibly the most, con spicuous example of peace makers or compromisers of all our states men. Few measures are enacted as they were originally conceived. THE HUSTLER OF ROME. MONDAY SEPTEMBER. 17 1894. The constitution of this glorious Republic as passed by the comi iiduta. congress which had m t to declare Tte indepei demte of the; then thirteen states, was a corn promise to satisfy two portcrful h*» met t’ i > the assembly v z those I who h Id to Federalist views o? s stiong centralized government j championed by Alexander 1L.m.l- , tor, and those wbo he iev d with ' eqmiliV I’m- cot.victmi s in giving the in<iividu*»l stales more power ns enunciated by Thomas Jeffer son. C’iic*Buons are the 1 fe of a cosmopolitan people It is next ‘o impossible to etiac m asures int laws which will pieaad all perou. s alike. We are cons’ituted by the Cre • tor of man and the universe to view questions and is-ues affe- t ii.g the welfare of the human race, ■ t rough different mediums of r asoii. In this mm is n» more strength than nature. All vepeta-i >n <liff ts in form, in dze, production aud ten.peiainent. We c-uinot all think alike no more th in we cau in features ami statue be exactly the same. How foolish and utterly illogical no less than vain, | inglorious egotism for men to censure each other because forsooth —they do ! not agree as to the best means to car- ■ ry out certain measures. I He who establishes his edicts, or sets torih his the. iy and belief ns the only right and just manlier if t iiu g, is ulei'l a mentil infa it, I and a cemstilutional despot. No, life means concession from the cradle to the grave, aud on tbie hangs the destluj aud happiness of mankind. W « --1 ■■■!■ II M. ■» i■„ » ———TVW—a 1 z PASTEvx *rais ini. ivqyß_MA> {Soyouwilln mem her it. When - • you are attacked with Cramps; Colic, Cholera Morbus, Dys- , entery, Diarrhoea or are acci- ; dently injured PAIN-KILLER will give you instant and per- J manent relief. The power of Pain-Killer is not limited tof any particular brand of pain. It is equally valuable whether the trouble is external or in i ternal. When you are in dis j tress always remember that 40l IIIM ** * TIP Prpparwl only by Pkrrt Davis A Son, Providence, R. 1. | NEW GOODS, NEW TRI MM ER I To the public, I wish to state that I have pur chased an ele gant sto c k o f seasonable MUlina r y and employed a me tropolitan Trim mer who will be here on the 20th A word to the ’ wise is suffi cient M. Spiegleberg. 40 5 &. 40 7 , Broadway. Road Citation, GICOXGIA, Flo\ i> CaM'X’iV : W W. K. -i.wilh.elal.. have '‘<'iiti"ue*l the Board of I'onu iWmoik is It. als aud Rev enue of said Couid. .asking that these tlesuoiit wa'4 now leadii.tr avtl mv. Hirpt direct liojn So ney. Georgia, ar>d tauudug ofreerh ly. wii.fi* known as Rodgers olt. It.irn Place ..:.<i Homy I fWiMi mood’s dwetirng hoa-e and iwt r-ecting [ with the puhlur toad ktinwu a. Ike Pleasant ciiurch road, at w near l>ruiem*>iids school house. lw u>ade a second e ass public road, and the Road < <»i> tuissioue. aof l'e'4 Dis trict n . M ■ of said ('mint, ha vine repor-ed the proposed road tabs of public ntilirv. N.-w, this is to cite all persons haring nhje-lions thereto or Claims for damages arising tb«i--front, to make the same known to the Hoard of C-.mn’is soiiers at the next meet inr to be held on the first Monday >n -tnpust ixiu. Witness the Hon .*<■>-. • . l .siei Chsinnanof the Board, This Jul., sth. IstU, <1 30-d. Mejurl ardt, Cerk. •THE BIGGEST® » * THING ROME *'* ■ • Z-»fMcDoßald-Sparks-Stewart-Company.ihsz ■a— ♦. Fimite, Carpels, Allings & 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 • d K IjOWEST prices. , » -. 1. 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. % a We are just overltowin g with bright neurnFiture It is a pleasure to show you these goods. Call and see us. I * 1. S. Third. A_venu.e; g We It