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L ?.T.YJ, r 2!, he , rs - ' Bn Goods. Hats. Shoos and Notos. I
[i Best goods! Lowest Dridfls!
Cotton Mills to resume.
Chester, Pa., September 18. —
The cotton mills of the Patterson
Mills Company that have been idle
for several months will resume
operation tomorrow on full time,
giving employment to about 3<X)
employes.
CHEAP RATES.
By the Southern R’y
only $2.60 Rome to
Chattanooga and re
turn. Ticketson sa 1 e
daily Sept. 14 to 2 0
good to return Sept. 24
T. C. Smith, P. & T. a.
A Balloon Struck by Lightening.
While he duke andDwhessof Con
naught were inspecting the per
formances of a military balloon at
Aldershot on Sept. 4, the balloon
was struck by lightening, which
followed the anchor wire to the
earth and seriously injured three
men who were holding the wire.
The duke rushed to the assistance
of the unfortunate men, who were
shrieking with the agonizing pain
their contact with the wire caused
them.
They were released from their
predicament and taken to the hos
pital, not mortally hurt,
DE PARIS’S TESTAMENT.
He Prays That France may Re
turn to her old Religion.
London, Sept. 17 —The political
testament of the late count of Par
is was made public today. The
document, which is very brief, is
da'ed Stowe House, July 21, 1894.
i aud says:
“As 1 bad no knowledge of my
I future, I would not attempt to
I trace a line of conduct for my
. son.
•‘Feeling perfectly confident
that be will always upuold the
traditions of our bouse, which ar :
“live tor France” aud for the faith -
ful discharge of all the duties in
cumbent Upon him, I hope that
iTaciie will soon be reunited, all
parties finding a basis of common
agreement nuder the traditional
monarchy.’’
If 1 went to Frohnsdorf in 1873,
it was to show' my respect lor the
hereditary principle. Since then I
have tried to deserve the confi
dence of my party by fighting, al
though in exile, zealously for
France. ”
The document concludes by ex
pressing hie truet that Got has
not abandoned France to whom
He gave Saint Louis and Jeanne
d’Are. He felt certain that France
will return to her obi religion and
that meanwhile he could only hope
for unity of all existing parties.
He *as sure that his friends
would understand that this was a
necessary condition aud precedent
to all they hoped for.
!In the |
malaria I
■districts I
? there has been in use a remedy with £
■3 good effects for nearly a quarter of c
5 a century. It is a preventive and C
j cure that thousands make use of s
4 1 every year. Why? Because it never g
> fails to do good—its medicinal oualr C
1 ties are certain. It is specific .of 4
4 1 this dread disease. It cures. £
r~ n
Browns t
[Does not X ;
Iron
teeth.] > ’
Bitters
.>■* rsFAiL ittuardf c
Mhc’.cn >!<■ C
poison in yOut bfotVlJ ' r he -‘'‘"P’
toms: that intermittent fever which 3,
dries up your blood —your appetite <
fails—you have no energy, strength— J
that cold, chilly feeling which brings ( -
on nervous prostration, headache, <
neuralgia, aching pains. Have you i
these ? It this is your case c
D 5 » >
Brown s
; ,ron u
Bitters you need!
The Genuine has the Crossed , j
Red Lines on Wrapper.
J Brown Chbmicai Co. Baltimore, Md
THE HUSTLER OF ROME, TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 18 1894
THE “OPERATOR”
Is Said to be One of the Best
Shew on the Roaa.
Among (he coming attractions
tha* ere worthy of special notice
the most notable is
tor" with the twin, stars, William
aud Willard Newell in principal
i roles. Both the stars and play
have been heralded extensively
| through >u the United States and
Canada.
In this nge of stage realism the
.public is continually asking for
something new and if the words
of the lending critics of New York
Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago
and other large cities are to be ac
cepted, the Messrs. Newell have in
“The Operator’ realistic scenes
that excel anything of sensational
character that has ever been pro
duced.
\ US?*- '
It is claimed for the play a dif
ference from the average melodra
matic production, which as a rule
subordinates he plot to the scenic
effect. There is nothing abortive
about this play which is full <of
thrilling situations and lively dia
logue abounds with most humor
ous comedy, while the scenic me
chanical effects are only incident,
al to the drama, it is claimed that
they are* the most gigantic aud
wonderful production on realism
ever conceived by man.
Among the thrilling scenes
which assume the proportions
of rea ism are the sinking of a
huge ship in mid-ocean ; the flight
of .he lightning express, which
crosses the stage in full view ot
ihe audience at a high rate of
speed. The crowning sensation of
all is the headlong plunge of a pi
lot engine from a wrecked trestle
twenty feet high, into the abyss
below,
Tongues of flame are seen to is
sue from the fire box, smoke and
sparks are emitted from the stack,
the hissing of the steam and the
shrieks of the men on board, the
glare of the headlight, as it plun
ges to its awful fate, makes one of
the most terrible yet realistic spec
tacles ever witnessed.
. In conjunction with this mass of
•'Wfc. <1
realism the audience do no lose
sight of’the really interesting feat
ures of the play, the twin stars
Willard and William Newell, who
are so much alike that it is beyond
possibility to tell bne from the
other.
They are both clever actors, and
made a name for themselves not
often equalled by players in the
melodramatic school. The stars
have surrounded themselve with
an excellent company including
Harry English, John Saunders,
Henry Winchell, Frank Walsh,
“The Operator” quartette; The
Misses Leslye Lysle, Lilliam Ward
Zella English, March LaMoyne,
ami others. ,‘The Operator” comes
po the Nevin Opera House next
Friday Sept. 21st. At these prices:
Parquet sl. Dress Circle 75. Gal
lery 25. Advance Sheet now open
at Yeiser. Seats sl.
SHOT ALL OF THEM
And then Escaped tn the Metin
tains Near Glen’s-Falls.
Glen Falls, A. Y.» September 18.
—-Leonard Blodgett, aged fifty-five
years, last night shot Edward
Whitmore, aged sixty-eight; Mrs.
Whitmore, aged fifty-seven, and
thenjstabbed Mfss ’Whitmore; aged
fifteen years, at a place ten miles
south of here. Blodgett, who was
frustrated in an attempt to out
rafe the girl, escaped to the moun
tains.
£1 !—.—■—9--’
When traveling, always take a ca
of Johnson's Oriental Soap with yo
diseases are often caught from min
READ IT OVER,
Examine Our Bargains*
AND THEN
CrETIJST TIEZZE
20 per. ct off of Manufacturers cost.
In order to make room for our enormous stock
which is arrivingdaily, we will for the next ten days
give 20 per. ct. off of Manufacturer’s cost on all
I
ladies and childrens Slippers, Oxfords, Low Cuts
and Operas.
'’-’,.. I * • ’
-HWe Have An Elegant Line OfH-
” ‘ S 4 < i. •
These goods bought late and at a tremenduous dis
count and when you get them of us at 20 per.xt.
off of Manufacturer’s prices they cost you next to
nothing.
EAKI V FOR THEY HAVE>-
GOT TO OO-
f
w. H. COKER & CO.
No s 19 & 21 Broad Street,
ZROZMZE GEORGIA.