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Charles Dud Hey Warner
Once said:
“The time will come when some inventive
genius will enable us to ' drop a nickel in the
slot,’ and take out a complete education.”
Little did the great novelist drcam that his
jest was so soon tocrystalize into the practical
plan today before the readers of this paper.
There Is not an intelligent man in the
world but appreciates the value of an
education, and has occasion many times to
t regret the fact that he has either failed to
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perhaps has been deprived altogether of the
advantages of higher educational institution*
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It ds Too Late
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course is the possession of the results of the
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» college ducation.
In a word, the ENCYCLOPAEDIA
BRITANNICA is a whole college education
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THE CONSTITUTION,
ATLANTA, GA.
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DEMOCRACY’S DAY
Speaker Crisp Made a Magnificent
Address.
A POWERFUL ARGUMENT
I
I
Showing What '-'Congress did
do''and Whatthe Demo
crats >n Congress had
Tr'ed to do Our
John did’ntSpeak
Yesterday forenoon there was a
| gathering of the cians at Nevin’s
I Opera house and by eleven o’clock
[about 1,000 people, a good percent
lof them being ladies, had assem
bled to hear that great Georgian,
I Mr. Speaker Crisp defend the
denncratic party and “tell what
congress did. ’
On the stage were quite a num
ber of citizens, representing every
walk in life. Stage and house be
ing full of good feeling and happy
'anticipation of the feast all had
! every right to believe was coming
,their way.
At 10:45 Capt. M. M. Pepper ad
vanced to the front of the stage
[and in a ring.ng speech such as
only genial, resourseful Munford
Pepper can make, introduced Mr.
Speaker Crisp.
Mr. Crisp arose and after com
plimenting the citizens of Rome
for honors confuted on him by
their call for a speech from him,
he got right down to business.
He said he would ask no m n to
vote f<»r the democratic nominees
unless he could convince him, or
that they were already convinced
that the principles involved in de
mocracy were for the best interests
of the Goverment.
He invited any man in the au
dience be he republican, populist
or democrat to ask him any ques
tion which they would like answer
ed,
Said hepioposed to appeal to
their common sense and their judg
ment .
The republicans and populists
sav that congress has done nothing
—you have a right to know and
1 shall endeaVer to show you
that we have done something
—done more than any other con
gress oi the United S r ates has done
m the same length of time.
Tho 53rd. Congress met l ist Au
gust, ave ir ago and was convened
nr f he midst of a great panic
Distress not all come from
b-td laws, though bad laws may tie
v ry largely responsible for hard
times.
Democracy believes that it is the
nv < f the citizen to support the
.vornment.
Popuiist believe that its the du
ly ot the government to support
ih’ 1 citizen. (applause )
If there have been any bad laws
enacted in the United States for
the past 30 years, why the Renub-
I .icans are responsible.
When Congress convened in Au
gust it found the financial system
of the United Stat-s Jwas vicious
ly wrong.
In ’73 the Republicans demone
tized silver. Iu '7B almost regardless
of party, the people demanded silver
and congress passed over the presi
dent’s veto, the Bland-Alison act
which gavt the county from $2, COO,
000 t 054,000,000, permouih.
Iu 1890 the Sherman Law was
passed. When in Auerust, one year
ago, congress conveied, we found
that the coinage of silver had ceased
Gold and silver are money- Paper
is a promise to pay money. If yon
have notes out you must have money
redeem them or human nature
o-.kes the holder of the noter rush
i.nd demand the money.
T*>« Jogislaiion on silver had some
's <i<> with ihc p nic, but not all.
Democracy alwrys stands for frea
■ i urge oijsilver. Personaly he was
for free silver.
Tin- is the greatest nation on the
dee of the earth and the interest of
tua various sections vary greatly.
H re M L Palmer infeiupted,and
.sked bun if the fact,that infer-a
i' ( mocratic administration free silver
ha I been defeated was not enouh to
run free silver people from Dem
on acy
Air Crisp answered “No’Sud cited
h < Forty'eighth congress, demo
|< y .tic,had refused and defeated the
l .oiris Tariff reform bill. How
■ Forty ninth congress had <ie
-1 '< -i-’d the second Morris bill but
j in he long Fiftieth congress the
[ d uocraU had passed by an over
j '• ’'<-lnii’.ig majority the Mills Tur
iff bill.
I answer you no,sai 1 he, we will
1 i<- ‘his silver problem and set
i o ii like the practical com-
THE HUSTLER OF ROME. SUNDAY SEPTEMBER, 30 1894.
I ist who Li.ve financial idea-, e
only among the billions of dollars.
The populists try to belittle any
thing in which democrates agree.
They slur at the tariff bill and say
that it indies but u few cents dif
ference.
Why in the Senate, where the
populist have only four members,
two of them voted against oil es
forts at tariff refoim.
The tariff is a tux an indirect
tax but a tax th it is felt just the
sßine.
The McKenhy tariff bill amounts
to an average of 50 per cent advo
lorem.
He illustrated the meaning of
tariff by drawing a picture of
Rome, inside a wall and naming
the gates or ports of entry through
which outsiders must bring goods
A man comes to the gate, has a
hat for sale, asks one dpilar. The
gate keeper says pay me 50 cents
to get in. That is tariff, He comes
in and the man who buys it pays
$1.50; one dollar for the hat and
50cents for tariff.
On the inside of the wall you
make a hat worth a dollar but
you sell it at the top of the mar
keter $l5O one dollar for hat add
50 cents for protection.
Again put a wail around the
United States and you take ten
bales of cotton and go to Liverpool
and sell yourcotton for S3OO and
then buy S3OO worth of goods that
you need. You come home and at
the post of entry you are made to
pay* $l5O for the privilege of bring
ing triose goods in, or $450 —as
much as yot could have bought
with 9 cent cotton.
Here Palmer opened his bazoo
again and the Speaker asked Air.
Palmer if any member of
the audience, was wearing an arti
cle on which the AlcKinley bill
had levied no tax. (The speaker
over looked the smil - worn on Air.
Palmer’s face v.: ich was easily
recognized on the head of “Raw
material’’)
Continuing he said the AlcKin
ley tariff bill took away about ope
third of the farmers cotton crop.
The farmers grew poorer and the
merchant could not buy' from the
manufucturies, ami here the ma
chinery stopped and the panic en
sued.
We undertook to reform the
tariff and then we found what a
big job it was. We were met by'
every trust and protected manu
facture in the union. They were
ready' with their accumulated
wealth, backed by their parent, the
Republican Party, were ready to
fight to the last ditch. They'
fought us and for weeks and weeks
the battle raged.
We sent a bill to the senate, a
bill which stripped trusts of their
ill-gotten power—but the senate
modified that bill and we had to
compromise, for you all know that
legislation is only' compromise.
We found a Sugar Trust char
tered iu New Jersey and we found
that under favorite legislation
mouapolizing the refinery business
aud under a * ] rote ctive tar ff of
6-10ih percent it was a power in
the land. Nine tenths of the sugar
we use is imported and you ami I
were taxed to pay ttie bounty io
the Lousisana sugar planters.
Ninethouths “came in the gate.”
Here Palmer broke iu again
and wag again put to sleep by the
convincing argument of the great
speaker.
Said Mr Crisp our congress strip
ped the Sugar Trust of its power
and makes them pay 40 per cent
on all raw materials why even the
senate bill strips lhem of more
than half their power.
Peffer, a brigbt and shining
light of popuiism wanteda bounty
put on sugar—because out in Kan
mis they raise the sugar beet.
( Palmer wakes .and kusses Clrve
land, yes said the speaker the
jpipulisis dMight in maligning and
abiismg Gr< ver Cleveland and
ttieii he laid Palmer out again
He then mentnmed over many
ot ttie I(i6 articie.- ol '-ver day use
alii.-.h the democrats hi d put on
tne list, among ih m s .iu he, it
will take hits of '•alt i<> Fave the
populist p-rtyai d iti»-y too should
feel.'hank fu l .
our people would bo saved $l4O,
000,000. (Palmer kicked but was
covered up again )
The above figuns show the net
saving to the consumer both from
the tariff and prohction an 4
considen d very low •
NcW v.< nil know what the Re-
would do, but there are
no n oro e r übiic ns m this south
lam:. In their place we hi ve a b-w
part’ mailed the populists WLat
would they do? we can only judge
bv what their representatives in
curgress have already attempted.
•They have a platform and about
in spots they have candidates—
i May the Lord have mercy on them
if their candidates are not better
than their platform.
He then showed up rhe railroad
plauk of the pop’s platform and
with fine sarcasm a.-k> d how Jef
ferson would look upon such wild
cat schemes.
Why, said he, Jeffoison’s idea
of democracy was that the federal
government uld do no’hirg for
the state that the state could do
for its self, ami the state should
do nothing for the family that the
head of the family could do,
Palmer said ill that the pops
asked for was to be given a chance
The Speaker replied that the hon
est, level headed, common sense
people of Georgia would never
give them"a chance.
There was nothing in the plat
form for the s uth —he then re
reviewed and asked Palmer what a
“Referendum” was, saying that he
wouldn’t know it if he met it in
the road.
He showed that there were no
pop represnetatives from the South
That populism was hatched in
Kansas the year after the grass
hoppers That the people of K li
sas, had been so taxed by their
republican brothers in the East
that even their corn became cheap
enough for fuel—ihat they haled
the South. But when they could
stand their burdens no longer they
had not the manhood to join the
democracy but s-t up a new party.
( Here Palmer rose from his seat
and amid g'lcal uaiured cries of
‘good.by, he straggled out cf the
hail and took tu the woods.
Air. Crisp reyeiwed. the bills
that populists ha vt introduced and
showed them oy the records to be
ibe most visionary hoard of Wild
cat law makers that even went off
at a tangent or smek in the mud
because of trying to walk the sur
face Jay faith.
Said he, populist party has no
excuse for living—in Georgia—
and it ought to die, aud will under
an over whelming majority.
He paid a fine tribute to Judge
Maddox, saying that as a rule new
members were always slow about
coming forward during their first
session in congress. But that Judge
Maddox had not only been atten
tive to duties, but he had ever
been on the alert. That no member
of the House, of any party, had
forged to the front more rapidly
than had Judge Aladdex.
Mr. Crisp finished amidst a storm
of democratic enthusiasm and a
a call was made for Judge Mad
dox but as the hour Wits late and
‘‘Our John” was suffering from a
tooth ache of two days standing,
H« excused himself.
Mr. Crisp and his private secre
tary, E W. Barret, left for Atlan
ta yesterday sfternoou. And he can
go, feeling assured that on next
Wednesday the democracy of old
Floyd will do its dutv.
—Pittsburg Dispatch.
(retting Out of It.
General Common—Have you heard
de news from Washington?
Major Wealer—Naw. What is it?
General Common—Fellys wid $4,000
a year has got to pay de income tax.
Major Wealer—We must perjure our
selves I—Chicago Herald.
[ To Cure
The Earache
2 I, <i Vx Saturate a piece of cbtton
g Y with Pain-Killer and place
C kin the ear - The pain will
X . quickly cease. To cure tooth-
X ache, place the cotton in the hollow
6 of the tooth, and bathe the face with
i PAISHiLiEg
$ This good old remedy will cure any ache or pain
that ever attacked the old or young. Every household
should have a bottle of Pain-Killer with which to meet
such emergencies. Sold everywhere. The quantity has been
W doubled but the price remains the same.
$ FERRY DAVIS & SON, Sole Proprietors, PROVIDENCE, R. I.
TO © PIMPLES, BLOTCHES a
’as S 5 I BIM OLD SORES N
* PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT CATARRH, MALARIA,
ANO potassium KIDHET TROUBLES
> Makes art BTSPEPStt x
P 'ir6S Are enuresrerao»e tshy p.p.r. A
»■ ■ i --- —Prickly Anti. Poke Root and Potas- V
J „ . Bium, the greatest Hood purifier on Jk
, in Blood Poison ?
ItaM Lippman Bros. , £avanua>,
. j-s 3 •• Go.: Peak Sips—l boupht abottlocf x
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strength to wc ken, . i,•.• • < .. . ZT '. 1 *' ir * ' I her.?-
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For primary f • .rd-irv ;.nd .i rtiarv s ‘ 1 r ' a? reln *
syphilis, for bl<•». n-d* rang, iaer\.f- c - r, / / / • x.\,<_3usou t
4 rial poison, malar; >.. dysper- f.a, d c ALm/■ ’--nr-or xi
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knowiodgo. I-..a intlect-• i..-. .-c CAI rA- XT
» disor.ae, plouri an-’ -I co:-:.i m i ;<• 3
’ Soyoars, wastrf-itedbyt’ - v 6 * jW
physicians ano .‘ipent inuul odscfi ;- r-,,n rn T'-iM bl'a-.ifn I’nl-pil trnfi X
• tin, tried evc-y finnva r . ..-dy vi.c- KE;! t’il bIJJ IrJil’JJ MU. X
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CprlEZ-Jl-, Oraes. County, i£o.
Sheriff sales For Octo
her 1894.
GEO RGIA, Floyd County:
Will be sold bes ore the <'ourt House door in
the < ity of Koine, Floyd County Ga., between
the legal hours • f sal" on the first Tuesday in
ix-tober 18'>4, the following uescrib.id prop
erty to wit:
'lhe remainder interest of Jos. J. I’iintup in
city lots Nos. 35, 30, 44 and 4'2, with the improve
ments there in. Also known as the residence of
Mrs . Ava C. i’rintup. Levied on by virtue of a
Justice Court fi-fa issued from the 919th Dist
G. M.,in favor of W. M. Gaminou & Co, vs
Jos. J. I’rintup, as the property of the Defdant
ant. Levy made by Henry Beard, L. C.
Also at the same time and place, all that trac
or parcel of land lying and being in the city of
Rome Georgia, fronting on Broad Street, 43 ieet
and running back Westerly, 145 feet on North
side amt on South side 127 feet, and on the West
43 feet wide. And knowh as No. 108 in Kings
Subdivision of ihecity of Rome and m-ar the
Northeast corner of orig lai land lot. No 245 in
the 23rd Dit trict and 3ts Section of Floyd Coun
ty Ga. l.avied on o/ virtu.) of tw • tl-las, one is
sued from the 919th D/Scrict G. M„ Justice
Court .in favor of Anderson Miller, and the
other issued by John J. Black, T. C. in favor of
State and County, vs Owen Goodk-t, as the
properly of the Defendaii . Levy made by.
Henry Beard, L, C.
Also at the same time and place, a certain lot
of land in the 22nd District and 3rd Section ot
F loyd county, oa, commencing at Silver Creek
andrunning north 230 feet, thence west 120 feet
thence south 112 feet, thence west 32 leet, thence
south 150 feet thence east with creek 17G feet to
starting poiiit, containing oneacie more or less
and being part of land lot No. (17, situated at
Lindale m the E.T. V. & o. and c. K. & C. '
Railio d . known as the Abrams house and lot.
Le vied on by virtue of afi fa issued Hom the Floyd '
city court iu favor of K. D. VanDyk-. surviving j
partner vs J. S. Howell, as the property of the
Deft.; property pointed out by the riff’s. Atty’ |
Also at the same time and place that part of i
lot of land No. (117) in 23rd. District and 3rd. I
section of Floyd county Georgia that lies on i
East side of the Dalton road and being three
acres more or less of land in Southeast corner
oi said lot on said east side of said.'Dalton road
Levied on by virtue of a justice court fi fa Issued
from the 919th. District o. M. in favor of W. H.
Wardlaw vs. 1 rank Murphy as the property of 1
the defendant. Levy made by W. M. Byars L. C
Also at the same time a: d place that parcel of
land in town of Fore tville l-loyd county oa.
known and distinguished as lot No. one hundred
and twenty (120) iu said Town fronting on Wails I
worth street sissy feet running back one Hun- 1
dred ami fifty (150) feet to Chesser property, Lot 1
Levied on known as Hettles place anil Levied on '
by virtue of a court fi fa issued from j
the 9111th. Dist. <;, M. in favor of Ben Benson '
vs. Columbus Johnson, as (lie pro erty of the -
Deft: Levy made by W. M. Byars, L, c.
Also at the same time and place, south half of city
lot of land N 0.45 in Etowah divisioncity of Rome,
Flojd county, <ia. fronting on Fifth Avenue (6
' vest where L. J. Wagner now resides, known as
j tiie a nustrong property, bought by him from
’ Mary H. Armstrong. Levied on by virtue ofa
Justice Court ti fa is tied from the O'.'Jth District
. M , in favor of Reese & whitehead for use of
T.J. Reese vs L. J. wagner, as the proyiertyof
the Deft. Levy made by w !'• McLeod. L.C-
Also a. the same tim-and place, South han
of lot of land No. ,11 in the 22nd District anu
3rd Section of F oyd countv Ga. and said halt ot
lot containing 8« acres and b< ing land bought
of Malinda Roper, by J. M. Henderson. Levien
on by virtue of a Justice court ti fa issued from
the 9ti2nd District g. m. in favor ot Kotinsawlie
A Bro. vs. J. M.Henderson, as the property or
tiie Deft.
Jake C. Moore.
it. -it> snwat.
Notice Guardians Sale
Georgia, ) Agreeable to an order from
Floyd county, j the court of Ordinary in anu
for said countv will lie sold before the < ourt
house door, between the legal hours of sale ou
the Ist Tuesday in Octobar next, tiie follow
ing Real Esiare to wit.: Tne South west quar
ter of lot of land known as,lot No, two. Iniiirl’ cd
and twenty-eight (Zjß) in the 23rd pistiict
' 3rd Section ot Floyd county, ororuia, con Jf‘?
| ing forty-four ( Lucres more or Jess, lernisv -
his
Anderson x Thompson,
| mark.
J Guardian of the Estate ol
Samuel ami Lucetia Thompson
| “minors,”
Wild Land Sale.
Ml 11)3 sold before the courthouse doorin
. the city of Rome, Floyd county, Ga. between i‘ K
egal hours of sale on the first Tuesday in
cember 1894 tiie following described pri'i i it.'
Wild land lot No. .’4 containing one
j and sixty acres, and East “alt ol l ,)f
| taiuing eighty acres al! in the by
, 4ih Section of Floyd county, Ga. Lev . ~
virtue of 10 Ufa’s for the years 18f4 to 189. H ■
I sive, isued by John J Black, I <. in a
I S ate ami county vs. Joo, W. Jones, astbep ‘
. erty of the def nendant-
I -W to u s-d. Jake cj M°" re - Sher ‘
Libel for Divorce.
Georgia, Floyd county.
! Carrie E. Williams) Libel for divorce ior
I vs INo 45, i loyu ®.oL
) Benj. L. Williams) Court, Sept. Tenn
| Tojthe defendant Benjamin L. Wl ' ’ an d
| are hereby notified and commanded l " olir t
| appear at the next term of the SnlK f r "p |OJ( ion
to lie held in the aforesaid county o- iJ)en '. an d
on the 2nd Monday in January 1 . f||r
there to answer pl mtiffe petition r iirt w j|i
divorce, As in default thereof san
. prooed as io justice shall appeitain. ,
i Witnes» the Hon. W. M. Henr,' I]U p e
i aforesaid county. This 25th day " ■ ■
1894. W. E. Beyseigel, elk, Supr, t"
. county Ga.
1 twice a mo for 2-mo.
You can find . an^ a
thing needed |[ ? ,
school room at krni