The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, October 02, 1894, Image 3

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J WOMEN FOLKS QUEEN VICTORIA h dhW^ ne Novem her 9tn. York., October I.—“As- Vff ' vr tin^r ( .ni London, says Ltll ' ? n Victoria may abdicate lW ®* e onN.«.nb«» th - The he throne on letterSa ‘ V V P ctoria’s rheumatism is r AUht present time the W t nf England goes up and Stairs in a sort of litter, and polled about her rooms in ave- resembles an enlarged say it'- reumatic gout tangoed X'-thi. partial dtaablement * M , prominently to the front question, will not her l M ty abdicate in favor of her of Wales? k The Court eavesdropper says Men the 9th of November next lh , birthday of the Prince ot Wales, the announcement of her Majesty’s retirement will be made i a favor of her eldest son, who will be crowned as Edward VII Queen Victoria is 75 years old, an age when one can well under stand she might be only too wil ling to free herself entirely from all trammels even of such feeble responsibility as a British Mon archnow possesses. The Prince of Wales is 53. and therefore no long er young. and so it is about time that he had some taste ol his natu ral heritage. A court presided over by a man who is so thoroughly esteemed at present by his countrymen and would continue to be so by his cubjects. with a Queen who is just ly regarded as the most beloved I’r. -in Europe, and by a young Prince and a young Princess of Hales, provided with a future Prince of Wales in the shape of a healthy and robust baby, the en suite development of the Duke and Duchess of York and infant, would give an impetus to trade and re vive social gayety to an extent which has not been employed in England since the days when the Queen and the Prince Consort were 4 young married couple with a nursery full of toddling infants. Another point which assists in giving probability to this possi bility of a coming change in the occupantof the throne is that the 9th of November, the Prince of 11 sles s birthday, is also the date "hii ,i for many centuries has been ted throughout London a ‘" r d Mayor s day, the occasion whi cli the Chief Magistrate ' ,r yof London ascends the wic throne. Lat day a p igeant traverse ß e ' - ? o. London,escorting,with ti e stance of a regiment of cavalry. H 11 * w Lord Mayor to his offieialpal- 12 ’tauMon House, which he is H !’ ; during the twelve months ot In re’gn. v, 11 >' le year in which Queen chf>° 1H l "' e to t * l9 B overeignt’, she t’ **** No. ml)e ; as ’, be •“S ° k * e ,Z ul i d “* k ’ hei c ; tvT . mto her capital realm I°' ’ 3UII ““ 80verpi " n of the the *" 6 llea<1e(1 tlle ■ procession of Sheriff. S “°" here ’ an ' l . W! '“‘ - «■>•! c °inci L r ( • 1 c ia l‘ ter °f romantic MsoV n tbe bist '°ry of Eng- WbeH ,ißtQueenif tlle 9tb °f Ter ».yofu 6 tlle ’ripleanni oft lie biri, *; r r try int() London her ab,li ° ier eb l es t son and of LONDON BEAUTY. i a,nl Brilliant anEi for a Husband. Ik' ? ' i3H is tl f, a ” ty ’ ’ lB 37 years B'° n <b)C <' hl reßßdf l woman ■ 'mh that ' S 3 * shallow and h </ rt . '’" e «he ought , ’‘’stestion and a ■ bp > noX Wh,ch have Ka lot trouble have contributed to this desired result. “I shall be 38 next birthday, 4 ’ she is in the habit of saying, with the most delightful candor, ‘and I should be constantly mistaken for my own daughter if I were not so very much bettor looking.” Her husband? He is a fool of course. What could he have been but a fool to think that Lena, bril liant and 19, could be marrying him for anything but his money? What can he be now but a fool to go on worshiping this woman wh« insults him a dozen times a day with her scornful good humor and her cruel wit. The world scorns scarcely less than she does herself his slow pa tience and long suffering: “My husband has no brains to speak of you know,” says Lena, conversa tionally. Her husband can hear the remark from the other end of tie table. “He wrote a prize poem at Cambridge,” she continues en joying herself very much, “that speaks for itself.” Presently Sir George falls ill. This ilin )ss is alarming, it even alarms Lena. In the very middle of the season she goes down to the cca> country to nurse her husband. She puts on a very becoming cap and a delightful apron. The sick man always lies so that he can see her. She has done her t beat to break his heart, and he loves her still. The touch of her hand ruses in him a thousand tender e notions. She is still the one wo man in the world for him. And she leaves him. The deadly dullness of the place and the monotony and depression of the sickroom soon get intolerable. She has always been quite self ish. Admiration is the breath i f her lite. And who is there to ad mire one in the coal country? She goes back to town and a telegraph iuformes her of his death. She la meats him and curses herself pas sionately for a few days. But there is the estate to see about, and one’s black end all sorts of things. “I am not sure that black is not more becoming to me than any thing else,” she Bays. The fact affords her great consolation. WHIPPED A WOMAN. For Which Three men Will Serve the State in the Penitentiary. New Orleans, La., October 1. — A Times-Democrat Aberdeen (Miss.) special says: In the Mon roe county circuit court to-day Judge Newman Cayce pronounced sentence of five years in each of two convictions upon Tan Roper and Ed Peter and two years upon James Nelson, all white, for White Cap exploits a few months ago. Roper was a new citizen from Alabama, and while he was in the fields at work his wife had a habit of spending her time with a neigh bor, (Mrs. Cullers, which Roper fi nally prohibited, but with no suc cess. Roper and his fellow laborer, Peter, accompanied by Nelson, at night, armed and masked with handkerchiefs over their laces, went to the house of Mrs. Cullers and severely whipped Mrs. Roper and Mrs. Cullersand made threats of hanging them with a rope, which they had with them. After this performance they fled to the Mississippi bottom country, where they were afterward arrest ed by Deputy Sheriff ‘David Mar tin, of this county, and brought back for trial. Peter is said to have a’ready served a term in the pen.* tentiary. Had on a Romantic one A v-31 v r.imautic yuuug mmi was in the ii-ilni ui ,cal»4Ug ou a young woman who .I ves in the out ) ing districts oi this city. His calls had such interrupted frequency tha the young lad) a parents though they savored of tautology. Oue night he of the romintie no nd proposed they go for a walk —menninu, of course himself ana t .e young woman. After speaking of thegloriHd of the luscious moon and the wonders of the brisk uight air,&c., he pursuaded her. feme said that she knew a fence the HUSTLER OF ROME, TUESDAY OCTOBER, 2 1894. WAIT FOR THE 818 MRNUM St BAILEY ! THE Gi'EATEST i.EAOEit is ajiuse.m::. . J /Tlir F? $ W'. ' \ V®-j|/Ihe baniwa u Dhd.ti Greatest Show Ch Earth AT rome, NOT UNTIL OCTOBER 16 1 -vyi Jcginnins ou that day a Grand Trinmpjiant Tour of tha Southern States. BE FOOLsD BY NO CHEAP SIDE-SHOWS I flfl // There is only one great and inimitable show in the world and that Is THE BIG BAIW & BAILEY SHOW. ‘ Capital invested $3,500,000. Daily expenses $7,300. Only show in* lIOT dor<e lby the Cle gy. No False Pretences. Mo Exaggeration. EVERY* ' < ** v ‘* >, JUST AS ADVERTISED. New Performances, New People, New INCREASED IS EVERY WAY ci and etknclqgigal comsress Except in price Os admisßion. <SS GREAT EQUESTRIAN TOURNAMENT. FOX HUNTERS’ MEET. EQUESTRIAN MAY-POLE DaNCE. “l J* r J?!L “S wW three circus wanes is riags greater number of acts, and better ones than ever before. TW ° E,eTated StttßeS ’ KllCe Tratk S,, ‘ l Steel-barred An.n.al Arena. O TRAINED ANIMAL EXPOSITION! Curious Human Beings with queer religions .nd ceremonies, Aerobatic, Gymnastic and Tumbling Tournaments. Circus, Hippo- Pagans, Idolators. Heathen, Mohammedans, Cannibals, Vishnus m**’ wiiH drome, RhCillg, Aerial, EquOatrian, VV!!d BeflSt and Domestic Buddhists, Confucians. Hindoos. Christians and Amazons, whole yjEJhk Aninuil Exhibitions. familesef savage people with their huts, weapons, implements, COLLECTION OF CIANT ANO PIGMY QUADRUPEDS DID luU ijVDn OLE A uIANI uuKILLA I gathering of curious creatures from all countries. ■TiffiEm eact W M EL'“ Akt A, r> Here is the only living spemmen of the wonderful counterfeit 20~0 F TH E F UNN I EST CLOWN S I N THE WOR LB—2o. JOllim, THE WIDOW OF BIG CIHKO. OUR PRICES' THE SAME NORTH AND SOUTH Th-Greatest Curiosity ever exhibited, and of the utmost interest And Everywhere We Take Our Entire Itig Show. Jj . ... . —w. wow; wiiA oi i. . , " , Compared With Other Shot Would Be Dear at Ten Cents. Ferocious, .»tld and liomest . Ammais performing at sue time. ' ’ "<’■ . L - 1 " Gi mtOit, IS ham’s ’-i’- i Ua : rlcss Horse. Dwarf Cattle. Steer -y_X. ■' Z’ . yf, !' r with 3 eyes, 3 nostrils and 3 horns it l! fl hll i Tn.ff'H ’• n > hr, rjHF'V’’* ’•! UUUniWi UlllbiJl . ..l ’ ij C I THE VEBi LOWEST EIOuSSiIIN RATfiS te ? To All Points on the Big Show'., Sciii’ieru Tour. L.-’-y i'?. T- Bowling G’-een, October 2; Naslivtile, Octe.ber, 3; Ccimfoi-r, October i'Zz'T? Birmingham, October 5; Montgomery, October G; Macon u -tobcr 3; Amer- k l 'Ov 0 icus, October 9; Augusta, October 12; Athens, October i. 3; Atlanta, October T •) z "1* »/ 15; Rome, October 16; Chattanooga. October : 7. ‘ SC. AKS? SOUTH-ADMISSION SO —.i ■■■ ■■ . - mu ii .a , r n u ~. v Reserved seats at regular prices, and Admission tickets at usuaN ' (f o advance, at Yeiser’s Drugstore, 330 Broad street. . BEWARE OF CHEAP 25CENT SHOWS, PLAYING THE SO(J<;i-kj AT INCREASED PRICES &> LB-ZkiiuErsr 3 ■ ALONE GIVE THE SAME SHOW AND THE Same Prices Northand South. where he could sit and talk to her. He was in the highest state of maudlin sentiment when they got there, and heaven knows what he was going to say when he took a stern,earnest look at the fence . and gasped . The reason was because the | fence was made of a peculiar kind of barbed wire. This was too much for the young man’s romanticism He fled. SARAH ON DIAMONDS. I ’Mon Dieu!’’ Says She, “They are, Horrible.'' It is understood that Mme. Sa rah Bernhardt no longer shares the general admiration of her sex for diamonds. There was a time —but that time has passed, and her views are now summed up in this general and, i must be admitted, sweeping con demnation : “Mon Dieu! They are horrible, killing the best expression of the face, putting out the fire of the eyes, paling the ear tints and mak- ing the best teeth like porcelain, and the others like chalk. I might wear glass beads or Egyptian coins, but diamonds —never! ” WOMAN ON A TOUR, Rode 1,200 Miles and Wore trou sers all the way Tire Pa'l Mall Gaz?tte says: The new woman has been on a tuur in the provinces, in the hope, doubt less, of converting England to her | newness, ; At least, I suppose Mies Bacon is a new woman. At dawn, on August 3, she mounted her bicycle in Loudon and made for the east coast. Thence she journeyed byway of Petersborough, York and Durham to Edinburgh, and then back again to London, through the lake dis trict and Chester. Altogether, Mies Bacon covered 1200 miles and wore the rational dress all the way. And no one, lam glad to hear, even laughed at her. Nor has the tour been barren of proselytes’ Among the lakes she ran into a National Home Reading party which seems to have consist ed mainly of the other kinds of woman >u irrational costumes Miss Bacon took them up Skid daw as an object lesson. Ana when they came down, lo! the other kind of woman was all muddy and be araggled. while the new woman was nice and tidy. And so the oth er woman is thinking of becoming rational. I wish to buy twr, good second hand show cases. Mrs Mary Weber . next to F.C.Hc ugh, the Tailor. Administrators Sale. GFCRGIA, Floyd County Pursuant to an order of the Court of Ordinary will be sold before the Court house door in the Citv of Rome, said County between the lega. hours of Sale, on the first Tuesday in August 1894. the following property to wit: One lot in DeSoto, (now f ourth Ward) City of Rome, Floys County, Ga., known as the former residence ot ,1. P. M. Bvrd. fronting on the Alabama Road I or Bridge Street in the said City 90 feet and ex tending back, same width 140 feet, and being the property, conveyed by deed of Mrs. Mary I'. Freeman, to Mrs. M. E. Knox. Dated Febttary Ist., 1889. Recorded in Clerks Office Superioa Court said County in Book “Y.” of deeds, Page 498 ed in deed of Martha E Knox, to raid R. B. Me Arver, Dated April 20th. 1881 and Uecorded in Bork “C. E.” of deeds, Page 282 No. 187. Go Old lot sold as the property of William T. Sa on deceased. This July 3rd. 1394. W. J. Gordon, Adioinistratoi De Bonis Non with will annexed of Wm. T. Gordon , deceased, Estates ■ ' B. OF 61 AND W.& A R. R. m d most desireable.line Itlvttn KOI! O ATLANTA Chattanooga, Nashville. No waiting on connections trains. All trains leave on schedule time from JRome Railroad depot, foot of Broad street. “Only one block from Armstrong Hotel. Csr'o ,ll y four blocks from New Central H »te No change of Cars. Through Coaches on all trains Be tween Rome and Atlanta, Close connections in Union depots at Atlanta and Chatttanooga with all trainsJdivergiagTj Leave Rome, daily at....9:15 am 3:oCrt>m Arrive Atlanta •* “12:55 am 6:25 p m i RETURNING. Leave Atlanta, daily atß:os a m 3.01 p a Arrive Rome “ “11:30 am 6.00 pm For maps, folders and any desired informs on, call on oi write. C. K. Ayer, J. A. Hume, T eket Agt. 8 W. F.AYERT. M