The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, November 16, 1894, Image 5

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aiM sis aiifflwni. wjiii MANUFACT VRERf I INI DEALER | N ja# ajil Gmile, Mimeins, codm, to m froi’filitlrn IW g, Lawn Vacos, fßuniains ic. t You Want nud’Ot What Y<>u Oid.-r S. HEMS r REE’ r Mgr, Chattanocga Tenn. 1116 Market Street.. AJ. BANK 5 r ON Get era! Agent Ringgold Georgia H' EK’-&v v ! f- "T - • s-•••'• - >r -~~-■*• •• ■ ■- ■ - iS£'T '< x JT ‘ ™ 3 ' - ---—-•> —M| i I ■£ e'\l -j-im‘ll „ llriMW - rT , CT , Vi| , ;[u; - £Li>- -x WYATTS uam oU.iik ......„.„ jpn T4J,«O- a . l -T. _z_. .1 1 >''x..:. i .~ *,q 5 , • ■•*..■■ Nothing in This World Is so cheap as a newspaper, whether it be measured by the cost of its production or by its value to the consumer. We are talking about an American, metropolitan, daily paper of the first class like THE CHICAGO RECORD. It’s so cheap and so good you cant afford in this day of progress to be without it. There are other papers possibly as good, but none better, and none just like it. It prints all the real news of the world—the news you care for—every day, and prints it in the shortest possible space. You can read THE CHICAGO RECORD and do a day’s work too. It is an independent paper and gives all political news free from the taint of party bias. In a word—it's a complete, condensed, clean, honest family newspaper, and it has the largest morning circulation in Chicago or the west—l2s,ooo to 140,000 a day. Prof. J. T. Hatfield of the Northwestern University says: t( THE CHICAGO RECORD comes as near being the ideal daily jour nal as we are for some time likely to find on these mortal shores.” Sold by newsdealers everywhere, and sub* seriptions received by all postmasters. Address THE CHICAGO RECORD, 181 Madison-st. (M VHHHBl&SSSßxr’inrcMiiwn.p —— .. .. k free coinage of SILVER. The free and unlimited coinage of ■ silver* the product of American mines, I at the old ratio of 16 of silver to i of j gold, is the only solution of and remedy for the disturbed and unsatis factory condition of trade, manufac ture and general business of the coun try- lhe surreptitious act of 1873, divorcing silver and gold in our mone tary system, was a crime of untold magnitude. It was the rankest kind of class legislation in favor of the wealthy against the producers of wealth, and hostile to the prosperity , °f the United States. It was an act , of treason because done at the instance °f a European syndicate and for bribe money, “giving aid and comfort to our country’s enemies.” To shield flte guilty parties, the well authenti oated facts, often published, have been 'igorously denied. she Enquirer will continue to ex- Pose this unpardonable crime until right and justice are done the people ' the full restoration of silver to its o'l companionship with gold. We r ‘ e ed the assistance of the people in ■sseminating the truth, to which end " e invite all in your selection of pa- I’ers for the coming season to include / e Enquirer, that costs only SI.OO a - e ar. (Issued twice a week.) Liberal commissions and cash re wards given to club raisers. Sample copies free. Enquirer Company, Cincinnati, O. J aTho thumb if an unfailing la.ex of character. Th* Square '1 >l< tn dicatae a strong will. S r <'*t 'p and flrmnem*. Closely allied is t • Spatulated Type, tha thumb ot those . of advanced ideas and business A* ability. Both of these type In tong At to the busy man or woman; nod Demorest'# Family lin soie pre ~’ll ii.rctt eeticciailjt for •«*ca> prenti# a wlmio volume of new :<*<**■ »<»'- PXXX'J*i dins -d in » smallsp.it*. #«' ' h 'd ”7; I \\\*'•! r of the wludn world « work 11 I |i for .-t month may be read i» h»tf im I hour. The Conkad Type rndtcaU* M&\ refinement, culture, and a ktv* of F n am-ic po-try, and action. A peraoa r V v ,'n type of Ummb wtl. thor —J *• Piv'hly enjoy the Hlrr»ry allraetioM <5 X of Dcinoreel 's Magazine. The Ar al " i J>e Tree iiwdcal** a love of . beauty a.'.d art, which wfll tad rare 4 pleasure in the maguillcent oil-plec - *“? ,d .... <,f Hd.-’i v 24 inches, repro- CJ A (i.Rcl fn>m the original painting by De lamgpre. th. n>..< eebtbra ed of k living few or-painter#. ’’•'•Sh *'* a be ziven to evtry nubr’— ber to W<, ' • cannot ’ll® di*' ''.gu'rhed from the F’.Sf rt orn'inal 11.-sb ■ tie.-. exquialte I I / -£~ i lished in i> number of the Maga te-fc T zine, and the art eh « ar- so pro. C <JS t fn-elv and snperl ly : lustrated-that PCX <'”■ Magazine'm reamy. « f //I folio of ait works of fnt nuDe i / \ on er The Philosophic Type >» the ll .'Si thnmb of the thinker and inventor I/O ! il of clans who will be deeply Inter rK cited n those developed ,inonth£ I'all hi Demarest's Magazine, tn every L 0~.1/ one of ita nnnienm departmeida. wi'.cta oarer the entire artistic ami \\ W cost oulv 2.00. and you will ha'® ’j) ’-A a , „ y -nzines in one I • W 1 xvlNOHDrMol’: >T I 'll ;- he 1 -, Isi-t llth Street. v.w /\oik / O'7 Thcn-li not n fashion miigaz ns. W SPSS'S /•fl T-. ''' E.U'.' ...X’S gentler -er. everyone ° r , )r( , linncl |umntedwtih benioiest's.Miigazin- ■ * c j|, l( . n copv ifreei, and whole THE HUSTLER OF ROME.FRIDAY NOVEMBER, 16 1894. A COWARDLY DEED Mich Fifteen Prominent Citizens Must Answer for. Birmingham, Ala., Nov. 16. —' Fifteen prominent citizens of Cull • man county, amobg them L. Al. K-l hr, County Commissioner.W'-r* o-fhv arreted and placed in jail at Cullmah, charged with partici* i .'<<r ing m the lynch ing of Monroe nd John Evans, father and eon and wealthy farmers File Evans’resided near Bailey-: i <own , and lived a rather sejludeo I tie Near their place several men I ■ad hewn fired upon from time to| • and the Evans’ were suspect ad of g rne of these crimes. i ‘Ju August 15, 1891, they wen i ’ Med on a charge of shooting a’ ; a -u named Mooney, who wi s 1 'Ven wounded. The younger i ■ vans was also suspected ot mui d-r. but there seemed to be co <>:)••' usive evidence in either case 1 AV hile under guard at a deputy’s house ‘.hat night a mob of 200 white < ;s c ame, overpowered the guard i and hanged them with the same j rope to the same tree. Thw ]ynch- I ing was a cowardly affair and large r wards were offered by the state land county, but not until a fe\. days irgo did the officers get a clue.i | when, it is said, one of the guilty |parties gave the entire gang away, j which seems to have Been composed i o ome of the niost prppiii •it inen In the county. L. M. Kellar, Coun ty Commissions'; Will Bag-Icy, J. Bagsley, I). M. Holmes, or.e Donaldson, and 10 others whose names the Sheriff refuses to dis close were jailed today. Warrants are out for about a hundred others, some of whom have long ago re moved to Geoigia and others to Texas. The arrests have caused a Jig sensation in North Alabama. A NEW WILL ?3n. Clay Made After he Was M; - ried. Lexington, Ky., Nov., 16.—Im i ediately after the ceremony was performed yesterday, which made 15-year-old Dora Richardson the wife of octogenarian Gen. Cassius Clay, the old general made a new will. He would not say what disposition he made of his proper ty, but said that under a form*-] document it was to be divided P pially among his six children. It was after much coaxing from die general and her brother, that the girl was induced to stand by die general’sside while the core-I .nony was being performed. At its conclusion she went to the citchen to superintend ths prepa ration for dinner, while the old general and ’Squire Douglass drew up before the big, old-fashioned grate and discussed the topics of the day. EA<r ROME VOTERS The voters of East Rome are lereby notified that the book of registration are open for six cun -pcutive Saturdays. W . M Gammon Clerk Nov. 8 1894. There is no medicine so often ieeded in wvery home and so ad mirably adapted to the purposes ‘or which it is intended, asCham bjrlain’t Pain Balm. Hard y a week passes but some member >f the family has need of it. A tooth ache or a scald promptly re lieved and the sore healed in much less time than when medicine ha lo be sent for. A sprain may b. promptly treated before inSama ion sets io, which i « u r•s a •u r • in about uK-rhird of the time otherwise r pii/aJ.Cuts and bruises should r»- «iva immediate treatment befor h<- parts become swollen, which 3.H only be don when Pain Balm ( kept at hand. A sore throat ma ■ > cured before it becomes s?ri< m < t eublesome corn may be tmii i by applying it twice a day tor > <>.-kortwo. Alamo back may b r,d am* several days of valuali m • saved or a pain in the side < i p.st iwliwved without paying » l<>c or bill. Procure a 50 cent be h it once and you will never r t ic. Fouaale by Lowry &Br lo. i THEBTGGESTTHING AT ROME, I BBS I taffA fe. i S 3 fF T I • j- J I -*v-A.b^v ~ 4- I? 11 i ■ i Solid Oak Suit, $17.50 Washstand, $ 1.00 1 1 WMMi j i »StK 11 I D L ' IS ■ I II Ji l1 Ladi s’ ocker, sl,lO * Tin Fioit Safe, $1.75, Lidi s’ Roc’.er, $1 3X " J B » fff. . • I | fr-- -rl I TH ! 1 fi Ji I 111 h' jj ,1 J I <j fl I>■ ■ i I I ill a itai - I Oil PT--S ’ ml ***•'**■*k .. y j. j , M Oak Washstand, $1.25 <)ak Koc ‘ er ’ 1 >• Ts J Ti'! Illi Puil i jjjj JjTlI 3 ) i.ich io tn i i b r, 90c. Ce lie i able .■ . >. ( « *■ jH "j Bis .JS&ai If ‘My > it i . Wc vU H 3 ~ ' ■ w 9 i&c lh>ce ,$l5O S* i'.d Cak Suit, $13.50 i OKLYAFEWOFvURTHOUM 81 NS I ihi |J n PARKS- ■ ChOOSIO'o ’lwart LoM; ( irpb, Fd.nitureanu Underlaking-iome,. . d i t 1 I