The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, November 20, 1894, Image 4

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LHB HUSTLER UF tOME HOOonn-claß* Mail 'latur. ... » I Edi’or, and i IID Ur. B > la.D, | Managei. , ) CITY .JOHN C. RhEC E, editor. DAILY AND SUNDAY. JO cents a week or $5.00 per aunum ONLY OFFICIAL ORGAN . he city of Rome, and Floyd, . •‘Banner county ' of Georgia. j - - - w» 1 —' * r— ”~ ,l ‘ .■NOTICE TO SUBSCRIBERS . -If jou fail to receiv.. your prner regularly, kindly repor ilie to this offl e. line. , - aorta will secure you an i i'oa.to.i to a m.i £.y. funeral. Subsc .bers will be protected. • NOTICE TO ADVEITSERS. Yorf will confer a favot on -ar add art.et by Handing in changes lor display adds by or be -fete « o'clock a. m. ts the day you ex/oct it to l.on»i and traiteient .. Iverosing reawnable of Respect. Funeral notices, Notices •! jCatertaiuwentßcOhituaries, and bke notices of ■ >n#a»nable length, free of charge. AWMuncements of candida.es, same old price . —for hard times—ss 00. The Hustlkkof RoMEiJ the people’s paper all pome set matter—and if to reach : the masses as well as the classes now is the At the recent election in Missou tri 503,322 votes wete cast for Su jpreme Judge. If the Mediterranean should (•vaporate to the extent of 500 feet, "Uly would be joined to Africa. The power of herculite, a new explosive, is almost beyond belief. A half pound of it will move 300 itona of slOll6. The Czar has at last been buried, now let the Jape kapture Port Ar thur and we will be ready for Cfaristmaa. The young Czar Nicholas bide fair to become popular, very, very -very popular it, his realm. He does uot wri’e poetry In New York, successful candi dates will have to keep oc running after the first of January, lhe new law prohibits their using free pase- • *a. A hat a pity Professor Fifzsim xnons cant get to tap Governor "Waite, just one of hie “uot very aard blows.” on the point of the -shin. The Chicago Dispatch aays: ■‘Bacon is the new senator from .Georgia. He will be recalled as the man who wrote Shakespeare’s c?lays.” What does Professor C’>rbeti think of the » xi' made by Profws ’•jc Riordan, who had the mistor une to meet Prot. Fuzsimmoue at Syracuse? Bieckinridge is to go on the lec ture platform. Let his audience ’w as one individual and request Madaline Pollard to take the stage an actress. T» T.ie intermarriage of the houses Brica and Cameron means lhe jropsing of the gold bug and the silver beetle. Peruaps the develop ment of our futute financial policy liesilong this line. Black, of the Tenth, writes Wat son that he is willing to resign and ’ run the race over again. Watson Jias nothing to loose in such a deal but if he accepts, my, my, but 'vont there be tun. V"’ The Russian Government is al ?ready trying to break the spiri *ud humiliate the soul of the fai r young Princess Alix. With malice afore thought,it calls her “Blagov ■ecnaja Velikaj.i Kuoguia.” Kan he uihi 1 ists do worse? A Citizen of Orange, N. J., who ior got to take from the pocket of his overcoat a memorandum of hia loss* aat the racetrack lately re t /!V ! d advice from an unexpected quarter. A burglar who gathered up one thousand dollars worth of silverware in hie house the other night took the oveicoat also, but left the memorandum thus in dorsed: “Don’t play the raees; they caused my downfall.” AMONG THE PRINCESS. Rome is going to have a Keely institute, and Phil Byrd will have the opportunit y of a new sensation. —• Brunswick Timcs-Adverriser. We hope that Editor W rench does not im an to say that the sen sation will ensue from a cure. — Columbus Ledger. W onderwhy Woodal hopes that. Wonder whether Brother Wrench thinks a cui. 1j necessary. o o o No paper in the state has made more rapid improvement both in amount of news matter and vol umn of business than the C luni bus Ledger. As to the Ledger’s edi torial page, that has always been bright and sparkling since Editor Woodall has been roosting on the ! tripod. o o o The Ishmaelite is always thank ful, but it will not keep the day sug gested by Cleveland. —Sparta l«h --niaelite. Os course Cleveland won’t care, but if lie did, it would be all the same to Lewis. o o o About 20,000,000 of the new postage stamps have been called in by the postmaster general on account of their worthlessness. — Brunswick Times. A klear kase of Uncle Sam get ting stuck in a most stuck up trans action. o o o Savannah’s military is agita ting the subject of a modern rifle range. o o o The editor of the Butler Herald has this note: “Some people get in such a hab it of lying that they will net car ry aw ch that ke< p correoitinu. » o o o The Dalton Citizen has this “landslide” paragraph: ‘Subscription to the Citizen can be paid in corn if any of our patrons think with us that there’s any use of keeping our democratis rooster alive. ” The heinous crime of Will My ers has been traced to the reading of the confessions of John M.Mur rell, the Tennessee highwayman, by a senes of coincidents too re markable to be mistaked. The manner of crime itself is pattern ed after one of Murrell’s murders. The names of Morlfin and Cun u uham are abases of Murrell’s, and even the effort at disguise and reckless bravado are touches that belong to the j ioneer roud agent. —Brunswick Times. ■■■■ II - I II ■ -Il ■ - Most people who read the poem “Nothing to Wear” when it ap peared many years ago fail to re call the fact that the author W; - Lam Allen Butler, was then a young lawyer, and l,as since be come a leading membar of the New bar. His specialty is admiralty cases, and he argued a case before the Supreme Court in Washington a few days ago. Mr. Butler is the author of a volumn of verses and has contributed largely to legal literature. Ex-Secretary Endicott sails for Europe next Saturday v.ith the expectation of passing the wmtsr abroad. Some time ago he sold his residence in Salem, Mass, a town to which his name has long bee linked, because one of his remote ancestors was an original seller there. The Chinees minister asserts that China will, if necessary, keep up the war for thirty years. Thw minister, of course, counts on hav ing plenty of coolies to spare.'lf he hasn't enough the united States bas a tew that art not necessary te the welfare of the country. The official figures give Irl R. Hicks. Prohibition nominee for Congress in ths Tenth District of Missouri, 146 votes. Mr. Hicks now knows what it is to encounter a storm tn a char day. Vulcan was probably in transit. The fellow and his girl who writes it “Xmas,” will soon open negotiations but when they reach the “Santa Clause” age they will return to the old style of writing it Christmas—just like sensible people. rHE HUSTLER OF ROME TUESDAY NOVEMBER 20 1894. A NEWSPAPER TRUST Pretty well everything has fallen into the hands of trusts in tl esc days, but a newspaper trust is' rather a i ew tiling under the sun.j It is reported that Senator Brice | of Ohio ami several heavy capital-! ■ ists are now engaged in organizing: one. They propose to get the con trol of a big daily paper in every important city of the country, from Boston to Francisco. The syndicate is now negotiating for the purchase of the Boston 1 Traveller, a New York daily, sev-1 oral of the Scripps papers (pub-j Isihed in Cleveland, Cincinnati i and St. Louis), the Youngstown i < Telegram and the Kansas City World. It has also options, it is said, < n I journals in St. Joseph, Mo., Si. I Paul. Minn., and I It is barely possible than in one o. 1 two instances it will find it neci s a y to start, new papers rat her tin.n pay the high figures asked for the i old properties. The idea of a syndicate is that a ’ good deal of money can be saved | in paper, news collecting and tele-1 graph tolls, and, as Senator Brice knows something about the trusts, he evidently sees a big profit ahead | in this new venture. To the people of Georgia, The : Hustler of Rome wishes to say that we have scornfuLy rejected ' all overtures made by the tru.-t looking to the bottling up of its big plant, in the iron grip of the grinding kombinw. We shall kon tinue to serve the paper, with all the news, at 10 cents a week £IBF"Xow is the time to subscribe. PERSONAL mentions The wife of Li Hung Chang is about 53 years old and comes of ► | distinguished Manchuriau family i Twenfy-fcur women are takii graduate ccuaes at Yale college this ! year, a number’ slightly in notes | ot ihst of the two lust years. With the possible exception o* Thomae Edison, John Ericsson , i wao conceived the Monitor, was th» most prolific inventor of th- cen tury. His ideas sufficed to builu up many large fortunes. Jepson, the explorer and auihor who went into Africa with Htnrv M. Stanley and found Emin Past a will soon be married to Mi«< Anna Head, daughter of A. R. Head, a San Francisco millionaire. Miss Florence Marryat, the nov el let and daughter cf the f» nu u- Capt Marryat, is to deliver a it nes of lecturee in this country on the following topics: “The Mis takes of Marriage,” “The Nrw' Woman” and “Can the Dead Re turn?” Philadelphia plumes herself on j | being the “city of explorers.” ami ; I the distinction seems deserved.! Dr. Donaldson Smith’s explora ! tions in Africa, the works of the' j University of Pennsylvania in As syria and at Nippur, Mercer’s in ' vestigations in the valley of the! Delaware river, and his study of: the pre-historic caves of Tennes see. Peary’s quest of the North Pole. Bryant's and Hite’s discov eries in Labrador, and Rockhill’s! survey of northern Thibet all re dound greatly to the credit of the' Quaker city. THAT BOND ISSUE Yes, that’s all right. Give us plenty of bonds. We democrats deserve the worst.—St. Louis Re public. Ihe repeated rumors of an ini bond issue are (evidently well founded. It is to see how | such an issue could be avoided.— ' Boston Journal. Mr. Cleveland's interferes e with this slipshod management of the gold reserve is sufficiently em phatic as to cause Carlisle’s resig nation—but he won’t resign.— Minneapolis Journal. Mr. Cleveland will have no trouble to dispose of his new $50,- (>(>(t,(XX) bond issue. Since election day the credit of the government Inis picked up wonderfully. But what a scandal it is that bond is sues are necessary in times of or >• found ponce.—> ew Yo k Aila r t'sar. gLnnaiil n ?parks- nn " ■ Otewart U THE ;> i xGI s> < i.’] [I.NG AT R() M I we— ■■'■“•K* pt- -Aw ■ . Jr IJI I J ' [ap’W'TS r j f H fl ini ‘V L U - - 3 Mr '-4 Mr I R Si S 3 <. lid OrtK Suit $20.00. ( Jak T . tb](Sj $9 50 . J 9 /I I| ft 1:1 . ' ill Jor S II gnWnwi 11 iiJUL. ffittffnti fy ,Q| tl v Rattan Rocker. $2 00. 1-14 Sru.e b'ir.‘)b 4 ,<L 50. Rattan Seat Chai,4oc. . Cane Seat, 50c, , :t Jf/Jl ■ gffcl jl® z 4 , ■ .Efts' jMA’.. H te..A ft j ■ o ak Chevale Dre-eer. Oak Dresser, Bevel Glass, Glass 18x40, SIO.OO 22x24, $7.50 iwSi irnr WJ' JJ - I ul || Ciib SI.OO. J PX Centre Table, 7,c. ® |w!w As If 4 IlwteAß J fl A A | -t A fc-Hys j • • a ilHgssbi / A' < * gm op bureu y». ri I arge Rocker, $1.50. Oak 1 , $1 23. DR ABOVE S -OWi ONLY A FEW OF OUR THOUSAND BARGAINS IcDooald-SComoant. v. 3.2 pC Sj . urniture and Undertaking Rome, fit.,