The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, December 07, 1894, Image 3

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Shoes FOR The Million, We handle the finest We sell the Kent You coine and see us W« do the rest. Our School Shoes for Boys and girls have no superior. THEY WILL STAND THE RACKET. Thousands of pairs of lasting beauties for the ladies, Our mens barpains'have no peers in this market. a Ladies Spring Heels in oil eizesand styles. ffiDMATOBSANDM MFOBTEBS **lCanirell St Owensve* 240 BROAD STREET. Rome Mutual Loan Association. HOME OFFICE ROME GEORGIA, 325, Broad Street. A National Building and Loan Compny Purely Mutual, safe investment and Good Pro Made by small Monthly Payments, OFFtCKR>. J.X.<3!LOV®K, IVesioent. J. l». MOORE, ®ec*ty * Treas. CEAS. 1. GRAVES, Vice Presrflent. K. RHCDES. Mgr’ Laud Dept. HALITE.) S4ITH, General Council. COAL! COAL! ALL GRADES. ROME COAL CO. VA PB Cfifnnd AVO \ Priee* 4 Henry G. Smith. Ma’gr lAtll/yvbvUu MB. , Hn Rom* tJ. U.King, Weigher. miiiminiTH. CHATTANOOGA TENN. A Striedy class Hotel. Right in the heart of the city 6onveneret to business, deports and electric car lines. Tie service is unsurpassed and the pi ices reasonable. W. A.- CJanip O’Neil Mlg Co. uEziZii .JEL -tZIZ«A ■••■ : COAL'® __ TELEPHONE 76 MSB’ SIHS 1)1 f 530 Market St. Chattanooga W.C. SMITH Agt, Proprietor LADIES & GENTS CLOTHING C LE / t F- OYEDOR REPAIRED, AT LOWEST PRICES. PROMPT PROFESSION WORK, nwiwrpiwos gOR THE NEXT 30 J WILIAaKE CABINET PHOTON at $3.00 Per Dozen. p T h Js is a SPECIAL OFFER for Cabinet n otos only. I guarantee go“A wotk. FOR $4.50 Y°u can get one dozen Cabin t Pnotos and atwo-th rds life size. ’• w. I ancaster, Photo, THE HUSTLER OF ROME, FRIDAY DECEMBER 7 1894 FOR WOMAN FOLK COLORADO’S WOMEN. THERE WILL BE THREE OF THEM IN THE CAPITOL NEXT SESSION. The logical outcome of giving the ballot to women is about to be tested in Colorado. That is, there are to be women office-holders, and the public waits with interest the result of the experiment. Mrs. Antoinette J. Peavy is the Superintendent of Schools. During the campaign Mrs. Peavy traveled over the entire State or ganizing the women and urging them by personal conferences, held ia private parlors, to take up the duties of citizenship in a pub lic-spirited manner. She seldom made stump speeches ; she preferred to talk business to the women in these parlor conferences. What the result of her work and that of the Republican women has been, the election returns have demon ’s trated. The women who are to take part in the exciting contest over the se lection of a United States Senator to succeed Wi»3c >tt and who are to demonstrate their abilities as law makers are Mrs. Clara Cressing ham. Mrs. Frances Khrck and Mrs. C&Trie Clyde Holly. ilrs. Cressingham t«Aik a decided interest ra equal suffrage dur g 'the campaign, and in a recent school election she led the women *.gaiast a •cabal that was thought to be dangerous to the best inter ests of the district. ; In thedßepublitam County Con vention, where tht women were ar- I' rayed wft h the busriess men against the “g«i g,” she was prominent in , her bdlE. stand-fer fair play and i'd cencf.. The ni'tural result was t iat iir the dutftribution of offices the women were recognized by the placing of Mrs. Cressinghant up on the ticket. Her fellow-llaborer in the cam i paign Frances Klock. 1 Mrs. L lock is I'd e daughter of a ‘I Wisconsin fancier and the wife of : a Union volunteer. Her father fell i before, Vicksburg, a brother died in ; an t.niny hoqjital, while her faus • band at the dose of the was mus rte rf 'd out a captain. I Dnning the var Mrs. Klockwork- T wit h the Sanitary Commission, ■ ;r.d-sincetin war she has »lways been identified with the Woman’s , Ri lief Corfßtvf the G. A. R.. which ‘ aocoETits largely for her selection 1 ais a candidate for office. Tfap third woman representative Mrs Carrie C.i?yde Holly, went with her‘husband, Charles E. Holly, from New Y-rfc City five years ago to Fseblo, a*i& they reside upon a smalll fruit ruekch near that city. H-r'husband is a lawyer of consid erable ability. A COUNTESS WHO SELLS PA FERS. Earty every uscorning.says a New York exchange, e little woman ol 50 or there-aboats sets a small ta ble on the sidewalk in front of the } Post Office Building on Washing -1 ton street in Brooklyn. She spreads out upoi the table a great bundle of newspapers ami proceeds to sell them. She is a quiet little woman. Usually she wears glasses; her dress is faded and thin t so is she Fverytning about her indicates pinching poverty. But there is nothing unusual in all th a- There are many other faded and pin died little old worn e-i in Brooklyn and New York, and some of them sell newspapers. But this littl- old woman is one of those interesting people who have a history. She was a Count ess once, and is a grandniece of Pulaski, the great Polish patriot, who fought f»r America in the Revolutionary War and fell gal lantly at the siege of S iv.mnah. • 11-r full name is Jos p line Sulf cenzka larozka. Her story, as she tells it, begins when, a yuan' Pol ish girl, she married Cou it Paul larozka an.l went to live in Si. Pe ersburg. She bad a high s. ci il position there That was almost a generation ago, an 1 she was haj-py in the Russian capital for many years. By and by she and her husband began to disagree. She does not say what caused the quarrel, but she says it was no fault of hers. Finally she loft him. Then her husband retaliated in a manner that some people might call pe culiarly Russian or Tartar. They had a son, a bright youth, and the father caused information to be sent to the Government that he was in a conspiracy against the crown. One day the boy disappeared. The next the mother heard of him that he had been sent to Siberia to die in the mines. The Countess trjed to have her boy released. She visited officials herself. She asked all her friends to help her, but she could not re move th) Czar’s chains from her boy. Then she came to America, bringing with her the littls money e he had saved. She lived in New York hi d Brooklyn in cheap lodging-houses nutill nearly all her money was gone and the time had coins for her to do some kind of work or •tarvu. Then abe began to sell pa pers, and since has earned her liv ing lu that manner. ARMENIAN MASSA3RE. First Rapt; of tie Siaujbter Not Exaggerate! London, Dec.7.—The Daily News has this dispatch from its corres pondent in Constantinople: “News from various sour firms the belief that the first, report -of .the Armenian massacre was n t overdrawn. There is reasons to be lieve that the truth was hidden from the sultan, who on November 30th requested th? United States minister to send a delegation to accompany the commission of in- quiry. The minister communicated with Washington, but the decision of th Washington governmentjisyet unknowu. The sultan on December 2d requested General Rlun Pasha to go to Bitlis and report directly to the palace. Blunt ’e health pre vented his goiug, which was regret able. inasmuch as he would have been a trusty investigator. The Standard learns that Pres ident Cleveland expressed to the sultan his regret shat he was unable to send an American del-gation in to Armenia with the commission of inquiry. PATRIOTIC MEXICANS. Offering Their Services in Case of War With Guatemala. City of Mexico, D< c. 7—The *’e Jean gmermenr is receivii g many offers of as-'isD.nee in putting extra troops into th« fie ’ in case .» f wtr with Guatemala n xtraord na' y- « ion ihe lei i I urn of the of Qu< ret*r<, <>r, Tuesday, vot ed th-ir its ue nberi would draw no s»l r ' during he w-ir, shoo'd hn tillities and t at the amount thi satved be apt lied to purposes f «ar a- tl e genera’ g v r meat may see fit General Leonardo Marquez, now re iding in Cuba, and who is the on i v surviving officer o'the old imper al fereeß in the M*x can occupation, nas offered his K»ivi ;es to M x , notwithstanding hi* aoe and infi m a'i«s. General Pablo R »oha, of Goa i jiiato. has offered to raise extra for r- H of m >unted rurales a d giu rr 11ns for irontier service against Gua temala. Murdered by Mexicans. Sin Au'.onio, Texu - , Dee 6—Hen ry B< si } stockDJHn of Pecos Cou - ;, brings news ol the murder o. T oiiis Ivi lert and sen 1 y Mexican otii avs Poidert whs a prominent h ,'ip man and. Hccotnpauied by his so i, aged 15, was leturning t<> his ranch from a business visit to « a cb”.an living just across'be bor. ler in Me xico. They wore ridirg dor n n mvim <m the Mexican - -‘e ->f '!• [ Rt G:aul>, when fired up n from a - T-e h Her Poi'<-rt was killed o bright, and l-is son i ce e>l a’ Lt f.hrouch bin b i-lv, «■ i• i resul ted in 1 a lentil a few I. u > late,. - JACK KING, I’ru.ident r. J. Simpson, Acting Caahavs 1 W- P. SIMPSON, Vice rrratdent Merchants National Bank OF ROME CA. INTEREST ALLOWED ON TIME DEPOSITS All AOfonrn vlalio.'n Consistent with Safe Banking’ A ended our Customers BRICK KILNS LIME KILNS HAIR AND SAND We can furnish fresh Lime in large quanttie® burned from our own Kilns on short notice. Brick. Lime, Hair and Sand always on hand Greorge W. Trammell Fourth Ward Brick Yards, Mrs. J F Wardlaw, MILLINERTT, New stock, and acorn alete line of all the very latest Nove ties. New goods arriving weekly. No. 208 Broadway, Rome GAL OPPOSITE FIRST NATIONAL BANK. LTTMBER 3 A.ll kinds of Ltongja Lumber sawed to or der on short Notice,. Call on or Address, JOHN C- FOSTEfe L 1 oster’s AdEills Gira*/ IC. ATKINS & CO, CHATTANOOGA TENH/ MANUFACTURERS OF CIRCULAR, BAND, 6AIW. CROSS CUT A-Nl> HAMJ» SAWS, ETC. WHOLESALE a bin ery Mill Supplrs R • iniriog a Speclaltv A BRAN NEW ENTERPRISE Any up -o date Er-terpr.se * hould be encour aged. Great care will b? taktnto please my CUStO(Tie! S. Cal! at the Annex Bathing and Tonsonafj Parlors, if you w an to b treated right. 312 Broad Street. Special attent on given to Lu lies and On.ldren HARRY CHAPMAN, White Barbee. THE ROME BAKERY AND RE S T UR ANT. J. 1 . VV ilkie, Proprietor. No. 228 Broad Streep. WiBB Dana CAK?: ihDEBW DAT Restaurant supp ied with the best the market alTords. Special attention to weddin? orders and ornamental cdsefcfr FRESH OYSTEdS RECEIVED EVERY DAljfL Polite waiter.-,, Satisfactio - gu ir mtt-e I. give me a eaH; .A.. W. HART, leather and Shoe Hand male Shoes I uilt to order, Repair wig* as | cislify, Masonic Temple Store