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■fl THE HUSTLER OF
stared nt the Postott < e an mcom<l-cIMB matter
PHILLG. BYRD- Editor and
MANAGER.
10 ci it/pir $4 pir year
Advertising rates, reasonable.
PHONE NO 85.
Bryan, S wall and Maddox is
the winning ticket tor November
3rd.
If silence is golden there’s ’rea
son to doubt-how Watson stands
since G -orgia’s election ,
When Judge Branham’s ship
comes iu it will be a Supreme court
judge-ship. And it's aiready un-i
d-tr canvass.
A crazy dude negro applied at
the Kimball house for entt rt i.i-
Baeut. tie was locked up. Strange
to say h docs not lay the blame
ou a hypnotist.
If castor oil is applied to a wart
once a day for a month the wart
will entirely disappear. In many
cases it will not require so long a
time . —S 'ientific American.
Trox Bankston says that, “Joe
ulhatton is not re o ist“red in Ca
toosa county, but we confident
he must le living here, even if it
is under <issuni"d mime.”
The cause o! education has had
a bad n tback already, for smii
one has broken the back of the best
football half-back at Dartmouth
College.—Macon Teh graph.
McGarrity’s name will be Mc-
Ginty aft- r 'be election. He will
be at the bottom of the political
wave in the Seventh Congressi&nai
district. —Ringgold New South.
The Devil is making hay while
the preacher is dabbling in politics.
—Dalton Ci lizen.
Go tell it to Psalmuel and whis
per iu the ear of Dr. Gambrell.
The newspaper boys are busy
just now in hunting out the best
Supreme court judgeship timber—
and all of them ag'ee that Joel
Branham, of Rome, is as good as
any thay aire a tall.
Hon. John W . Maddox deserves
and will receive—a largely mere: s
ed inaj -rity in his race for r- -elec
tion to Congress, where he h.-is
faithfully Io Ked aitei the inter
s sts of our people -
If Sam Jones und<takes to
“chew” up the ballots of ihe dem
rcratic majority of ’Wednesday he
had I•e ter splice his jaw or it!
might get in he e<mdi ion of T"in
ats 'n’s t- mat. — D Kalb N w
Ea .
It is said tha r John Temple
Graves would have aspired to be
United S ales Senator in casa the
Populists had carrjed the legisla
ture. Tile State can now more ful
ly realize what it has escaped
Grifiin News.
Altgeld sat s Illinois will go for
Bryan by a greater maj »rity tnan
it went for Cleveland. We would
like lor the republicans to irot out
the nag that knows more abou
Illinois than Governor Alt.eld.--
Columbus Ledger.
Governor Atk’nson was re elect
ed by about forty thousand and
the majority for the state house of
ficers reach-d nearly fifty thou
sand. The democra'ic party in
Georgia is climbing back to its old
figures.—Conran' American.
Se .b right carried Floyd coun
ty by a maj >nty of “68 votes, hue
the democratic state house officers
carried the county by four or five
hundred. Floyd had a iit'le home
pride ami voted for the Populist
nominee. —Conrant American.
Tom Watson’s throat is still
Bore, and his physician thinks that
he will not be ab e to make any
more speeches soon. Tom is evi
ftpleutly improving, however, for he
j has resumed his letters to the Ne v
York W jrld.—Albany Herald.
Atlanta —-just as w- ; ex-ected —
bobs up with severhl candidates for
Supreme Court Judge. Now, we
have a great admiration for At
lanta. but we want it distinctly
understood that we are opposed to
'anything she asks for until her
people take a little more interest
public affairs. The idea of a coun
ty lik ■ Fulton, with over 13,060
registered voters, casting only a
li>tie over 6.000 votes ind giving
the head of the Democratic s ate
ticket a paltry little 1.200 majori
ty—such an idea, we say, is enough
to m ke a good country Democrat
vow that Atlanta shall go hungry
tint 1 she does something to re
deem herself.—Cedar own Stand
ard.
The greatest monstrosity of t e
campaign is the Kentucky chicken
hen that laid un egg with a big “B”
on one side and the figures ”16 to
1” on the oth r. She must have
been eating silver bugs to have
dropped such a curio. O e thing
is certain there can be no clo.ud
over her parentage. She is the
daughter ol some good
Kentucky rooster —Dalton Citi
zen.
The Cedartown Standard hits it
right when it says: “If Seab
Wright's friends in Floyd had
known ihath« would ever write
such a letter as he sent to the New
York World the night after the
election, that v ounty would have
gone againsj instead of for him.
That characteristic whine of
“iraud”was unworthy of a man
of his intelligence. ”
'1 lie Hous im, T-x-s, Post rises
to make this remark: “The pen
sion rolls now are nearly 39,000
names short of the million mark.
No wonder toe Northern histories
put the hjial of the I nion arm es
at a ridiculously low figure — hey
d d not have the light of the fin
de siec e pension rolls to guide
them.”
The stories in McClure's Io 1
November will comprise, in addi
tion to the first iosialmeut of the
Kipling serial, two dialogues by
Anthony Hope; a true story oi
railroading m the Rocky moun
tains in winter, by Cy Warftian ; a
romantic story of a diamond lub
ber. ; and a Ti.ankegiving love
s ory.
Assistant Editor Sam Jone
gives his views on the democratic
victory under a scare h ad in Mon
day’s is-ue of his organ, the At
lanta J-.u mil. R-v. Samuel claims
to be a democrat Y<«ked to Hoke,
wher-'ll y< u find tv oof such po
1 tical kiin: ?—Ameficus l imes Re
colder.
Mark Wauna c aims that then
were from one hundred ten to oin
hundred thirty-two hou-and peo
ple in the repub icon parade in
Chicago. The United Press says
there vere be. ween seventy-five
! and one hundred thousand m th
!p trade. ho told it? —Columbus
Ledger.
)
The Tenth, Wa son's district
gave Atkinson a g<>od majority,
this should be a writing on the
wall sufficient to show tl e Hon
Tom Watson 'hat there is no
ho| e for aim in thestate m 'hecom
ling national election and the bes
thi"g he can (6/is to step down
and out —DeKalb New Era
Judge Joel Branham would like
to be one of the new justices to oc
cupy a seat on the supreme court
bench. He is n able jurist, an ele
gant gentleman and is qualified to
fill the duties to which he aspires
with credit to himself and his
state. —Ringgold New South.
One < f Seab’s workers said he
spent over 500 on ejection day. He
can’t deny it, even if he wanted
to, and we haven’t heard that he
does.—Hustler of Rome.
If the ab >ve be true we- hope to
hear no more about frauds in dem
ocratic elections —Dalton Citizen
• ■
Capes and Jackets
ifrom $ I up at Thos.
i Fahys.
THE HUSTLER GF ROME FRIDAY OCTOBER 16, 1896.
- *
I was felling Glenn Edd that
nickles were as scarce as hen's
teeth, w hen that youngster stag
gered me by declaring that his old
blue hen had t-eth —that she wore
jhem in hercomb. How can a man
be anything but chicken-hearted
when he has to 11 >ck with such
fledgelings?
* *
*
The Paulding New Era says o>
Judge Joel*Branham :
Judge Joel Branham, of Rome,
has announced himself as a candi
da’e for supreme court judge. We
do not think a more honorable,
upright, talented nor a better
qualified man for the position cmi
Tie found in the state. We want
men ’here who are honest, and
who know their duty and wi I do
t. We believe that Judge Bran
ham is such am m If Georgia can
•i-cure the s-ivice of Judge Bran
ham and two others who are his
-qual in talent, qualifica ions and
g-ntlemaniy virtues, we i ed have
"o fears as to their fai hin sr
vice 11 the people.”
* *
*
According to the fi al returns
the next Get;?-*al Assembly in
Georgia stands forth > Sena e 36
Democra’s, 7 Pops, and 1 Repub
lican ; in the house, 140 Demo
crats, 30 Populists, 4 Republicans
and 1 Independent. This gives the
Pops the representatives in onL
27 counties leaving the Repub i
cans four counties and the Demo
cra s 106 —or just the number ol
counties in Georgia that have gone
“dry” under Democratic La-al
Option—though the 106 are nos
all dry counties.
Here’s another “Bu'l's Eve
Sho ” from the Paulding New Era:
“Let every Democrat go to work
to give Hon. John W. Madd- x a
good majority in Paulding. Paul
ding is Democratic and sin u'd stay
io. The people have spoken, and
a majority assert by their bal ots
that they are tired of Populism
rule The assertions of some of the
Populists are beaten “b\
negroes ar.d sorry white people”
vill not do, for the Populists, bv
the u»e of wh skey and beef, k. ep
ig 'he negroes hunched all night,
dr nking, eating mid carousing
amj also by threats, secured a fail
■•hare of he negro votes.
I hey should never ; gain open
th-ir mouths about prohibition.
I'he very idea of the r drugging
rank men to the polls to vote :
p ohi-popul st ticket is enough to
make an angel weep, and even
sname thedemon-a of the lower re
gions . Nor will the other lie do.
that ihe Democrats secur d $4,000
rom ibe sta e campaign fund.
P-au ding furnished her own fund
so far as the Democra ic pa’ty is
loncerned.”
* *
*
Yesterday’s Hustler of Rome
contained a notice of the death 01.
a daughter of Mr. and Mrs Gor
don Smalley, formerly of Rome,
but now of Atlanta. This morn
mg’s Constitution says >h s of the
-ad occurrence:
“After a long illness, Miss Pearl
Sma' ey died yes erday at the resi
pence of of her parents 114 Simp
son street. She died from typhoil.
fever a. d had been sick for several
months. She hasalways been ade
vout'Christain, being an ernest
worker in the Methodist church.
The funeral services will be held
at the house this moyiing at S
o'clock. Dr. Bigham, of Decatur,
ofll dating ; and the in’erment will
at the Eecatur cemetery.
*
* *
I understand that City Engineer
Charles Garrard says that the ap
proaches to the “Land Co,’’bridge.
n Second avenue are becoming
dangerous. Now I want to appeal
to the County Commissioners to
edine sorward promptly and have
this repearing dene. Abcot SSO
will do the work. As to the clos
ing up of the bridge— tis not the
thing to do—an the other hand it
is the thing that must not —and
will imt bodone. Now i* the time
to inuk? the re, airs—an 1 the
County Comii’is- „re me
people to have t hem m de.
* *
*
Here item from the Atta la
Beacon taht wi Ibe r«-ad wiiu n
lerest by Romans because the
young man who did the ki ling's
a Floyd county boy. The Beacon
say- :
“Tu-sday. at 6 o’clock, J W .
Daniel, of Marshall coui.ty. shot
with a pistol and instantly killed
Euriah Slanton near Monroeville,
in Ma shall enun'y, Ala. Ihe ball
entered the left breast and pu-ed
directlv through the heart. D i;ne|
received a tew fl sh wounds imm n
knife in the hands of .-la mi. The
d'fiici'liv anise from a dispii'e as
to which of the two wtjre the owner
of a hog, which Slaton had recent-
Ip put in a'p.«n. Daniel is in cus
tody, and as the Circini Court is
now in sess on, he will probubfy
get an e .1 ly I ria'. ”
*
* *
J W Daniels is ayuiinger broth r
of Mr. J Bird DadieL ol this coun
ts and a son - f Seaborn F Daniel
who was a worthy ai d reap < t d
citizen of Floyd until about S
years ago when he and his son
moved to Alabama. Kuowinu
what Ido ot ’he Daniels J am
banking on that hog beidg the
rightful property of young Daniel.
1 urn a Democrat a d I. Bird
Daniel’s apoPu est butih aid bis
o ks are as good as anybody.
They are honest and honorable.
WATSON S TREACHERY .
Not long ago Tom Watson com
plained of the treatment the Bryan
pre-s ha : accorded him, He said
it h 4 abused him and qo -stiomd
hmotives.
Mr Watson has no cause foj
complaint. On the contrar In
has every reason to feel grateful t(
he Bryan pr> ss for t,he distin
guished coi sioeration H showed
him The wor * charge ary Bryan
newspaper made against him was
:hat he was willing to sacrifice tl e
cause for which he expressed se
Inuch divot on to fuither Ins owi
ambition hat kt vis v.illu gt<
eu ager thf ehetionof .he Pn si
denial Candida e of ins paity i"
order to lorce hiii.s- If n ti.e De
mocratic licket.
But no Bryan newspaper accused
Mr. Watson of using Ins po.-it-on
for pectin.ary gain ; yet it appears
from evidence in the hands ol the
Pupu ist National Committee that
Mr. Watson has done this thing
His attacks on Sew. 11, the De
mocratic party and inciden aliy
on Brvan, ostem-ibiy' in defense
of the Populist part" and princi
ples. and ins impassion-ci appeals
in belialf "f i h ■ P [ ulist org mza
liona- the palladium of populai
ii I ts, w re prepared for sale ana
were sold . •
The spectacle of a Vice Pr-si
ieiuial candidate seiimg his cam
paign utt'-rances by <i e column is
ii"! mspiiing
When 11 sale ; 11. vol ves b. i ray a I
• f hi- p aty and its uJli •» k i i<--
vul mg.
Tne tank and file (>' the 1 opu
l.-ls are not I, -e kind ot V del's l<
serve a- political go< ds to b sold
al Mr. Watson’s bargain-counter.
—St.. Louis Republics
Sour
Stomach, sometimes called waterbrash,
and burning pain, distress, nausea,
dyspepsia, are cured by Hood's Sarsa
parilla. This it accomplishes because
-with its wonderful power as a blood
purifier, Hood’s Sarsaparilla gently
tones and strengthens the stomach and
digestive organs, invigorates the liver,
creates an appetite, gives refreshing
sleep, and raises the health tone. In
cases of dyspepsia and indigestion it
seems to have “ air agic touch.”
“ For over 12 years I suffered from sour
Stomach
with severe pains across my shoulders,
and great distress. 1 had violent nausea
which would leave me very weak and
faint, difficult to get my breath. These
spells came ottener and more severe. I
did not receive any lasting benefit from
physicians, but found such happy effects
from a trial of Hood’t Sarsaparilla, that I
took several bottles and mean to always
keep it in the house. I am now able to
do all my own work, which for six years
I have been unable to do. My husband
and son have also been greatly bene
fited by Hood’s Sarsaparilla —for pains in
the back, and after the .grip. 1 gladly
recommend this grand blood medicine.”
Mrs. Peter Burby, Leominster, Mass.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl.
, , r*-ii eur ® a " Liver Ill* and
iIOOU S HHIS Sick Headache. 26 ceuu
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