The Hustler of Rome. (Rome, Ga.) 1891-1898, December 01, 1897, Image 1

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■ r A ft gM u ■ w •• • J I ; I ' r ". bg 1 I ' |||B| J. - -s'** -*-aXrtk’-UMC| I „ 1 -■■ 5? ■ ■ ‘-u 7 ■ ; ‘-5.1 ■ I W* I I uro * |£ BhSbS I EOD H (H:r OF 'I he ■ 1,7 Y AFFAIR I .GO HOME H. ,-■ ()e Whitehall’s ■ «-i- Al’EI) Master. M 1 Ky. Dae, I. My. ' .iy wan no batter |B; !b-r cuse has as- ■i . •'.• peet. Iler re- ■ Gene’a’ Hl by H; ■ v eoine to see i-Liy hud he ■l -til at her Hl ar Whitehall. H ■ L • IL-y, sis'er of led to see her Ml- Rielrir Ison and Hll'- i-i a V.oboit qtiar- Mr -1 in Clell driv- Hiu V-r oil ;!,•■ place it is re ’ <!■ i'< : I her she was y i i. boarding Dora, .-'I help from his 1 dhe's. H ' . ■ .-lirotis all night fia by quarrel. This ecneiousness re H i that as soon as ' ' ■•': 1 enou :b she H ' --al Cloy H Ct Il’s otter and t the G>d>t- ’ stsf-T-in-law ' hall along H would <l<v i1 s H with h's little ■ ':j that Dan T’ 1 H ; r of M rs. B o’ •<! her relatives. B 'I" 1 >'s and J ichard- j B ptfpartng tLents. Ives. '■ olj afe in .hid- B'' • " '-' ■■! the,worst is ex- B , Could m&et Tu ■ 'a-es— On Wednes- B - I' eentber 1 st, at 9 j B ' Cty court room,! B '“■■ 11 inis will set 1 B an -uiii" term of the B ' " kerne bar will 1 B' Ifest is I-- t’s I - con? Br-'? J 1 s! ‘a -p thcning- food and ' B r -c in its flesh-form- B I■ s. It contains Cod- K ‘'si'icd or partially K. ' ‘ H !i l:»ned with the well-1 E. ..■ i - highly prized Hypo- Bht ii- ' an< * so K; . / P ot 'ncy is materially ' "'"''i’lMDo? /'■ ' ''t loss of flesh and n- ’.’ a normal condition the . ; and the adult. It u . I '■ blood of the anemic; li o /. : “ugh, heal the irrita- tu~. ? e ’ '‘-o-' t and lungs, and itiy ■;’. ” ’ consumption. We tj : . ncnt because the pr c y c ," .' ! “cnty-five years has Cast-,. ' HI * ens °1 thousands of ro u , r< SCOTT S Emuisuin. 1 x.* . 1,0o i *ll druggists. ? 1,1 iw NE, Chemists. Few Y«rk. THE HUSTLER OF ROME Smoke Xtra Good And Rebel Yell Cigars MIIAM AGAIN CAR! EICVILLE MASHER ON ANOTHER “WHIZZ” BEEN ON LONG SPREE And A '>'ri<iii>Av In-titei> Atlan ta Lady . . This morning’s ConstiTition I says: Sam F. Milam walked before j the recorder yestepl iy 'afternoon ne of the n,ost di! ipid.ited and ' <>bj . o t s ever seen at the nolice barracks With loiu, v t vy, ii< •• i hi ■. it l « tac ius l a! ' as d alii, and eyes that were unnaturally brght and encircled by dark rings, he etoi d up *to re ceive his fine. It was the second time [within two days, and in each instance Milam had been arrested on the same charge. The voice of the young man trembled with emotion as he spoke to the judge and he hung his head as if hearti'y ashamed of himself and his con . duct. Expressions of regret and sym pathy were heard on all sides for Milam, for he impressed those who saw him with the fact that he is a gentleman still, despite the fact that he has been arrested twice since comig to this city for I insulting Indies. i Heavy’ drinkii g was the cause lof the young man’s conduct. He has only just starte on the down ; ard pat h . Saturday a f ternojn Milam in- - i suited a lady on North Pryor 's reet. He made a remark to her j and then attempted to catch her ■ hy the arm hut the lady drew back | and reported the matter to Patrol man Sam Sh°phard. Milam was ; arresled’atid carried to the po lice barracks where he was con fined until the following im ru n’’ wi >n a bmd >f $25 75 was put np for him by h s brother, •h i lives .n this city and co n- i mauds the re.ipeet of all who | know him Mil irn f>r •■■ted th'B bond Mon day morning by’ not appearing in court to answerte the charge against him. Ho is from Carters ville « her* “he is a member of a dry gilds Ifni, and is doing well. Milam is stopping at ths Aragon and it was there that he was arrested yesterday morning. He went into the dining room and was causing some disturbauc when the head waiter was in structed to removed him. Mi lam was quilt euoujh, but as he was passing a lady near the door he said ; “Look at the old sweet thing.” It was for this that he was ar rested. The case ,vas explained by the officer and the head waiter.and during their testimony Milam hung his head and refined to look at Judge Calhoun. After hearing the testimony the recorder looked at Milam for a fev moments with out speaking. The young man observed this an i a b.u-ih crept over Ins face and he moyed nerv ously. “What is the matter with you Milam?” at length asked Judge Ca houn. “Idon’t know, judge,l, am fcure. L have been on a drunk and done things I should have left undone I am sorry, judge,” ami here Milam’s lip trembled and bis body s '.aye 1 with earneatness, "and 1 want to go home. “Why,l know your people well,”) replied the judge. “You came of a’ good family and you were reared well, I know. Here you have bsen a-reated twice within a few dsys for the same thing, and I don’t understand it, What do you mean?” “I dent know, sir,” Milam, ans wered. “I »nr tim s think and, here hie voice became husky, “that | lam loosing my mind. Judge, I have no money with me, but it you will kt me communicate with brother I believe he willjkeep me ROME GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY EVENING. DECcMnETI 1 1897 WOOD ALCOHOL SETS IN ITS DEADLY WORK IN SELMA. SEVEN MEN ARE [DEAD And Fifteen Others are.Dangfr ouhly 111. Silina, A’a , Dec. I.—News reached the city last night from a inilroad coi struction camp on the line of the Mobile and Ohio Mont gomery extension near BDliegsiea in Chilton c unty. of the death of se - n men iro n Iritiki ig whisky mt.immg wood alcohol. Friday last J. L. Jones, -a con tractor, sent to the city for two galloi sos alcohol. Word alcohol was sent him, and not noticing the warning on the label, he mixed it with the whiskeytand sold it to the hands. Sunday morning Jones was rid ing with W. H. Anderson, when he suddenly cried: “Anderson, I am dying!” and before he could be got back to camp, expired . Andersen was taken sick soon after reaching home, and died yesterday. Both men had drank of the whisky containing the wood alco hol. One white man and fonr negroes at the camp have since died, and fifteen others are desperatelj ill. WITH THE REGULARITY'OF A CLOCK. Cheney’s Expectorant will in variably cure a desperate cough and case of the lungs. I have used it in my family for many years and can say it never fails to prove its worth. It will always get yon right. C. Tucker. LAST WOLF KILLED Os A Pack That Has Long Annoy ed West Virginians. Clarksburg, W Va., Dec. 1. — On the farm of Rev. George Har man, near Elkins, a wolf measur ing seven feet from end of tail to tip of nose was killed by Jet Roy. This is the la t of a pack of seven that had been devastating that country for years past, and it is thought to be the last one in West Virginia. CHRISTIANS SLAIN And The Khalifa Will Soon Be Punished For It. Suakim, Dec I—Advice from Kassala say that reports are cur rent there that the Khalifa mur dered several Christians at Khart oum. Printers will be interested in the announcement that, as soon as the contract for printing en yelopop for the postoffice depart ment expires, the government will cease the business of printing return cards on envelopes. It will also interest them as well as all business men to know that by a r. cent ruling letters that cauuot lie delivered will be held thirty days unless a sh >rter time is in dicated on the envelope.— N e w«p aperdom. _ out of the stockade for a while.” “Never mind about your broth er. You have already cost him $25.75 and I am not going to let you do it again. N w. I will tell you what I am going to do. I will not impose a fine on you this time, but will give you a sentence of six days. During that time you are t' be kept in the polj.ee barracks.’ “vVhy, Judge, I will go crazy d >wn there if you keep mo there long,” said young Milam. “No, you won’t. I will have ths ity physician attend to you, and , cs e that, you ara sobered up.” Milam was taken back to the prisoner’s room and h r the next six days he will be kept at Hie* p.Htce barraiks undir the care of Dr. Hunt. OREVFUSA WRECK horrorshave MADE«HI\ GRAY AND DEC RE Pl D. MOST UNRECOGNIZABLE W TCHED Day# And Nigi r By j Guards With Strict Orders. Paris, Dec. I—The Dreyfus case continues to absorb Europe an attention. The desperate efforts of th j French War Office to ore vent the rehabitation of the .Jill-starrec 4 prisoner of Devil’s Island aru des tined to failure, it is beliewd. Dreyfus is practically unrecog nizable now. His hair has turned white, and he is a complete wreck. Even if the ii quiry being carried on should prove tliepreluds to his release, life would be’ more or less a blank to him. He exists— that is all. I he only wonder is that he s ill lingers on. Countless persons, endowed with strong constitutions would have accumulated before this to the system to which he is subjected, in the opinion of those who have watched him on the spot, as a letter just received from French Guinan abundantly testifies. Eleven warders are told off to guard him night and day, two at. a time, relieved every two hours. They are strictly enjoined niter to speak to the prisoner un less there is some imperative reason for doing s >. Thus Dreyfus sends days ’ and weeks tog thor, precluded from conversation with any fellow-crea ture. Until last July he dwelt in a hut situated in the part of the island. Then he was removed to the plateau higher up The structure he now inhabits is about 30 feee long by 10 feet broad. In front of this hut isa bit of ground 40 yard? in area, in duced by a very thick palisade six feet high, so that the prisoner can not catch a glimpse of the sur rounding scenery, but has only a ! dead wull to gaze upon. ! The wretched man tried to con vert the grjuud into a little gar den, but the soil is so poor and pebbly he had to give up the j idea. He now passes hours to. g 4he r in reading and writing let ters. Owing, however, to the money he is permitted to receive from France—sloo a month—Dreyfus is able to supplement his meager diet. rtipans Tabules cure flatulence. ,K* 11 1 When a II ! I | man fa" s ou t . o f a ten . s tory | window S’ ‘» WL "~'V "'if B ~IC J ~ you’d natu- I 11 man Wcl1 ' —ls WHF Piw 11 perhaps he | * s a ”d then I again, pcr- __ f jL. haps not. Something ♦jrV ... may save him. There e ’i. y may be a A friendly awn- i t ing that will let him down qK easy, so he WL-w' K> may be sound an d well to *sV."morrow. You sever know what may save a man who , seems to be as good as dead. Many a man who seemed to be dying of • consumption, and whom the doctors pro nounced just as good as dead, has got wel and strong and hearty again by using r»r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. This wonderful medicine has shown the doctors that consumption isn’t always a fatal dis ease It can be cured if you get at the . germs of it in the blood and clear them out k ’ oughly That is what this “ Discovery ” docs. It makes new blood, healthy blood. The gi rms of consumption can’t exist in h.-althy blood. They simply let go their hold and are carried out of the system ; I n the new blood builds up new tissue, 1 new flesh new power, new life. It carries I vitality to the lungs, the bronchial tubes and eve: v other part of the body. j It cures people after cod liver oil has I failed, liecause their digestive organs are too weak to digest fat foods. The ‘‘ Discov ery ” makes the digestion strong. For thin and pale and emaciated people there is no flesh-builder in the world to compare with it. It doesn’t make flabby I fit but hard, healthv flesh. It builds nerve power and force and endurance. It is never I safe to pronounce any one “dying of con- I sumption,'’ or anv other wasting disease, ’ until this marvelous “Discovery ” has been . given a fair trial. I Dr Pierce’s thousand-page illustrated book, “The People’s Common Sense Med i ical Adviser ” will be sent free paper-bound for the cost of mailing only, ai one cent stamps. Cloth bound, io stamps extra. I Address Dr. K- V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. FJ.KANE&CO HAVE fl THOUSANDS OF BARGAINS TO I BARGAIN ft ft We anticipated the Fall Trade ft and more, we made our calcula- "a tions against six cent cotton, and, 1 ft while our buyer was in market, | ft • bought our entire new Fall and | Winter stock on that basis. It I ft took work, it took money, it took | time and it took a man who knew ft how. That we have generously I ft succeeded in preparing to meet ft the exigencies of the times and j ft the conditions that now face the ft people, we moat cordially invite 1 ft you to call and see for yotrsslf 1 ft Weknow that we can satisfacto- . & * rily convince you. ■ ft iWe flatter ourselves tnat we ® ft have already built an unassaila- ’ ft ble reputation for handling only K ft the very best grades of staples. I ft We are here to grow up with the H ft city and we propose to make ev- ft erysale add to the reputation we R ft boast, H ft • As to the more changeable or || ft fashionable patterns, weavesand gj ft stylish goods, we pride ourselves • th i■. w; 11 /r. i) n j rr ) jll / • | ft* selected stock ever brought to » ft this market, Gooas. that are a jf feast to the artisticeye andgoods ft that wear like [ron and yet are a I? # joys rever; (I # - || Sr fill * J F ). KANE& CO 1 10 CENTS AWEEK