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THE HHSiIW (F ROME
Evening Except Saturday, bun- ;
davand WeeklV-
PHILLG. BYRD, Editor And
Managir.
omo,. WIU.r.7 «>«*. Tb.td Avenue.
list OF SUBSCRIPTION
a' or
Daily And Sm'Oay.per K* r J1
Bbndar. i«r year ••• ■
Weekly CTHK RomCovww'P*’ ’
PY CARRIER IN CITY AND BTBUI 88. I
D»>< y and Sunday. lOoenta per week.
Ron.it by bank draft. exprsn
money order or registered letlar
Address _
THE HUSTLER OF ROVE,
Rume, G*.
■ntered ■< tbePoat offlce ae asc'«nd claaa matter
Advertialne rates and sample for th
asking.
BUSINESS OFFICE PHONE 85
As stove wood McKinley s tree
sage strikes the popu’ar cord.
Few of the measures advocated
by the Blalock committee have
passed.
Poor Mr. Secretary Gage’s cur
rency reform scheme is getting the
ha ha even from Tom Reed.
Lets see, what, was it Hon
Bowdre Phenizee said, he said ii.
confrence about his colleagues?
Let all the people have a chance
to vote for all the judges and sc
liciters general. That’s thedoctrin.
Democracy has a chance in
Georgia, but, my, my, how the
present legislaaure fooled the
voters last year.
Even Tom Watson declines to
waste time talking to such a tri
fling, do-nothing set of men as the
Georgia ligisla’u.'e.
If the Democratic legislature
fails to pass a coutict bill Demo
crats of georgia are going to have
trouble in the next elections in
this sta'e.
Such “feeble-minded” gentle
hearted, lovable, affectiouate, an
gelic creatures as Mrs Noble should
be treated as God’s noblest work,a
good worn ar.
It seems probable that before
“Old Tiggers” Grosvenor begins
his assault on the civil service law
in Congress there will uot be
enough left of it to assault.
Gus Fatnbles, Mrs. Noble’s negro
accomplice and tool, will not die
on the scaffold until Mrs. Noble
swings. Governor Atkinson wJI
not permit such an outrage.
Jim Brrry, of Chicago, landed
a punch over the heart of Waltei
Croot, of England, Croots remains
are now ready for burial. The ring
is mightier than a battle in Cuba.
The fool legislators who vote
agains* a convict bill and then
•uvite Tom Watson to address
them deserve back seats on a lone
lug in the backestcf Duck-woods..
They should be rel gated i' id for
ever retired om public life Their
own actions condemn them.
J?
B ■»
When an innocent
71; man i« jailed by
he pu f.is
to come out the
‘ same way he went in.
Ilf may break jail and be
cau kht and put back
EwCS? He'd rather have the door tin-
E’KFJ locked and walk out and
Bads stay out.
A sick man is a prisoner in
SRNR the j a ’' disease; he has gout
in by some door of carelessness
-gfigy. or neglect or irregular living,
and he must unlock this same
door by careful, sensible habits
if he wants to be a free, well man again.
If dyspepsia and biliousness or constipa
tion is the way he got into disease, he has
got to overcome just those troubles before
he can get out.
The majority of diseases begin with some
trouble of the digestive organs or of the
liver, which prevents the supply of proper
nourishment to the system. The best
remedy for these troubles is Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery, because it gives
the digestive and blood - making organs
power to assimilate food and transform it
into pure, nourishing blood, vitalized with
an abundance of red corpuscles.
It acts directly upon the liver and gives
it capacity to filter all bilious impurities
out of the circulation. It buildr. up solid,
muscular flesh and healthy nerve-force.
In obstinate constipation the "Discov
ery” sboukd be used in conjunction with
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets, the most nat
ural and thoroughly scientific laxative ever
devised. The “Pellets” regulate and in
vigorate the stomach, liver and bowels
One is a gentle laxative ; two act as a mild
cathartic.
"My wife had suffered for seven years with dys-
P*P R *a, sick headache and costiveness ” writes
Mr. Alonso D. Jameson, of Dunbarton, Merrimack
J*-. , we tried many doctors and many
kinds of medicine, but all were of no avail We
purchased six bottles of your • Golden Medical
Discovery.' which together with the Pleasant
Tenet*' has entirely restored niv wife’s health,
and we cannot say enough in thanks to you for
these valuaMu medicines "
A barber is very often a s >rt of
a lock-smith.though one has never
yet been known to sutler w th lock
jaw.
»*»
It takes a newspaper file to rasp
up the old saws.
«
» •
Kingston has been laid out again,
but {Kingston life is entirely too
grave *0 be buried. Kingston will
bp transported or translated —but
buried? Never!
♦
« ♦
The Japanese, who claim to have
first discovered or utilized the
p-ach, have a quaint legend as to
the fruit. A pious o d couple,
stricken with years and poverty,
subsisted by begging. One day on
the highway the old woman found
the beautiful ripe fruit. A'though
almost famished , she did not self
ishly eat the luscious peach alone,;
but took it Lome to divide with
her husband. As the knife cut in
to it the fruit opened, and an in
fant sprang forth, who told the
astonished beggars that he was
the god Shin To, and had accident
ly fallen from the orchard of the
Japanese heaven while at play
with some other gods and goddess
es. For extricating him from the
pf-ach Shin To gave the Japs its
seed to plant, and told them its
product would make them wealthy.
Thia is the origin of the peach,
according to the Japs,
*
* 4
Holly and mistletoe will soon
be gladdening the juvenile lives of
the happy homes of the land—but
—unpleasant though it be to think
<>f, there aru others. Remember
these little waifs and make their
hea:ts glad. Such a little goes
such a long way—and here in
Rome, remember Junius George is
no longer here to look after the
poor.
With the return of the bustle,
’he old saw about figures lying
will take on a new lease of life,
* *
*
Koi. K. Kringle, of Klondike,
will be a most popular arrival—
because he is obliged to come.
*»*
All little boys are good little
boys now. The Sunday school
classes are being crowded. There’s
nothing like being Christmas-treed,
i oxey will find bad eggs are
hard to beat—if he gets on the
grass in Rome.
*
* *
It’s abi ief dig the Constitution
makes that don’t produce a col
umn reply from that old Republi
can sister, the Macon Telegraph.
*
* *
Allen D. Candler, "the “Plow
Boy of Pigeon Roost,” is the most
popular candidate in the field. He
pleases the best of the classes and
is the idol of the masses. He will
sweep the ibid when the race
opens. Mark that prediction.
* *
*
Who will be Floyd’s next rep
resentatives? That question is of
ten asked but never answered.
Bill Ennis will be the next State
Senator from this district and
John J, Seay will be the next May
er of Rome. Mark those predic
tions.
Rome’s sheets, with clean pave
ments and seas of mud and s ush
running the road beds and slosh
ing over the crossings look like
soiled frocks with clean trimmings.
But then the name of Romo’s
streets is Denny's-Mudd.
***
The editor sat in bis office cold,
whence all but him had fled, but
he wished (hat every last deadbeat
was in his grave stone dead. His
mind then wandered far away to
the t ine when he should die and,
his royal editorial soul go scooting
to the sky; when he’d roam the
fields of paradise and sail o’er jas
per geas, and all things glorious
would combine, his every sense to
please. He thought how, when
bed look across the great gulf
dark and drear, that yawned be
tween his happy soul and those
who swindled here; and then for
water they should call and in ago
ny they’d caper, he’d shout to
them : “Just moisten your to >gue
with the due that’s on youij pa
per,” says one of the boys.
Woman’s Friend
The Great Medicine that Gives
Nerve Strength
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Makes the
Blood Rich and Pure, Creates an
Appetite and Restores HealtU,
Vigor and Vitality.
•‘I feel that I ought to write a few
words In praise of Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
which has done great things for tne. I
was in a delicate condition and was sick
at my stomach and constipated. I tried
remedies highly recommended tor female
weaknesses, but the medicines brought
on other troubles. I was so weak I
could not attend to my household duties,
and I then determined to try Hood’s Sar
saparilla. After I had taken this medicine
a short time I began to gain strength. I
Crow Stronger Each Day
until I was able to work all day without
any inconvenience. I have taken Hood’s
Pills for constipation, and I am better to
day than I have been for five years,
Since taking Hood's Sarsaparilla and
Hood’s Pills I feel rested in the morning,
I am less nervous and am sure J have
richer and purer blood. I have always
been bothered with scrofula, but now 1
am rid of it. Before my last child was
born I took Hood's Sarsaparilla, and
my girl baby was fat and strong, while
my other child was not well and lived
to be only two years old.” Mrs. E. F.
Deal, Box 419, Missouri Valley, lowa.
Hood’s s S.
Is the best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier.
Hrtrtrl’c Di lie «re purely veiretxble, ears.
lIUUU » LIUS fulljr prepared. 2} cent*
THE AUSTRIAN SITU VITON.
Cureiit events in Austria exhibit
to mankind the incongrous ele
ments of that strange Empire.
The turbulence in Prague and
io other Bohemian cities has thus
far taken the form of mere pillage;
yet that the Goverment views the
matter with apprehension is
shown not crly by the large num
ber of troops called out, but by
the proclamation of a sort of mar
lial law peculiar to Austria
It is known as the “Staudrech,”
and under t a summary tribunal
of seven men comes into existence,
b fore which disorderly persons
may ba haled by police or soldiery.
The tribunal may alsc inflect sev
ere punishment, even to the death
penalty, and order its execution.
To invoke summary and vindic
live an agency is the more remark
al le in that country because for
neatly fifty jearstht. Emp're has
refused to sign death warrants, ex
cept in a very few cases of most
aggravated and atrocious crime.
The Dual Fmpire ia a j auachron
ism. Such a union of discordant
races cou'd not effected today. It
arose when the Church was univ
ersal, aid exercised large political
powers.
Because of this fact the Empire
maintained its support of the
Church until very recently. Now
that the concordat? is dead, civil
marriage authorized and other re
ligions tolerated, the bond of faith
is a thing cf the past and factions
are given freer scope.
This change has made the Con
servatives Opportunists. They are
different to the raca fight, but
will avail themselves of .every op
portunity to advance their own
plan i.
No unifying force exists in th?
Empire except the army. The
“Germans cement'’ has proved to
be of poor consistency: tor the
Germans of Austria are more di
vided among themselves than is
any other racial or political group
within the Empire. It has been
said thatEmperJr Francis Joseph
might, as a last resort, carry out
the “revolutionary” suggustion of
the late Count Taafle—that the
graded representation in the
Reichsrath of the varions social
classes be abolished and universal
and equal sufferage be granted—
•n the hope that the leveling in
fluence of democracy might re
duce the Austrian community to
something like homogeneity.
But this seems a forlorn hope.
The social material of that com
munity is to refractory. The ten
dency <>f events in Austria seems
to be toward militaiy adminstra
tion, and the army appearears to
be the only power in the Empire
capable of preventing its disinteg
ration
Twelve good men, under oath,
having heard the evidence, said
Mrs. Noble was guilty of putting
her husband under the sod. Why
should a murderess evade the pen
alty for her crime?
yi- j >
Every American sheep ought to
feel hearti'y ashamed of itself
when it thinks of the trouble it
has caused American statesmen
and then learns that a Sedalia
wool factory closed up because it
couldnot get any wool to manufac
ture, says th ■ St Louis Republic.
POLK IVHLLER
HOLD DOWN THE BOARDS
AT NEVINS
ANO He’S A PuACH.
House Should be Packed to See
Him Tonight.
Polk Miller, Oscar Sissiou, and'
Ester Wrllace will this teison I
sweep the territory th y tour by
storm will) their e’ever entert tin
ment of comedy opera and charac
ter sketches.
Polk Miller is w tho.it ape r is
an accurate delineator of the'
Southern negrq. Mr Mil er was;
born and bred in the Sou>h . and
be understands the negro as the
negro really is. He does n t pre
sent him to the public as a ba 1 of
putty that can be moulded to fit!
the shortcomings of the actor, but
he gives the negro with ail his sub
tle and peculiar wit brought out
in a natural dia'ect. Mr. Miller,
sings the old plai.taiioa songs and |
picks jigs upon the banjo t’ a u <
revelry in the days before the war.
Mr. Sisson is a finished comedi
an. the master of a pungent vein
of humor that does not adulterate
with boisterous j >kes and rough
falls, but makes his au Pen a
laugh loud and long at every line
of the amusing comedies th it he
presents with the aid of Miss Wai
lace.
Dainty, grace ful and merry is
Mice Ester Wallace. She is one of
the most charming additions tc
the comedy stage and in time to
the operatic, for she nas a splen
did mezzo-soprano voice that is
sweet and clear and at her com
mand. Mies Wallace is young in
years, but her developed k.iowl
edgi of how to entertain her audi
ence, and do it without a conscious
action makes her more ot a favor
ite than older comediennes who
often grow wearisome as their play
grows longer. At Nevins’ tonight.
Sea’s on sale at Treyitts.
THE LADIES LIFE INSUR
ANCE COMPANY.
The Ladie’e Life Insurance Com
pany has organized forth” express
purpose of insuring the lives ol
women, since the regular life in
surance companies seem devoted
almost exclusively to men’s risks.
This company will not insure a
man’s life under any circumstances
but will take a risks all women of
suitable age, who can pass the
nquisite medical examination
and answer the following ques
tions satisfactorily:
Were you born on the 13th day
of the month?
Did that day come on Friday?
Have you ever worn an opal
ir.g or other opal jewelry?
When you find a ladder in your
path do you go under it or wa k
around?.
Are you addicted to the habit
of knocking ovt r salt cellars at
ibe dinner table?
Is there arsenic iu your face
powder.
When you see the new moon
over your left shoulder do you [in
variable take prompt measures to
avert hoodoo?
Are you always careful to see
that you do not sit down at the
table with comyany which foots
up to thirteen?
Are you conscientiously oposed
to starting on a journey on Fri
day?
Did any female members of
your family as far back as the
third generation, ever commit
suicide on account of disappoint
ment in love?
Did any female member of ycur
family ever die after the breaking
of a mirror In your house?
If so, how soon after?
Any evasion in the answers to
these questions will be regarded
as unsatisfactory answers, and
any false statement will work to
vitiate this po icy.—Courier-Jour-
nal .
Os course the young war lord
feels proud of the success of the
german arms in Hayti. Tin
“great” black republic was made
to shake so hard that its leprous
scales almost, fell off.
Senator O. B. Stevens is the
practical and successfu 1 farmer
and business man to succeed Mr.
Nesbitt as Commissioner of Agri
culture. That office needs a change >
and needs it bad.
|/Act . Harland says: u
• . ,• •>■., < ”i<- vegf/able ‘ '
.! tt
II ( . . of beef tnet, cinil.incd with [
I I th* purest ■ ■ '■•'* I ' en ’
CQTTOltlii
Is Best (fS=Rj! I
| j for either short-.iiing t" frying Pure healthful, V /i i
i i palatable. YGMffiMßiaiF |
11 ' "f" ‘ -»r* h nn* |A •n; .•• »:!■’. tin*. IVi >
' 1 a ■ | I ( (
< I Ul , ;»» u ..••»-») It wvl‘l •»• uny tstUtir At»y. V*. ' u *-- ’
THE N K *A.KR*Nm COMPANY. Chicago. St .Louis, New York. Montreal. '
! >ea'HKA .%.< * ■ * < K>e«©e®woee^*eeßße<!
___-- ~ • ——— ■ '- 7 .”• • 11,1 “'Ju
I have used
Piso’s Cure
for Co 1 'iiptioii, and can
recommend it above all others
fi r Coughs and Colds.
It is selling’ like hot cakes.
GUSTAV FALK ’ Druggist>
Winton Place, Ohio.
iS FCURE tor August 31, 1897.
New Drug Fii m!
Havinsr bought out tho F, Johnson & Co.
Drug business, and added asp endid line of
Di’.g; Patent .Medicine
|-AND—]
* . Druggists’ Sundries *
to the stock, we are no.v op in and solicit a
share o y ir trade.-
The new firm own the prescrip
tion books of F. A. Johnson &
Co.; and are ready to refill any
prescription wanted, Dr. Davis,
who was connected with the late
Ifirm, will be in charge of this de
partment, and give it personal
attention.
SAM M. LOWRY,
firinrrlyof owty Bros., in this ci‘y, is manager of the business and
to his old fri<'n Is and f riner customers, as well a? new, he extends
a hearty w< Icome to call.
Very truly,
Home Pnannaoyi
New Clark Building Broad Street.
I uc ■ . lES ' fs ’ Blood, i
*• . 6
n " « -a
' ' ''
I CE 3* £ p.
E Bins; 'l 1
j I® • I -
tMtS !
Restores I
n PPRi- 1 UDKT.UKB g I
1 Ar ■’ ' . ’ will K«ep your 5 |f
j DkL'GG’S'r; zC , T ; . . Stomach in Healthy g n
I ■- z - \ . .11;
1 t <si R- “Li i n
j ■• ■ I I
i t •wi
Mttfon St., N. Y. « nj
-fr -w Nom gsidia au«pt "Tnds b j
< Marie blow# la "very bottle, o
SAV:: : LIVE < PILLS 25 CENTS '
H Furcly Vegetable V U ■
y Dyspepsia. •c irr... n3[lnfl(ioil P ii es . Sick Headacne, and
1 Small Ea,<’Ulen.
st=3K=l'=DtE2P: - ~ ntt- —,, —- ,r—tj
! k , - L”/ ’ - »-v »wM«aa r “iu 1 l.<ju_ja_x .
K G ALL SUMMER i ’’
| CATHARTIC
*
s<
I lO< ■* i
i 2S ♦so * all |
, - r,MT Nww YwrluSßl
► » • H *■>» ««!»■ T
ffifcS SIRWIfijH TO fait.
Free to All Who are
Weak and Worn. i
A Method to Cuke and Ja,
thk Powir. |
It is a romarkahle f ac t ,|. a)
man UFVbr appreciate the u 1
ings o< others until he hims‘-i 1
UHased tbr ngh the tire of , I
reinore* ‘hen it is that ho loc ks I
around .or those who are
ing; h» wants them to profit | V I
hi* expwiebce; he gives hi, t • I
nnd money gladly for the | f| I
of others and t.ey.-r tires ul I
I
• '■■ ■ ■' I
.s' ■ ■
< 1
' I
zeal. There are plen’j- I
weak and worn <>ut, '?■“ I
with remorse and fear, th■
ral outcome o f habit# that ■ , I
incapacity; a sense of |., h .. I
uess and a feeling cs if th- :,.L t ■
side of life had been bauish.u • r - I
ever. Such men should writ tc I
I'bomas Slater. Box 235. K u ; a . ir ,. | I
zoo, Mich. He wiil send ir hb v H
mail, in a plain, sealed eev -. •fl
full particulars about th- n. , I
he used, and this will enaH- J ■
man to get a complete « v ■ a fl
home. It is the method t) ,t M r . I
Slater used to cure hiin«. ;: ;ie IB
troubles that sap -4 fl
vigor and also enlarged his r---.\ g IB
to n tural size. Th- cun- v, ; .» i C
complete, so satisfying, iH f ; IB
a change from his forn,. ; IB
lion that he will gladly u . IB
all a >out it, sending a.ii ],:,;i j.
lars. He figures that he u -> t IB
know of a better way b> h, IB
appreciati >ll oi his own <u; : . ; .j
the sufft rings of other-. Y, ; .. re
must be generous men 3
world to ott set tin- tide
Writ"* to Mr. Sla‘er—;■ ,(
nothing for his di.-cr ; : .,1
method.J
Beauty is V/ca H c
I ITLavty is as -
man as any other <|ti .Y < .1
beauty of f 'rm and s
b-atucal mmd and r.
I’hys, ihebeauty is ;,1
term brightly tint
the vivacious eye, a- ...
and grace oi muni: r, ’ -
cates a sup’-rabundar,' *• ’ i ■■ ■ ■!■ MM
('.a! strength Very tew w.; n
possess these qualities. \ ry
many more might
I who do not. Il ymi feel ih.a • ,u
are losing vitality, 10.-inc v,. . ~
losing your beauty, losin-j
--strength, if you fed thd. >
face wbteh once was plump .
rosy is becomming Him ami ■
low, that, wrinkles (whmh m p B
terror to all pretty w 01 •. ■
beginning to appear, t '.k. <nr t ■
vice and 'ry tiiut greut.rsi if >•
coverits, the •‘Ma-*a'o
Cui*'" which is the m y m.<
known to science to a
thin and sallow yxprt-ssi. ~k a
plump and rosy face. Jt we.
1 form a face with ['lain or
tt-atures into an exyr <
grace and beauty, i .<
teuches us that it v. mb: <
we must e.x-rcise Lh>'m:; y
need the develapmg. - I
causes the b emd to r i
j part of the “body ca’h !
lion, the muscle is f-d a f
thened by the fresh i '
1 hero lore develop. (
The Massage Cup w... r:1 ' : <
•ace, when prep t ! a- . • L
contiacting ami relax!' ■
chs. what ex-rei.s ■ wiil I
other parts oi the body. >
'f yon would have p...y’ ,,
omplexion, if you w d t-m
tae- plump and rosy,
.ike to remove that “In : |<
kle, send One Dolar i< '
mad yon the great “mas .*
Cup,” with full direct: l-’f \
use. Remember you can ’■ >v“ ".'
money back it you say so. a
Igexts Wanted Address k t .
■!1. V <V ( ... I
f!
GOLD 1 ■
iehreon prizes, ',L
Pide Oller, We Rive noil.inir /
pnzes Wh« can term IPe [-
worilo from the letters in " •' .'-J
You can make 15or ne.tv ” ,
any letter more times than it I"
word. Anything Hut is a Inrun ■■ U-;
1, ■ Hlov ori The i.nblislier' v, l' p''
person able to make Um larpe* : , *•'
in the Word WASHINGTONS. - , .
largest tfin.Gi 10l eaeli ol lit.' .
lists, $5.00 to each of Hie taxi '
DonVjou think jo't coni i Im
You will enjoy tlm making oi ' , ,
not try for the first prize.' U.e ; ■».
are. given for the purpose of G • ,„....
lion to our woman’s paper. ■
coiuplete, nocontinneil siorms «n
sarj for von toenterthe e.nn. s.. I
cents (tuoney order, silver o> . - r
subscription with jour Jist ' 1 I
ery person sending tlr> •"”
15 wonls or more is guar ioiee I
“nt by return mail (in addi'ioe. ,
a solid silver soe.k or scan p"
i uaranieed in ever, ease o; n. .
Li ds should be sell! al one. , a .
Aug, 15, the names and aikire--'
comeßtAiiis will be printd 1 » *” ; .
Isli ,<i Sept 1. '»ur piddle n," ~,,•> ~.
i.lfer is utad.i to introdn. e n. " '.a -
any mercantile agency f•»’ ■"'/ "
your list now. tdilres", inn ' •<
amonK, Brooklyn. N. Y. nw H|
a per,
■ MBS In ißboiirnl io-i'-rr ' Y
LkjFj and discmu-uen co-
wrlnnrv organs irr U>i
without ißiwirrW'' \5