Newspaper Page Text
TEACHERS’ PAY.
Ordinary Teachers Receive
Better Pay In
ENGLAND THAN AMERICA.
But in England the Burden of
Paying Falls on the
Poorer Classes.
Mr. John 8. White cells attention to
the fact that while ordinary teachers in
America are better paid than ordinary
teachers in England the highest places
in England, on the other hand, bring to
their incumbents six or seven times as
much salary as the highest places in
America do. Writing in The Cosmopol
itan, Mr. White says that the principal
of Boston high school gets only $3,850 a
year, while the head master of Rugby
has SIB,OOO a year, the head master of
Eton from $25,000 to $28,000, his house
and certain other perquisites, and fre
quently lunches with the queen besides.
That is probably worth SIO,OOO a year
more, especially if the master has to par
take of her majesty’s favorite luncheon
of raw ham and oatmeal porridge.
Mr. White sees in the small salaries
paid in the highest educational chairs in
America the reason why persons of tal
ent and ambition are unwilling to re
main teachers. They get so much larger
reward by putting the same exertion
into some other work. This is true, but
Mr. White forgets one point. It is that
the great salaries he mentions as paid to
the head masters in Great Britain are
part of the gigantic revenues of the
Church of England, a state church. The
pay of a British bishop is higher still.
The archbishop of Canterbury gets near
ly $135,000 a year. And every cent of it
comes off the people of Great Britain by
taxation direct or indirect, and the agri
cultural laborer is so poor that he is an
object of charity all his life, his condi
tion being more hopeless than that of
many American slaves before our civil
war. Do we want teachers’ salaries in
America paid in that way?
The Real Poor.
The class that during the coming win
ter will need all the help that people
who are provided for can give are the
respectable persons out of employment.
Ordinarily they earn sufficient for them
selves and their families, perhaps even
laying up a little. But this winter many
of them can get no work. Mills and
factories are shut down, commercial
houses have closed or are reducing their
force. Terrible indeed is the prospect
for the man or woman thus thrown out
to face the cold world on nothing a
week. Os courser the unfortunate of
real pluck will strain every nerve to
catch on again and at least earn bread.
But with all such plucky ones can do to
help themselves there will still be many
left temporarily without bread or a roof
to shelter them. Almost everything can
be done temporarily except starving.
'That a man cannot do.
The really high spirited among these
ait first feel as though they would rather
.die than ask for food. Then hunger
.drives them on, and they appeal with
beating heart to the well to do individ
ual who passes by. This class should
never be denied. Help them to food and
lodging whenever they ask. You can
always tell the really deserving poor.
Hundreds of well dressed, honest per
sons walk the streets today not knowing
where their next meal is to come from.
Everybody must help them.
If it could be possible, one could al
most believe there were microbes of
crime and suicide floating in the air as
well as microbes of diphtheria and
smallpox. Numerous and desperate
train robberies have been committed
this year. Men masked and armed to
the teeth suddenly board a train and
hold a loaded pistol to the engineer’s
head while their confederates proceed
to rifle the express car. Two of the
desperadoes engaged in the Oliphant
train robbery were caught lately and
taken to Little Rock. They were
found to be wealthy farmers belonging
to the best families in their neighbor
hood. They were themselves married
and the fathers of families. Why should
sane men of this class, men who have
all the necessities of life in plenty,
throw to the winds their whole standing
as decent citizens henceforth by engag
ing in a vulgar train robbery unless
there was such a thing as a contagion of
crime?
Across the Harlem river at New York
is a bridge unique of its kind in the
world,. It does dutv as a drawbridge
TEACHERS’ PAY.'
DON
I /_
fsr'Aj
C»CIY VCWV, JUU
have your money back. No other medi
cine of its kind is so certain and effective
that it can be sold so. Is any other
likely to be “just as good ” ?
As a blood-cleanser, flesh-builder, and
strength-restorer, nothing can equal the
“Discovery." It’s not like the sarsapa
rillas. or ordinary “spring medicines.”
At all seasons, and in all cases, it puri
fies, invigorates, and builds up the whole
system. For every blooa-taint and
disorder, from a common blotch or erup
tion, to the worst scrofula, it is a perfect,
permanent,
for the New fork Central road, but Ifa
stead of being composed of the familiar
span and turn table which belong to
other such structures this is a drop
bridge. When vessels pass through the
Harlem waters at that spot, the bridge
is lifted bodily in the air at one end,
leaving the river free. The span is 60
feet long, and it is lifted by an engine
which raises it up between two giant
iron frames 109 feet high. When the
steamer passes, the drop bridge is swung
gently down again.
Let Them Be Abolished.
An officer of a great city relief mis
sion was lately interrogated as to wheth
er there was any visible increase of des
titution this season. The mission has
been in existence 40 years; its employees
are acquainted with those needing relief
as well as any persons living. The offi
cer interviewed replied that the work of
this organization lay chiefly among the
very poorest slum people. The number of J
these remained about the same from yeam|
to year. Outside of these, however, there
was one class that had largely increased,
according to his observation. This was
the tramp and fraudulent beggar class.
Frauds of all varieties had taken ad
vantage of the cry of hard times to load
themselves upon the large cities.
The tramp and whining old profes
sional beggar woman were alarmingly
increased. The society had carefully in
vestigated such cases and come to the
conclusion that it was scarcely less than
a crime against the community to aid
them. In some cases men had come to
them barefooted begging for shoes, oc
casionally even underclothing, exhibit
ing their bare skin beneath the tattered
coat. Their needs had been supplied,
and then they were followed by the so
ciety’s agents, to see where they went.
Without exception they made for the
nearest low rumshop or pawnshop and
turned the clean, decent article of cloth
ing into bad whisky.
Now, let anybody ask himself whether
it is a real charity to keep the life in such
a creature as that? Also, when a filthy,
wretched old female assumes her theat
rical beggar face and stands bareheaded
in the rain to enlist the sympathies of
the foolishly charitable, would it not be
better for her to go to the workhouse,
where her kind belong, than to disgrace
the fair streets of an American city?
Real sufferers front hunger never parade
their woes.
When a red nosed, dirty trampwhines
out in his singsong, “Say, boss, can’t
you gimmo a dime fur a night’s lodgin?”
the man who gives it to him is commit
ting a real wrong. A higher civiliza
tion will declare that the true charity is
to let these excrescences on humanity
die and go to a place where they can
not get whisky.
In the Middle of the Road.
The opinion is expressed that since
Russia is jealous of England’s prestige
in Asia, and France is jealous of her
progress in Africa, particularly in Egypt,
those two nations would alike welcome
any pretext to make trouble for her.
Then, in the spirit of the kissing picnic
at Toulon, they would join their fleets
and give her a good drubbing, making
common cause against the ancient foe of
each. It is believed in some quarters
that it would please France and Russia
to give England such a drubbing even
better than to fight the triple alliance.
In case of such war, it is said that Eng
land could no longer hold herself isolated
from continental politics, but would be
forced to side with the triple alliance,
and the war would become general.
Nothing could please Germany, Italy
and Austria better, therefore, than to
see England attacked by France and
Russia.
France is a brave and generous repub
lic, and our friend —Russia stood our
friend when no other nation in Europe
did during the civil war and literally
prevented foreign intervention in our
affairs. On the other hand, the sympa
thies, interests and characteristics of the
great English speaking brotherhood of
nations in Europe, in America and in
Australia must run together and be as
one. The nations that speak English
are one race, and ties of blood draw them
close together as one family. Which
side would have our sympathy and mor
al support in case of war between Great
Britain on one side and France and Rus
sia on the other? Well, neither. The
United States would keep in the middle
of the road. But we would regret very
much to see such a war.
A citizens’ committee at Altoona, Pa.,
has set an example that ought to be fol
lowed in every well to do town in Amer
ica this winter. The members of the
committee and their friends pledge
themselves to subscribe collectively
$5,000 a month during the next five
months for the relief of the deserving
poor of their city. The relief is not,
however, to be distributed in mere char
ity, to destroy the self respect and hab
its of industry of the recipients. It is to
be paid to married men for working on
the city streets and quarries. Regular
wages will be paid for regular days’
work, Altoona will be improved all
over, and the families of the-men will
be supported comfortably through the
dreary winter. The plan ought to be
extended. City streets need to be put in
order. The country roads of America
are something to be ashamed of daily
and hourly. If the poor men out of em
ployment can be hired by rich men who
have money to spare to build decent
roads in the country, then all of us will
be happy. Rich men can thus do better
with their spare money than in buying
just now,
f’T BE FOOLED
by the dealer who
brings out some
thing else, that
pays him better,
and says that it is
“just as good.”
| Doctor Pierce’s
Golden Medical
I Discovery is guar
anteed. If it don’t
■benefit or cure, in
* every case, vou
THE ROME TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY MORNING; NOVEMBER 39, 1 898
Profteseor Dewar's AchiovejneiW.
Since Professor Jatws Dewar lyis suc
ceeded in liquefying oxygen, and other
chemists have been able to liquefy other
gases, it has been suggested that the true
definition of a gaa is that it is the vapor
given off by a liquid. Tins will not do. If
a pressure at low temperature can be ap
plied to make a liquid our of a gas, there
is reason to believe that if greater pres
sure were applied at still lower tempera
ture then the liquid could be reduced to
a solid. Water as we usually see it is a
liquid, but at a higher temperature it is
vapor; at a lower one a, solid. Professor
Dewar’s great achievement favors noth
ing less than the startling theory that
all substances, whetlier we know them
commonly as solid, lityuid or vapor, can
be reduced to all three of these forms.
The question is, Which is the original one?
We know that, the first form of mat-
Ar, so far as science can judge, was
■gaseous—star mist or fire mist. That
F was the original form of matter, if we
can suppose it to have had at all an
original form. The right way to put
the definition, then, would be thatasolid
or liquid is a gas which has been sub
jected to pressure at the proper tem
perature. Both pressure and tempera
ture are of course different for different
substances, if indeed all substances
may not some day lie proved to be one
identical form of mhtter, differentiated
by diverse arrangement of atom and
molecule and varied conditions.
Dewar’s discovery will add to science
a new expression—namely, the “critical
point” or temperature of a gas. The
earlier attempts to liquefy oxygen were
unsuccessful, because they consisted of
the application of pressure at too high a
temperature. The exact degree of cold
to which a gas must be reduced before
it will liquefy "under pressure is called
its “critical point.” The critical point
foi' oxygen gas is 166 degrees below
freezing point—that is to say, 134 de
grees below zero. In obtaining liquid
oxygen Professor Dewar has succeeded
in reaching a temperature of 256 degrees
below zero. Professor Dewar is a Scotch
man by birth. He was the pupil and as
sistant of Sir Lyon Playfair, and he is at
present professor of natural experimen
tal philosophy in the University of Cam
bridge.
The British Farm Laborer.
English editors certainly ought to
know their own country. Serfdom was
prevalent in the days of William the
Conqueror, and afterward. But in the
reign of Elizabeth, in the year 1574, it
was said that the last serf on British
soil had lieeisAanumitted.
The find, however, by
perusing the from
All the Year was a
mistaken still
flourishes in free as
iniquitous as it ever did, apparently.
The tiller of the soil does not begin to
be as comfortable and well fed as the
four footed animals upon the farm:
An agricultural laborer who is married aud
has a family never buys meat. He never
tastes it unless it is given him as a dole. He
never takes a holiday. When a holiday is
forced upon him, it means short commons—
that is, nothing to eat. The only prospect he
has in life is not alone the prospect but the
certainty of getting poorer—poorer end poorer,
with the “house” in the end.
If he is lucky, and the parson and the squire
and such like look after the parish. 1-c will he
a recipient of charity from the cradle to the
grave. He will never have-anything in the
shape of rational amusement, neither he nor
his. Wore anything of that sort to come his
way, he might gape and stare and laugh—if
you can call the hooting sound ho makeslaugh
ter. But not only would he not en joy himself,
he would not understand what was meant.
He is imbruted—a mere animal. That is what
"Sweet Auburn, loveliest village of the plain,”
in the present year of grace has made him.
His only enjoyments are material—beer and
'baccy. The wise folk who speak of improving
his condition seem disposed to begin by depriv
ing him of those.
Gardeners have fonud it hard to get
at the truth about the effect of electric
ity unou growing plants. The truth
What is Eczema?
It is an agony of agonies.
A torture of tortures.
It is an itching and burning of the
skin almost beyond endurance.
It is thousands of pin-headed ves
icles filled with an acrid fluid, ever
forming, ever bursting, ever flowing
upon the raw excoriated skin.
No part of the human skin is
exempt.
It tortures, disfigures and humil
iates more than all other skin diseases
combined.
Tender babies are among its most
numerous victims.
They are often born with it.
Sleep and rest are out of the
question.
Most remedies and the best phy
sicians generally fail, even to relieve.
If CUTICURA did no more than
cure Eczema, it would be entitled to
the gratitude of mankind.
It not only cures but
A single application is often suffi
cient to afford instant relief, permit
rest and sleep, and point to a speedy
cure.
CUTICL'RA works wonders because
it is the most wonderful skin cure of
modem times.
Bold throughout the world. Prieo, Ccticuba,
S0o.; Boat, 25c. ; Ribolvsnt, sl. Forres Dbvo
AMD Ohxu. Cost., Bole Prop*., Boeton. “AM
•bout the Bkin and Blood “ mailed free.
I seems to be that jvtst enough of it is ex
cellent, while too much of it is worse
than none at all. It helps plants under
glass when judiciously applied and is
therefore beneficial for early garden veg
etables. It makes the leaves and’terns
longer and liastens the growth. It like
wise makes rhe green par ts of the plant a
deeper green, but at the same tune the
plants must not be flooded with it and
drowned out. The exact amount each
gardener must determine for himself by
experimentation. .
The Advertising
Os Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is always within th*
bounds of reason because it is true; it alwayi
' appeals to the sober common sense of thinkin'
people, because ills true; and it is alwaysfoll]
substantiated by endorsements which, in tin
financial world, would be accepted without t
> moment’s hesitation.
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum,
: fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands,
> Chilblains Corns, and all Skin Emptionß
, and positively cures Piles, or no pay re
. quired. It is guaranteed to give perfed
' satisfaction, or money refunded, rrlot
1 25 cents per box.
For sale by D. W. Curry, druggist.
Oscar Fleming is sole agent
in Rome for Beresford’s book,
j He is now receiving and fill
, ing orders. 500 more copies
just recieved. See him oi
leave your order with Harry
Bawlins. 22 lw
Both arms and one leg of George Pail,
of Clayington, 0., were broken by rob
bers, who took S3OO from him.
THE ROME COAL CO.
For Glen Mary Coal Tele
phone 142. Rear Hamilton &
Co. _
A kettleful of ancient coins, believed
to have been buried by counterfeiters,
was dug out of the ground near Groton,
Vt.
Shiloh’s Vitalizer is what you need for
constipation, loss of appetite, dizziness
and all symptoms of dyspepsia. Price
10 and 75 cents per bottle. For sale by
D. W. Curry.
If you feel weak
and all worn out take
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
Buy your Oil from the
Southern Oil 00. They guar
antee every drop of it Look
out for their wagon. 10-29-2 w
Children Cry for
Pitcher’s Castoria, •
Ostrich Feathers cleaned,
curled and died. Alson Kid
GIOS«BiaMA H
69
lanta, wW ■ % ’ ~
11-7-tu th
Madam Earnest Bach, of IlobokeHHS
.1.. was chibbed almost to death bfiS||
Brooklyn policemen, whom he
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she eried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria
Cheap Kates
To the interstate Mechanical and agri
cultural Exposition and Georgia State
Fair at Augusta, Ga., November 14th to
December 14th, 1893. The Rome rail
road will sell round trip tickets to Au
gusta and return at very low rates du
ring the fair. Call on C. K. Ayer G. P,
A. or J. A. Hume, Ticket Agt.
Children Cry for
Pitcher’s Castoria.
In a duel at Turanr, Oklahoma, Will
Durant was killed by Sandy Folsom;
then Bud Durant, a brother of Will,
killed Folsom.
Shiloh’s Cure is sold on a guarantee.
It cures incipient consumption. It is the
best cough cure. Only one cent a dose.
25 cts ,50 cts. and SI.OO. For sale by D.
W. Curry.
LADIES
.'{-.•'■ding a ionic, or children who want build
ing un. should rase
BROWN’S IRON BITTERS,
it is pleasant to take, cures Malaria, Indi
restiou. Biliousness and Liver Complaints.
Ingleside Retreat.—For diseases of
Women. Scientific treatment and curea
guaranteed. Elegant apartments for la
dies before and during confinement. Ad
dress The Resident Physician 71 73
Baxter Court. Nashville, Tenn.
8-22-d& w3m
Only 810.20 Rome to Augusta
And return, including admission to
the rrand fair at Augusta, Ga. Two
trains daily via the Rome railroad mak
ing close connection in Atlanta with
trains for Augusta. Call on
C. K. Ayer, G. P. A.
Do you enjoy a good, nice,
bright fire from a clean coal
that leaves scarcely no ashes,
then buy the Red Ash Jellico.
The Rome Ice 00. keeps it.
11-14 w.d fri snn
Lake Shore residents of Chicago ob
ject to the name Palmer Boulevard, ap
plied to their drive in honor of Mrs. Pot
ter Palmer.
Karl's Clover Root, the great Blood
Purifier, gives freshness and clearness to
the complexion and cures constipation,
25c., 50c. For sale by IJ. W. Curry.
I SPECTACLES
« the
‘ BEST
a AT
? TO MT mu
It 1 SSgggBSSB,4- ==
« PROFESSIONAL COLUMN
l ® PHTBICIANBAND BUBGEO.Nf
, HOWARD E. FELTON. M. D„
'* Physician and Surgeon.
!’ Office over Hammack, Lucas A Co.'» Drug
* Store. Entrance on Broad Street.
KT*At office dty and night. Telephone 62.
e
DR. L. P. HAMMOND,
t PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Residence No 103 West First Street,
* Office CROUCH & WATSONS DRUGSTORI
B Rkbidence telephone • . . no 4«.
r Office ... • 13>
C. HAMILTON, M. 0.,
, PHYSICIAN AND 9UNGEOJN
” Residence No. 116, Maple St. East
Rome. Office No. 220 1-2, Broad St
Residence Telephone No. 109. Office
Telephone No. 123.
’ ATTORNBYB-AT-LAW.
«J. BRANHAM,
i ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
» Rome, Georgia.
, D. V. UICHMOXV & dafvillb railroad
My employment by the above company will
•ot interfere with my general practice, which
will be attended to as heretofore. mchi-dly
; J. B. F. LUMPKIN,
Attorney at Law,
Room 12, Postoffice Building. Promp
attention to collection?,
dSml maS
J. H. SANDERS.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
CEDARTOWN, GA.
Collections a Specialty.
W. W. Vandiver,
Plans drawn and
prices, and satisfaction guaranteed.
addressed to us at Rome, Ga., will recelrr I
promut attention. feb/fidtf
JACKSON
OFFICE FURNITURE COMPANY,
JACKSOX, TEXN:
Manufacturers oi—
School, Church and
Office Furniture.
Schools and churches seated in
the beet wanner, offices furnished.
Send for Catalogue. H-U-d6m
Erbohbkb bv tmb Highest Medical Authorities,
CATARRH
JLJ X" iqf . INHAT.VR will cure you. A
iT} jßb wonderful boon to sufferers
UT /MET from Colds, Sore Throat,
Jr, * .JHaJP Influen«n, Bronchitis,
/< or HAY FEVJEB. fjords
- immediate reMr/. An efficient
’* • remedy, convenient to carry
tn pocket, ready to nee on first indication of cold.
Continaed Effteets Permanent Cure.
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Price,
M ete. Trial free at Druggists. Registered mail,
00 cents. I. 9. CTOMIM, Mfr., Thns Riven, Mich., U. S. 1
CVSHM jfILTT f s
ilFllTUfil Th ® surest and safest remedy for
RICN I nUL all skin diseases. Eczema, Itch. Salt
Rheum .old Cuts. Wonderful rem
edy for PIIJEB. Price, eta. at Drug- p II |fi
fists or by mail prepaid. Address as above. DRUWJ
W. L. DOUGLAS
S 3 SHOE »».
De you wear them? When next In need try a pair.
Best In the world.
•4.80 M WIH.
JMMaSlßStdi£i roß ladies
02.50 » ss *Tr’h2.oo
12.25 W JB t 1.7S a
If you want a Uno DRESS SHOE, made In the latest
style,, don't pay $6 to SB, try my $3, 53.50, $4.00 or
$5 Shoe. They St equal to custom made and look and
wear, writ. tfyou wish to economise In your footwear,
dew *} wchaslng W. L. Douglas Shoe*. Nam* and
prleo (tamped en the bottom, look for It when you buy.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brwckton, Mm*. Sold by
CANTRELL & OWENS
WHIbKfeM
B ■ AU*» a,°»
"OFFER
A Magazine
Daily
We have made ar
B Magazine free to
„ pay -s’> in ad vance forj® •Y* '? ■
is a
| year. Where will
cc jbHHHH
j v 4m • - .&&&:
• 1
vcw.s or
j -jV- T »> v .
William Dean
' Ju?" y . fOr ?’? t ’' r::! !•■■ sMKtoe, 3fl r i
dWe,’ -•’ which c-e te tsmsus a (titers c( ths M«a».'.lae. ‘ >Aa/\
Frank R. Stockton
A, >7 ~ •,”., , , • fa s l ” w i” t» write. YY«I "•’TI
|§ It * 4, ‘ ,0 « ,,e ,or the M«»i:He, and wl« iho write ilw,t
Alphonse Daudet, Emile Zola, Pierre
v i JS-z Loti and Jules Vernp w| " *• w'wate'y senmyw
\ .™.L. .J; 7. . & rcnie i«i« m««.
\ trftted articles, three ot which arc Autobiographical latervlews.
e«b*c« ri»M
Other Interviews of this fascinating kind wJK tell, hi a«Koblocrap*«
leal form, the careers of ||mm»
Loul * Pasteur Thoma. A. Edt.on Z7T\
■’’*"’ J * ln « 4111 Henry Georga A''
EdW<rd Be "* my Edward Everett Hele ' ( £»(
\ H*mniarion Gaston Tl as and lor
•\f * •torrs Os other world famous personalises.
pr, lUfrees _2Z*
>< X| Vj/jStab
t Short Stories £ y w - D * hOWCLLS * rudyard kiplinq, L.
J CONAN DOYLE, WALTER BEIANT. A WW \
?iAD?n S V/Ji?. DV ’ CLARK RUSSELL, OCTAVE TttANBT. BRET \d!/‘
HAR™dT^ E e L 3^^,=o^ ot S h^ H WNK dBWBrr -
Real Conversations X w ”
unique h« thte Msgwrlwe. | VK
W * wwcfc I itL
t Portraits of Distinguished People
at different ages of their lives i« a striking feature of the Mijcsrfasi aod KUITw
dm Ing i he next year fully fifty of the most famous living celebrities will
be shown from childhood up, sometimes a dozen pictures o< a siesta v *■* n..a
person being given. '«***"*
Professor Henry Drummond .V«rS?
the B}°L 8 } °L7 ,r,,<>ri!inary lßtcr ‘“ "’’k" W,U * we “’ *■ H” d«Ha«
S<«> cnida
The Edge of the Fu ture ?, ■,h v : r
th « btest ftnd most interesting kno* ledge In all Heles of
tM ' y‘J,, '• y. ■’< : i ■- _ 2 1 - ■*'
!■■'>!. >r, I: <' r; ■!'.
that medicine. ’J tvo <" ’’ ' * ''■' _*■ '' !■ *. ?-
were cured n! nasal catarrh l>y i '.'.<- ■/*’ .'■• ‘: r i '/■/ 1 ■ , -,.■ ,l -d
It is truly a ereat medicine." Lv Kingato®'Vh'-’, r ■/-'■•■■
‘ Ar
For Catarrh, ludigestiou, Rheumatism, " Eve’iaagß9H||M|
LaGrippe aud General Debility, Germe- '■ Btss'Ferry..<.
teur is uneqnaled.
*• Brick Yam.
King’s Royal Germoteur Co., Atlanta, Ga. ; ' * r Wmw?.^” U ’”. n 10 am
EVANSVILLE ROUTE,
The favorite line to
CHICAGO .
And all Points n the North and
Northwest.
Remember this line has two elegant trains
daily l>etween Atlanta and Chicago.
No ti No a
Lv Atlanta, W & AlO 30 am 820 pm
Lv Chattanooga.lN (. &St I. 3<o pm 107 am
Lv Nashville, LAN 720 pm 620 am
Lv Evansville, E& T H 120 ow 1 011 pm
Lv Terre Haute, C& E 1 435 am 427 pm
Ar Chicago; CHe E1 947 am 940 pm
Train No 6 “Chicago and Atlanta Limited” is
a s did vestibuled train with Pullman sleepers
and day coaches. A dining car is attatched to
the train at Danville, enabling the passengers
to get their breakfast en route. This train also
has through sleepers from Jacksonville, Fla.,
and Memohis. Tenn., to Chicago.
Train No 8, ‘-World’s Fair Special,” runs
solid between Atlanta and Chicago and is
equip]>ed with elegant Pullman Pallor Bjtfet
cars. A. G.
8. I. KOGERS. G. P. A. E.& T.
Sou. Pass. Agt.
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Complexion Preserved
DR. HEBRA'S
VIOLA CREAM /t!|
Removes Freckle,, Pimple, < "
Liver • Mole, Blackhead,, \ V
Sunburn and Ten, and re- \ .otfaw
stores the skin to Its ongi- J
nal freshness, producing a ffc/ -yfilFtftSwL'
Clear and healthy com-
Nos. I and 2 make close
Kingston, with Western A- Atlantic train, koiM
I North to Chattanooga, and Month to AUautU
i I Connections at A-Jseta ,nd Chittsnoogs
I Union Depots with all trains diverging. 1
Ail trains arrive and depart, from Rome Rail
rood depot, foot of Brosd street, less than one
block from heart of city.
tS'“No c bange of cars at Kingston. Through
I coaches on nil Gains bet a eat Rome end
Atlanta. W. F. ATER,
Fupt and Traffic Manager.
>
OTVL Y
1
■ H O UFL 8
I
; Rome
>
1 — Tfl —
L
BaveKome Rome Daily at -
■Kwive Atlanta
Koine
MB*e
Leave Rome
, Arrive Atlanta
J Callon
T. O. nmjJpiigMii
Pass. Agt..
J. J -
Division 1 lijj* I l 'it' II ffi