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THE OLD HERO SPEAKS
Cordon Talks Sense to the People ot
Georgia.
ATKINSON FILLS THE MEASURE FULL
Why De»ert the Old Party Now? What It
Hal Done and is Doing For Georgia—
Stand By the Democratic Faith.
In his speech at Buena Vista a few
days ago General Gordon, who was given
a rousing reception at the hands of the
citizens of Marion and surrounding coun
ties, had this to say about Governor At
kinson and his administration:
After expressing his sincere apprecia
tion of the gracious greeting accorded
him, spoke in substance as follows:
“It is well known to you that two years
ago I was not an advocate of Governor
Atkinson’s nomination. A large body - t
people, especially of ex confederate ß ,
sought to place in that high office that
superb soldier, that unselfish patriot, that
stainless gentleman and able citizen,
General Clement A. Evans. My, own
heart was deeply iulisted in this effort;
not that I honored Governor Atkinson
less, but my old comrade more. I had
seen him tried; I had seen hie devotion
to duty, his unswerving and heroic nature
tested under conditions and trials, which
none but the bravest and truest could
withstand. I believe in Governor Atkin
son, but I knew General Evans. In the
one case it was faith; in the other it was
absolute knowledge. I hoped that Gov
ernor Atkinson, if elected, would develop
the sterling qualities essential in the chief
executive of a great commonwealth; but
General Evans had already deveeped
them. He had already exhibited those
exalted attributes which rendered it im
possible for him to be diverted by any
consideration or by any power from the
fearless discharge of duty to his state and
people. Such I say was my position two
years ago. but am here today to declare
in the most unequivocal manner and by
the most enphatie terms which I am ca
pable of using, that Governor Atkinson's
wise administration has ripened my faith
into assurance and my hope into knowl
edge. His fidelity, his ability and his
unfaltering courage in meeting the grave
responsibilities of his office are known of
all men. In every contingency and trial
he has met the demands of official duty.
Whenever mob law has threatened the
orderly processes of the courts his efforts
to protect and sustain the law officers
have been prompt and energetic. When
ever courts and juries, in the interest of
society, of human life and of liberty have
condemned law breakers and criminals to
righteous punishment. Governor Atkin
son has exhibited the manly and official
firmness to withstand all appeals for ex
ecutive clemency, when clemency would
defeat the ends of justice. Whener public
education has needed an advocate it has
found a ready and vigorous champion in
the state's executive.”
ANDRE'S MONUMENT.
Vandals Have Chipped Bis Memorial In
Westminster Abbey.
Near the center of the south -wall of
the nave is a monument to Major Andre
of Revolutionary note. The very long
inscription upon it begins, “Sacred to
the memory of Major John Andre, who,
raised by his merit, at an early period
of life, to the rank of adjutant general
of the British forces in America, and
employed in an important but hazardous
enterprise, fell a sacrifice to his zeal for
his king and country, on the 2d of Oc
tober, 1780, aged 29, universally beloved
and esteemed by the army in which he
served and lamented even by his foes.”
About the base of the monument,
which is a panel set against the wall,
are several small figures. These project
from the panel, and represent the presen
tation of Major Andre’s letter to Gen
eral Washington on the night before his
execution. The ease with which the
heads of these figures could be broken
off has been too great a temptation tc
relic hunters, and most of the heads
have been knocked off and stolen. That
such vandalism is not wholly modern is
shown from the fact that Charles Lamb
ASK the recovered
—jm dyspeptics, bilious
IMIm Ifel k fCffl sufferers, victims of
fever and ague, the
mercurial diseased
B patient, how they re-
W covered health, cneer-
ful spirits and good
’•MB appetite; they will tell
vou by taking SIM-
W»l<f4 |l WX ./.V .Wmons Liver Regu
' WbMUASI To 111 ft *l l y LATOR.
The Cheapest, Purest and Best Family
Medicine World 1
For Taun
dice, Bilious at tacks,SHß EADACHE, Colic,
Depression of STOMACH,
Heartburn, etc. This unrivalled remedy is
warranted not to contain a single particle of
MERCURY, or any mineral substance, but is
PURELY VEGETABLE,
containing those Southern Roots and Herbs
which an all-wise Providence has placed in
countries where Liver Diseases most prevail.
It will cure all Diseases caused by Derange*
anent of the Liver and Bowels.
The SYMPTOMS of Liver Complaint are *
bitter or bad taste in the mouth; Pain in the
Back, Sides or Joints, often mistaken for Rheu
matism; Sour Stomach; Loss of Appetite;
Bowels alternately costive and lax; Headache:
Loss of Memory, with a painful sensation ot
having failed to do something which ought to
have been done; Debility; Low Spirits, a thick
yellow appearance of the Skin and Eyes, a dry
Cough often mistaken for Consumption.
Sometimes many of these symptoms attend
the disease, at others very few; but the LIVER
is generally the seat of the disease, and if not
Regulated in time, great suffering, wretched
ness and DEATH will ensue.
The following highly esteemed persons attest
to the virtues of Simmons Liver Regulator:
Gen. W. S. Holt, Pres. Ga. S. W. R. R. Co.; Rev
J. R. Felder, Perry, Ga.; Col. E. K. Sparks, Al
bany, Ga.; C. Masterson, Esq., Sheriff Bibb Co.,
Ga.; Hon. Alexander H. Stephens.
“We have tested its virtues, personally, and
know that for Dyspepsia, Biliousness and
Throbbing Headache it is the best medicine the
world ever saw. We tried forty other remedies
before Simmons Liver Regulator, but none gave
us more than temporary relief; but the Regu
lator not only relieved, but cured us.”—ED.
Telegraph and Messenger, Macon, Ga.
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
J. n. ZEILIN & CO., Philadelphia, Pa.
writes ot the defacing ot tins very mon
ument in this way in his “Essays of
Elia.” Southey, the poet, when a boy,
was a pupil at the Westminster school.
Later in life he was exceedingly sensi
tive in regard to his political princi
ples, and for a time a serious quarrel
existed between himself and Lamb, be
cause the latter, speaking in regard to
this injury to Andre’s monument, de
scribed it as the “wanton mischief of
some schoolboy, fired perhaps with
raw notions of transatlantic freedom.”
Then, addressing Southey, he added,
“The mischief was done about the time
that you were a scholar there. Do you
know anything about the unfortunate
relic?”
There is now fastened upon the wall
of the nave, above the monument, a
wreath of oak leaves which Dean Stan
ley, when he visited America, gathered
near the spot on the bank of the Hudson
river where Andre was executed. Al
though Andre died in 1780, it was not
until 1821 that, at the request of the
Duke of York, his bones were exhumed
and taken to England to be buried in
the abbey. The box in which they were
placed for the voyage is still preserved
in the oratory over St. Islip’s chapel,
where the wax figures are kept—Max
Bennett Thrasher in St. Nicholas.
Judge Maddox'. Appoin*mentis.
Trenton, Thursday, Sept. 17.
Dalton, Saturday, Sept 19.
Braswell, Tuesday, Sept. 22.
Plainsville, Thursday, Sept. 24
(morning).
Sugar Valley, Thursday, Sept. 24
ight).
Resaca, Friday, Sept. 25.
Calhoun, Saturday, Sept. 20.
Subligna, Sept. 28. 10 a. in.
Villanow, Sept. 28, 4 p, m.
Wood Station, Sept. 29,10 a. m.
Chickamauga, Sept. 29. 4 p. m.
Kensington, Sept. 30, 10 a in.
Cedar Grove, Sept. 30, 4 pm.
Chattooga Church, Oct. 1,10 a. m.
Teloga, Oct. 1, 4 p. m.
Menlo, Oct. 2. 10 a. in.
Holland Store, Oct. 2, 4 p. m.
Lavender. Oct. 3. 10 a. m.
Burney delivers trunks right
side up. Call at Armstrong
To Lookout Mountain.
Beginning Saturday, June 18, and
continuing until September 27, the
Western and Atlantic railroad will
sell round trip tickets Saturday after
noons and Sunday . mornings good to
return not later than Monday morn
ing following date of sale at $2.00,
Rome to Lookout mountain and re
turn. This is the only line entering
union depot opposite Read house,
Chattanooga. C. K. Ayer,
Ticket Agent.
Walker Whitesides.
The Cincinnati! Inquirer of April
24th says: “It was a veritable treat to
sit through the story of “Hamlet,”
with (Valter Whiteside. It is not a
wonder that he has captured metropo
litan audiences, nor that the critics
have halted to seriously consider the
fairest, most youthful, scholarly for
his years, and graceful withdrawal,
that aspired to the kingly crown of
the world’s tragic star. It would not
be policy nor justice to so frank a
man as Mr. Whiteside, nor would he
permit it, to say that he istheequal
of Booth, but the spirit of absolute
fairness to ' the aspirant, modest
though he be, is that people who last
night found their palms meeting in
appreciation involuntarily found
themselves comparing the Hamlet of
Mr. Whitesides to the Hamlet of Mr.
Booth, and then congratulating them
selves that each century “supplies a
man.” Mr. Whiteside will be at the
Nevins opera house Tuesday Sept
-22 presenting Shakespears Masterpiece
Hamlet.
Notice.
I want every man and woman in
the United States interested in the
opium and whisky habits to have one
of my books of these diseases. Ad
dress B. M. Woolly, Atlanta. Ga.,Box
368, and one will be sent you free.
The Corpulent Bourbons.
Where does the Due d’Orleans get his
fat? From the Spanish and Neapolitan
Bourbons, of whom he is unquestionably
a descendant, even though Louis Phi
lippe were a Chiappini. I cannot think
of any French Bourbons, except Louis
XVI, his sister Clotilde and Philippe
Egalite’s father and the Comte de
Chambord and his sister, who were very
fat. The two latter were, however, de
scended from the Neapolitan and Span
ish Bourbons. Obesity has been an oft
recurring malady of the Spanish royal
family ever since Elizabeth Farnese
married Philip V. She was the heiress
of the fattest Italian that probably ever
lived. He was a prince for a Barnum
show whose legs had to be propped up
by buckram and whalebone cases to pre
vent them overlapping his feet Fatty
degeneration impaired the usefulness of
Charles 111 of Spain and destroyed the
activity of the late Queen Christina,
grandmother of the Comtesse de Paris.
Queen Isabella strongly inherits the
family failing. The Comtesse de Paris
makes a brave fight against the heredi
tary diathesis by Bantingizing at Mar
ienbad and on the Aubergne moors,
where she tires out all her gamekeep
ers.—Loudon Truth.
Cause anil Effect.
“Did I hear that your mule was
struck by lightning, Eph?”
“Yaas, sah; dar was a powahful bolt
hit dr mule right ahind his eahs. ”
“Did it kill him?”
“No, sah; but it done broke up de
sto'm. ” —Detroit Free Press.
ANNOUNCEMENTS,
For Ordinary,
lam a candidate for the office of
Ordinary of Floyd county, Georgia,
and will be grateful to all for votes
and help. Cicero T. Clements.
THE ROME TRIBUNE FiflD
ND OF W.
Reports by Wire from the Great
Markets.
Rome Cotton Market.
By wagon 7%@8
Cotton.
NhwYobk, Sept. 17.—The following are to
day’s quotations : Middlings, quiet, B%c: sales,
200.
Cotton Futures.
Opening Clo?e Close
today, touay. yes'erday
January 8 46 8 3i 8 2'
February 8 44 8 86 8 30
March 8 46 8 35 8 35
A pnl .... 8 46
May 8 5 8 t 2 843
June .... ....
July .... ....
August. .... ....
Sepiemher .... .... 8(8
Oct her 8 21 8 14 8 23
November 8 20 8 26 8 13
December 8 33 8 26 8 21
Livehpool. Sept. 17.—The following were the
quotations today: Sales, 10,000 bales Tone
steady. Middlings, 4 21-22 C.
Opening. Close,
January and February 4 23 4 26
February and March 4 24 4 26
March and April .’... 4 25 4 27
April and May 4 25 4 29
May and June 4 30
June and July 4 30
July and August ....
August and September 4 ?4 4 36
September and October 4 28 4 31
October and November 4 32 4 28
November and Decec-fier 4 24 4 26
December and January.... .4 23 4 26
LOCAL MARKETS.
[CORRECTED DAILY.]
GRAIN AND PROVISIONS.
Rome, Sept. 17.—The following are the whole
sale prices; final! lots to consumers are rela
tively higher,
MEATS—Smoked bacon. C. R. sides, boxed.
s*/ 4 ; dry salt C, R. sides boxsd, 4%e; sugar cured
hams boxed. >O% to 10%c®il; picnic hams box
ed, 6%c; breakfast bacon sugar cured, Bc.
LAKD—Pure leaf in tierces 4%c; pure leaf in
80 pound tube and 50-pound tins. sc; compound
in tierces 4< i c, compound in 80-pound tubs or
50-pound tins, 4*/*c; cottolene in tie ces, 5%c;
cott dene in 80-pound tubs or 50-pound tins. 5%c
< ORN-Sacked white, less than carload. 4.. c.
OATS—Sick d mixed, less than carload, 35c.
HAY—Choice Timothy, less than carload, 81:;
No. 1 Timothy, less than carload, 70c: No. 2,
mixed, lees than carload, 60 to 65c.
HKAN -Pure wheat bran in ton lots. 55c.
MEAL—Best water ground, 36c; best steam
ground. 36c.
GRISTs—Hu-’nute in barrel". $2,50.
FLOUR—Highest patent. $4.10; first patent,
$4 00; best straight, $3 20.
SUGAR—Standard granulated. sc; fancy N.
O. clarified, 4qc; New York cream, extra C.4'4c.
COFFEE—Fancy Rio, 18c; good Hio, 16c;
common Rio, 13'Jc; best brown Java 3'c; beet
Mocha. 30c; Arbuckle, roasted iu one pound
packages, $lB 10; Levering, roasted, in one
pound oa< kiges, $lB.lO
SYRUP—Selected Georgia cane 25e; New Or
leans molasses, a’ to grade, 10 to 20<:.
BIT I’TER— Fox River Creamery,23c; New York
State. non»,
CHEESE—Iie.
RIUE-Famiy Carrolina. 6i; good Carolina,
sc; medium Carolina, 4c.
LtOf. RS.
WHISKY-Rye, $1.20 to $3.50 ; corn, 90c to
$ 1.(0; gin, $1.05 to $1.75.
WINES -93 cto st; high Wines, $1.22: port and
sheny. $1 to $3, claret $6 to $lO per cas* ; Ainer
i :an champagne. $7.50 to $8.50 p-rcase;cordials
sl2 per dozen; bitters, $8 per de sen.
HIDES. WOOLS, ETC.
Green salt hides, 3&3%c; No. 1 flint hides i6c;
goatskins, 10 to 20c each; eh-epskine, 10@20c
each: beeswax, 15<ail7qc. Wool—washed, io to
18c per pound; unwashed, 10 to 13c; burry 6 to
10C.
TABLE SUPPLIES
[Corrected dally. Consumers' prices quoted
Onions, )5c per gallon.
Cabbage. 3c per pound.
■G een apples, 15 to 30c per peck.
Pears 25c per peek.
Grapes 25c® toe per basket.
Nutmegs, la«3oe dezen.
Green corn, loc.
Irish potatoes, 25c per peck.
Bananas, 10@.20c per dozen.
Evaporated iruit, B@loc per pound.
Eggs, 12%@ 5c per dozen.
Creamery butter. 25@30c per pound.
Country butter. 20c per p und.
Cream cheese. 15e per pound
Bread, large loaf, sc: two small ones, sc.
MEATS.
Steak’—porterhouse. lC@'2’/ a c, loin, lf@,l2 I , a c.
Beef roasts, 8 to 12qc per pound; heel stew
meat. 5c ner pound ; mutton, 7@loc per pound;
lamb. 10@t2%> p -r pound: liver, 5c per pound;
veal, 14 «, i2‘4c n-r pound; bologna, 5: per pound;
corned ue’tjßTilnc per pound: dried beef, 150
per pound in qiiantityor2sc per pound chipped:
sugar cured bains, 12i a to 15c p- r pound: coun
try. 11c; Ca itornia hams, lie per pound; break
fast bacon. 12q to ISc per pound; country ba
con, 8‘ B ®loc per pound; lard,country, 9c; tierce,
5c per pound.
FISH.
Redsnanper. Pc pound; ca’fi’h, 8c pound;
herring. 10c pound: black bass. 10c poundi but
falo, U)c pound ; pomnaro 16*4c pound; crop
pies. be pound; perch. 10c pound, salmon, lie
pound: fresh shrimp, 45c quart; oysters, 40 to
50c quart
MIS ELLANEOUS.
Hens—Dressed, 25 to 30c; ducks, dressed, 25 to
30c.
Teas— Imperial. 25 to s”c; gunpowder, 35‘ro
85c; English bi e klast, 3 ' t • 5i c
Molasses—Good corn. 23c; sugar, 30c; N, O.
sugar h iuse, 15 to 30c; countrv, 22c.
Canned G<mds —Tomatoes, 70c@$' per d. zen ,
corn,9oc to $1 perd<z>n; peaches. 900 to $ per
dezen: table peaches $1.50 to $2 per (loin;
apiico's $2 per d zen; apples, 75c per dozen:
apples. 75c per dozen; sardines, 50c case, oysters,
55 to 75c. x
Naval Stores.
Savannah. Sept. 17.—Turpentine, firm at
22*4 lor reguars: sales. 1 OOOcisks; rec iptu.
1.1(10. Ro in. firm; salesa.oiiii bbl-; receipts
2.96 : A, B. (,’ and D. $1.41: E F and G, Si s’l;
Handl, si 59; K Si 55; .M. sl.6i; N, SIBO
windowgl.iss. s;.uo. waterwhite. $1 i.
WiiMtxaroN, Sent. 17.—Rosin, firm;
strained. *1.35; go d »trM led $1.4 i; spirits
of turpentine, steady; machine, 22. irregu
lars, 21J4; tar. steady at $11)5; crude turpen
tine. quiet and stead); hard, jl. JI: soft
$1.55, virgin. $ .65.
Chicago Grain ami Provisions.
Chicago. Sep-. 17.
OPEN. CLOSE
Wheat-September 57-Z
Wh..AT-October BOIf ... 59Jk
Cokn -Septembe" ... 21
Cohn—October ... 3454... 2154
Oats—September .. .
0.-rs-October 19 ....
Fork September .... 5,70
Pork October 6.7214 ... 5.73
LvRD e (ember ... 3.3.5
Lard October 3.7214 ... 3.37
Ribs-*- niier .... 3.07
Ribs -October -ggx. •• 3.35.... 3.10
A felt want is that gnawing at the
stomach after you have eaten a full
meal, and can’t eat any more, and yet
there is that feeling as though you
had eaten nothing. What is wanted
then is a dose of Simmons Liver
Regulator, the best Dyspepsia cure,
for that is what that gnawing means.
‘Simmons Liver Regulator is all that
is recommended for Indigestion. A.
B. Dyche. London, Ky.
Buy your cigars and tobacco from
W. C. Wimbish, 219 Brood street.
AY, SEPTuMBEIi 18, 1&96.
An Unprecedented
Gain in Weight
A Trained Nurse Gained Fifty=three
Pounds by Using a Nerve Food.
ONE OF THE MOST REMARKABLE
RESULTS ON RECORD.
From the Gazette, Yonkert, N. Y.
"T don’t look much Ijjte a living skeleton
now, (io I? And yet two years ago I weighed
just seventy-two pounds,” said Mrs. J. W.
Coffey, of 55 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers,
N. Y-, to a reporter. And we agreed with
her, for she certainly looked anything but a
living skeleton, but rather bore the appear
ance of a plump and attractive lady in ex
cellent health and spirits. Continuing she
(aid:
“I had lost my appetite and was wasting
away in flesh, losing some fifty pounds in a
few months. Doctors said I was threatened
with consumption. I was under what was
regarded as first-class medical treatment,
but it had apparently little or no effect, for
I kept getting worse until I was so weak
that I could not attend to my household
duties and could hardly walk. My husband
and everybody who saw me thought surely
that I would die, and there seemed no help
for me.
“ Tonics and stimulants and medicines all
seemed useless, and I grew worse and worse
until at last I resolved to seek some new
remedy—one entirely out of the usual line
of nauseous drugs and doses of stuff which
seemed to take away what little relish I
might perhaps otherwise have had for food.
A friend told me of some wonderful cures
effected by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Pale People and I bought a box. The effect
from their use was noticeable from the first
and soon appeared almost miraculous, for it
seemed pretty nearly like the raising of one
from the dead.
“ I soon commenced to eat, soni”thing I
had scarcely done before for weeks, and soon
begin to gain in flesh and strength. I went
one day to the doctor’s office and he was sur
prised at the change in me for the better. [
had to confess that I had been taking the
pills, and he was broad-mhide I enoirrh to
advise me tc continue what was evidently
doing me so much good. I took, in all. six
boxes, and incre is-d in weight fro u 72 to
125 pounds, which is my regala: and normal
weight.”
“Are you sure the cure is permanent ? ”
“ Well, yes. My work istlrit of a trained
nurse, which means, as you probably know,
irregular hours and at tim-s great exhaus
tion. During the two years since my re
covery I have hud m my engagements, and
through them all have continued in good
health. I take pleasure in bearing testi
mony to the remarkable power of this great
medical discovery. [ know of other cures
effected by it. A friend of mine snlfere I
greatly at her monthly p riods. One box
relieved and three Irnxe; e ire I her. But I
know of no case equal tn mine, for my situ
ation was critical, desperate and almost
hopeless.”
Mrs. Coffey his Jived in Yonkers for six
teen years, and for twelve years lias followed
the business of attending the sick, excepting
only the period of her illness. She Ims
hundreds of acquaintances ami friends who
know her to be capable and trustworthy.
Many of them knc.w how very ill she was
and how remarkable was her recovery. The
pills have a large sale in Yonkers anil West
chester County, which will be greatly in
creased as their merits become better known,
for they seem to be one of the medical mar
vels of the age.
W. P. SIMPSON, Pres. I. D. FORD, Vice-Pres. T. J. SIMPSON, Cashier
EXCHANGE BANK OF ROME.
STOCK, SIOO,OOO
Accounts of firms, corporations and individuals solicited. Special attrntior
given to collections. Money loaned on real estate or other good securities.
Prompt and courteous attention to customers.
of Dircetors,
A. R. SULLIVAN, J. A. GLOVER,
C. A. HIGHT, I. D. FORD,
W. P. SIMPSON.
w ST.AM'hV
HOCSE -
D J * J 0 N ES; Pro pri eto r>
SPECUL ™ 10 FAMILIE? -
Two Minutes Walk frem Cen
traE Depot-
- TENN.
- " ’ . —■ " " 2T ■ ■■■■»
(SSSSSimZSn THE 1 TO 4 DAY CURE for
- Gleet. i.eueorrGcrn (Whitesi. Spernintf.rrhcea.and
b ■ all unhealthy bexuiii dischuiges. F ree Syringe.
NO PAIN. KO iMAIN. PREVENTS STRICTURE. **
jerr prevents all private u:eas:s.
A A
Z! OFFP t !<• UD>’.'Gi l:. ‘
loftier.
tiou. i prutcribe «)->.: re-. • ur.-nd it in » t -.. ■ ’ >• I t"? * ‘
« ,r - 'O •'•-' *
Subscribe for the Tribune.
AN UNSOLICITED TESTIMONIAL.
From the pemocrat, Atlanta, Texae,
“ Being constantly asked by many of my
friends if Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale
People were doing me any good, I offer this
unsolicited testimonial and answer. Never
having seen a well day since I had typhoid
fever last summer, I could retain scarcely
any food, my limbs and joints ached and
pained all the time. It was misery to me to
rise up in bed and my mind was clouded, in
fact was a physical wreck and I felt that my
life was drawing to a close, and I must con
fess it was without regret on my part as my
sufferings were almost unbearable.
“Since I commenced to take Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills, at the solicitation of my wife, I
have taken four boxes, and I feel like a new
man. My appetite is good and I now retain
what I eat, my limbs and joints are free of
pain and I have gained ten pounds in weight.
My life feels renewed and while not yet en
tirely well, I feel so much better that I un
hesitatingly assert that I believe Pink Pills
for Pale People a good medicine for what
they are recommended. Knowing that no
medicine will save life under all circum
stances or in all cases, yet I do honestly be
lieve that they have prolonged mine, or at
least, where all was dark and gioomy and
full of suffering it has been ehanged for the
better.
“ The manufacturers of this medicine de
not know of my taking it. Neither am I
paid for this statement, but give it freely in
answer to friends and the editor of this
paper.”
(Signed.) John BaugbeSS, Atlanta, Texas.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this
27th day of March, 1896.
R. M. Blaydes, Notary Public.
Regarding the above testimonial of John
Baugress, 1 beg to say that no man stands
higher for honesty and veracity in all this
section than John Baugress.
W. H. Wright.
Editor and proprietor of the Democrat
Atlanta. Texas.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale Peo
ple are an unfailing remedy for all dis
eases arising from a poor and watery condi
tion of the blood, such ns pale and sal
low complexion, general muscular weakness,
loss of appetite, depression of spirits, lack of
ambition, anieinia, chlorosis or green sick
ness, palpitation of the heart, shortness of
breath on slight exertion, coldness of hands
or feet, swelling of the feet and limbs, pain
in the back, nervous headache, dizziness,
loss of memory, feebleness of will, ringing in
the ears, early decay, all forms of female
weakness, leucorrluea, tardy or irregular
periods, suppression of menses, hysteria,
paralysis, locomotor ataxia, rheumatism,
sciatica, all diseases resulting from vitiated
humors in the blood, causing scrofula,
swelled glands, fever sores, rickets, hip-joint
diseases, hunchback, acquired deformities,
decayed hones, chronic erysipelas, catarrh,
consumption of the bowels and lungs, and
also for invigorating the blood and system
when broken down by overwork, worry, dis
eases, excesses and indiscretions of living, re
covery from acute diseases, such as fevers,
etc., loss of vital powers,
early decay, premature old age. They act
directly on the blood, supplying tc the blood
its life-giving qualities liy assisting it t»
absorb oxygen, that great supporter of all
organic life. Pink Pills are sold by all deal
ers, or wili be sent post paid on receipt of
price, 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50
by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co.,’
Schenectady, N. Y.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Dr. HENRY H. BATTEV
SURGEON AND PHYSICIAN,
ROME, - - GEORGIA.
DR. L. P. HAMMOND
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Residence No 408 West First street,
Office Medical Building, Room L, Second Flocs
Residence Telephone
Office .... gj
Dr. D. T. MCCALL? -
Physician and Surgeon,
ROMS, GEORGIA.
Office, 208 Broad Street; Residence, 42 Main
Street.
Office Telephone 13. Residence Telephone 132
ATTORNEYS.
Mosss Weight. Babpeb Hamilto
WRIGHT & HAMILTON.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Office, No. 17 Postoiiice Bulldiu r,
ROME. GA.
WM. J. NEEL, !
ATTORNEY A.T LA W ,
ROME, GEORGIA.
Office In New King Building.
Will practice In all the Courts. Special atteu
tion given to Commercial Law and the examl -
nation of Land Titles.
HALSTED SMITH
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office in City Hall, - Rome, Georgia .
T- BEN KERR,
ATTORNE Y-AT-LAW,
Practice in all the courts of Alp.,,
both State and federal. Will act as
commissioner to take testimony. Col
lections will be carefully looked after.
Bank of Piedmont, reference.
PIEDMONT, : : : ALABAMA
MAX MEYERHARDT
ATTORNEY-AT-1.
ROME, . . GEORGIA
Office in Court House, Up Stairs
Special Low Rates
VIA
Southern Railway.
FOR MONTHS OF
June, July and August
Brunswick, Ga. Tickets on
sale daily at sl4, good until Octo
tier 31st.
St. Simons Island. G a Tick
ets on sale daily at sl4 50, good,
until Oct. 31 st
Cumberland Island, Ga. Tick
ets on sale da ly at sl6, good until
Oct 31st.
Tybee Island, Ga. Tickets
on sale daily at sl6, good 15 days—
can be extended 15 days.
Lookout Mountain, Tenn.
I Tickets on sale every Saturday, good
|tn return Monday following date of
sa’e; rate of $2.00 for round trip. ‘
Lithia Springs. Ga. Tickets
on sale ever/ Saturday, good tn
return Monday following date of
sale; ra'esl.2s for round trip. /
For full particulars call at city,
office, 14 Arrastr ng building, or
write to T. C. Smith. P. &T. A.,
Rome, Ga
C. A. Benscoter, A. G. P. A.,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
■
BEST LINE
VIA
ST. LOUIS, CHICAGO and PEORIA
TO
OMAHA, MINNEAPOLIS, ST. PAUL,
KANSAS CITY, ST. JOSEPH, DENVER.
NEBRASKA, COLORADO, MON
TANA, UTAH AND PACI
FIC COAST.
VESTIBULED TRAINS
WITH
SLEEPERS,CHAIR CARSs£*>
and DINING CARS.
L. W. Wakeley, c. P. A.,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Howard Flliott, Cen. Mgr.,
ST. JOSEPH, MO.
J. N. Merrill, Cen. Agt.,
ATLANTA, QA.