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FOR FALL BUSINESS
Every Advcrliscr Should Be
Represented
HI THE TRIBUNE’S TRADE EDITION
_____ *
It Wi l Be I'sued Early In October and
Will Ecliptw- all Previoua Effort.
In Thia Line.
Readers of Thk Tribune have
learned to look forward to each new
and successful achievment of Rome's
great daily. We have issued several
special editions since the present
management has been in charge and
■we are happy to say that each and
every one has been an improvement
on its predecessor as has been evinced
by the popular public favor with
which they have been received.
Early in October we intend to issue
a special edition which will eclipse
our previous efforts. Rome is steadily
growing and there is healthy and sub
stantial improvement going on all
over the section of country tributary
to the North Georgia metropolis. Now
is the time to keep our advantages
before the people.
In no other way can this be done
quite so successfully as through the
medium of a widely circulated news
paper like The Tribune. Every edi
tion of a special character that we
have gotten out has gone abroad on
its mission of progress and the results
have been made apparent by the at
tention attracted to this section of
country.
We have endeavorad to make every
edition as full and complete as possi
ble, but in this one we want to cover
the whole ground. All that we ask is
the liberal co-operation of the people
for whom we have labored so earnestly
and for whom we expect to continue
to work as long as we control the des
tinies of The'Tribune
It will be to the interest of every
business or professional man in North
Georgia and North and East Alabama,
to secure space in this great issue
The merchant, the manufacturer, the
land owner, the mine operator, the
professional man and all who are in
terested in educational, industrial
work, or emigration work, will t,e
benefitted by represention in its col
umns.
Not less than ten thousand readers,
in every part of the country, and
especially in the West and Northwest,
will read this great edition and profit
by the information gained from its
columns. Our solicitors are already
otit and will make a thorough canvass
of the country contiguous to Rome
and we bespeak for them the consider
ation which they are entitled to in
promoting this laudable enterprise in
the interest of our city and section.
Durant, Mis?.—Office of J, S. Rosa
mond. Messrs. Lipman Bros., Savannah,
Ga:
Gentlemen—While in San Antonio,
Tex., last spring I saw your advertise
ment of P. P. P. (Prickley Ash, Poke
Root and Potassium) in the paper for the
cure of rheumatism and though 1 : I woul i
try a bottle; finding such great relief
from it on my return home, I had my
druggist, Mr. John McClellan, to order
me a supply. After taking, I think, ten
bottles, I have not had a pain or ache
since; previous to that I suffered for
twenty- five (25) years, and could not get
the least benefit until I tried P. f. P.,
and therefore take pleasure in recom
mending it to all. Yours truly,
J. 8. Rocsamond.
On the 1 jriuutiou of liaiJ.
For more than a century it has been
the generally accepted opinion among
meteorologists that hail ues me
formed of a succession of concentric lay
ers of ice, which have formed around a
nucleus. It has also Lecii the general
opinion that the size cf the hailstone
depends much c;i the height from
which it falls, eno coining from a great
distance being able to gather a greater
number of layers cf frozen water in its
fall.
M. Sanna-Sclaro, the French v c-athci |
sharp, contests the idea that Icilstcnv: j
are so formed. He says the cougehJion j
begins from without, and that the • j
called nucleus is the result of pres
sure. According to this novel theory,
when the externa) surface begins to
freeze, the air bubbles are driven to
ward the center and give rise to u pres
sure, under which the crust yields.
Sanna-Solaro says: “The shock deter
mines the congelation of a fresh layer,
which is formed of two distinct parts,
one deprived of air (and consequently
transparent), the other clouded or
opaque (in consequence of the included
air bubble). ”
According to one authority, this phe-
Q “MOTHERS’
14 FRIEND”
’ r *s,
s . Shortens labor, lessens pain,
diminishes danger to life of
both mother and child and leaves her in condi>
tion more favorable to speedy recovery.
“Stronger after than before confinement”
says a pruiniue.it midwife Is the best remedy
FOR RISING BREAST
Known and vorth the price for that nlone
Endorsed and recommended Ly midwives and
all ladles who have used it.
Beware of substitutes and imitations.
Makes Child-Birth Easy.
Sent by Express or mail on receipt of price
JI. OO per bottle. Book "TO MOTHERS"
mailed free, containing voluntary testimonials,
BRADFIELD UEUVLATOR CO., ATLANTA, Q>.
BOLD BT ALL DRUGGISTS.
nomenon is reproduced at each succes
sive congelation, and if the hailstones
reach the ground before the freezing
process has been completed their cen
tral portions may yet contain air bub
bles, watqr or crystals of ice. Pyramidal
shaped hailstones he ascribes to the ac
tion of violent congelation, which causes
the contained fluid to split the crust
into three, four or more pieces.
Professor Sanna-Solaro also gives
some good reasons in proof of his state
ment that hailstones are formed instan
taneously.—St. Louis Republic.
Piccadilly.
Perhaps there is among the great cap
itals of civilization no more celebrated,
no more beautiful street than Piccadilly.
The origin of its name is still disputed,
although the interpretation given by
the Hon. F. Byng, once- universally
known as “Pcodle” Byng, on account
of the curliness of his hair, will serve
as well as any other.
He hold that, rather more than two
centuries ago, it was Charles Il’s habit,
when he took his morning’s walk in the
Green park, to buy some cakes or turn
overs from an old woman with whom
he exchanged many a merry jest, and
who kept her btoth on a spot opposite
to the present site cf Apsley House.
These cakes were called‘•‘pickadils, ”
and from this circumstance the fashion
able western artery of London was sup
posed by “Poodle” Byng to have taken
its name.
“Poodle” Byng’s ashes repose in St.
James’ church, which Sir Christopher
Wren regarded as one of his most suc
cessful structures, not far from the
grave of that celebrated roue and volup
tuary, the last Duke of Queensberry,
better known as “Old Q. ’’ or the “Star
of Piccadilly,” whose dishonored bones
repose beneath the communion table.—
London Telegraph.
Preservation of Bouquets.
A florist of many years' experience
gives the following recipe for preserv
ing bouquets: When you receive a bou
quet, sprinkle it lightly with fresh wa
ter; then put it into ave sei containing
some soapsuds, which nourish the roots
and keep the flowers as bright as new.
Take the bouquet out of the suds every
morning and lay it sideways in fresh
water, the stalk entering first into the
water. Keep it there a minute or two;
then take the flowers out and sprinkle
it lightly by the baud with pure water.
Replace the bouquet in the soapsuds,
and the flowers will bloom as fresh as
when first gathered. The soapsuds need
to bo changed every third day. By ob
serving these rules a bouquet can be
kept bright and beautiful for at least
one month and will last still longer tn
a very passable state, but the attention
to the fair and trail creatures, as direct
ed above, must be strictly observed.—
New Orleans Times-Democrat.
This is the day of anti-this, and anti
that but what people need most nowa
days, is the anti-bilious medicine, Sim
mons Liver Regulator, the King of Liver
Medicines and Better than Pills. “I
have used no other ant : .-bilious remedy
for six years and know from experience
that for ladies of a constipated habit
nothing equals it.”—Laura V. Craig,
Ellebury, Fla.
Don’t fail to call in at J. Sam
Veal’s bo< kst >re. Fine Art
most beautiful.
Bicycles at prices to suit the pur
chaser. Repossessed wheels at your
own prices Victor, Falcon, & Craw
ford. All 1896 models. Call at E. E.
Forbes Music store, No. 327, Broad St.
Hot or Cold Water.
In a paper read before a medical asso
ciation recently a prominent physician
says, concerning the use of hot and cold
water, that while tho majority have
concluded that hot water is better for
bathing the eyes there are cases where
cold is required and that the patient
should decide for himself, giving tho
preference to that which the more
quickly relieves the pain and leaves no
bad effects. Hot water is generally con
sidered to be far better than cold for
bruises. Water which is not too cold
drunk in quantities is cue of the best
means of producing the perspiration
necessary fur curing a heavy cold. It is
said that a bowl cf v.ntcr idcod at the
side of the bed will often cure trouLlid
sleep as well as insomnia. It is an s.d
mirable method of purifying the atmos
phere of a room which Las become ft,'. 1
with tobacco smoke.—Bicoklya Eagle.
Chinese Cologne.
The Chinese ladies have an odd kind
of cologne—that is to say, they con
stantly have upon tlieir person a small
bag of sweet smelling gum similar to
that which was used l y qhe ancient
Egyptian women. Numerous costly jars
recently unearthed at Pyramids contain
the cosmetics and perfumes which were
used by Egyptian princesses, all of
which bear a nsemblance to those in
vogue today among Chinese ladies of
the highest rank.
Peculiar St. Louis.
The city of St. Louis is not in any
county. Under the Missouri cons'itu
tion of 1875 the city was separated from
the county. In 1876 it was created a
separate municipality. It seems to be
the only city in the country that is not
within the limits of a county.
A Suburban Malady.
“What nervous disease did Dr. Good
head say your husband is suffering
irotn?”
“Ho called it‘catching trains.’ ”
Chicago Record.
Notice.
I want every man and woman in
the United States interested in the
ooiuin and whisky habits to have o >e
of rov bodies of these diseases. Ad
dress B. M. Woolly, Atlanta. Ga.,Box
368, and one will be sent you free.
THE fiUME TKIBUBE. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3
FEW NEGROES WILL VOTE.
Os tlw 130,000 lu South Carolina, Only
5 500 Are Registered—The New L»w.
Columbia, S. C, Oct. 2.—The lust op
portunity to register before the Novem
ber elections was given wonld-bo voters
of South Carolina this week. Under
the constitution adnpted last year the
applicant for registration must be able
to read umiersramiiuglv or explain to
the satisfaction of the managers any
section of t.ie constitution read to him
by them, and he must also present a re
ceipt for hi. poll tax.
Registration under this condition will
proceed until Jan. 1, 1898, when the ap
plicant of registration must be able to
both read and write any section of the
constitution, or must pref ent his reciept
for taxes upon at least S3OO worth of
property. But those who are now of
age and do not register will not be per
mitted to do so after next year.
The result of the registration this
year shows that unless the attempt now
being made by Republicans to get the
election .laws overthrown, as contrary
to the section of the constitution of the
United States, allowing this state,
Georgia and Florida representation in
congress, the negroes will not be a fac
tor in politics here until those now be
ing educated become of age and comply
with the educational requirements.
Os the 130,000 negro adults in the
state, not exceeding 5,500 will be able to
vote in the November election—only
about that number haviug been regis
tered. About 50,000 whites have cer
tificates. This cuts off Republicans
from sending a congressman from the
First district, now represented by George
W. Murray, and nullifies their fighting
chance in the Seventh, from which Dr.
Stokes (Dem.) was recently unseated.
They Burned Clove..
From the middle of the sixteenth cen
tury until 1824 the Dutch regulated or
sought to regulate the clove trade and
the price by annually destroying a por
tion of the crop in order to enhance the
price of the remainder. The burning of
cloves took place annually, from a quar
ter to a half of the crop being- thus de
stroyed. The last clove burning was in
1824, when the practice was discontin
ued.
Alfonso V of Aragon and Naples was
entitled the Magnanimous because on
more than one occasion he released pris
oners taken in war instead of putting
them to death or holding them for a
ransom.
Harvesting Upland Rice.
Question. —I have a half acre in up
land rice, which is very fine. When
will it be at the proper stage to harvest,
and how should it be gathered.
Answer.—The proper stage for har
vesting is when you find the straw turn
ing yellow and the grains well filled out
in the heads. You cau cut with a reap
hook, tie in bundles at once, and hang
on poles held up by props at the ends,
or you can cut and lay upon the stubble
to dry, after which it can be put in
small stacks. Should you hang on
poles, a week’s exposure will be suffi
cient, and you can then house until
ready for threshing. Don’t bind in
bundles when the dew is on the straw.—
State Agricultural Department.
Value of Coal Ashes.
Question. —I have a quantity of cor.l
ashes which I do not like to throw
away if there is any value in them,
either as a fertilizer or as a mulch. Can
you 'tell me if they are valuable for
either purpose?
Answer. —Coal ashes may contain a
slight quantity of phosphoric acid, but
if so, the amount is so small as to be of
no practical value. The ashes may bs
used to improve the mechanical condi
tion of very heavy soils, which contain
vegetable matter. They are also of use
as an absorbent, and may be placed
around fruit trees with advantage. In
all cases they should be fine and dry
and sifted. —State Agricultural Depart
ment.
free^ Ott
Ir jou at-ua your name and add ©br, mention
tun ibis paper, rc Dr. H&tbafray & Co., 22% So.
Ct. -»viauta, ‘Ja.. you will receive their
v&rfiMoi* 64 pwg-3 Reference Book for ftien and
Women.
This b »c>k has just been issued and is full of
vpJiiHble information to tboae afflicted with anv
of those delicate disease** peculiar to men and
women. It tells how to cure diseases. Dr.
Hathaway & CO. are considered to be expert in
the treatment of such diseases, and are without
doubt the leading specialists in the line of dis* ;
eases wulch they make a specialty of.
SPECIALTIES.
Specific blood poi- r
soning, nervons de (
bility, kidney and Cgs UsS?
urinary difficultie-, z&Y
stricture.. varic •- I / -v
cele, hydrocele, pirn- I
pies, pi lee, iheuma- AMlfr fry
tiem, skin and blood
diseases ot all forms,
catarrh and diaeasee ASWAW.
of women. Address
orcalion Dr. Hath- fflEi
away & Co., 21% So r.roau st, Atlanta, <•*
Mail treatment given by sending for symptom
blank No 1 for men. No. 2 for women, No. >
for skin olsea.es. No. 4 for catarrb
Buy a
Smooth
White SX-
Skin
For Your Face!
It probably needs renewing, for it is rough, red.
freckled, blotched or pimpled, until it has become
repulsive instead of attractive. Healthy skin is
always beautiful. Tho sun and wind, impure .
soaps and cosmetics injure the skin.
Viola Cream
cleanses, nourishes and restores the skin, making
it soft, white and beau ifui. It U not u coßinetio
—does not cover up, but removes blemishes. It
is hnrme’ss and always docs just what we claim
for it. The only preparation -hat will positively
remove Freer les. Blackheads, Tan, Bunburn and
Pimples. Hundreds c f tCHtimoniuls from promi
nent i..dies. I" icc 50 cent* a jar at druggist*.
U. G.bli rNf> ’O., TOLEDO, 01 iIC.
MT STOCK-JUST WHAT ffl WANT!
It Is About
Time
You Were
Thinking
About a
Winter Suit
Hat or
Underwear.
It is Fun for Us
To watch our competitors trying to
meet our prices. But our customers
and the public say THEY can’t. We
already know it and want you to find
it out. ’ •
Take a Glance at
These Prices.
'And hold us responsible for what
we say:
We can sell you an All-Wool black,
brown, blue or gray mixture Clay
Worsted Suit for SIO.O0 —not for
$12.50- — that’s the price others are
asking. These goods are handsome in
finish and design and are perfect-fit
fing. Cassimeres, Cheviots, Serges
and Worsteds of various colors at
$7.50, SB, $O and SIO. Not
shoddy goods, but up-to-date for the
price you pay. Each one is a big bar
gain by itself. Our finer line of suits
is comprised of novelties of the very
best of manufacturers.
Agents for Dunlap’s Celebrated Hats conceded to be correct in style
and comfortable as well as du
rable. We also carry a full line of other makes of hats, varying in price from $2.00 to
$4.00. Soft hats of all kinds. Everything guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction.
When youTead this tell your friends about it. They’ll appreciate it after having pat
ronized us once, and they’ll thank you and us, for we will deal honestly and fair with
them and sell them low.
J. A. GAMMON &. CO.
The One Price Up-tc-3ate Clothiers, - * • - 237 and 239 Broad Street, Rome, Ga.
SEVERAL CAR l PSPS OF BUGGIES T| lUV 111 IPT PO
PHAETONS AND WAGONS. HILI IllUd I UU
PRICES CUT TO THE VERY BOTTOM.
$45 for a Top Buggy. SSO for a Top Buggy and Harness.
How is this for a sample of cheap prices? SILVER DOLLARS are goo.l in exchange. We sell medium and high
grade work for cash, and we give time on safe paper. We trade for old vehicles as part pay on new ones.
HOW IS THIS: $lO 00 for a set buggy wheels, finished, (tired, painted, and your boxes put in). We allow actual
value for old wheels as part, pay on new ones. We are up-to-date in our repair department. We give it careful attention
and are having a good trade.
-We are having daily calls for good second hand Buggies, Surries, Carriages and Spring Wagons. If you have such to
trade bring them and let us see them and we will trade with you.
R. H. JONES & SONS’ MF’G. CO ~ Rom, and Carters,! le, Ca.
Hi&t «
fS
vM g
■DLL ROAD. «
1 the road from health to sick- M
r. Sometimes just a little irreg- Uh
t “bearing down” feeling, indi
: that nearly always leads to the (R
perfect health. Nearly always
inine organs. Neglect of these M ,
:rer further down the hill of dis- Uh 1
tEE’S a
CARDUI |
lisplacements, drains and weak
ay building up the whole system.
strong, healthy body.
> women to cure.themselves. It Uh
the doctor that he must know if
Bottle.
s in this Country. *
It is with both pleasure and
pride that we come before
you with the
MOST COMPLETE LINE
OF
Men, Boys’ and Children’s
CLOTHING
ever brought to this market.
We have spared neither time
nor energy in selecting our
fall stock, and we can, with
out boasting, say that there
is no better bought stock in
the country. For the fat
men were bought stouts, for
the slim, slims, and we can
almost fit anybody.
It Makes No Difference
to us whether you wish a
cheap business suit, a fine
Scotch or Cassimere, or a
fine Worsted Dress Suit.
You CALL OR WRITE FOR
WHAT YOU WANT.
»
Many People
Who have heretofore had tailors to
make their clothing are today our cus
tomers. Why ? Because they nave
found the place where there is no
trouble to get a fit, thus saving; from
SIO to sls on a suit. Besides the
handsomest and cheapest line of Cloth
ing made, our store is filled with the
latest and newest Shirts, Collars, Cuffs,
Neckwear, Underwear, Hosiery and
such like.
Youths’ Suits
All Wool Blue and Black Serge
Cheviots at $5.00. For $6, $7, SB, $9,
$lO and $12.50 we can show yon a line
of suits unequalled in value and make
up in this part of the country.
All Wool Boys’ Suits $2.48 and
$2.08 — the greatest bargains ever of
fered. Don’t miss them.
From the Factory
to your head
‘XJeJs
(UARANTEE!)
AN UP-TO-DATE STYLE
FOR
Fall a-
wi NTE R
J. E. WINFREY’S
I CIGAR FACTORY.
J ’HAND-MADE and HOME-MADE.”
I
I — o —
Pure Havana,
Winfrey’s Hand-Made,
W. & A. Cigars.
The best Five Cent cigars on the
market. There are none better, because
none better can be made. The manu
facture of all cigars personally superin
| tended,
i patronage solicited. Care
fulaiten tion given to all orders.
No 22 Broad Street,
.PQMF ga.
ARLINGTON HOTEL
EAST HOME.
Mrs. S. E. Vick, M’gr.
MEALS 25e. LODGING 25c.
Op n all h> urs, night »i>d day.
Good silting roo a free.
Refurnished thronghou • Nt at bed
moms and good fare.