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COSSIP ABOUT COMING
SESSION OF CONGRES
SENATE AND HOUSE, i
GETTING READY FOR THE SESSION
OF CONGRESS.
Speculation aa ito Its Prospective Doings. |
The Quetitlow of Caban BeJUgerency.
The Annexation of Hawaii Senator
Lodge's Scheme—Financial Legislation.
Washington, "Deo. I.—Outside the
tapitol the air fk balmy and sweet; in
side st iferedolemt of varnish and ■turpen
tine. Painters have brightened the
walls and •armies of scrubwomen have
polished the floor* .and vigorously wield
■ed .their .brooms.
While wandening forlornly about the
•other <dajy, missing sorely the hum of
the ooßgiessionad hive, the bursts of
oratory, Abe .rappang of the speaker’s
.gavel, I espied, stewed snugly away in
a far corner of a committee room, a
lone senator whose name I am not .al
lowed to mention. He had a Congres
sional Record in iris lap, in which, as
he saw me approaching, he pretended
to be deeply absorbed. Had it been al
most any other book I might have cred
ited him with being sincere, but this i
was too great a itax upon human credu
lity—and he knew it. He extended his
hand, and, making the best of a bad
situation, invited me to a seat beside
him.
“You have come to interview me, I
auppoae?” he said in a discouraging
done.
“That is exactly what I wish to do, ”
I replied. “I came here with the inten
tion of extracting information from
somebody, but, to tell the truth, I had
not anticipated such good fortune as to
meet with”—
“There, there; that will do,” here
joined wearily. “What is it you want?”
“Well, not much, nothing that you
cannot tell me offhand, I am sure; only
to be informed, for the benefit of our
readers, as to what congress will do the
coming session. There has been a deal
of speculation about its prospective do
ings, but what we desire is something
authoritative and at first hand from an
active participant in debate, from some
one, like yourself, in touch with the
president and with the people.”
“That’s a modest request, ” be said
dryly.
“Yes; that’s why I make it. Modes
ty is my most eminent virtue. ”
“Indeed! Well, if you have one other
virtue and will exercise it I will under
take to gratify your curiosity. ”
"And that?”
“Discretion. ”
“Why, certainly !'I forgot to mention
that discretion is my stron'g point. ’*
“Very well. In the first place, what
do you consider the foremost questions
today in which the people at large are
most interested?”
The Coban Problem.
“I think, senator, that Cuban bellig
erency—the question of its recognition
by our government—touches the people
most nearly on their sentimental and
- sympathetic side; next to that the an
nexation of Hawaii,”
“Exactly, my friend, -and those will
be the two great problems which we
shall first attempt to solve—how to do
justice to Cuba without offending the
mother country, Spain, and how to
right a wrong without incurring the
vengeance of the wrongdoer. There is
no doubt at all as to the justice of Cuba’s
cause. I do not doubt either that it will
ultimately win. It is a question more
of abstract sympathy and of principle
than of concrete advantage to us. Not
ior worlds would we attempt the qnnex-
/ m Lv
Travelers shudder with horror at the
thought of the train-wrecker who stealthily
undermines the supports of a railway bridge
and precipitates a passenger train with ;t s
load of precious human freight to a hoiii
ble death by fire and water. There is a
deadlier enemy than the train-wrecker that
menaces not only travelers but stay-at
homes. Its name is indigestion. It slowly
undermines the supports that hold up the
bridge of life and yearly precipitates untold
thousands into the dread valley of consump
tion. If people will only take the right pre
caution they can avoid this calamity and
-even remedy it after it has occurred if they
will act in time.
All cases of indigestion and every disease
that has its inception in indigestion or faulty
nutrition are cured by Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery. It cures 98 per cent, of
all cases of consumption. It cures wasting
diseases. It is an unfailing remedy for nerv
ous prostration. It is the great blood-maker,
' flesh-builder, and nerve tonic. Thousands
have testified to its merits. There is nothing
else “just as good.” Druggists sell it.
“ I beg leave to inform you," writes Mrs. J.
Shelv of No. 1701 Thomas Place, Minneapolis,
Minn., 'that Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis
covery cured my trouble in my neck—Goitre. It
went away in three months. At the sixth bottle
it began to grow,smaller. Before, it had grown
larger very perceptibly. lam very grateful for
the cure.”
Healthy babies. Healthy mother. Healthy
father. These arc what you find in the homes
that have a copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common
Sei.se Medical Adviser. Send 21 one-cent
stamps, to cover cost of mailing only, to
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
Buffalo, N. Y. Cloth binding, 31 stamps.
ration of Cuba, wen iif it 'were practica
ble. It is th» spectacle-of that brave
handful of patriots battling against
•fearful odds, resisting ; aggression and
wrong as did our Revolutionary forefa
thers. Without a particle of hatred to
ward Spain, without the remotest desire
.for the acquisition of Cuba, still our
isynipathies are moat decidedly with the
-struggling young republic. But, again,
we must not allow our inclinations
merely to plunge us into a war, the is
mie of which no one can .doubt would be
favorable to us, but the cost of which in
blood and treasure would Jbe incalcula
ble,
•"As legislators who will be held
■faintly responsible for any disaster that
our -deeds might bring upon the coun
try, we cannot forget this fact nor al
low rthe clamor of the unthinking mul
titude to hurry us into a .declaration
that might lead to war. The senate, as
you know, has practically passed a rec
ognition of belligerency, ao far as an
expression of its opinion goes. In. the
house the matter is in the hands of Mr.
Hitt, with Speaker Reed sitting on the
safety valve. I think, without express
ing an opinion at all derogatory to any
one, that ultimately this question will
be precipitated as an expediency, and
then there will be a general scramble
as to who shall have the honor of fa
thering it. But, in some shape or other,
it will come before both houses, and
there is every indication that it will be
settled for good and all.
Hawaiian Annexation.
"As to Hawaii, .there are no two
opinions as to the popularity of the an
nexation idea. The chief objection urged
against it is the distance of the Hawai
ian Islands from our coast. Depend* up
on it that unless all signs fail the an
nexation of Hawaii is a foregone con
clusion. Some will urge that, while we
may not annex those islands ourselves,
still we will do all we can to prevent
any other nation from doing so. But
that silly dog in the manger policy will
not work in this age of enlightened
sentiment. If we as a nation are not
Strong enough and bold enough to take
and to hold what we want and need,
then we are not strong enough and bold
enough to stand in the way of other na
tions doing so.
".Now, one of the first things to be
attended to after Cuba and Hawaii are
disposed of will be Senator Lodge’s pet
scheme for the purchase of the Danish
West Indian islands. They are for sale,
but as the old king is still living whose
royal sensibilities were so rudely treat
ed by us years ago it will be a delicate
subject to negotiate. But he needs mon
ey badly, even though he is the father
of England’s prospective queen, and if
we go to him with the cash in hand he
will surely swallow his dignity, hand
over the islands and turn the cash into
his coffers.
“Here again, as with Hawaii, comes
the necessity of buying at once, for it is
well known that Germany desires these
islands mightily, and if we do not soon
complete our purchase she will doubt
less acquire them. And there is no real
reason why she should not except that
rather mythical Monroe doctrine which
commits us to resist any further acqui
sition by any European power of Ameri- 1
can possessions.
"So much for foreign relations. While ;
we are at peace just now with all the
world, there is yet the definition of the
Monroe doctrine which may involve us
in trouble. But our duty now is to ex
tend our commercial relations and
strengthen"our merchant marine. As an
auxiliary to our navy, most important
in time of peace and absolutely necessary
to its effectiveness in wartime, is this
school for sailors, the marine merchant
service, which has the advantage of be
ing self supporting and self operating.
Reciprocity.
“Do you see my drift? Well, what I
mean is reciprocity. On the north we
have Canada, selfish and grasping; on
the south the West Indies and the vast
continent of South America, with its
40,000,000 inhabitants, producing few
manufactured goods and insatiate for
trade; east and west we have Europe,
Africa and Asia. I cannot enter into a
discussion of the merits of reciprocity,
but it is a fact we have established, to
our sorrow and regret, that the lack of
it—or rather its abolishment—has oper
ated to our loss and disaster, commer
cially speaking.
"In a nutshell the case is this: We
have what all the world needs, especial
ly of raw products :.-nd many manufac
tures. We are absolutely independent
and self supporting. We can do without
the products of almost all other coun
tries, but they cannot-do without ours.
Especially is tins true of the West In-,
dies and South America, which produce
only within a restricted range. With
reciprocity, then, we hold the balance
of power, for we can say, ‘Give us your
; trade or we will deny you ours.’ We
1 have an advantage impossible to esti
mate. Reciprocity is free trade with a
string to it, and we hold the string!
I “Related questions to this are, first,
the preservation of the seal herds in the
1 Bering sea, the definition of the bound
ary line between Alasl.aand the British
possessions in the northwest, rhe re
stricting of immigration and bi 'ietal
lism. Regarding the seal question, it
looks to me as if Canada and Great
Britain were imposing upon our good
nature mightily to interfere in this
matter at all. In the first place the
seals are practically our own property,
but Great Britain steps in with a propo
sition for us to divide it with her little
protege. Canada, who, by the way, de-
o K TRIBUNE THiUIISDAY. DECEMBER 2.
rives flour dimes the revenue from 'the
seal iherde that we do—gets four times
the revenue fr jm our own seals that "we
tdo'Ourselwai'! Now, this is not a qxies
ifiton of:sentiment, but of selfishness, And
■no .other mation can accuse us of im
proper conduct if we authorize the kill -
ing of the.entire pack outright. That,
to my mind, is the most equitable solu
tion of the 'problem.
•"As to the lines will
probably the drawn tightly about the
prospective citizen from foreign parts.
Farther than this I do not wish to be
quoted. Onljy this: When our system is
congested, we usually take a rest—and
take a pill. We certainly do need a
rest, and the immigrant—well, it looks
as though he anight get the pill.
Finance.
“Financial legislation, the currency
question? That depends upon the coun
try at large more than upon individual
preference. As.oonditions are at present
we are .superabundantly rich in money.
We are about to receive the pay for our
great crops, and in gold. The balance
of trade is now in sour favor. For many
years Europe has been paying for our
crops in our own securities. But now
she is handing over .the cadi and wish
es she had those securities back. Yes,
there may be financial legislation, but
upon what lines I cannot now predict.
In fact, I would rather not .express an
opinion. But there is one related topic
you should not overtook in the nature
of experimental legislation, and that is
something entirely novel, even as an
idea. I refer to the proposed .establish
ment of the postal savings bank system.
A bill for its establishment, lam as
sured on good authority, will be intro
duced in the simplest possible form,
containing, including the enacting
clause, less than 200 words. This bill
will be presented by the junior senator
from Illinois, Mr. Mason, who created
such a dbusation last spring by his bel
ligerency speech on Cuba. It will limit
proposed deposits to $250 and interest
to 2or 3 per cent; also provide for the
safe investment of the vast amount of
capital that will undoubtedly flow into
governmental coffers from this source.
“Will there be further tariff legisla
tion? Not of a nature calculated to dis
turb the business of the country in the
slightest degree. But no work of that
sort has ever reached perfection at first,
and I suppose the enemies of the bill
will rasp it a bit and the friends will
wish to polish it up a little.
"Our railroads? "Well, they are doing
pretty well at present. 4 Yes, the ‘little
joker’ in the tariff bill which was in
tended to prove corrective of the Cana
dian Pacific somehow miscarried. But,
no matter, the intent was good enough.
Somebody’s backbone relaxed; that was
all I The coming sessidh its to be a busi
ness one. Domestic matters, such as
public buildings, river and harbor bills,
forestry reserves, civil service—a sub
ject painful to contemplate—will-surely
receive attention. One thing, however,
do not forget—G xl helps those who help
their homes!” F. A. Obkb.
The Coming Woman
Who goes to the club while her husband
tends the baby, as well as the good old
fashioned woman who looks after her
home, will both at times get run down
in health. They will be troubled with
lose of appetite, headaches, sleeplessness,
fainting or dizzy spells. The most won
derful remedy for these women is Elec
tric Bitters. Thousands of sufferers from
Lame Back and weak Kidneys rise up
and call it blessed. It is the medicine
for women. Female complaints and
Nervous troubles of all kinds are soon
relieved by the use of Electric bitters.
Delicate women should keep this remedy
on band to build up the system. Only
50c per bottle. For sale by Curry-Ar
rington. .
Thanksgivings In Europe.
Thanksgiving day comes down to u»
from New England’s earliest times, and
so docs the turkey The pumpkin pie had
its birth in hiassachusetts and Connecti
cut, though cranberry sauce has a lees
ancient and honorable history. But
Thanksgiving was not original in New
England. Days set apart for giving
thanks to the Almighty were known in
Europe before the reformation and were
in frequent use by Protestants afterward,
especially in the church of England,
where they were a fixed custom long be
fore they were in the colonies.—New York
World.
How to Prevent Pneumonia.
At this time of the year a cold is very
easily contracted, and if left to run its
course without the aid of some reliable
cough mediciueis liable to result in that
dread disease, pneumonia. We know of
no better remedy to cure a cough or cold
than Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy.
We have used it quite extensively and
it has always given entire satisfaction.
—Olagah, Ind. Ter Chief.
This is the only remedy that is known
to be a certain preventive of pneumonia.
Among the many thousands who have
used it for colds and la grippe, we bave
n-vtr yet learned of a single case having
resulted in pneumonia. Persona who
have weak lungs or have reason to fear
an attack of pneumonia, should keep
the remedy at hand. The 25 and 50
c°nt. sizes for sale bv Curry-Arrington
Co.
A Word to Guests.
Never stare nt the carver. Remember
you are invited to dine, not to take a les
son in carving Appear perfectly uncon
scious of his efforts; a glance now and
1,.0n will give you sufficient insight into
t. i -othod Thons citen seems to be an
tl'ruist mie l;;s<-uv.iti<;n übout carving
ni.K.h alienees till Longues anti draws all
i?:,.. io the i . ...I of the tabic The most
snuiiul ■■ ■' wit! sor. ctii. is lail if cqn
k K.us of boin;; watched. V, ilh a little tact
tin- hostess cun easily engage the attention
oi her guests, tl-.ut the carver may not be
annoyed. —Selected.
Vinttce
•
<• everyman and woman tn the
’ states in'erevteß in the opintn
Molt-v he hits to have one of my
' ► of these diseases. Addrest B. M
t’v Stlanta.Ga , Box 362, andone
' '•» sent yon free.
A RELIC OF THE PAST.
'S rgical Operations for the Cure of Piles and
Rectal Diseases no Longer Necessary.
A Med?cial Discovery Which Will Change the
Treatment cf All Such Diseases.
It has long been thought not only by
-some physicians but by people in general
that the common, painful and exceed
ingly annoying t-rpnble, piles, was prac
tically incurable by any other means
■than a surgical operation and this be
lief has been the cause of years of need
less suffering, because of the natural
dread of surgical operations.
There are many salves, ointments
and similar remedies on the market
which afford some relief in cases of piles
but the Pyramid Pile Cure is the only
preparation so far introduced' that can
be reliably depended upon to cure to
stay-cured, every form of itching, bleed
ing or protruding piles.
Mrs. M. C. Hinkley of 601 Mississip
pi ISt.., Indianapolis, was told by her
physicians that nothing but a surgical
operation coating between seven and
tight hundred dollars, could cure her as
she had suffered for 15 years; yet even
in such a case as hers the Pyramid Pile
Cure accomplished a complete cure. She
says: *‘l knew an operation would be
death to me and tried the Pyramid with
very little hope and it is not to be won
dered at Chat I am so enthusiastic in its
praise.”
Mr, D. E. Reed of South Lyons,
Mich., says I would not take SSOO and
be placed back where I was before I
used the Pyramid Pile Cure, I suffered
for years and it is now eghteen mouths
since I used it and not the slightest trace
of the trouble has returned.
The {Pyramid Pile Cure is sold by
nearly all druggists at 50 cents and $1
per package and as it contains no opium
coocaine or other poisonous drug can be
used with perfect safety.
No one need suffer from piles in any
form who will give thteexcellent remedy
a trial. Send for book on cause and
cure of piles, send free by addressing
Pyramid Drug Co., Marshall, Mich,
(formerly Albion, Mich.)
V.omeu Art Students.
“Os all the curious things I ever
seed, ” remarked the retired mariner,
"these hero gill artists are the curious
est. The wonders cf the deep is nothin
to ’em. I was mendin a net down on the
dock there a few days ago when one of
’em comes erlong, plopped that three
legged affair of hers down near me,
rigged up her ombrel and set to work at
paintin a schooner ’et was layin off in
the river. Tide was pretty near tber
least of ther ebb when she began, and
ther schooner was, of course, pintin up
stream. Well, the got erlong pretty well
puttin the two masts in her all right
and the bowsprit. While she was paintin
the hills across ther river tide turned
and swung the old schooner around.
When she come to took at her picter,
she must er seen somethin was wrong
about that air bowsprit. It looked wrong
somehow, and I’m blest if she didn’t go
and put another one on, sticking out
over the stern of the danged thing.”—
New York Press.
.. $ ■ w- 11 4
Dig down to the cause of your sick-1
aess, if you want to get well and stay
well. Most likely it’s indigestion. The;
irritating poisons of fermenting, putrid ,
food, left in the stomach by indigestion,
cause headache, neuralgia, nervousness,
dizziness, stomach ache, nausea, irrita
bility, and all the other well known
symptoms of indigesticn.
They also cause many pains and dis
orders which are often laid to other
causes and hence are not easily cured
But as soon as the poisons are removed,
all these symptoms and disorders disap
pear, because there is nothing left to
cause them. Nothing succeeds iu this
like Shaker Digestive Cordial, because
it prevents the undigested food from
fermenting in the stomach and helps
the stomach to digest its food
Sold by druggists, price 10 cents to
SI.OO per bottle. JJ
The Worth of llis Money.
Not seldom in highland districts the
attendance at church during unpropi
tious weather is but scanty. One minis
ter, finding himself on a boisterous Sun
day confronted with but one solitary
auditor, who happened to be a gruff,
outspoken character, took him into his
confidence, with a view to propitiate
Jbim. “Will I go on with the sermon,
John?” John answered gruffly, "Os
course.” Getting into the pulpit and
leaning over it, he asked, “Will I give
you the Gaelic sermon or the English
one?” "Gie’s baith. Ye’re weel paid
for’t, ” said John, more gruffly still.—
Good Words.
Coughs, colds, pneumonia and fevers
may be prevented by keeping the blood
cure and the system toned up with
Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
O*»rsn>€«iy*4 r.lHliii*" R“<luch<l.
Berlin, Dee. 1. —Tne United States
ambassador. Andrew D. White, in an
interview with the Germ m minister for
foreign ass ;irs, B iron Von Bulow, re
ceived emphatic as.-uraiices, couehed m
friendly erms, of Germany’s moderate
intentions m regard to ueniandiiig of
Hayti iuueiiinity tor the illegal irnuris
oiniieiit of Herr Emli Lueders, a Ger
man subject. Baron Von Bulow v
sured Mr. White of Germany’s good
wid and respect tor American suseepri
bility, which caused the German gov
ernment r<> reduce its'claim for indem
nity to $20.00J
Miss Allie Hughes. Norfolk, Va ,
was frightfully burned on the face and
neck. Pein wee instantly relieved by
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel salve, which
healed the injury without leaving a
scar. It is the famous pile remedy.—
Curry-Arrington Co.
’MAKE A DOLLAR.
By sending four cash subscribers
to the w eekly TRIBUNE, Local
agents wanted throughout North
i Georgia and Alabama, All post/
masters are authorized to receive
subscriptions.
Edmond de Goncoart.
Edmond de Goncourt was the chief
spokesman of his school. He was the
first to set the fashion, or at least the
first to proclaim it, of going about note
book iu hand for professional purposes,
and on nothing did be pride himself so
much as on the paternity of the "hu
man document.” For any useful—nay,
blessed—formula let him receive all
credit, so long as the invention is un
derstood to be of a phase, not of a thing.
The limitation is necessary, in view of
certain extravagant pretensions which
won’d assign to the founders of realis
tic fiction an honor and glory similar to
that which, iu physical science, belongs
to the author of the “Novum Orga
nnm. ’ ’ In both cases, we are told, there
was a change of method in both the
importance, of particulars was empha
sized. Unfortunately the comparison
can hardly be extended to the subject
matter and the results. Nature was un
known when Bacon prescribed rules for
the discovery of her secrets. Human
nature, the motives and conduct of
men, was as well known 2,000 years
ago as it is today.
No documentary novelist has added
to the sum of general- knowledge or
done more than dress up old truths in
a few new garinents borrowed from va
rious sciences. The innovation of real
ism, or naturalism, was at most, then,
one of method applied to a given body
of already known phenomena, just as
the same facts may be treated by induc
tion or deduction in turns. And even
as an innovation of method it has been
much exaggerated on the fatuous pre
sumption, often made by De Gopcourt
and others, that no novelist before Bal
zac had ever studied the details of life
—a presumption resting apparently on
no other basis than the fact that our
old friends, taking such study for grant
ed, did not deem it necessary to be con
stantly talking about it.—Macmillan’s
Magazine.
J. C. Berry, one of the best known
citizens of Spencer, Mo., testifies that
he cured himself of the worst kind of
piles by using a few boxes of DeWitt’s
Witch Hazel Salve. He had been troubled
with piles for over thirty years and had
used many different kinds of so called
curss; but DeWitt’s was the one that did
the work and he will verify this state
ment if any one wishes to write him. Cur
ry-Arrington & Co.
It Brings Ravishing Dreams of Bliss.
In southern Arizona the jail and
prison officials have their hands full in
trying to prevent the smuggling into
their institutions of the seductive ma
riguana. This is a kind of loco weed
more powerful than opium. It is a dan
gerous thing for the uninitiated to han
dle, but those who know its uses say it
produces more ravishing dreams than
opium. The Mexicans mix it with to
bacco and smoke it with cigarettes, in
haling the smoke. When used in this
way, it produces a hilarious spirit in
the smoker that cannot be equaled by
any other form of dissipation. When
smuggled inside the prison walls, the
Mexicans readily pay $4 an ounce for
it, but free men buy it on the outside
for 50 cents.—San Francisco Call.
You can’t afford to risk your life by
allowing a cold to develop into pneumo
nia or consumption. Instant relief and a
certain cure are afforded by One Minute
Cough Cure. For sale by Curry Arring
ton Co., Rome, Ga.
Wlibed Particular*.
“It’s much more comfortable, ” said
the slightly haughty young actor, “to
be permanently located. I spent only
ten weeks on the road last season. ”
Mr. Stormington Barnes looked at him
■uspioicuslyand inquired, “Which kind
—railroad or turnpike?”—Washington
Btar. ,
Btiy a
Smooth
White U.
Skin W.-i&wß
For Your Face!
Itprobflb’7 re’iewin/. fo r it i. rough, red.
freckled, blotched o. pimpled, until it b*»R become
repulsive lustetd of a*rrae»;ve Herilthy skin to
alwajs b iirot’Cu' The son and wind. Impure
•oapaana 2001 les injure tho akin.
Viola Cream
cleanse*. doutlsLom end rfM.-vre:- vh<’ .Tr.n. making
it soft, white and beau-ifui. .1 .a < 'Kinetic
—does not cover up. i-m remu blemishes. It
to harmless and always <• ju. what we claim
for it. The only pre;u.“n\‘o , i bat will pobitive’y
remove Freckles DiackEeud** Tan, i-an burn and
Pimples Hundreds i f from promi-
nent ladies. P-ice co cent* u J-.r nt druggittg#
O.C. BITTNC U 'O. Tnt.vOU, OHiO. .
...... -
CHANGER
POZZONTS v
vComplexionv
POWDEK .
' i-’A BEMAKS ALWAYS THE SAME.
!
W The Anew , p’tre*!! and-v.-st ’oeßnt!- V
A tying toiii ' I'ow.ck i cv« “ L //
r»V soothing hce
harmless >»ial when t
f i»1 f yoi’ 2i2 ftve r•.
pozzom s a
/A you do nr-t in.-". I " {T"
fcOMPLariOAi ’ - ’-
‘AIT IS SOLD wxzr ?
1
Why not
Buy a Piano
At Home
Where you are .m position to
get one at, the
price, from ons of the largest
dealers in the South. Tbe r
E. E. Forbes Music House--
is enjoying one of ibe most
prosperous year s in the history
of its exis en< e, and’ is better
prepaired than ever to trade
with you in away to save you
money. Call on or wri e them
for prices on
CONOVER, KARNICK & BACH,.
BEHR BROS, KNABE,
CCHBERT AND KINGSBERRY
PIANOS
Found at *
327 Broad St., Rome, Ga.
8. P DAVIS, Manager,.
WEAK MAN
CURE YOURSELF,
Di-. Grady’s wonderful Irish
n \ Invigorator. tbo great, st
J|!i retneuy for Lost Manhood,
. overcomes prematureness
iLLTIAjA. au d stops all unnatural
MILjSmL drains and loss s. All small
organs enlarged and
1 Jnstrevgthened. Sufferers, by
x ' ' I~>y remitting JI MI a sealed
k' fl isck.ge containing 50 pills,
SJ laiytarerully compounded, will
iMMMiaJZANfc» >e sent by mail tr.-m our lab
vld dh. ukady oratory, or we will furnish
Success for 50 yrs. six packages for <5 with a
200,000 Cured. GUAi-ANTEE to cure or
money refunded. A’l letters
confidential, and goods sent with full instruc
cions free from observation.
Address, CRYSTAL MED. CO, Lowell. Mass.
übronlc Diseases ———
of all forms
Successfully Treated,.
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Palptta
tlon, Indigestion, etc.
OcLtcLjrzrla.
of the Nose, Throat and Lungs.
Diseases Peculiar to Women.
Prolapsus, Ulcerations, Leucorrhea, etc.
Write, giving history of your case and it -will
receive immediate attentl n An opinion, price -
of treatment pamphlet and testimonials will be - i
sent you i-bex J
Dr, S, T. Whitaker, Specialist, ■
305 Norcross Building, Atlanta, G ■
Stop
When in Chattanooga, either on
bueinees or pleasure, at the most:
comfortable and convenvient hotel
iu the city.
Stanton House,
Near the Central Station and
convenient to business center
Rates, $2 a pay, .
M. M. Kline & Co. Proprietors.
Pawtucket Fur Company,
294 Main Si, Pawtucket, R, I.
WANTS ALL KINDS OF
Raw Furs, Skins, G n'Ciig, Senaca, etc
Prices quoted for next 60 days are as fol
lows; Silver Fox. sls 00 to $l5O 00; Bear,
$5.00 to $25 00; Otter, $4 00 to $9.00; Martin
$2 00 to $9.00; Beaver, $3.00 to $3.50 uer
pound ; Wo f, SI.OO to $2 00; Red F< x, $l,O0 ■
to $2,00; Mink, 75c to $1.00; Skunk, 25c to
$1.00; Gray Fox, 50c to 75c; Rat, 20c to 25c
Price list on all other furs and skins fur
nished upon application. Full prici s guar
anteed, can ful selection, courteous treat
ment, and immediate remittance on all
consignments.
VIM, VIGOR. VITALITY
RESTORED
30 DAYH.
JGvod Effects at Once.
CAT(‘N’S VITALIZES
Cures general special debility, wakefulqess, $
spermatorrhoea, emissions, impotenty, pare
sis,etc Coirects functional disorders, caused
by errors or excesses, quickly restoring Lost
Manhood in old or young, giving vigor and
strength where former weakness prevailed
Convenient package, simple* effectual, and
legitimate
The Cure is Quick and Thorough.,
Don't be deceived by imitations: insist on
CATON’S Vitalizers. Sent sealed if your
druggist does not have it Price $1 per pkge,
6 for $5, with written guarantee of complete
cure Information, references, etc., free and
confidential. Send us statement of case and
25 cts. for a week’s trial treatment One only
sent to each person.
CATON NED. CO., Boston, Mass.
Kill to Live.
That living germs oy millifins infest m
the human system and produce dis
eases of blood and nerves is no longer
a theory but a proven fact. That
King’s Roysl Uimetiß
Cures these diseases in a speedy and
pleasant way. is equally proven.
MPKIJVG
Is here. Look to your b<althat.tbe
l-egiiitilbg of the lot season. Keep
Gem e’nir on la> d. Use it as s tonic
preventive at d cure Sold every
where. SI.OO per hottie. r
Atlanta Chmical On, Mianta, Ga.
MANUFACTURERS.