Newspaper Page Text
doh’t forget the j : qhG DISTANCE TELEPHONE
FAMINE AT DAWSON.
JAMES R. KEENE PICTURES THE SUF
FERINGS OF GOLD HUNTERS.
Baid on the Bella—Fabulous Prices Foi
Food—ln Some Cases Money Cannot Buy
It—Despite This Unprovisioned People
Are Crossing the Passes.
Mr. James K. Keene received the fol
lowing letter at his office in New Yort
recently from an expert mining engineei
at Dawson City, Northwest Territories,
•dated Oct. 8, who, with an assistant,
was sent to the Klondike region last fall
by himself and other capitalists to in
vestigate and report on the situation
’■there:
“My last letter, written to you from
on board the steamer Bella, after leav
ing Fort Yukon, under date of Sept. 25,
was mailed in Circle City, Sunday,
Sept. 26, 1897. We reached Circle City
Saturday, Sept 25, at 7 p. m. The
steamer had barely tied up to her land
ing, the passengers going on shore in a
■snowstorm, when she was boarded and
taken possession of by 50 armed men,
who demanded all her stores and sup
plies for the starving people living in
the vicinity of Circle City, some 188
miners. The list they presented called
for all the delicacies of the season, but
all case goods having been left at Fort
Yukon, likewise wines, liquors and
cigars, they only found staple articles—
namely, flour, bacon, butter, ham and
lard.
“The proceedings were very sum
mary. There were about 30 passengers
on the boat. The crew, composed of Si
wash Indians, left the steamer on her
arrival at Circle City. Captain Bay, U.
S. A., addressed the mob, but they dis
posed of hifh by not paying the slightest
attention to his remarks, intimating
that ‘this was the United States, and
to h—l with the fellows in Canada;
that the English government looked out
for them, ai\d that they didn’t propose
, to allow food to leave the United States
for a foreign country and they starve. ’
“Accordingly they took about 30 tons
of ham, bacon, butter, beans, potatoes—
practically all that there was of these
articles—and about 200 sacks of flour.
» Private property was respected; other
wise we would have had a shooting
match on the boat After cleaning up
the vessel armed guards were put on
board by the miners as well as on
shore to prevent any further robbery,
though there was really nothing else to
take, unless it was private property.
“Sunday morning, about 7 o’clock,
the Bella left for Forty Mile. From
Circle City on the passengers became
the crew of the steamer, and at short
intervals they were compelled to tie up
the boat, go ashore, cut wood and pack
■it aboard to run the engines. Wednes
day night (Sept. 29) Forty Mile, the
first port in British territory, was
reached. As soon as the steamer was at
her moorings she was boarded by a de
tachment of the mounted police and the
mail sent ashore. There being no cargo
to discharge she was ordered up to Fort
Cudahy, across the creek from Forty
Mile, where she remained that night.
“Rumors came thick and fast about
starvation in Dawson City and the ter
rible condition of affairs in general
throughout the country. Wednesday
night the ice was forming rapidly in
* the Yukon river, and it looked very
much as if the steamer would be unable
to face the floating masses as they came
down the stream. Thursday morning,
although partially frozen in, the steamer
started for Dawson City, 53 miles away,
where she arrived at about Saif past 5
o’clock that evening.
“A more God forsaken place you
never saw. The town lies on a flat on
the east side of the river, immediately
back of which are hills about 500 feet
high. The river is about three-eighths
of a mile wide and is, I should judge,
quite deep. The elevation above sea
level is approximately 1,000 feet. Where
the town is located must have been an
old moose swamp. During the summer
time it is undoubtedly a regular quag
i mire.
“There je.re fpl)-; 500 lifers in town.
General Debility
I and Loss of Flesh
| Scott's Emulsion has been the
remedy for nearly a
Quarter of a century. Physicians
t admit that they obtain re
ran it that they cannot get
Korn any other flesh-forming food.
There are many other prepara
tions on the marked that pretend
■to do what
| SCOTT’S
■ EMULSION
Hgs, but they fail to perform it
: Bp pure Norwegian Cod-liver Oil
Hie into a delightful cream, skill
■uUy blended with the Hypophos
yiites of Lime and Soda, which
J® are su °h valuable tonics,
jfksF makes this preparation an
one checks the
' H wasting tendency, and the
■ ryf patient almost inunediate-
M I I ly commences to put on
Hgj &ain a strength
which surprises them.
''="■* you get SCOTT’S Emulsion. See that the
add fish are on the wrapper.
5O«. and |i.oo, all druggists/
i ■ SCOTT 4 BOWNE, Chemists. New York.
who won’t work and e'xpoct to be fed,
and there is no food to feed them with.
The police won’t arrest them because
they haven’t any food with which to
feed them. Everything is frozen except
the whisky, and there seems to be an
unlimited supply of that article at 50
cents a drink, or $lO per bottle. Cham
pagne is SB6 per bottle, and I suppose
other beverages are at corresponding
figures.
“Five cent cigars cost 50 cents each,
and flour, outside of the company's con
tracts, $125 for a 50 pound sack; can
dles, $1 apiece. Seventy-five dollars is
paid for a five gallon can of coal oil. In
fact, none is for sale. Sugar is 30 cents
and tea $1 a pound. Coffee, $1 a pound,
and not fit for dogs. Ordinary dog meat,
which means dried fish, $1 a pound. No
man works for less than sls for nine
hours and confers a very great favor
upon you even at that rate. Cordwood,
sawed and split, is SSO a cord in the
yard. Can’t say what it will be before
this winter is over.
“Cooking stoves are not to be had for
love or money. Some sheet iron ones
can be obtained at a cost ranging from
$75 to SIOO. There is one tinner in town
working five men, and his orders are 30
days ahead. Sawed lumber, the poorest
quality, sells, when you can get it, for
$l6O for 1,000 feet, and flooring is 20
cents a foot. The restaurants are all
closed because they cannot buy sup
plies. Bakeries closed because there is
no flour to be obtained. There is no ho
tel and there are no lodging houses.
“Every building on the main street
is either a saloon with a gambling out
fit or a dance house. There are only
two stores, which belong to the compa
nies—respectively, the Alaska Commer
cial company and the North American
Transportation and Trading company.
They close at 5 o’clock, because they
have no candles or oil to burn. There
is absolutely no place to go. There will
be no more steamers here until next
July.
“The people are still coming in over
the trail without provisions. The po
lice here are driving every one down
the river as 'he arrives, and the compa
nies will assist in pushing out of town
all persons who are not supplied with
food.
“The condition of affairs is very pre
carious here. There is a possibility of
there being bloodshed on account of the
starving population. The stores sell
nothing and are only partially filling
orders in rotation to the best of their
ability. Ido not dare to move until 1
am first settled. Caches, where individ
ual supplies are kept, are being nightly
robbed and people are on the qui vive.
In several instances thieves have been
detected and shot, and I do not dare to
leave this place without some one in it,
for to lose our supplies at this stage of
affairs in Dawson would simply mean
—death. Money can’t buy food, and the
actual staple of life, flour, is unobtain
able.”—New York Herald.
How to be Beautiful.
To be beautiful, you must have pure
qlood and good health. To do so, purify
the blood and build up the nealth with
the best Tonio and Blood Purifier of the
age. Botanic Blood Balm (“B. B. B..”)
It is the old standard and reliable rem
edy. It never fails so cure all manner
of Blood and Skin disease, where emi
nent physicians, and all other knoivn
ren edies have failed. Send stamps for
book of particulars, to the Blood Balm
Co., Atlanta, Ga. Price SI.OO per large
bottle.
Positive Proof
A lady friend of mine has for several
years been troubled with bumps and
pimples on her face and neck, for which
she used various cosmetics in order to
remove them and beautify and improve
her complexion; but these local appli
cations were only temporary, and left
her skin in worse condition.
I recommend an internal preparation
—known as Botanic Blood Balm, (B. B.
B.), which I have been using and selling
about two years; she used three bottles
and all pimples have disappeared; her
skin is soft and smooth and her general
health muoh improved. She expresses
herself much gratified, and can recom
mend it to all who are thus affected.
Mrs. S. M. Wilson, Iron Mountain
For sale by Druggists. Texas.
The Dread of 'Death.
It may seem at first sight as if this
universal dread of death in healthy and
normal human beings living under nor
mal conditions involved a certain divine
cruelty. Why should men be tortured
by the dread of death, since death is in
evitable? Could not God have spared us
that intolerable and purposeless agony?
That is a not unnatural questioning of
the rebellious spirit. Yet a little reflec
tion will show that it is a very absurd
criticism of the ways of God toward
man. Granted that it is the will of God
that we shall remain on earth and live
our appointed lives there, it is essential
that mankind should feel the dread of
death. Without that drea'l the world
could hardly remain peopleu.
The dread of death is to the soul
what the law of gravity is to the body.
It anchors us to the earth. Without that
dread to weigh us down and keep us to
the globe, half mankind would be driv
en by curiosity, by the love of change,
by the dread of ennui, by what Bacon
calls “niceness and satiety,” to push
open the closed door and see what is
beyond. Children and a few very happy
and easily pleased people might perhaps
say they would not explore further and
that they were perfectly content with
things as they are.—London Spectator.
.
When Collin* Was Prominent.
Human conceit was the theme of a
little group of men the other day, and
one reliable citizen told this remarkable
story:
“I’ve known conceited men in my
lifetime, but there is a picture some
where is this tavpi. Which illustrates aq
THE HOME TRIBUNE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1897,
excesMot seif apploval not often encoun
tered. I have not seen the picture for
several years and would like to show it
in proof of my story, but to borrow or
steal it would doubtless be impossible.
A number of years ago, when the Mount
Vernon association had been organized
to reclaim and preserve the old home of
George Washington, this acquaintance
of mine—Collins by name—went on a
summer excursion to the national capi
tal. While there he made a trip down
the Potomac river to Mount Vernon and
happened to be on the grounds when
the Mount Vernon association was hav
ing photographs taken of various points
of interest, including the old tomb of
Washington, the new tomb, etc. When
the new tomb was photographed, vari
ous men of national prominence being
in the group standing beside the mauso
leum under the fine trees which shade
it, Collins, uninvited, by some hook or
crook managed to slip in among the by
standers and thus became a figure in the
photographs. This was bad enough, but
the sequel is. worse. He brought the
picture home with him, and unless th;
enraged gods have destroyed it it still
hangs in his parlor along with other
monstrosities of bad taste, bearing un
der the photograph this legend:
“ ‘Collins at the tomb of Washing
ton. ’ ” —Detroit Free Press.
Notice.
I want every man and woman in the
United States interested in the opium
end whisky habits to have one of my
books of these diseases. Address B. M
Woolly, Atlanta, Ga., Box 362, undone
will be sent you free.
The Calligraphy of the Dumas.
Both the Dumas’ hands are those of
busy men, but the elder Dumas could
go on forever. He never stopped to
punctuate. One of his literary canons
was that a clear style punctuates itself.
There is a good deal in this. The son
never missed a comma, semicolon, colon
or full stop. He had not the father’s fa
cility, which resembled a tropical veg
etation at the end of the rainy season.
The younger Dumas beat his brains
terribly and forced them to bring forth
plays. But his letters were jeux
d’esprit. He ought to have been a
preaching monk or an advocate. He
liked to preach and point morals and to
kick his fair penitents to give them real
cause to cry. But he was not the brute
he liked to pass for being. Nothing can
be more refined than his handwriting.
The original manuscripts of his plays
are scarcely legible, the corrections and
erasures are so numerous. But he did
not let the copyist or indeed any stran
ger see them, but rewrote and added
pungent and pregnant sentences as he
did so. The first thoughts of some au
thors are the best; they were the worst
of Dumas fils unless when he was an
swering a letter. Answering, mind. It
was then a case of steel responding to
flint. Sparks flew. If there was an ex
plosive about, it went off.—London
Truth.
A Clever Trick.
It certainly looks like it, but there is
, really no trick about it. Anybody can
try it who has Lame Back and Weak
Kidneys, Malaria or nervous troubles.
IWe mean he can cure himself right
away by taking Electric Bitters. This
medicine tones up the whole system,
' acts as a stimulent to the Liver and
i Kidneys, is a blood purifier and nerve
tonio, It cures Constipation, Headache,
Fainting Spells, Sleeplessness and Mel
ancholy. It is purely vegetable, a mild
laxative, and restores the system to its
' natural vigor. Try Eleotrio Bitters and
be convinced that they are a miracle
' worker. Everv bottle guaranteed, Only
500 a bottle at Curry-Arrington Com
pany’s Drug Store.
Not Worth a Kap.
Dean Swift, in his “Drapier’s Let
tors,” employs the expression in several
places of rap, applied to base brass and
copper coins. Thus, in his first letter,
speaking of the scarcity of halfpence
and farthings, he states, “Many coun
terfeits passed about under the name ol
raps” (see volume 4, page 66, Falkner’s
edition, 1735). He also mentions raps
more than once in his third letter. The
rap was well known in Dublin previous
to the universal circulation of her majes
ty’s present bronze coinage.—Notesand
Queries.
3 —-T
Everybody Buys So,
Cascarets Candv Cathartic, the most won
derful medical discovery of the age, pleas
ant and refreshing to the taste, act gently
and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels,
cleansing the entire system, dispel colds,
cure headache, fever, habitual constipation
and biliousness. Please buy and try a box
of C. C. C. to-day; 10,25, 50 cents. Sold and
guaranteed to cure by all druggists.
Mrs.
“I met a woman the other day, ” says
a writer in the Chicago News, “who
has met Rudyard Kipling. Not only has
she met him, but she has broken bread
with him, and she has heard him talk.
I asked her what impressed her most
about him. Think of the man who
wrote ‘The Gadsbys’ and ‘The Seven
Seas’ and ‘Soldiers Three!’ She said she
was most deeply impressed by the fact
that Mrs. Kipling calls him ‘Ruddy,
dear.’”, , .
B Lapp POISON
A
tlary BLOOD POISON peamanently
cured in 15 to S 5 days. You can be treated at
home for same price under same guaran
ty. If you prefer to come here we will con
tract to pay railroad fareandhotelbllls.and
nocharge, if we fail to cure. If you have taken mer
cury, iodide potash, and still have aches and
pains, Mucous Patches in mouth. Sore Throat,
Pimples, Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on
any part of the body, Bair or Eyebrows falling
out, it Is this Secondary BLOOD POISON
we guarantee to cure. We solicit the most obsti
nate cases and challenge the world for •
case we cannot cure. This disease has always
baffled the skill of the most eminent physi
cians. *500,000 capital behind our uncondb
tlonal guaranty. Absolute proofs sent sealed on
TEZAS LADIES
SPEAK THE TRUTH.
tDe Leon,Tex.,writes: lain
a widow, tend can strongly
recommend Dr. M. A. Sim*
mons Liver Medicine, it
having Saved my Life 6
years ago, when I was down
With Liver Complaint and
Kidney Disease. I think
it a far better medicine than
that made by “Zellln” and
“Black Draught’’
Gestation;
During the period of gestation the tension
Upon the muscles and ligaments of the
Womb is greatly increased and the blood
vessels are taxed to their utmost If there
is any tendency to uneasiness or pain, we
recommend frequent warm injections of
our Mexican Female Remedy and two or
three doses, every day, of Dr. Simmons
Squaw Vine Wine. This treatment will
strengthen the ligaments, will assist in
holding the uterus In place, lessen pain,
make the uterus more pliable and elastic,
and prepare the organs for the Anal effort.
It also lessens the danger of death to child
and mother, and fortifies heragainstliability
to convulsions, flooding and other danger
ous symptoms, and with ordinary prudence
guarantees a rapid recovery.
Celeste. Tex., says: Dr.
M. A. Simmons Liver
Medicine is the best in the
MB ■ world for Biliousness,
jViajHfcaßfe B Indigestion and Torpid
1 Liver. Have used it 10
XEfeAft P y ears > and recommend it to
friends, and they all
praise it I think there is
JI as much difference be-
IK. tween it and “Zellin’s” and
MMEgig/jß“Thedford’s” as between
w'Jw day and night. •
Paleness.
Ansemia is a condition often called “pov
erty of blood" from deficiency of the red
corpuscles which give to this fluid its char
acteristic color. It arises from insufficiency
of assimilation of the proper materials of
food to replenish the blood, as in chlorotic
girls. It may occur in persons who have
long suffered with hemorrhoids, or in
women from repeated discharges of blood
from the uterus. The lips ana tongue lose
their natural red color and become white
and the face looks like wax.
The most efficient remedy for this condi
tion is Dr. Simmons Squaw Vine Wine.
The improvement produced by its use is
frequently almost magical; an enfeebled
heart becomes strong and equable in its
action, digestion improves, the lips auc)
cheeks lose their pallor, and the eye be
comes bright and the step elastic.
The Rosy Freshness
And a velvety softness of the skin is inva- I
viably obtained by thqse who use Poczoni’s J
Complexion Powder. g
'» A t'Ur O CRAVE.
Fl
WE FORFEIT if our testimonials are
true. Have the druggist show
them to you, or address with stamo
and we will send them and book free.
The Elixib or Youth cures all Nervous Diseases, such
as Tv eak Memory, Loss of Brain Power, Lost V itallty,
Nihgtly Emissions, Vericocele, Evil Dreams, Headache,
Fains in the Limbs and Back, and Insanity, caused by
Youthful errors or excesses, over indulgence or abuse ot
any kind of either sex. Ask for Elixir of Youth. In
tablet or liquid form. Take no other. 81 per bottle or
box, 6 for 85. Sold under a guarantee to cure or money
refunded. Prepared only by
TILE GERMAN HOSPITAL REMEDY CO..
Grand Rapids, Michigan, U. S. A.
For sale by RomegDrug Co., andjC
A. Trevitt, Rome, Ga.
DEAD STUCK for BUGS
Kills Roaches, Flea®, Moths and Bedbugs. Non
poisonous ; won’t stain. Large bottles, at drug
gists and grocers, 25 cents.
a—mm———■——m—m——o—
Cushman's
MENTHOL INHALER
S Cures all troubles of the
Head and Throat
CATARRH, HfAOACHL
NEURALGIA, LaGRIPPE,
WILL CURE naiation stopb
sneezing, snuffing, coughing.
HEADACHE. Con
tinned use effects
SURE CURE.
ENDORSED &
-Z*/ higher* medical au
ihoriti-js of Euro;*
and America lor
* X COLDS,Sore Throat
Lkuy Fever, Bron
chitin, La GRIPPE,
p The most Ref reshing
and Healthful aio tc
HEADACHE Suffer
ers. Brings Sleep to the Sleepless. €un». Insomnia
and Nervous Prostration. Don’t befooled virhworthi.es
imitations. Take only CCSzIMAN’S. Price, 6Oc.
at ail Druggists, or mailed free. AGENTS WANTED.
CUSHMAN’S MENTHOL BALM
ful cures of Salt Rheum, Old Soree, Chite.Wonnde,
Burns, Frostbites. Excels all other remedies for
PILES. Price, at Druggists. Book on Menthol
free. Address Cushman Drug ',o.* Vir>-
Cannes. J nd. or 824 dka3Bork ChicaKo* 81b
Always prompt and reliable. Avoid /mitatumj.
Get C atom's Tammy Pills and satn bkgkkts*
At drug atorea, or tent direct (sealed), price sl.
Caton Bfnc. Co., Boetou. Maaa. Pamphlet U-
WONDERFUL MEDICINE FREE!
PROMPTLY SENT TO EVERY MAN WHO NEEDS A GENERAL BRACING UP.
IT BRINGS PERFECT MANHOOD TO ALL.
PHYSICIANS’ INSTITUTE, Os Chicago, 111.
GRATUITOUSLY, GLADLY SENT to all men who need It and who will write for IL
A* ■ A lams percentage of the men of today an sadly in need of the right Had of medical treatment for weakness peculiar to men. Mamr
eases are due to euly vices, others from excesses, while many of the oases are due to overwort, worry end general nervous debility. It
JOr matters not, however, what the cause may have been, the foot still remains that they ell require proper
a 1 medical attention IMMEDIATELY. , .
[I A\ \ \ 1 every portion and organ o/your body, stop all drains and losses, snd restore you to fSBYECT MANHOOD. MpM—*SSllL‘3mt
I Failure is impossible with our method. We have thonsands of testimonials from all over the world.
S/f \>zA READ WHAT THESE PATIENTS SAYI
VI If (51 Blasct.bd, Wass., Msr. 28, IBM. tom, La., Juns 19, 18M. Havana, N. D., Jro. 99,1895.
t I 1 J I nylMatw’ Chicago: ngticiatuf IrttUult, Chteagai fsrrduf.;
Csfcjm M DsaaSrsa,-! have nsarly finished my Ur Oy» Tsraxts,-Please aceepll my "or the reluH**, my H
ffll XI | I eourw of treatment, and find myself a thanks for the klndneas youi have don. veatment. During the l.ti two week! ■■g BMB H B BME
W \l // different man. Icannot findword. me. Loro, have entirely .topped rod that I took your treatment the Improve-
EDU \l II enough to praise and axpreto the deep vigor has returned. Ilam all O. K I me nt was remarkable. I have had no SIR
IM V // »r«‘l‘ u 'i» I feel towards yon. Your am better than I have been for 15 yeara. emlmlona or other aymptom. alnc. tab- j
I 1/ treatment Is .Imply wonderful. lain Ido not feel like the same mro. All log your medicine Mr friends ar. all
I l perfectly cured rod thank you a bun- my friend, when they meet me.ay robbed -t th. improvement In my fßHgSgmgHßgl
fVi/71 dred times rod will help you all I pee- ' Whsi bare you been doing! Never —neral annearroce Booing that you
111 ZlO slblrcro. May Ood blear you rod your saw a mro come out Ilk. you. £.y ever prosper. I remain, ■■/
fj VW wor *- Youn truly, C. IP. Iver your frlrod, M.PC. r Yours sincerely, '
Hr LI //L Hundreds of similar letters are now on file in our business office, and all are bona fide expressions of
P V Z Er pennently cured men. Do not delay writing to us. and remember that we are not only « responsible Instltn- .
I El iion in every way. but ours is the largest medical institute in America that makes a specialty of SBXVAI. AND
I tbifli NINVOtrs DUEABM. Inclose, oenta for postage on medicine, which is always plainly sealed.
PHYSICIANS’ USTITUTE, 1878 Masonic Temple, CHICAGO, ILL
Are
y° u fe * I
wholly
satis-
There a a deal of satisfac
»• a tlon when yon know that
prj von are strung and well. If
11VL1 you are not, yon ought to be.
We will make you eo if pos
sible. our distinctive
■ . t specialty ie all diseases pe-
vtti T" h culiar to men and women,
W X LXX such as Blood Polson. Stric.
ture, Nervous Debility,
Kidney ana Bladder Trou
bles, Rheumatism, Catarrh,
etc,, a ' Bo all d eeases of
J vJLIX women. Call on or write
us and if necessary we can
prove to you that we cure
,a a. where some of the best
Qplf J physicians have failed.
OL.il J Mall treatment give! by
sending for Symptom blank
No. 1 for Men; No. 2 for Women; No. 3 for Skin
Dieeaees; No. 4 for Catarrh. Call on or address
DR. HATHAWAY & CO.
22% South Broad Street. Atlanta, Ga.
RAILWAY.
Condensed Schedule in Effect December 5. 1897.
STATIONS. No. 10 ~No7~i4~j~No. 8
Lv Chattanooga B.ooam 6.10 pm 10.00 pm
Ar Dalton 9.20 am 7.20 p m! 12.1 '.am
Ar Rome 10.40 am 8.20 pm; 1.50 am
Ar Atlanta l.H)am 10.40 pm s.o>nin
Lv Atlanta 4.20 pm 10.55 pm s.2'.'am
Ar Macon 7.00 pm 1.05 am! B.loam
Ar Jesup s.4oam' 2.3Bpiu
Ar Everett 6.25am' 3.25 pm
Ar Jacksonville 8 4Cami .
Lv Jesup 9.58 am 7.95 pm
Ar Jacksonville I.oopm 10.3<»p a
Lv Everett 6.30 am Tikpm
Ar Brunswiok 7.25 am 4.3- Jpm
No. 8 carries Pullm an Sleeping Car Chatta
nooga to Atlanta.
No. 10 carries Pull man Union Sleeping Car
Chattanooga to Atlanta.
No. 14 carries Pullman Drawing Room Buffet
Sleeping Car Chattanooga to Jacksonville and
Atlanta to Brunswick.
stations. No. 7 No. 9 N 0713
Lv Atlanta 7.30 am 2.30 pm 5.00 am
Ar Rome 10.19 am 4.55 pm 7. Pum
Ar Dalton 11.35 am 6.06 pm 8. Hhnn
Ar Chattanooga I.oopm 7.30 pm v.3oain
Lv Chattanooga 7.50 pm 9.45 am
Ar Burgin 4.03 pm
Ar Lexington 4.30 am 4.55 pm
Ar Louisville 7.27 am 7.30 pm
Ar Cincinnati ’7.2oam 7.20 am
Lv Chattanooga 1.30 pm . . 130 pm
Ar Nashville ... . 6.55 pm 6.55 pm
No. 9 carries Pullman Union Sleeping Car
Atlanta to Cincinnati and Pullman Sleeping
Car Chattanooga to Louisville.
No. 13 carries Pullman Sleeping Car Atlanta
to Cincinnati without change.
STATIONS. No J 2 T N 0716.
Lv Chattanooga 9.45 am 4.loam} 5.50 pm
Ar Knoxville 1.05 pm B.osam| 9.50 pm
Ar Morristown 2.35 pm 9.50 am• 10.55 pm
Ar Hot Springs • 11.46amj 12.23 am
Ar Asheville I.lspm| 1.39 am
Ar Salisbury 6.40 pm 6.l'Oam
Ar Greensboro 9.52 pm 8.50 am
Ar Raleigh * 7.10 am 11.45 an:
Ar Norfolk...•- s.2.’>pni
Ar VVa bington 6.42 am 9.2.»pn:
A ’* ew Yorlc •• • 12.43 pm I 6.23 am
No. 12 carries Pullman Sleeping Car Chatta
nooga to New York via Asheville and Sa'
isbury to Richmond, arriving Richmond 6.00 a.i
No. 16 is solid train Chattanooga to Norfolk,
with Pullman Sleeping Car Chattanooga to
Raleigh without change. Close connections
made at Norfolk with steamers for Baltimore
New York and Boston. Pullman Sleeping Car
Salisbury to New York via Washington.
STATIONS. No. 16 ; No. (f
Lv Chattanooga 6.20 pm: 9.45 am
Ar Knoxville 9.50 pm l.‘sim
Ar Morristown 12.01am| 2.33 pm
Ar Bristol s.ooam< 5.w >pru
Ar Washington 11.25pm’ 7.4uain
Ar New York 6.25am 1 1.20 pm
No. 6. carries Pullman Sleeping Car ("hatta
nooga to Washington and Chattan oga to Nev*
York without change.
No. 16 carries Pullman Sleeping Car Chutt.
nooga to Knoxville and Knoxville toßri tol.
stations. ———-—■ y<77;
- ... —1
Lv Rome 10. ! >a:
Ar Anniston l.Olp.
Ar Birmingiiam lO.OOpr.
Ar Syelma 5.3r,pr-
Ar Meridltin 9.50 pm
Ar New Orleans _S.3i>am
Ar Jackson 9.45 am
Ar Vicksburg 11.35 am
Ar Shreveport. 7.2 q>m
♦Hb.lß.4jWo-»I itNaTft SNo. 10
2.15 pm 5.00 pm Lv Rome.... ar 16.00 am 9.3iiam
6.00 pm T.lspm Ar Gad-den. ar 6.35am| 7.15 am
6.30 pm 7.30 pm Ar Atlanta iv| 6.15 am, 7.00 am
+ Dally except Sunday. § Sunday only.
W. H. GREEN, Gen. Supt.. Washington. D. C.
J. M. CULP, Traf. Mgr., Wa-hington. D. C.
W. A. TURK, G. p. A., Washington, D. C.
C. A. BENSCOTER, A.G.P.A., Chattanooga,Tenn
OitatioL —Leave to Sell.
GEORGIA- -Floyd County:
To all whom it may concern; Solomon Everett
administrator of John Mills deceased,
has in due form applied to the under-signed
for leave to Bell thetstocks belonging to the
estate of said deceased, and Baid application will
ibe heard on the first Monday m January,
' next. Thia 6th day of December, 1897.
I JOHN P. DAVIB, Ordinary.
•Shall I not take mlns mm
ta nine iaa Hxxbt IT.
: Elegant :
;/ \ Meals
: ■ \ The Best in the City. FmmM !
i Attention and High, WH,
i Wl Airy Rooma. Ton pay Ml?
for what yon order. >
Warner’s
Nonesuch
Lunch Rooms
Far Ladies and Gentleman.
Sitting Room and Toilet i t
Convenienoea are provided. i >
Cori Peachtree and Marietta Sta.
WotxroM Baildiag. ATLANTA, 6A. ]
TAKC ELEVATOR.
FIFTH FLOOR.
■■mm ■■ s»aaaaaaaaea
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
Surgeon and Fhplcian,
Homo, Georgia.
Dr. D. T. McCALL
Office 401 Broad Street,
In Building Occupied by Rome Drug Co
TELEPHONE 157.
—DR. JAMES E. IVEY,
Physician and Surgeon
ROME, GEORGIA.
Office over Rome Drug Company )
Telephone 157.
ATTORNEYS. •
Wm. J. Neel,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
ROME, GEORGIA.
Office in New Kins Building.
Will practice In all the Courts. 8p- < ial atten •
tian given to Commercial Law and the exami
nation of Land Titles.
Halsted- Smith,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Office n City Hall, Rome. Ga.
c. W- UNDERWOOD
attorney- at-i aw,
Rome, Georgia.
CORPORATION LAW ONLY.
-Haggard’S
IFHOT Oft SALE AT YOUR PLACE
ORDER FROM
ONE BOX’ THREE BOXES;
$1:00, sz wy
For nervous women that suffer from
menstrual derangement they have qo
equal on the market. Sold by Curry-
Arrington Co., and Taylor & Norton.
15