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WASHINGTON LETTER.
FELL FROM WINDOW.
Special Corrcs]iondent of the T niou H ■-
corder.
Washington. April (i, 1904.
It will not be denied that the Y. M.
G. A. lets its share of gall. It has ap
plied to he appointed siijs rintendent of
all the new army post exchange build
ings, with the privilege of introducing
all sorts of religious quarrels into the
military service. This is fairly matched
by the proposition that the government
shall give 70,000,000 acres of irrigated
land to the Salvation Army and lend it
millions of money.
r- *
The numerous understrappers who
have risen from Shank’s ordinaryj'mare
to a gorgeous equipage during the last
two or three years will he deeply em
barrassed by the Sundry civil bill, if it;
goes through the Senate unscathed. It j
provides that all carriages owned by the !
government shall hereafter bear the
painted name of the department which j
they servo. This will diminish their
use as private chariots to some extent, |
but, as it stands, the identifying name
need not be any larger than the type
in which this letter is printed, and they
may put it on the inside or on the unihr
side. So there are chances of escape.
Although there will probably be no
new public building begun or authorized
this year, the House lias provided in
t he sundry civil bill for a magnificent
addition to the Capitol—an extension of
the main body of the building east
ward 10H feet, so as to bring it out upon
the body of the plaza flush with", ti e
two wings. This addition will contain
sixty-six spacious and sumptuous rooms,
half of which will belong to the House
and half to tiie Senate. The entire ex
tension will cost $2,500,000, and will be
finished in two years. Leading from
the east steps to the rotunda will be a
beautiful marble vestibule, 108 feet long,
forming a grand entrance to the build
ing. The Seutite will probably ratify
the scheme.
Dragging Pains
Twelve-Year-Old Glenn Howard of Ma.
con, Loses His Balance
High Window.
in
2825 Kecley St.,
Chicago, III., Oct,, 2, 1902.
I suffered with falling and con
gestion of the womb, with severe
pains through the groins. I suf
fered terribly at the time of men
struation, had blinding headaches
and rushing of blood to the brain. ,
What to try 1 knew not. for it ? j
seemed that 1 had tried all and ]
failed, hnt I had never tried Wine • 1
of Cardui. that blessed remedy for j,j
sick women. I found it pleasant
to take and soon knew that 1 had
the right medicine. New blood
seemed to course through my veins
and after using eleven boltlc3 T
was a well woman. p5|
Mrs. Bush is now in perfect
health because she took Wine of
Cardui for menstrual disorders,
bearing down pains and blinding
headaches when all other remedies
failed to bring her relief. Any
sufferer may secure health by tak
ing Wine of Cardui in her home.
The first bottle convinces the pa
tient she is on the road to health.
For advice in cases requiring
special directions, address, giving
symptoms, "The Ladies Advisory
Department,” The Chattanooga
Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
|VINB«CIU8DIII
A Golden Rule
of Agriculture:
Be good to your land and your crop
will be i *
i good. Plenty of
Macon, Ga., April 5.—Gleuu Howard,
the 12-year-old son of the veterinarian'
who was killed recently at a Popular /
street livery stable, fell headforemost
from the second story window of the
Union Dry Goods store building yester
day afternoon, and his skull was frac
tured in several places.
It is not probable that be can recover
from the effect of his injuries. It was
at first thought that only the outer skull
was fractured, but later developments
showed that there was serious injuries
at the base of the brain.
The little fellow was employed as office
boy for Dr. M. M. Stapler, and accord
ing to the best accounts obtainable he
was trying to see something down the
street, when he leaned too far out of the
window, lost his balance and fell, his
head striking on the granting. The
ambulance was summoned, and lie was
carried to the city hospital.
Potash
in thefertilizer spellsquality |
and quantity in the har
vest. Write us and
we will send you,
free, by next mail,
our money winning
books.
0ERMAN KALI WORKS,
New York—93 Nassau SI.
RIGHT HERE IN MIILEDCEVILIE
KEO DCASE KEJHA^ EENTO BE
FIND HONEY IF II VO II FI FAILS
TIICl'RE TI1B WORST CAME OF
CATARRH.
The administration indulges in voci
ferous joy over the news from Paris
that the Panama title is clear, mid
lombia has lost her canal suit in
French court, enabling the canal com
pany to turn over the property to us
during the present mouth. When lie
read the news Senator Lodge rushed up
to the White House and embraced the
President, with no more attempt to bide
his emotion than two girls show upon
the street when confiding to each other
their matrimonial prospects. Other vis
itors gave way, and diplomatically
shrunk into embrasures of the windows,
a id slid behind portieres so as to sec,
not to be witnesses of the too ardent
felicitations and transports of rapture.
Now let us see is Uncle Sam can read
his titles clear to ditches in the swamp.
* *
*
Legitimate business goes forward by
spasmodic jerks in both Senate and
House. The.Seuate now has the Post
O lice appropriation bill in band and
t ic House is trying to swing the civil
service appropriation bill every night “a
day's march nearer home.” The read
ing clerk is presenting them item by
item, and contesting the floor as far as
the speaker will let him with members
who insist upon carrying on anacrimon-
Women as Well as Men
Are Made Miserable by
Kidney Trouble.
ious partisan debate between sentences.
This hesitating progress has continued
dav l»y day. On Thursday Senator Gor
man spiritedly arraigned the Republi
can party for sins of commission and
omission, especially for refusing to in
vestigate the diffusive postoffice scandal.
He insisted that under lax methods cor
ruption had permeated every depart
ment of the government; that thousands
of office-holders bad snatched boodle
merely because their party had been too
long in power, and would probably j use.
soon be driven from all places of au
thority.
Senator Dolliver, Iowa, “the” Re
publican orator, deprecated the “seuse-
tl ;e 1 'ss clamor” which demanded investi
gation, and insisted that adequate and
ample investigation had already been
made and reported by the Post Office
Department itself. There has been
enough investigation, lie said, and Con
gress ought to go straight on with its
work. Gov. McCreary, Kv., asked Mr.
Dolliver if it was generally considered
adequate for a prisoner to sit in judg
ment on his own offenses. Senator Pat
terson, Col., insisted that there had
been no investigation whatever in reply
to the demand which had been made
It is no uncommon thing to see a
medicine advertised as a “guaranteed |
cure.” Rut investigation usually shows |
that the guarantee is made by some nil- I
kndwn firm, hundreds of miles away. j
The guarantee, though, that comes
with Hyomei, is entirely different. It \ tiou?’
is made by Geo. D. Case, one of the most
reliable drug firms in this section. He
;ni’ orrises that if Hyomei does not cure
the worst case of catarrh, lie will return
the money without any question or ar
gument. No business house in MiL-
ledgeville lias a better reputation for
square dealing than Geo. D. Case, and
when he guarantees that lie will refund
the money if Hyomei fails to cure ca
tarrh, no one lias any 7 question as to the
agreement being lived up to, both in the
spirit and letter.
Hyomei is very easy and pleasant to
The traveler stepped out of the car to
j stretch his legs a bit while the trainmen
] were doctoring a hot- box, says the
Chicago Tribune.
“What town is this?” lie said to the
' solitary native on the station platform.
“Name’s on the sign up there,” re
plied the native.
“Oh, yes—Dreary hurst. How far is
it to Chicago?”
“You’ll find that on the sign, too.”
“ So it is—fourteen miles. Much busi
ness done here?” ,
‘ ‘Not much. Keeps us pretty busy
though, mindin’ it.”
“Had a great deal of rain in this sec-
35c
40c
and
50c
MATTING
Just breathe it through the little
inhaler that comes with every outfit;
every breath will bring recovery so much
the nearer. It kills all the germs of ca
tarrhal troubles in the air passages of
head, throat and lungs, soothes and heals
the irritated mucus membrane, and is
the only natural cure for catarrh.
The complete outfit costs but one dol
lar, and ext ra bottles of Hyomei can be
obtainod for fifty cents. Do not let a
slight catarrhal trouble develop into one
that may be serious and chronic. Use
Hyomei at once, remembering that von
run no risk whatever when you try
Hyomei on Geo. D. Case’s offer of "No
cure, no pay.”
In 18(13 the first Japanese newspaper,
with some news was translated from the
Dutch, was printed. Now Japan lias
1,500 daily papers and periodicals. To-
*• Well, we ain’t growed webs on our
feet yet.”
“Any newspaper published in the
town?”
“No, sir. Nothin' but the Drcaryiiurst
Democrat.”
“Much building going on here?”
“Some. Abe Eyfert put up a chicken
house last fall.”
“You don't have much business to do,
yourself, do you?"
“Yes, sir. They keep me down here
at the deepo to answer fool questions.”
“So I perceive. Well, mv friend,
you’re rather too many for me. Do you
ever take a drink?”
“Sometimes.”
Then suppose you go to the pump there
and help yourself. I see the train is
moving off. Good-by.”
ALL AT THE
UNIFORM PRICE
OF
& 24c.
BIG SAVING.
These prices are
cash only as they
sacrifices.
for spot
are great
§
for one by the Commissioners appointed i kio has twenty, but there are no even-
by the President himself, and declared
that an early adjournment had been de
cided on to avoid legislation not desired
ing newspapers among them. One of
the Tokio papers, the Japan Times, is
printed in English, but is produced by
by the President. There was to be uo | Japanese exclusively,
tariff revision; no public building bill;
no river and harbor bill; no reciprocity;
no investigation of various scandals; no
ttlement of the Swayne or Smoot
ises. Senator Lodge asked him if the
nation had not had prosperity, and when
in the past there bad ever been such a
high tide of nrosjterity as under the
Dinglev act. Senator Patterson replied
that the country had had flush times
and jieriods of depression under both
parties and all kinds of legislation, but
Testimony of a Minister
Rev. Jno. S. Cox, of Wake, Ark.J
writes, “For 12 years I suffered from
Yellow Jaundice. I consulted a number !
of physicians and tried all sorts of med-
ciues, but got no relief. Then I began I
the use of Electric Bitters and feel that
I am now cured of a disease that had me
in its grasp for twelve years.” If you
want a reliable medicine for Liver and
Kidney trouble, stomach disorder or
general debility, get Electric Bitters.
It’s guaranteed by Culver & Kidd.
, ,, , _ „ by Culver &
lie would venture to say that under the Only 50c.
so-called free-trade regime of 184fi there
was more general thrift and national
prosperity than there had been under
The annual report of the Floyd coun
ty dispensary at Rome shows a net profit
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, dis
courages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor
and cheerfulness soon
disappear when the kid
neys are cut of order
cr diseased.
Kidney trouble has
become so prevalent
that it is not uncommon
j, for a child to be born
ytySSfr’ afflicted with weak kid
neys. If the child urin
ates too often, if the
urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child
reaches an age when it should be able to
control the passage, it is yet afflicted with
bed-wetting, derer.d upon it, the cause of
the difficulty is kidney trouble, ar.d the first
step should be towards the treatment of
these important oigans. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased condition cf the
kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as
most people suppose.
Women as well as men are made mis
erable with kidney and bladder trouble,
and both need the same great remedy.
The mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is seen realised. It is sold
by druggists, in fifty-
cent and one debar
sizes. You may have a
sample bottle by mail
free, also pamphlet tell- Rome of *»«uok« t
ing all about it, including many of the
thousands of testimonial letters received
from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer
ft Co.. Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and
mention this paper.
Don’t aa»Uo anv mistake, but raiurmbre
* <e tame SnamD-lloot Dr. Kilmer’a
bwami'-Koot, anil the* address, 0 ncham
Urn. N. Y.. on everv bottle
the administrations of McKinley and | for the first year of 12*5,094.8(5, and for
Roosevelt. Senator Lodge admitted the second year of 133,918.815. The dis-
tliat tlu‘ worst feature of the so-called | pensary paid the county and city $26,-
post office scandal was the fact now re- 200 from March 31st, 1903, to March
vealed that there ltad been “secret ;{j st jqqq
rules” in the department for the benefit i _
of Congressmen; it was hoped that the,
present bill would abolish them. Saves Two From 2, nth-
In the House there are premonitory “Our little daughter had an almost fa-
it.,,.,,ft" tal attack of whooping cough and brou-
spats every day. Williams, Democratic write8 M n!. W. K. Haviland, of
leader, stud the situation bristled with Arrnonk, N. Y., “but, when all other
issues for the campaign. The party in remedies failed, we saved her life with
power would be held resixmsible not Dr. King’s New Discovery. Our niece,
, e e ., „ , who had consumption in an advanced
merely for its failure to cultivate reci- stagp . ds0 U8od t £ is w(m derful medicine
proeal relations with other nations and liu ,i to-day site is perfectly well.” Des
its refusal to punish grafters or iuvesti- perate throat and lung diseases yield to
gate manifest and palpable corruption, * )r - King’s New Discovery as to no other
, , , . . medicine on earth. Infallable for coughs
and for bankrupting the treasury, but alld colds . 50c and ft.00 bottles guar-
espeeially tor its refusal to prosecute the auteed by Culver & Kidd. Trial bottles
eoal-earrying-railroad trust and to bring free.
criminal action against the Northern 1 ■——— ——
Securities Company and condign pun
ishment on the promoters of that con
spiracy. He added that the impeach
ment of Judge Swayne ought to be vig
orously carried on or stopped; that it
was not dignified or decent, to hold a
high judicial officer in suspension while
his arraignors went liome to fix their
fences.
wwMmmw,
THE NEW SPRING STYLES OF
“Queen Quality”
Shoes and
Slippers^^
Have Arrived at Our Store.
Our windows and inside Shoe Stands contain
all the latest styles and Prettiest Footwear
ever exhibited in this city: A neat and stylish
shoe adds greatly to one’s appearance. They
cost you anywhere from $2.50 to $3.50.
Everything
Women
New For Men,
and Children.
Ms Pills
stlmnlete the TORRID LIVER,
atraagthea the directive organs,
regulate the heweia, end are «*•
Allen’s Foot-Ease. It rests the feet.
Cures corns, bunions, ingrowing nails,
swollen and swearing feet. At all drug
gists and shoe stores. 2oe. Ask to-day'.
ANTI-BaiOUS MEDICINE,
i, iiiiihm Man ■ “ ■ -,1
aa they
ein arroatrd
lake No Substitute.-
Too many winter goods in stock. In order
tu reduce this stock will sell at low prices.
Come to us, and we can supply your wants
v At The Corner Shoe Store.
VAUGHAN & HINES.
mmi