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FOR FALL BUSINESS
Every Advertiser Should Be
Represented
111 THE TRIBUNE’S TRADE EDITION
\
It Will Be lß>«ed Burls’ In October and
Will Ec'ipee All Previous Efforts
In This Line.
Readers of The 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 ah 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 wi|l 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 endeavored 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 he
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
out 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.
Free Pills.
Send your address *.o 11. E. Bucklen &
Co., Chicago, and get a free sample box
of Dr. King’s New Life A trial
will convince you of their merits. These
pills are easy in action and ase particularly
effective in the cure of Constiption and
Sick Headache. For Malaria and Liver
troubles they have been proved invaluable.
They are guaranteed to be perfectly free
from every deleterious substance and to
purely vegetable. They do not weaken
by their action, but by giving tone to
stomach and bowels greatly invigorate
the system. Regular size 25c. per bots.
Sold by D. W. Curry Druggist.
TROUBLE A.T SEA GIRT
The Savannah Men Say They Have Had Nj
Hand In I'.
Dispatches have been sent out from
Trenton, N. J , to several northern
papers stating that there was consider
able bad feeling among the shai p
shooters who participated in the
recent rifle contest at Seagirt, prin
cipally among the Georgia and Pen
nsylvania teams, and the statement is
made that these teams are working to ,
prevent the next interstate match
from taking place in New Jersey.
The alleged trouble is supposed to
have begun during the recent contest
over some of the decisions. Col. John
C. Owens, assistant inspector general
of rifle practice of New Jersey, said
- the complaint |wasj unwarranted and
there was no truth in the story.
Tfcs trouble was caused by the Mas
sachusetts team’s request to shoot
with Winchester rifles, but the night
before the match opened the captains
.FREE to ~^ tt
If you send your name and address, mention
ing this paper, tc Dr. Hathaway & Co., ‘M So
•Sroad St, Quanta, <4a.. you will receive their
va,naoi« #4 page Reference Book for Men and
Women.
This book has just been Issued and Is full ot
valuable information to those afflicted with any
of those delicate disease* peculiar to men and
Women. It tells ilow to cure dleeas's. Dr.
Hathaway & Co. are considered to be expert in
the treatment ol such diseases, and are without
doubt the leading B|>eciallets in the line of dis
eases wa’ch they make a specialty of.
SPECIALTIES. ■
61 ecitic blood poi*
Boning, ncrvoua de 7
biliry, kidney and
urinary difficult
Btricture*. vatic** I / > w>7
cele, hydrooeH pim- '1 .©/y
pier, piles, rheum a
tiem, skin and blood „.
diseases of all forms,
catarrh and diKeasee
of women. Ad<lress
orca’l on Dr. Hath
awav <& no., #l% So. Broad st, Atu nta \.n
Mail treatment given by sending for miuph,i.
blank No 1 for men, No. 2 for women, i\u. 2
lor skin diseases, No. 4 for catarrh.
of the various teams met and decided
to permit the use of any style or rifle.
The principal objectors were the
members df the Georgia and Pennsyl
vania teams. The Georgia team won
the- match, but the Pennsylvanians
were not dangerous at ail during the
contest.
The Pennsylvania and Georgia
teams also protested against the Dis
trict of Columbia team, on the
grounds that the members exceeded
the time limit while on the 200 yard
range. The team, however, had plenty
of time to spare on theSOO-yard range
and under the rules the time was
>averaged and the allowance was not
claimed.
Members of the Savannah team
when seen said-thpt the team has no
intention of taking the action claimed,
and say they are perfectly satisfied
with their treatment at Sea Girt. The
kindliest feeling exists between the
New Jersey and Georgia teams, and
there is no bad feeling whatever.
It was also said that some of the
northern guardsmen were incensed at
first at what they thought was the
confederate flag, which flew the
breeze over the Savannah men’s tents.
The flag in question, however, was
the flag of the state of Georgia. ,
All cotton goods ancli as
bleaching, sheeting, prints,
ginghams and checks arc sold
at factory prices at J. Knttners
THE BATTLE OF THE NILE.
Nelson Said It Was a Conquest, Not a
Mere Victory.
EJeven out of 13 French ships of the
line had been taken or destroyed and
two of the four frigates. It was not a
victory; it was a conquest. So wrote
Nelson regarding it. It is unnecessary
here to speak of the titles and rewards
which were showered on the victor. Il
is qf more real interest to consider the
true significance of the victory, the
sense in which it could be said to be a
conquest. In England we have toe
much accustomed ourselves to look on
it merely as the most brilliant of sea
fights, and in France it has been spoken
of as a reverse indeed, but one which
cannot cloud the splendor of the battle
of the Pyramids. None the less, it was
the conquest of Egypt; itwqg the isola
tion and virtual imprisonment of the
French army.
Bonaparte understood this from the
first, and after a vain and hopeless cam
paign in Syria—hopeless against the
power which commanded the communi
cations by sea—he made an ignominious
flight, leaving Kleber to get the army
out of the mess in which he had put it.
Nelson, too, understood it and wrote on
Aug. 11: “The-French army is in a
scrape. They are up the Nile without
supplies. The inhabitants will allow
nothing tp pass by land, nor H. N. by
water. Their army is wasting with the
flux, and not 1,000 men will ever re
turn to Europe. ’ ’ And some months
later, March 22, 1799, he wrote: “The
embassador of Bonaparte has been in
tercepted by Troubridge on his way to
Constantinople, and among other arti
cles of his instructions is an offer to en
ter on terms for his quitting Egypt with
his army. This offer is what I have long
expected the glorious battle of the Nile
would produce, but it was my deter
mination from that moment never, if I
could help it, to permit a single French
man to quit Egypt. To Egypt they went
with their own consent, and there they
shall remain while Nelson commands
the detached squadron.”
A letter from Kleber to the directory,
written only a month after Bonaparte
had deserted his post, reveals the hope
lessness which was felt. “I know,” he
wrote, “all the importance of the pos.
session of Egypt. I used to say in Eu
rope that this country was for France
the fulcrum by means of which she
miffht move at will the commercial sys
tem of every quarter of the globe. But
to do this, effectually a powerful lever
is required, and that lever is a navy.
Ours has ceased to exist. Since that pe
riod everything has changed, and peace
with the porte is, in my opinion, the
only expedient.”—Cornhill Magazine.
A NOBLE SURGEON.
He Saved a Patient’s Life at the Peril of
His Own.
A certain London hospital has on its
staff of physicians one man at least
whose heroism has been demonstrated,
and his corpselike pallor and faltering
gait, although he is in his prime, bear
daily witness to this fact.
“It happened ten years ago,” said
one of the hospital clerks in telling the
story, ‘ ‘just after the doctor became a
visiting surgeon here. A woman was
brought in suffering from a cancerous
growth that must in the end prove fa
tal. The house surgeon in charge, a
young man, advised an immediate oper
ation and he and his assistants were in
the midst of it when the visiting sur
geon arrived. ,
“A student was handling the knife
and had laid bare the life destroying
cause.
“‘Careful, careful,’ exclaimed —the
visiting surgeon as the student dexter
ously cut the flesh. ‘lf you sever that
artery, she may die under the knife. ’
“The warning came late, the knife
had slit the artery, and the blood leap
ed into the wound.
“The visiting surgeon had a small
cut on his forefinger. To seize the ar
tery so as to stop the flow of blood
would necessarily bring the cut in con
tact with the bacilli of cancer. A mo
ment’s delay, on the other hand, meant,
perhaps, the woman’s death.
“Without an instant’s hesitation the
surgeon’s trained fingers hafl gripped
the artery, which he held firmly until
it could be ligatured. It prolonged the
woman’s life a few months,” continued
the rurraior, “but the poison got into
the doctor’s system, and he lay at the
point of death for weeks. ” —Pittsburg
Dispatch.
Xev iiiki »ij 1 -n <ir«*ss k»o<lh
arriving daily J. Kiiitncr
THE HOME TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBERS, 1896.
AN ART EXHIBITION!
| Where No Admission Tickets Are Necessary.
? We have just opened up and are prepared to show.
• FIVE CAR LOADS OF
; Furniture, Carpets, Mattings and Rugs.
$ Our Carpet Department
Ils filled to the ceiling with the choicest effects in
Brussels, Tapestries, Ingrains.
Our Matting Department
Is far ahead of anything of the sort in North Georgia.
? Good Cotton Warp Matting
v on the floor for 20c. per yard.
i 11
g Our Rug Department _
Is simply complete. We are prepared to give you prices no competition
can reach. We extend a cordial invitation to all —visit Our Mammoth
£ Store before the stock is broken and we will do the fest.
I McDonald-Sparks-Stewart Co.
| 1,3& 5 Third Aye- & 204 Broad St., Rome, G-a.
J Funeral Directors, Coffins and CasketsM
REMOVAL! y
HAPE SING has moved to
No. 6, Third Ave., where
he is turning out the whit
est, cleanest, best laundry
work —the only kind good
enough for you. Let your
bundles com’.
HAPE SING,
Nc. 6, Third Ave., Rome, Ga.
UFarlona, Cubaaa Cigar Factory,
LLORENS, PACEITI & CO , Props-
Manufacturers of the following
CELEBRATED BRANBS :
LnPaloma Cubana,
Th reej Friends,
Ei f’arvenir,
Our
Star ot America;
Flor deJKcy West,
Ei Machete.
We guarantee that all our Cig rs
are Cuban hand-made, and aie of
the very best quality.
We solicit a trial.
OFFICE AND FACTORY
8i W. ALABAMA ST.,
ATLANTA, GA.
NOTICE.
On the 3d of October next, at 10 o’c’ock,
a. in., at the court houte in Rome, Floyd coun
ty, Georgia, I will as euardian of Mrs Louisa B.
Lai him, insane, tpply to the. Judge of the bupe
rior Court of said county for )e«ve to sell for re
idvestment, the interest of said ward, one nndi
▼hied fourth n that f lot No. 21, in Jack
son Ward in tb» city of Savannah, ga., award* d
to E 'oily G. Pet p r ;• nd her children by commit.
dinners in partition under order <f Chatham
Superior Court, d ied ap’il 25tb, 18S3. fronting
RullHnet. ’I he re son for said avnMraticn
eing that said property ii» not. a ircfi’abe or
des ratVe Ir.v estwe nt (1 the ipphpr of sa d ward
» plUouw4w A. M. WORD, Guardian.
A Handsome Complexion *1
is one of the greatest charms a woman can fi
possess. Pozzoni’s Complexion Powder |
gives it.
G. J. BRIANT & CO’S BARS.
THE JOHN M. VANDIVER BAR. A ’
THE ARMSTRONG BAR.
The Most Elegant in Rome.
PUREST WINES AND LPUORS,
TIEZZE VEKT BEST
ALE, BEER and CIGARS.
You will find i here always the very best brands of Domestic and Im
ported Liquors, Wines, Cordials, Brandies, Syrups, Ale and Porters.
Special brands for fami-y use. Fancy drinks mixed by . the best and
most ex-perieneed bar tenders. We do not keep any liqqors that are not
strictly pure, and customers can depend on getting something good wnen
they come to our bars. Out of town orders promptly fiied.
In connection with each bar is a splendid billiard parlor, fitted up
with the best and latest improved Billiard and Pool tables. Call and
see us. *
24 and 26. Broad Street and Armstrong Hotel,
-- VM R D
REPRESSED FRONT BRICK.
TUE 1 to 4 BAY CURE for -
rouBQ Gleet. (Whitest, Sjierni-.tGrrhirn. and
ail unhealthy sexual discharges. tree Syringe.
No PAIN - No STAIN. PLiEVENTSSTRICTURE. ''
HCWTS AU PRIVATE CISEASUS. «C 0
A—A j Si
At- to any address, Gm- :;., j.
a Section AT.»I rd or has k i ven • The 3 mic * mk’
SFtfl'r-.i-.i- J f Hou, I prewcribn nnd recommend it tn my nru< ’ re. • •fi-JL Jg 2 •• W’
1 J MALYTOr MFC. CQ». <
NORTH GEORGIA
Agricultural- CAp,
DEPARTMENT OF THE UNIVERSITY
At Dahlonega, Georgia.
Spring term begins first Monday in February*
Fall term begins first Monday in September.
FULL LITERARY COURSES.
TUITION free
With ample corps of teachers.
TROUGH MILITARY TRAINING
under a U. S. Army Officer detailed by
Secretary of war.
Departments of Business, Short
hand, Typewriting, Telegraphy,
Music and Art
Under competent and thorough instructor*,.
YOUNG LADIES have equal Advantages.
CHEAPEST COLLEGEihtheSOUTH
For catalogues and full information ad
dress Secretary or Treasurer of Board
Trustees. *
16 TO I.
Wilkerson & Sons
Are furnishing 16 people in meats to their
competitors’ one. He bandies only the
best of
Lamb, Mutton, Veal & Beef
We guarantee all onr meats to be su
perior to any ever offered in Rome, and
we sell them at the very •'lowest prices -
Flue Mutton and Beet Daily.
We deliver our meats free If you
want meats quick telephone No. 97.
Give us your orders and you will be
pleased with your meats.
„ WILKERSON & SONS,
Cor. Third Ave, and E. First St.
The New
Southern Hotel,
Rebuilt and Refurnished Throughout.
RATES, $2., $2.50 and $3 PER DAY
; Now Open
to the public
W. O. PEEPLES, .Manager.
CHESTNUT STREET,
*
Opposite Union Passenger Depot,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Virginia Military Institute
Lexington, Va.
58th Y’ear, State Military, Scientific
and Technical School. Thorough courses
in general and applied Chemistry, and
in Engineering. Degrees conferred, in
course: Grad: V. M. 1., and Bachelor
Science; in Post Grad, courses, Master
Science, Civil Engineer. All expenses,
including clothing and incidentals, pro
vided at rate of $36.50 per month as an
average for the four years, exclusive of
outfit.
Gen SCOTT SHTPP, Superintendent
Nederland Ins. Go. (Ld.) *
Established 1858 A materdam Holland,
United States Branch,
Main Office New York City,*'
LANKOTA & JUDD,
Gen.,Mgrs Southern Dept.
Decker Building', Union Square,
New York,
Writes the most attractive and
easiest selling policies of any com
pany.
Reliable ard energetic Agents
wanted all over Georgia.
Apply with references to
A.L MITCHELL,
Gen. Agt. for Ge »rgia,
July 29 2m Athens, Ga.
DYEING!
But Not Dead Yet.
Ladies’ and gentlemen's silk and
woolen goods of all descriptions cleaned
and dyed in a superior manner. Prices
to suit the times. The oldest Steam
Dyeing and Cleaning Works in Atlanta.
’Phone 880.
MRS. J. E. KREIS,
No. 18 Trinity Avenue, Atlanta. Ga.
if YOUR hlsTmu
is not satisfactory when in A.h.u a
call on
GOODELL & PlEßjfll.
The most success'til
Eye glass and
Spectacle Fiber®
n tb<> S ‘nth. Examination fiee
ATLANTA JfTICiL ROOMS,
68 Whit/BaH Street. 3rd Floor.