The Rome tribune. (Rome, Ga.) 1887-190?, November 05, 1897, Page 8, Image 8

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8 i- I 1 J!IJ. f/VJuAV T Ty.JLC>;AH ' •••'•<• -■■' r 3 h'jV ' 1 ' s S COME TO V. I | OUR STORE FOR THE BEST GOODS i il/ at prices that are right. No bait on a few domestics, but prices (t\ ’ on ever ything that make the so-called cost price man sick. | WE MAY DECIDE TO GO OUT OF BUSINESS! | If we do, it will be because we sell goods too cheap. We are in the business now, and can serve you with $ the best line of S DRY GOODS, NOTIONS AND SHOES. | w W (ij No shoddy trash, but standard first class goods. Vl/ 'A $ WE ARE IN THE BUSINESS WITH ONLY ONE PURPOSE, £ that is to give our customers straight honest value,and not to decrease them by cheap advertising fakes. $ TO-DAY, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER sth, AND TO-MORROW, ❖ $ ii/ ■ 1 n\ a sale extraordinary, a big surprise for you. Come to ft >0 | F. J. KANE & COMPANY. | * 248 BROAD ST.. ROME. GA. | HER LAST CRUISE. THE FRIGATE YANTIC HAS EARNED AN HONORABLE RETIREMENT. After Long Service on the High Seaa She Goes to Detroit For Use as a Training Ship For the Naval Militia. Every year the number of wooden ships in our navy grows less, and with the retirement of the frigate Yantic an other picturesque but practically useless craft drops our of the line to be replaced by a modern fighting machine of steel. Had it not been for the rumpus raised by the Canadian jingoes the Yantic would have been allowed to retire into obscurity unnoticed. As it is, however, even at the close of her career, she is a subject for the exchange of international platitudes. When the nl.vy department was forced to condemn the Yantic because it was found that the expense of repairing her would be 20 per cent of her original cost, it was decided to put her out of com mission and hand her over to the Michi gan naval reserves to be used as a train ing ship. Upon hearing of this the Ca nadian newspapers raised a howl of pro test. They declared that in “sending a warship into lake waters” the United States government was violating the Rush-Bagot treaty, which has for years been a Head.letter as far as its practical effect goes. This Rush-Bagot treaty was made during President iMonroe’s administra tion and was “an arrangement as to tho naval force to be respectively maintained on the American lakes by Canada and the United States. It limited the vessels to two each on the larger lakes and one on the smaller, the vessels not to exceed 100 tons each and their armament to consist of one 18 pound cannon apiece. In how much respect this treaty is held is shown by the fact that we have now on the lakep, besides the antiquated cruiser Michigan, several formidable and well armed revenue cutters. The Gresham and the Carlisle, for instance, have rapid tiro .rifles, machine guiy ayd HLODD POISON K A SPECIALTYo p K ®l tiar y HLOOD POISON permanently I HScuredtnloto3sdays. Youcanbetrentcdai price under same guaran raSawShv. If you prefer to come here we will con ■a®™' tract to pay railroad faroand hotel bills,and nocharge, if we fall to cure. If you have taken mer cury, lodide potash, and still have aches and pains. M ucons Patches in mouth. Sore Throat, Pimples, Copper Colored Spots, Ulcers on any part of tho bod y, Hair 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 a ease we cannot cure. This disease has always baffled the skill of the most eminent physi cians. 8500,000 capital behind our uncondi tional guaranty. Absolute proofs sent sealed on torpedo tubes, making* them the superi ors in offensiveuess of several of the professed fighting cruisers of our new navy. The Canadians also have war ships on the lakes, but they disguise them under the name of fisheries polic ing boats. They have ram bows and nine nordfelt guns apiece besides heavier armament stowed below as ballast or housed at convenient lake ports ready for mounting. With 18 such vessels in the waters of the great lakes it is ridiculous for the UNITED STATES FRIGATE YANTIC. Canadians to object to our sending through their canals the poof old Yan tic, whose wooden hull has bebn patched until it will stand patching no longer, whose engines are worth no more than the junkman would give for them and whose smooth bore guns now lie rust ing in Charlestown navy yard. But in her day the Yantic was not a craft to be sneered at. When she was launched from the Philadelphia navy yard in 1864, she was as trim a little frigate for her size as we possessed. Her first assignment was. to cruise along the Atlantic coast and sink the commerce destroyers Talahassee and Chickamauga, but after a vain hunt .of two months she joined the blockading fleets. She was active in the two attacks on Fort Fisher and helped in the capture of Fort Anderson. After the war she spent a year or two on the drydock being re paired, and then she was assigned to the work of finding and blowing up derelicts. She made a cruise on the Asiatic station, and when she came home in 1877 she was used up. For three years the ship carpenters tinkered with her and made her as good as new. For the next ten years the Yantic was one of the north Atlantic squadron, and in May, 1886, had the most exciting ex perience of her entire career. She was 800 miles out in the Atlantic hunting for derelicts when she encountered a terrific hurricane. For days she strug gled gallantly with the storm. At one time her foremast had to be cut away to prevent her going to the bottom. While wallowing in giant seas her en gine room filled with water and the hot ashes heated it almost to the boiling point. In this uncomfortable condition of affairs the engineers nobly stuck to their post, half drowned and half boil ed. The Yantic finally got out of the stonn qenter and wap limping back t« ' THE* ROME New'Yo“f’when ‘she was struck by an other gale, which almost finished her. She was almost a wreck when she final ly did tie up at Brooklyn navy yard, but was repaired and put in commission again. In 1888 the Yantic accompanied the Galena to Haiti to rescue an American steamship which had been seized by Le gitime, the dictator. In 1892 she was 'sent to the south Atlantic station, but for months she was only kept from sink ing because her keel rested on the mud of the La Plata river bottom. Last summer she was brought back home, inspected and condemned, and at De troit she will end her days by furnish ing offshore quarters for amateur fresh water tars. John F. Willoughby. Haa Disappeared. “I was troubled with rheumatism in my back which was so severe that it was painful for me to stoop over. I began taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla and in a short time the rheumatism disappeared. lam now entirely free from it and in good health.” H. Eugene Fant, Box 52, Anderson, South Carolina. Hood’s Pills are purely vegetable and do not purge, pain, or gripe. AU drug gists, 25c. .Mln luff Man Kill* Himself* Silver City, N. M., Nov. 4. —M. W. Bremen of Globe, A. T.. a well known mining man, committed suicide at a hospital in this city. About ten years ago he took $3,000,000 from the silver mines at this piace. Recent'business reverses was the cause of the suicide. Bremen had been drinking. He leaves a widow and daughter at Globe. A. T. Historic Home Blown Down. Nyack, N. Y, Nov. 4.—The 1776 stone house at Tappan has been blown down by the wind. This is the house where Major John Andree was impris oned and from which he was taken to his execution on Oct. 2, 1780. It was owned by Dr. Stephens of Tappan, and has been visited by people from all over the world. WEAK MAN CURE YOURSELF. Dr, Grady’s wonderful Irish fl A Invigorator, the great* st . Y remedy for Lost Manhood, overcomes prematnreness and stone ail unnatural SjaJ'c Mlf .YCu drains and losses. All smell \ tflLweak organs enlarged and 4 JB-itreugthened. Sufferers, by ' * Ihy remitting SI.OO a sealed k- fl lack age containing 50 pills. Ki ttfll'arefi.llv compounded, will »■ >e sent i>v mail fr-m our lab uid Da. Grady oratory, or we will furnish Success for B 0 yrs. six packages for *B with a 200,000 Cured. GUARANTEE to cure or money refunded. A 1 ! letters confidential, and goods sent with full inetruc lions free from observation. Address. CBTBTAL MED. CO, Lowell, Mass. TO SEARCH FOR ANDREE. Paul Iljoervig will Try to Find th. Mis— Ing Arctic Explorer. Christiania, Nov. 4. —Tho steamer fitted out by the governor of Tromsoe, under instructions from King Oscar, which has left Tromsoe island in search of Professor Andree, the missing aero naut, . and his party, is the Victoria. She carries a party of 15 men and has on board Paul Bjoervig, the explorer. The Victoria is provisioned for eig t months and will search Daumandso eren. Advent bay. Cape Thorsen, Prinz Karl and possibly Dane’s island, from which point Andree’s balloon ascended last July in an attempt to cross the arctic regions. On her return the Vic toria will explore tne soutnwest coast of Daamaudsoeren. Robert W. Graves & Co., can fill your order for coal prompt" ly, Telephone 93, De4pHr»te Br«>ak tor Liberty. St. Louis, Nov. 4—Four workhouse prisoners made a desperate break for liberty here. All were working, one of whom. Buck Nelson, was a member of the “Skipny” Rohan gang. He was shot in the neck by a guard. Twenty shots were fired br the guards and fu gitives. Widiam Tnomas escaped by jumping into a buggy and driving hard. The others were captured. It is sup posed that friends from the outside bad hidden a revolver in the quarry where the prisoners were at work, as the pr • oners suddenly opened tire upon the guards. Important Rulings >n Indiana. Anderson, Ind, Nov. 4.—Judge Mc- Clure has passed upon the constitution ality of the new Indiana garnishee and the anti-waste natural gas laws. He declared the former unconstitutional as a whole and all cases brought under it were stricken from the docket. He made this ruling on the ground that it was class legislation and discriininati r against the wage earner, inasmuch as ’> made special provisions for attaching his earnings He held the anti-waste gas law constitutional and docketed the many eases against oil fields vio lators. Who can fail to take advantage of this offer. Send 10 cents to us for a generous trial size or ask your drug gist. Ask for Ely’s Cream Balm, the most positive catarrh cure. Full size 50 cents. ELY BROS., 56 Warren St, N. Y. City. I suffered from catarrh of the worst kind ever since a boy, and I never hoped for cure, but Ely’s Cream Balm seems to do even that. Many acquaint ances have used it with excellent re sults.—Oscar Ostrum, 45 Warren Ave. Chicago ,*lll. PERFECT MANHOOD wTbc world admires Oe perfect Manl Not courage, dignity, or muriular development alone cut that subtle and wonderful force known ut SEXUAL VITALITY which is thf. glory vs lAanlicod—the pride <r_ both old and s’oung, but there an thousands of men suffering the mental tortures of a manhood, shattereu nerves, and failing sexual power who can be cured by our Magical T reatment which may be taken at home jnder ou? directions or we will pay R. R. fare and hotel bills for those who wish to come here. If we fail to cure. We have no free prescriptions, free cure or C.O.D. fake. We have 8250,000 capital and guarat-.ee to cure every case we treat or refund every dollar you pay us, or fee may be deposited in Any bank to be paid us When a cure Is effected. Write for full oartlcuiare. »T.A’r JE MJSDICAJL <<>.. Omaha, For Delicacy, ! for pur<ty, and for improvement of the com- I 1 plexion nothing equals Puzzoni’s Powdbb. / VIM, VIGOR. VITALITY RESTORED 30 DAYS. Good Effects at Once. C A TON ’8 VITA LIZ E R Cures general special debility, wakefulness, spermatorrhoea, emissions, pare sis,etc Corrects functional disorders, caused by errors or excesses, quickly restoring Lost Manhood in old pr young, giving vigor and strength where former weakness prevailed Convenient package, simple, effectual, and legitimate. Ths 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. Sand us statement of case and 25 cts. for a week’s trial treatment. Oue only sent to each person. CATON MED. CO.. Boston, Mass $ FASHIONS CHANGE but V POZZONI’S y yComplexionv POWDER X KJEMAKS ALWAYS SAME. NUF The finest, puresiiand -nost beantl- V tying tcilf'powder ever made. It is soothing healing, healthful and A harmless, and whan rightly used fa Invisible, if you have never tried F.M A POZZONI’S * you do not know what an IDEAL /X COMPLEXION POWDER is. A IT IS SOLD EVERYWHERE. PROFESSIONAL. U4BUS Dr. HENKY H.BATIEY Surgeon and Physician, Rome, Georgia Dr. D. T. McCALL Office 401 Broad Street, la Building Occupied by Rome Drug Co TELEPHONE 167. DR. JAMES E. IVEY,. Physician and Surgeon ROME, GEORGIA. over Rome Drug Company.) Telephone 157. ATTORNEYS. - Wm. J. Neel, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ROME, GEORGIA. Office iff Building. Will practice in ail the Courts. Spt<ial atten tion given to Commercial Law and the exami nation of Land Titles. Halsted Smith. ATTORNEY AT LAW Office n City Hall, Rome, Ga. Haggard’S Sold by'' IF MOT OH SALE AT YOUR PLACE ORDER FROM ONE BOX' . THRtEOat* $ I 00 For nervous women that suffer from menstrual derangement they have no equal on the market. Sold by Curry- Arrington Co., and Taylor & Norton.