Newspaper Page Text
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iSSI
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'^^o§§fmF
Btaunrc n shoes
- ■ ■•
&€O’S
tOTIIING
Slflfi M
|Hrcains
He NEXT 30 IYS
I
that Match The
Low Price of
Wm ", Cotton.
Le: a id.
HB> HIIIT S
HBS^B'ider.' shirts slightly skrfirf'd at
worth $2,00. W)onble
BhRBB;um1 double back
|^^HRr ts only J 2 per pa®
G5c <sc anok
HH3B? pair. Large line of Lamb’?
gfSpßß.ii< atod shaker Flannel shirts
HB per pair. Linen Collars
£vi?%^P ose °nt, 7 ■
Bril.sh umKw made for
laskgßmui at doc per
HBBol and Fur Hats bought
MBHBv their value, and offered
HHH’ork cost. Hats for 75c
Fur Hats for $1,75
Fine Fur Hats Satin
HHH82.50 worth everywhere SIA,
for SI,OO worth $1,50.
wool at $1,15 worth
B i o k:
HHcti's heavy Shoes good wear
H|Hwerth $1,25. Ladies sewed
$1,50 sold 1 year ago at
genuine pehble at $2.00
Girl's Hutton shoes
t button hole at $2,00 sold
8H52,50. Ladies genuine pebble
flj Shoe at $2,50 and lvid buU
hole at $2,50 worth $2,75
BNH)0. Solid reliable goods.
dyyß,nnine calf sewed shoes at
everywhere $2,25. HeU
shoes at $5,00, good lirst
Heiser's Boots $5.
raSHTlioots only $2, Screw bottom
boot $2,75. Boy’s Boots $1
||||Bo. Children shoes 75c, good
WBKg serviceable wear in them.
assortment of Ladies and chil
Fine shoes in all styles, for
Bhool wear, houfe wear and dress
Bear.
f Clothing:.
B to 50 good all wool nice style
Ca*imere suits bought as a job and
offered at sls worth $lB tos2o.Boys
suits at $3,30 slightly damaged, reg*
j ular price $4,50. 20 Boy's suits
bought as a bargain and sold for
only 0 and $lO, worth more money
ages 12 to 15 years. Good Beaver
Hfcercoats, good style and well made
sells elsewhere at 818. 50
HBd suits carried irom last season
Hfor S3 iess than price. Jeans pants for
sl, SI .25 and 51.50.
1 SHIRTS ! SHIRTS ! SHIRTS 1
1L GLOVES ! GLOVES ! GLOVES !
BkPENDERS! SUSPENDERS!
■uIIBL BRAVES: Bit APES!
• TRUNKS : TRUNKS ;
s ( Hin and >ee our >tork andhny
goods.
Yours Truly.
S. K. LOOK & i’O’S.
— (/lottiing and Shoe stove.
Barnesville Gazette.
, BARNESVILI.E, GA.
TiIURSDAY, XO VKMBEr!e~ISBL
The Baptist eliurchat Griffin has re
cently been frescoed.
Lula Fambro, a young colored girl
died in town last Sunday of consump
tion. •
Mr. Will B. Kimball and Miss. Drew
Jackson were married in Spalding coun
ty last week.
Mr. John T. McGintr was nominated
at the primary election for Ordinary of
Monroe cour*y.
The 30th is the day set
apart by the President for National
Thanksgiving.
We hope Bro. Waterman will be par
ticular about what lie loads that pota
to with if he intmds to send it this way.
At the the bride’s father
atCabahiss Mr. James M. Goggans of
Jasper county was married to Miss Al
berta Mavs.
The editor,of the Gazette has been
very ill for several days, and it is hoped
that all deficiencies in this issue may be
kindly excused.
In Monroe county at the residence of
the bride’s mother on the 2nd inst. Mr.
J. E. Wilson of Hillsboro was married
to Miss Lena Rogers.
Since Sunday it has been snowing in
the Northwest, and the weather has
been rapidly getting colder. It is
about time that the cold wave reached
US. V |rr „;
Col. flteorge P. Swift and wife of Co
lumbus visited the family of Jtr. Ham
burger last week ,and Miss Annie Ham
accompanied them home for a
Mr. Allen Watson, residing
Sand town, Merriwether county, fell
from his buggy last Fttay week, and
died from the effects ofxffs injuries a
few days later. .
Old Uncle Mil ledge Todd whose mis
fortune in losing his arm in a gin, we
recorded some ago was
doubly afflicted in of his wife,
Martha Todd last Sunday.
The adourned term of Monroe Super
ior court was begun Monday morning,
but says the Judge, Stew
t was too sßc to preside and having
unable to get another judge to act
in his stead was compelled to adjourmto
the regular spring term. 0
k There will be a meeting of the Agri
cultural club at Granite Hall next Wed
nesday Be 22nd, at 10:30 o’clock a. m.
All members are urgently requested to
bepresent. as official business and oth
utters of importance will come be
fore the meeting. The cordially
invited to attend. M
Mr. Alexander Brandenburg, living
near Erin postoffice in Merriwether
county had his stabte and corn cribs
burned last while
he was out at the fire two masked men
entered his house, shot at his wife and
niece, and carried off his trunk con
taining one thousand dollars in moßy,-
a:ul bonus to the amount of $5,000.8
Mr. Pliinazee’s l:ond was made, and
the time of the trial from
last Monday to next MBraiiy. the pris
oner asking for further time, to engage
counsel. The facts of the shdßng will
appear at the preliminary trial next
MondajUßlr. Quinlan was wounded in
the the ball be
low the nose, end lodging in
just above the palate, a portion of it
was found there several days afterward.
The wound is a had one.
Parties owing me,
MC. will confer a
favor, a part, if
not all tli&y . owe. I need
money or J ask
for it.
' C. C. HOLMES*
New Schedule.
The passenger leave
Barnesville as follows: *
Down Fast Mail
Up Fast Aiail arrives 6:51 A. NX.
D§*vnDay passenger arrives 5,04 P.
Up Day passenger
Njpfct Passenger arrives 12:42
Passenger armies 8.54 P.
M. *
Barnesville leaves
6:15 A.M. * A
Barnesville B r^es
7:35 P.M. M
Thomaston train Arrives 10® A. M
Thomaston train leaves 4:30 P. M.
WHAT WOHAXSHOULD USE.
Despepsia, weak mck, despondency
and other troubles caused me fearful
suffering, but Parker’s Ginger Tonic
makes me a new being. A
great woimyr
it. I’ittshur^B
Thomaston, Ga„ Nov. 14th 1882.
Dmr QazeWt:
Our town is unusually dull at this
time. A circus has just come and
gone, and the congressional election,
and nomination of eounty officers and
etc., being over, no doubt has had some
thing to do in the way of w bringing on
tliisjdull and monotonous state of aff
airs,
There was a very light vote polled at
the different preeints in the county on
Tuesday last, owing to the fact that al
most every voter and especially those
who voted the Buck-head ticket were all
anxious to come here to vote and see
the circus; and while here did their trad
ing and wiiat cotton they had ready for
market, was brought in on that day.
The time beiug near at hand for onotf
our able and efficient county commisMn
ers term of office to expire, and it not
being convenient for him to serve the
county again in that capacity, the nam
es of three of Upson’s cleverest citizens
and staunchest democrats, werej placed
before the nomination as candidates
for county commissioner, “Uncle
Joel” Mathews being one of the thro e
whose names,had been^offered,. he re
ceived the highest vote for county com
missioner cast; and we know “of no one
mqre deserving, or worthy of the hon
or. or that would serve the county
with more distinction, than ‘J Uncle
/
Joel” lie is one ot Upson’s land marks.
One of my own sex, and who is a
youngrhpqse keeper, by the way,erf this
place, decided aiew days ago to try her
hand oh fashion cake. The re
ceipt for making,,# had been previous
ly given her by a veVjjNd lady, and who
hM long since three score
afl ten. in these woraf: One of but
ter, two of sugar, three of flour, and
four eggs.”—(not four dozen of course)
meaning a cup of butter, two of sugar,
three of flour, auß four eggs. The
young lady made cake acoording to
the thought, and used
four d(OTn eggs instead & four, and
the result was that the cake rose
to a great height; but when done was
quite thin though golden. The same
cake makas remarked the other day,
that the emms.coming was a good one,
no doubt but tidt she felt that she
could not (Barr|tt.)
Friday Fist a very large en
gine on a dray arrived in town. The dray
wS drawn by two cattle and same
ber of mules, We made no enquHßP
aboutrftoe enginC but heard a little boy
say it wTs from Butts county amfcfcat
it would soon be conveintly locßed
about live miles from this place where
it iu sawing lumber.'
The Gazette is very popular here, and
many of its old standbys in the county
who get their mail at this office can be
seen each Saturday with a copy of the
paper.
Edna F.
Free of Charge-
All persons suffering from Coughs,
Colds, Bronchitis, Loss of
Voice or atojir affection of the Throat
and Lungs, are Requested to call at any
drug store andgget a Trial Bottle of .I)r.
discovery for Consump
tion /rae of Barge, which will con
vince them oFits wonderful merits and
show what a regular dollar-size bottle
will do. Call early.
Thomaston, Ga., Oct. 13th, 1882.
To Hon. N. J. Haiumond:
Dkar Assuming, that thtre is
no subject of federal
portant as a thoroug!w^L a
molding’of the call
ed the tariff JMTOiat there is no sys
tem of whose practical work
ings are so little known to the people;
the writer [of this is induced by sever
al considerations to address you through
the public press.
Among these considerations is the
purpose of calling the attention of the
readers of the Gazette to the subject
and to urge; as far as I may, that a dem
ocratic house of representatives; as
there will be in the 48th Congress;
should not lose the opportunity to pro
vide for “a just and economical admin
istration of the government.”
* I propose in •His and other letters
hereafter to dircuss the postulates here
laid down:
Ist, Taxes in any form are paid by the
people as a pric&of the protection and
blessings of govfrnmeid: more plainly
stated, the people govern
ment in return for the protection and
benefits that governmeift; secures to the
people.
2nd, The revenue of the government
derived from taxation should be limit
ed to its actu;" wants; and its wants
should be limited to what is necessary
to meet Its obligations, or past.
Hence no more taxes exacted
of the people than necessary, with oth
er sources of revenue, if any, to defray
the economical wants and expenditures
of the government.
3rd, The taxes should be so laid as to
bear as equally as possible on all class
es of the people. in its bniad
w"? /Phan. CHAkSPECLfs^
AUtUAEK OFENIISTG
...... •- . . . _ f . . AT THE
“Old Reliable” Dry Goods Palace!
WK are now permanently located in our elegant new stores where we
have mieqnaled light and facilities for displaying our immense stock of
DRJLWOM, BOOTS, SHOES, HATS, CLOTHING,
; MILLINERY. CARPETS^ETC.
We defy competition in the following specialties:
Plain and Fancy Silks
Novelties in Dress GoodS*
t Black Cashmeres* Etc
Wc have bought
Jeans, Cassimere, Boots, Shoes,
At much less than last year’s prices. All we ask is that purchasers will
examine our stock before buying. Our
PARLOUS
Are unequaled by any in the South and presided over bv experienced
Milliners. t
W. A. JUHAN Sc CO., Macon, Ga.
117, 119,123 Second St. and 22, 24, 20, £BCotton Avenue,
and for Samples *nd Prices. sept 7
a system of taxation, so that elch indi
vidual should pay*only liis® roportion
ate share.
4th, The revenues should be raised as
‘
cheaply as possible, consistent with ef
ficießy and certainty, so that all the
taxis,' less the cost of collecting shall be
available for revenue.
sth, The present tariff does not bear
equally on all the too 'expen
sive in its collection, 4Rhd yields
revenue than necessary for an economi
cal admihistAtion of the government.
NWiiie it ejflNbs more than is made
to the government minus the
cost of collection and is therefore un
just.
6th, A properly adjusted tariff; being
the means of taxation for revalue; is
sanctioned by all polit
ical parties and influence
* agreeing to of
the deißcratic ves
to providofor a just tariff.
k7th, Duties on imports should he lev
ed for revenue only. The only grant
>f power to Congress by the constitu
tion to levy sucli duties is for the Br
poseof revenue. The Congress trßs
cends its powersawhen ik levies a Be
upon the any w>ther purßse
or view but the raising of reverne. lo
matter what.may lie the incidents of
such levy.
A few.thoughts mi the last
tion; The tariff is a direct
taxation. The impertor iMßtlirectly
the duties on his advan
ces the rate of duty for the Consumer
and then collects it from the
vvitl^intcrest superadding to
of article, the
same witßhiterest for his
The the
payer. of a llbme prod
iiict of an article upon
duty leyieil
and the consumer
has it to pay, but the tax thereby paid
is not made available to the govern
ment.
This is the unavoidab|P^eident v to
the tar ill*system. The people who bin"
and ccuaume the tariffed article are the
payers either way.
‘•incidental protection|y.o
the home producer, that some >o
clamorous to have secured !• them as
producers of tarriffed articles.
if protection was the end sought,
gw purpose of the tax, it would reverse
HB and would vi-
Tiate the All the con -
stitutional Congress as to tax
ation in any form is to collect revenue.
The purpose of taxal®on must he foii
revenue. If for any other purpose, even
if the raising of revenue was an inci
dent to that purpose, it would r3t be
There can be no middle ground, as
.Senator Brown said he occupied in his
remarks on the tariff in the last session
of Congress. A tariff for “protection”
with incidental revenue, is not within
the powers granted by the constitution
to the Congress. *
The Congress can only
alkgpisl a Revenue by levying * duty
the ifIGP
the
iS|Congress is Transc^^B
mg in taxing imports.
incidental “protection,” whether dHs
rable or unavoidable, can not be
gitimate purpose of such taxation, hut
nugßbe left as an incident, as a con-
to its operation. The prima-
ry purpose, not the Incidental or secon
dary effect, gets its sanction from the
constitution.
A cardinal declaration of the Demo
cratiejparty"is: - A strict construction
of the constitution, a just and econom
ical administrat ion. ” A Democratic
House of Representatives should not
lose the opportunity to revise the tariff,
adjusting it to the actual wants of gov
ernment, to do all that can be done for
the relief of the people from unnecessa
ry taxes, and bring every department of
the government back to economy, from
profligacy and unconstitutional policies
—if it can.
The foregoing postulates will be dis
cussed in other letters.
Yours truly,
A Rusticus.
KIDNEY-WORT
Hen proved
(KSTCimKfor • •
DISEASES^
c indi
l victim P fISsONOT
idney-Wort at once, (drug-
will speedily over
oM the disease and restore healthy action.
B nfiiAfi For complaints peculiar
kCIUICOI to yonx sex, such as pain
and weaknesses, Kidney-Wort is unsurpassed,
am it will aofc promptly and safely.
. Zither Sex. Znoontinenoe, retention of urine,
briok dust or ropy deposits, and dim dragging
pains, all speedily yield to its curative power.
ftfjißOLD BY PBUQQIBTB. Price sl.
I Acf at th Bama Tima on
KIDNEY-WORT
M>UAK L. ROGERS, SID D. SMITH.
tars k Mi
Bamesville, Ga.
MIlBlfNtl&M M
SeleofclcL
cash prices and haying'
rk hire to pSPwe able to give the custom
i
Greatest Advantages.
WE HAVE IN S#CK -
Dry Goods!
f Notions,
Clothing, %
Shoes,
9
Hats,
&c., &c.
We will give Special Bargains in
Clouting
A Givers a Trial.
Rogers k Smith.
K 50,000 Feet of Lumber at Auction.
taming our mill we will on Friday,
November 10th ISS2 sell at auction at Uie mill
all of our Lumber ot every description. Terms
spot cash. For further particulars apply to
T. J. SLADE. Ulsey’s store.
OrB: M. TURNER, BamcsvMe.
H>dney t Llyr and Mbwelg.