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THE BARNESYILLE GAZETTE.
VOL. XVI.
SEWER PIPE,' SEWER PIPE.
Votrified Salt Glazed Stone Sower, Drain and Culvert Pipe three ieet to three inches.
We w ish to say to Cities, Railroads, Dealers. Builders, Contractors, Phtmbers and Everybody, that we
will sell the Stone Vetrified Salt Gfiized Sewer, Drain and Culvert Pipe, Cheaper than you ever bought in this
country cheaper than vou can buv tire common cement pipe. We will not be undersold.
DON’T BUY UNTIL. YOU GET OUR PRICES.
No foul sewer gas can escape through the Vetrified Stone Salt Glazed Sewer Pipe like it does through
cement pipe, as cement pipe is porous and will not stand acids. 1 )oti’i buy until you see us or write. W o
wiil make it pay you to buv from us. We also keep a full assorted sizes of Curves,Elbows,Slants, Traps,&e.,
And Fittings of Era 1 ? Description.
We will make contracts to furnish pipe laved.. We keep Stove Flues, Drop Buttons, Stove Thimbles
and Chimney Tops. We are headquarters for Portland, Louisville and Roscoale Cements, Plaster Paris,
Land Plaster.
LIME! LIME!
Plastering Ilair, White Sand, Marble Dust , Fire Prick, Fire Clay, i'cc., &c. Everlasting C ypress Suingles,
Heart Pine Shingles And Laths
COAL, 00.A.1j.
We are sole agents for the Jelh o Mountain and Poplar Crock Coals for Georgia, Florida" and the Caro
lina mined by the East Tcnnesseee coal company, and will furnish dealers and consumers as low as can be
bought. Anthracite, Grate, Stove and nut coal at bottom prices.
Sciples & Sons, •
Atlanta, Ga.
DRY GOODS, MILLINERY
and®fancy®goods:
Now is the time time and the TRADE PALACE, 69 Whitehall Street, is the place to buy Dress Goods,
Silks, Satins, Velvets, Plushes, Fringes, Gimps, Hosiery, Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Corsets, Hoop Skirts, Bus
tles, Ladies Merino Vests, Jersey Jackets, Shoulder Capes in Chenille and Plush, Embroideries, Laces, 1 idles
Appliquet Figures, Kensington Embroidery, Silk Chenille and Arrasine. We guarantee prices on the above
goods 15 to3o per cent, less than any house in the city. In prices and styles we always lead and never
follow. In Millinery we know no competition. We guarantee our prices 50 per cent less than any house m
the State for the same goods. Our sale of Ostrich Tips and Plumes at 50 cents on the dollar, has been more,
than a success. We still continue this sale. f'SF'Kid Gloves fitted to the hand a specialty.
Come to the TRADE PALACE, L. E. & S. P. ATCHINSON, Atlanta, Ga.
E. J. Murphey & Cos.,
WILL PAY
Macon Prices For Cotton,
IN DEBTS.
POISON OAK.
Seems to yield every tinje to treatment with
Swift’s N|eeiflc.
Spartanburg, S. C., March l->, 18M.
Your most valuable, medicines (Swift’s Sjw
eifie) has done me so much Rood that I feel like
saving: this for the benefit of those who suiter
like I did. I was poisoned by Poison Oak.and
saw not a well day for six years, until I used
Swift’s Specific. In the six years I used al
most every kind of medicine,but none had the
desired effect. After usiriß six bottles oi
Swift’s Specific I am restored to perfect health
—with not a sißn of that awful poison left.
Yours truly, DA VID XEBBITT.
POISON OAK.
I had for thirty-eight years suffered every
spring and summer with Poison Oak, which I
contracted in bathing when a boy. I tried ev
erythingfor it, including many physicians,
blit without any benefit. I took six bottles of
Swift’s Specific (S. S. S.) four vears ago, and.
it cured me sound and well. Three summers
have passed and I have had norerurn of it.
JOSEPH BEASLEY, Columbus, Chi.
Remarkable Results.
I have had remarkable success with Swift’s
Specific; have cured several cases permanent
ly in a very short, time. One ease which lam
now treating was given up to die, and after
using throe bottles is so far recovered that I
think one more bottle will cure her. The
most remarkable case of all was a lady with
metlulary cancer of the womb, for whom I
had no hope whatever. After using one bottle
I am satisfied she will soon la* cured.
J. WYLIE QUILAIX. M. D.,
Easleys, 8. C.
Our treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free to applicants.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
Drawer :h Atlanta, Ga.
X. Y. Office, 159 W. 2H> St., bet. 6th A 7th A vs.
FOR RENT.
As It is iate in 1 u- w ca*on. I will rent a.settle
mental' 4 "" y acres of tendable land, between
Hi‘ r otower’B and Triune Mills in Upson coun
ty, next year for one bale of cotton. “Money
saved is money made.” H. PERDUE.
Barnesville, (ia., Dec. 2nd, 1864.-21
DR. WM. A. WRIGHT,
AT THE .
People’s Drug Store,
NO. 5 FROM;CORKER MARKET AND MAIN STREETS, BARNESVILLE, GA.
Is out a paid with a fresh supply of Drugs and Medicines, Paints, Oil
and Varnishes, Garden Seeds, Fine Perfumery, Laundry, Fine '1 oilet
awl shaving Soaps, Harps, Lamps of all Grades and Lamp Goods.
Snuffs in boxes and jars, Cigars, Pipes, Spectacles, Razors, Combs,
Brashes, School Books, Paper, Envelopes, Pens, Ink, Slates, Window
Glass, Putty, Flavoring Extracts, Fishing Tackle, Tobacco, Pocket Cut
lery. These with other articles too numerous to mention, all of which
will he sold on reasonable terms.
PRESCRIPTIONS FREE.
Private diseases strictly confidential. seplO-tf
WrS. MIDDLEBROOKS & CO.,
ARE STILL TO THE FRONT,
Withe the T. B. Lyon stock of Groceries and Hardware, which they
bought at a great sacrifice and are selling the same way.
THE RUSH STILE GOES ON,
and the goods are being sold cheap. In the stock they have many
goods that they will sell regardless of cost, before moving to their new
quarters that are rapidly going up. Don’t fail to see them be fiat’ you
buy goods in their line. no™3-tf
ENTERPRISE MANUFACTURING Co„^i?
|fj
0 “ £P GUARANTEED TO CHOP NOTC.B.KO THE MEAT,
sfill \ ‘“fp:
IlSfi. Ie
ios-szn U A # x. g : up
iPfdS I b | ... g s
mM ‘"pi
gi 1 § i°, 1 oo wo
s.s 3 p-jzjsaiirr poo?
£ ' £ Price, $3.00.
Send for Catalogue. * * oW **
KENTIOX THIS PAI'F.Bk CAN VA** Hardware CcalerS.
Tested and Endorsed by zoo Agricultural Journals.
fftmtmi FirMidpufgs I America* Agrlcultnrlst sajss
each editor Immediately I “These Chopper? excel anything of the
ordered an Enterprise Meat Chopper for hia | kind made in either Hemisphere.
Wtnrrffr you buy from your Dealer. If he Is out of them, send money
** to us. We will ship by next flat train.
BARNESVILLE, GA:; THURSDAY, DECEMBER IS, 1884.
183S.
Harper’s Magazine.
ILLUSTRATED.
With the now volume, beglning hi Decem
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tilth vt\u\ The oldest periodical <>r its type, it
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serial novels by ennsiancc Feminoro Wool-on
ami \V. I>. Howells; anew novo l on titled “Ai
the lied Glove;” descriptive illustrated papers
by F. I>. Millet, H. Swain Gilford, F. A. Abbey
it. (lihson, amt others; (ioldsmnh’s
I sioop- tot’onqiier,” illustrated by Abbey; nu~
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1885.
Harper’s Weekly.
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1885.
harper’s;bazar
ILLUSTRATED.
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BUOTIIKUB, New York.
1885.
HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE.
An Illustrated Weekly.
The serial ami short stori s ’ n Harper’s !
Young People lia vo all tin? rent tie interest i
that Juvenile fiction ean no €B4, .rhile tliey ;
; are wholly free from whu. s rnlcious or i
I vulgar'lysensational. The h. .orous stories j
i ami pictures are full of innocent fun, .and the I
papers on natural history ami science, travel j
! ami the hurts of lift*, are by writers whose ■
names give the best assurance of accuracy
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about it but. its price. An epitome ofeverj- \
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11 i 1c litci at lire.—Boston Courier,
A weekly feast of good things to tho boys and
girls In ( very family which it visits.—Brook
lyn Union. -
TERMS: Postage Prepaid, $2.00 Per* Year.
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A ildrcss HARPER & BROTH BUS Xcw\ ork
The Legislature.
Mr. Carlton introduced a resolu
tion in the senate opposing the pro
visions of the Blair educational
bill in CotigrtfMg and to oppose it.
if the resolution should be adopted
our congresiflnon as democrats can-!
not adhere to it,. If the resolution!
things for the Drmocratiu party to
do is the enactment of the Blair dill |
and then put its provisions into op
eration.
The senate lias passed a bill au
thorizing the father, and if he is
not living the mother to recover
damages for the homicide of a mi
nor child or for other tortious inju
ries inflicted on them. Also a sim
ilar one in case of the homicide of j
a wife.
Appointment of IL A. Peoples to j
Ihe judge of the county court of I
| Lowndes county was alarmed by the j
i senate
The House in considering the tax
| on pistols at $lO9, and a tax of<s2oo
on parties selling futures.
In discussing the proposition to
tax foreign corporations who were
loaning money to Georgia farmers,
there was a great diversity of opin
ion, ranging from no tax at all to
SI,OOO. Representative Boyd, of
Lumpkin favored taxing them sl,-
000, characterizing them as foreign
saving machines sent here to scrape
Georgia. Mr. Boyd, in our opin
ion was decidedly nearer the far
mers best interest of any man who
expressed an opinion in the de
bate.
Mr. Gardner of Pike thought it
unwise to drive money from us.
Both houses have resolved to ad
journ on the 20th inst, and have a
July session next summer. The
21st would he the constitutional li
mit to this session and the adjourn
ment to July, is in effect annual ses
sions.
Our Washington Letter.
Dakota the latest debutante and
candidate for admission to the sis
terhood of states has been officously
chaperoned by the Republican Sen
ate during the week, hut lias not
met with a favorable reception from
the Democratic side of the chamber.
Dakota is not wanted just now.
The question is one of politics. The
Republicans have been able too long
to control the upper house by rot
ten burrough states like Colorado,
Nevada, Oregon and Rhode Island.
It is necessary that the White
House, and both ends of the Capi
tol shall be in accord as soon as pos
sible in order to carry out legisla
tion that has been needed for t wenty
years. This accord will not he pro.
looted by increasing the power of
the solid north-west.
There is an endless stream of
Cabinet talk but quite as much is
known at your metropolis as at our
frontier so I will dismiss the subject.
There is however a subject about
which your correspondent knows
something,Offices. He is an author
ity on offices. He occupies an
unique position having resigned a
government clerkship in 1873 in or
derthat he might openly expose the
abuses of office holding in the press.
In less than three months the
Chief office of the Nation will bo oc
cupied by anew man. He will im
mediately appoint new men to take
charge of the seven great Depart
ments of Government. The State
Department, the War Dept; the
Navy Dept; the Dept of Justice the
Treasury; the general post Office,
and the Dept, of the Interior. The
president and his official advisers
will not only be new men; hut they
are opposed in party and in princ
iple to the men , whose chairs and
portfolios they will take, opposed
to the party and the principles that
have held the government with a
grasp of iron for twenty five years.
No voice is raised against the pres
idents selection of his immediate as
sistants from among his friends
from those who are in accord with
his views and with the political
sentiment which made him pres
ident. But when it is proposed to
go still further and appoint clerks j
and bureau officers who are in ac
cord with the incoming president
1 and cabinet,ten thousand pens leap
I from tin if ink bottles and write
! the refrain Civil Service Reform,
i with variations. With great respect
! for these enthusiasts and doctrinai
| res they do not know what is need-
I ed, and in order to learn they should
' like Peter the Great, and another
I whom modesty forbids me to men
j tion again, serve an apprentice
ship. There is precisely tnat same
reason for appointing new men and
women throughout the Depart
ments that there is for appointing
anew Cabinet or heads for the De
partment and every practical in an
I knows it. It is indispensible that
•i president shall have a corpsjofl
istants, in accord with him, and j
i
it is just as necessary that his cabi
net officers shall have a corps of as
sistants in accord with them. A de
mocratic president has been elected
with a view to a. change in the inter
nal policy and methods of the gov
. run lent. Methods cannot: be chang
. and without changing mem Anyone
knowing the persouol of the civil
Service here will realize how utterly
impossible it will he for the new act
ministration to navigate the ship of
state which it has just captured with
the same piratical crew.
('ivil service reform means, it it
means anything a reform ofthccivil
servants. Those who arc now in
office were never appointed for fit
ness and they have been debauched
land demoralized by a wallow of
i Iwenty-five years in the most cor run
! ting, slatternly, unsystematic and
j dishonest business establishment
that the sun of heaven ever shone
upon. These men and women do
not know how to work and they
are too old to he taught, they have
contracted habit s,desires,and moral
strabismus, that not only unfit
them for usefulness hut makes their
presence contagion and a menace. I
am far from advocating the doc
trim' that “to the victors belong the
spoils” The spoils idea should lies
utterly ignored. In filling the De
partments with a sound competent
clerical force, the question 11 is he a
republican is he a democrat?
should not be asked, but I repeat,
and it cannot be consistently denied
that the same reasons that existed
for a change of President, exist also
for a change in the instrument. He
would not be considered a wise gen
eral who would go to war with a
few traitors in his ranks, but what
would be the fault of the general
who would give battle with an army
made up of his deadliest enemies?
He would he shot in the back, and
he would deserve his fate.
AMERICA’S PRIDE.
True American men and women, by roasoir
of tlieir strong constitutions, beautiful forms,,
rich complexions and characteristic energy
nrc envied by .-ill nations. Its the general use of.
Hr. Harter’s Iron Tonic which brings about
t best* results.
Asa raindrop foretells a storm, so does a
pimple upon the human body indicate health
destroying virus in the blood, which can bo
ncuzt railed and expelled only by Dr..Harter's
Iron Tonic.
HE TIIANKH HIS PAPER.
Mr. Editor:—l was Induced by reading your
good paper to try I>r. Harter’s Iron Tonic for
debility liver disorder and scrofula, and three
bottles have cured me. Accept my thanks. Jos*
Hoggs.—Ex.
Chattanooga, Dec. 13. —Yester-
day six convicts, confined in the
convict camp at Coal Creek 1 Tcnn.,
made a break for liberty. They were
surrounded by a strong cordon of
guards, but conceived that by mak
ing a bold dash they could escape
in the confusion. They had run a
few hundred yards when the guards
recovered, and a posse was sent in
pursuit.
They followed a short distance, and
when they were in range called to
them to halt. They continued
straight ahead, whereupon the
guards opened fire on them. At the
first volley four of the fugitives fell,
and the other two surrendered.
Two of the prisoners were killed
outright by the fire, and two are
are mortally wounded.
A Sure Cure for Piles.
The first symptom of Piles is an
intense itching at night after get
ting warm. This unpleasant sensa
tion is immediately relieved by an
application of Dr. Bosanko’s Pile
Remedy. Piles in all its forms,
Itch, Salt Rheum and Ringworm
can be permanently cured by this
great remedy. Price 50 cents.
Manufactured by the Dr Bosanko
Medicine Cos., I’iqua, 0. Sold by J.
\V. Hightower.
The remedy proposed by one of
the Chicago Socialists for the exis
ting hard times is “to pay for noth
ing, and to receive pay for nothing.
Considering that the average Chi
cago communist has nothing to dis
pose of, and won’t even work, this
can hardly he called a fair arrange
ment .
sp'OiOL * 3= jajssxr.
CURES ...
Rheumatism, Neuralgia. Sciatica,
Lumbago, Backaciic, Headache, Toothache,
Sore T* ron(. fi we Bin rtm.K ;>r: in . Bruise*,
ISurnc, Sc?, tlx. iVo-st UiU**
AND ALL OTKKR IWHMLY MINS A Nil Aim
Sold by Drug£iUnn* every'’ I. re. Fifty Ceataubottle,
litre foil* 1> 11 Language*.
THE CJIAIM.ES A. VCCF.LEK CO.
(SuMcwvti to A- VSGILLR & CO.) Iluurv,C. ’*• .
NO. 47