The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189?, April 16, 1885, Image 1

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THE BARNESVILLE GAZETTE. VOL. XVII. Edgar L. Rogers, (Successor to Rogers A r Smith.) Has sold out the stock carried by the old firm, and non ’ opens ap a FRESH, NEW STOCK. in a neat new brick room. He will Lead in Low Prices. Dry S, Notions, Boots and Shoes Dress Goods,Laces, Embroidery, Tacking,Prints.<fe CLOTHING A SPECIALTY. Before i/oa purchase give him a cat!■ ALL GOODS DELIVERED. \VC. STEVENS, J- H. STEVENS, W.M. STEVENS. STEVENS POTTERY Culvert Pipe, Sewer Pipe and Drain Pipe. Headquarters for anything made of Clay. Fire Brick, Grate Brick Hearth Brick, Everlasting Well Curbing, Flower Pots and Urns by thc ( thousands. Do Cities and R. R. Companies We offer special inducements on Pipe from “2 bore to 24,” and will sell better goods for less money than ANY POTTERY IN THE SOUTH Write us for Price Tint. j. in s STEVEN'S. PRO. A CO., Stevens Pottery, (la. JOHN F TAYLOR Has risen from the ashes, walked into a neat, new brick building,with a full stock of Fresh Goods ! And will sell as Cheap as the Cheapest. Call and examine his stock. He will be pleased to see all his Friends and Customers! dcelH May’s New Ideal Lamp \ Light mo*t brilliant ami wonderfully largo-buttor t hmi WBor any three chimney lump* combined: saves all expense and annoyance of chimn*ys. No shade or globe required ljut likatnus, alway* ready for use. Positively Positively ft Non Explosive lIU ulllvliv Burns any Grade ol No Odor Mr/7 Kerosent, A1 Made of Bnu, handsomely , N0 DANGER ' j£J Stand Lamps ft Chandeliers! “May's New Meal,” on limner—Xonootliir genuine. Sent to any addrems, Bocurely packed in ii box— Agents wimtoil. U.\YN< >l{ A STK W.VKT, I'4 Iture lav St.. N T. COMPRISES FOUR PREPARATIONS. Liver, Heart and Kidney Tonic— For torpid Liver and Kidneys, and patpltation. Blood Pill if er. —For Scrofula and Blood Taints. Brain Tonic —For Epilepsy and other convulsions. Diarrhoea .Mixture. —For Diarrhoea, Dysentery, &c. Made at 55 Broad street Atlanta, and sold by Druggist generally. BARNESVILLE, GA.; THURSDY, APRIL 16, 1885. SOUTHERN ®QUEEN Wrought Iron COOKING RANGE. k - y. •, . V .G ■' 1 . ■. ' “y ...... , ff „ atom ■ x \ ™ .-rD— —% • il ;v—i te* a* Cfc, ,p 11 pj is .i j ; Manufactured in my own workshop of No. 14 best quality sheet iron. Weight of range 400 pounds. Every one guaranteed to give satisfac tion. Send for price list. marlH T. A. SNOW, Chattanooga, Tenn. For snle by H. It. CHAMBERS, Barnesvillo. DON’T READ THIS! NOTICE TO EVERY WOMAN IN THE LAND A’.V TURE’S GitE. / T HE. / LIN‘G BALM “Woman’s Safe Remedy.” A sure* cure for that distressing female complaint, Flour Alim, (or Whites.) It beats ti.c world of discovery, ami is the want of the world. Tills distressing': complaint has battled the medical profession; but at hutt this grunt problem lias been solved. And to assure the public we mean wind we sav, we warrant evert bottle t.oeure or money relumled. 1 tils Balm Is for Flour Alba (or Whites) and nothing more. Price 75 centsu bottle. Manufactured by COLLIER A BECKETT, 211 Heeatur Street, Atlanta, Gn. Wholesale by Magnus A- Hightower. niarl!l PRIVATE INFIRMARY INUt the Medical and Surgical Treatment OF DISEASES OF WOMEN AND CHILDREN. WM. ABRAM LOVE, M. I)., P hysician and Sukgeon in Charge. THOS. D. LOVE, M. I)., Assistant. NO. 183 WHITEHALL STREET, Atlanta, - Georgia. This Infirmary hns been fitted up with the latest Improveinens and a[l convanitmcos cal culated to eonduee to tin* health ami home-like eomtort ol patients. Physicians or others may send their friends here lceling assured that they will receive ev ery attention their respective eases may demand. Pat ients attended In their private hoarding houses when desired. Calls from a distance receive prompt attention. novl.t-iy Planing Mill I D. W. HUGHES, CHA TTAN'O CGA, TENN Sash, Doors, Blinds, Flooring, Ceiling, Siding Rough and Dressed Yellow Pine and Poplar Lumber, Shingles and Laths. Building Supplies a Specialty. nia •ioi ,( WHITE FO I! ES_ TL A. / TES, Marble and Granite IF YOU NEED MARBLE AND GRANITE Monuments S Headstones, TABLETS, CURBING Sc. Write to or call on T. H. BRAY, Griffin, Ga: Chapman & Crawley, MILNER, GEORGIA, Dealers in DRY GOODS, Groceries and Confectioneries. [ Barter goods for all lines of Country Produce. maroyl Washington Letter. Washington, April U, 1.855. There is apparently little ol in terest going on in Washington just now, but much is expected, :intl an ticipation is on iju! fire. _ Iho re cently appointed heads of depart ment' and elicits of bureau, have, of course, many things to learn before they can know even the routine of their cumbrous and needlessly com plicated charges. The subordinates, schooled in twenty years of repub lican red tape absurdity, have many things to unlearn, if, indeed, their instruction does not cost them j their heads. Ido not believe that: jit will be possible for the present administration to carry out any proposed or projected reform with out. a change of crow. The republi can underlings in the various de partments are servile enough, they will lick the hand that feeds them, even though it he the hand ol a I bloody Democrat, but they are skil led in all the vices of political scr | vility, they were never chosen for honest work, they arc treacherous ! and disloyal. They live in perpe- j tuul fear and ideal exile, longing | for the return of the republican par-1 jty four years hence. How can such poison trees bear fruit ot civil ser vice reform? In their heart they regret every measure and every event that recommends their hated captors to the country. It is only in enthusiastic, faithful hearts and willing hands that Mr. Cleveland will find the genuine sympathy and co-operation without which his best aspirations will fall flat. The motives of the President are unquestionably patriotic, and the j broadest and best democracy is not partisan. It is yet too early to cri ticize his policy, for statesmanship, except in absolute monarchies, must proceed with compromises, j The last stronghold of the defeated party is in the U. S. Senate cham ber. There in desperation and at bay the worst class of spoilsmen are perverting the civil ser vice reform idea of the new ad ministration into a stumbling block and a pitfall. The country last November demanded a change of personel that was meant to reach farther than the White House. Un less it shall reach much farther than now appears probable in view of the obstructive policy of the re publican majority in the Senate,the best efforts of the new administra tion will be without their full frui tion. There arc many things that come j under the personal observation of an old habitue of Washington that justify me in the opinons that 1 have expressed. I am in daily contact with politicians of both parties, and with the employes ot the various government depart j ments. I hear them talk and I know their animus. I am persuad ed that it is just as impossible to bring about a better state of things with such servants as these as it is to gather figs from dried thistles. When Mr. Lamar, the Secretary of the Interior puts his foot on a scandalous abuse that has existed for years, I refer to the use of hors es and carriages by the head of the Department and 'by the chiefs ot. Bureau at government expense, the clerks of his department make it the theme of their table talk and I speak of it contempt uously as pi- j eayune economy. They deride the | Secretary for walking to and from j the Department or for hiring with j his own money a common cab, when lie wishes to ride. Those are little things, but they are significant of the low tone of official morality, j and the obtuseness of moral vision j in the civil service which this ad [ ministration inherited, and which it can reform only by plucking it I out and casting it away. The ease of General Lawton, nom- j mated to he Minister to Russia and not confirmed on the ground that his disabilities had not been rcniov ed under the 14th amendment, has I been submitted bv the President to j the Attorney General for an opinion. 'Phe Attorney-General decides that he is eligible. President Cleveland last Saturday j made his first commutation by com muting the life sentence of Frank Minor, who was convicted of mur dering his wife here in October 1882. The two treaties between the United States and Peru, will termi nate March 31st, 138 G. A delegation of colored citizens waited on the President and asljjed him to review their societies on Emancipation day. The President finds that b n can not carry out his plan of seeing all who call at the White House, and has decided to require all who call to present their cards and lie will sec only those who have such bus iness as will require an interview. Mr. J. C. Cartwright and brother returning from Tnomaston last week had quite an adventure with a mad dog. He followed them when one of the gentlemen, getting out of the buggy, shot the dog in the shoulder. 'Phe enraged brute never whined from the wound but rushed at his assailants. One of the men climbed a fence and shot the anim al the second time before stopping i him. Meriwether Vindicator. Advertising Cheats!!! ‘‘lt has become so common to be gin an article, in an elegant, intcr ! eating style. “Then run it into some ndvertise- I ment that we avoid all such, “And simply call attention to the merits of Hop Bitters in as plain, honest terms as possibe, “To induce people “To give them one trial, which so proves their value that they will never use anything else.” *‘Th k Remedy so favorably noticed in nil tin* papers, i Religious and secular, Is I “II living a large sale, and is supplanting all i other medicines. j •• l lier. is no denying the virtues of the Hop j plant, and tin* proprietersof Hop Bitters have ‘shown great shrewdness ami aldlit y * I “In compounding a mtdieine whose vit lies an* so palpable to every one's observation.’’ Did She Die? “No! “She lingered and suffered along, pining away all the time for years,” “The doctors doing her no good “And at last was cured by this Hop Bitters the papers say so much about.” “Indeed! Indeed 1” How thankful we should be for that medicine.” Daughter’s Misery, “Eleven years our daughter suffered on a bed of misery, “From a complication of kidney, liver, j rheumatic trouble and Nervous debility, “Under the care of the best physicians, “Who gave her disease various names, “But no relief, •‘And now she is restored to us in good health by as simple a remedy as Hop Bitters. I hat we Inul shunned for years before using It.”—The Parents. Father is Getting Well, •*My daughters say: “How much better father Is since lie used Hoi) Bitters.” ••lie is getting well after his long suffering from a disease declared Incurable.” “J mi we are so glad that we used yourjßit ters.”—A Lady of Utica, N. Y. lie genuine without a hunch of green Hopson the white label. Shun all the vile,pois onous stuff with /Hop" or “Hops” Hi their name. There are many workers out of employment, and hardly any enter prise is making much money, yet most people are getting enough to eat and enough to wear, and are living along in happiness with rea sonable economy. The country is rich and sound at the core; and when all the inflated and delusive concerns are settled up and cleared, away, we shall find that we are a great deal better off than the philo sophers of calamity and despair have imagined.—[From the New York Sun.] Not a Trace. Dr. I). F. Penington, D. D. S., 536 West Fayette street, Baltimore, Maryland, states that he has per sonally used the Red Star Cough Cure and in his family, and has found it a prompt and sure remedy for coughs and colds. No bad re sults as of other cough remedies. Nota trace of opium or morphia. Jenny Lind Goldschmidt, who lias not sung in public since 1863, | now proposes to raise her voice in I Norwich, England, for the sake of j raising funds also for a children’s j infirmary there of which she was the foundress. Excitement. “What causes the great rush at 1.1. W. Hightower, Drug Store?” The free distribution of sample bottles of Dr. Bosanko’s Gough and Lung Syrup, the most popular remedy for Coughs, Colds, Consumption and ' Bronchitis now on the market. Re gular ize 50 cents and SI,OO. —The Empress Eugenie has writ ten a book upon the various recol lections of her life, which will be I issued almost immediately. * GURUS # , Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago. Backache. Headache. Toothache. Sore TlirontAH *l!lnpi.Spraln*.Bruinefl, Burns', .Sonlifn. Froht Bites* AND ALL OTMrit HODII.Y PAILS AND AMIES. Sold by l>ru£iftta* ml Denier* every where. Fill}' Ctu: * Direction* In 11 i^iigiwrM. TKE CHARLES A. VlMUihEIt CO. (SueociK.-* wA. YOOr.hER * CO.) IlalU: re, M.., U. *** * NO. 12.