Newspaper Page Text
THE BARNESVILLE GAZETTE.
VOL; XVII.
Closing Out Sale
—"AT— —
V. 0. Marshburn’s.
Commencement, Camp-Meetings, Excursions anil Low Prices always
•.get the crowd. lam an expert in conducting the Low Price .( harm, as
<vhen goods are offered at less than their value, and the public is inform
ed of the fact, they are bound to soil.
I will for the next sixty days offer a 112,000 stock at greatly reduced
prices, in order to make room for the heavy fall stock 1 will carry.
Examine before purchasing a job lot of
Low Quartered Shoes,
In both Gents’ and Ladies if you want to save money.
See my Straw Hats
In which vou can certainly be suited. Prices ranging from 10 cents up.
YOU CAN BUY A TRUNK FROM ME AT FACTORY PRICES.
I have an immense line of SHIRTS in both white and colored, at ac
"tual cost. I have just received the prettiest lino of WHITE GOODS,
bought at auction, that has ever been exhibited here, at prices that suit
the times. lam headquarters for Lace, Embroidery, Gloves, Ac.
Samples at New York Cost.
These goods wore bought for cash at a great discount,and will be offered
at and below cost. They consist of
Hose and Half Hose, Purses and Shopping Bags,
Suspenders, Corsets, Dress and Working
Shirts,Gauze and Muslin in Ladies and Gents
Undervests, Towels, Table Covers,&c.
The prettiest, largest and most Varied line of TIES and S(' AItFS ever
offered in Barnesvifle.
Come soon before the greatest bargains arc taken up.
NEW GOODS,
I have opened an entirely New and Freeh Stock of
Family & Fancy Groceries,
The trade will find always in stock Candies, Canned Goods, Tobacco and
Cigars.
FLOUR, MEAL, MEAT,
Sugar, Coffee, Rice, and everything to be found in a
First-Class Grocery Store.
Call and price beffire purchasing, as I propose to make it to your interest.
MR. M. S. HOWARD
is with me and mould be pleased to serve his friends.
Respectfully,
t J. C. PORCH.
i
- _ - =T=
J, W. Hightower,
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST,
Barnesville, z z Georgia
Dealer in a complete lint of
Pure Drugs!
And in Everything Necessary to the Drug Business.
Satisfaction as far as possible always guaranteed. Give him a call.
W. H f HEAD, s. I(. HEAD, K. P. UIIOOKS. j
W. H. Head, Son & Cos.,
BANKERS,
Successors to W. H. HEAD, Banker.
FORSYTH, GEORGIA.
A General Banking Business Transacted —Prompt]
Attention Given to Collections.
Correspond with and Refer to : American Exchange National Hank, i
New York ; Third National Bank, Cincinnati. Atlanta National Bank, 1
Atlanta, Ga.; Southern Bank of Georgia, Savannah, Ga.; National
Bank of Augusta, Augusta, Ga.; First National Bank, Charleston, S.<!.;
Exchange Bank, Macon, Ga. junll
TheGeorgiaScaleCompany
THOMAS M. TAYLOR, Manager.
" J Practical Scale Maker and Repairer,
78 E. AlabamA, Street, ATLANTA, GA.
Bailmi,Trask,FninaaDormantPortaliie,Colton Beaus 4 Counter Scales
Repaired and Warranted Durable and Accurate.
1„„ • Cnalac Second-haml Scale* bought ami sold
Dealer in w anon ocaies.iu’fer to nv wholesale <;rnoer m
Atianta. Travels to repair Railroad, Wagon, Furnace and Heavy Seales of any class. Don’t
tiirow away your old Scales- Junll
BARNESVLLE, GA.; THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1885.
Sweet Notes for Ladies
Strange it May Seem But True.
E. L. Rogers will make a price that sells his
his gocfls. Follow the lines below and
let vbur own eyes convince you.
and I WILL SELL
2500 yards Prints, - - 4to 0
3000 yards 4-4 Sheeting, - (>
2500 yards 7-8 ftirting, - 5
2500 yards GeorUn Checks, - (>A
500 yards Whitt Lawn, - •>
20 pieces Line* Lawn, - 124
20 pieces Lineillndia, - S
40 pieces Figutld Lawn, ■ - 5
Immense stock oiLaces and
Hamburg l H to 25
1000 yards Ginghkns, Sto 12.1
500 Handkerchief, bordered, 4J
Sjßcial attention is called to
ClothingiFurnishing Goods
Casimere Suits, I $5.00 j Dusters, 50 to $1.50
~ ~ i o•. V 1 j..) -a Laundried Shirts, 75.
Cottonadc Suits, J ,0 Unlaundried Shirts, 50
Dross Suits, “45.(X) to $20.001 500 Straw Hats, 5c to SI.OO
Pants, 1 75c to $3.00 i Fur Hats, 25c to $3.00
If you bring thenmney, goods you CAN GET for it. No matter
how little it may be. ITlianks for past favors, earnestly soliciting a oon
uance, lim most trulv, K. L. JIOGEBS.
gm-Cn viti.iE TiTyi.kr is with me and will be delighted to see his
friends come in and quinine my goods and prices. Charlie is too well
known to the trade oflthis and adjoining communities, consequently
needs no commendatfns.
NOTICE TO
FAR ME R S.
Cottoleed Oil Mill
A Cotton Gin,
A CottoHFeeder,
Amotton Condenser,
4 A Cotton Press, or a
SAW; MILL,
Pulleys, 'hhafting, Hangers
And IvJIL WORK.
Write to us for IBICES and DISCOUNTS, lie
make it to pour iide/ffJ to hap direct from as.
E. Van Vhnkle & Cos.,
MANUFACTURERS,
Atlanta, - - Georgia.
Notice to the Tit a be —Wjgivo discounts to the trade. aprSO
- ■— —■—
A New Enterprise.
We announce to the publiewat we arc prepared to dress and match
! lumber, cut mouldings of all styl|s, and do promptly
Scroll,Band ind Re-Sawing
or do general carpenters wol and wood work of all sorts.
We keep all the time a full lirj of
Lumber, Laths, Shinges, Brick, Plaster, &c.
Give us a trial.
I W. P.ftUSSEY & CO.
Chapman -k Crawley,
MILNER, lEORGIA,
Dealers in pjptY GOODS,
Groceries and < ifectioneries.
goods for all lines of bit. try Produce. maroyl
▼ ▼TnY y>for working people. Semi
f j j j cents [wastage, and we will
* mail you free, n royal, valu
able sample box of goods that will put you in j
the way of making more money in a few days j
! than you ever thought possible at any busi- i
ness/ Capital not required. You can live at j
home, and work In spare time only, or all tin
time. All of both sexes, of all ages, grandly
successful. 50cents to $5 easily earned every
evening. They who want work may test the
business, we make this unparrulleleu offer: To
all who are not satisfied we will send $7 to pay
for the trouble of writing us. Full particulars
directions, etc., sent free. Immense pay ab
solutely sure for all who start at once. Don’t |
delay. Address .Stinson & Cos., Portland, j
Maine.
Gray as any Old Rat.
In the wall; yet not forty years of age? Get
back boyhood’s color by using Parker’s Hair
Balsam. 50c.
Table Damask, bleached 33jj
Table Damask, 50
Parasols, any grade to suit, 25 to $5
Umbrellas, 50
Opera Slippers 75
Opera Slippers, silver tipped $1.25
Ladies Pebble Goat Shoes, but
ton, $1.25
Ladies Calf Shoes, button, $1.25
Ladies Kid Shoes, button, $1.50
Gentlemen’s Shoes from SO cents to
best hand-made.
'ird Wood Lumber
j ,e|
*vc the largest and best seleeted'xtock of
f BVVood Lumber ever brought to Atlanta,
eo. Jfsing in part of
Oclh Ash, Walnut Cherry
p.plarq Gum Hickory,
Hirei, Mupei, Cedar, Etc.
Newel Kalis, Balusters and Moulding of
anpattel at short notice. Dressed Ceiling of
dlnermiqinds;
office ;d Yard No. 10 Collins street, near
comeii Dcitur street Atlanta, Ga.
J. C. PECK.
Washington Letter.
Washington, June 20,1885.
The new Cabinet officers and the
Chiefs of Bureau under them are
very much embarrassed by their
inheritance of asylums for the aged,
blind and deaf. The Government
offices are t hese asylums,' and there
are in them hundreds of superanu
ated men and woman who do ac
tually no work. They were not re
markable for energy and efficiency
ever in their prime. Now they are
sans- eytSy sans ears,sans everything
but pocket. They go to the Depart
ments day after day as has been
their custom for years. They sit
at their desks and do nothing, but
once a month, when pay day
comes, they are each handed one
hundred dollars in crisp new notes.
1 have in my mind an old man
both blind and deaf, who is daily
brought to and taken home from
the Paten Office by members of his
family in- order that he may draw
the jiay he is absolutely incapable
of earning. If these superanuated
people should be discharged, they
would doubtless die from the shock,
and more or less suffering would he
entailed upon their dependent fami
lies. But it is nevertheless a gross
wrong to the tax payer and a sub
version of the purposes of the Civil
Service to make the Government
offices an asylum for this class.
The Government pays thousands
of dollars yearly for rent of offices,
and the rooms of many Depart
ments are overcrowded with desks.
It would he in the interest of econ
my to pay these old and helpless
people to stay away from the De
partments so that competent men
might be placed at the desks which
they only encumber.
There is another class that ought
to be discharged. The Departments
were filled with pretty women by a
systemjfostered and practiced by
the Republican party. There is
not a Republican Senator or ex
j Senator who has not lovely prote
ges, and some of them have dozens,
in the Government offices here.
I They were not appointed under
I civil service rules, but in direct con
i travention of civil service princi-
I (ties —because they were pretty and
j helpless, or because they were sis
ters, couins, aunts, and mothers-
I in-law. To say that they are not
efficient is putting it- very mildly.
| Ton good clerks, such as arc found
in the business houses of the city
can do more and better work than
one hundred of these woman, and
will be glad to do it for less pay
than the women receive. The fact
is that the civil service has been
most shamefully run down at the
heels as well as at the head during
the long ascendency of the party of
moral ideas and loose practices.
During the last three and a half
months great progress has been
made in the neglected and belated
work of many Government offices,
hut the best results cannot be hop
jed for until radical changes have
; been made in both the men, wo
! men and methods of the worst de
! moralized Civil Service under the
| sun.
Proof that anew era has opened
j in National affairs is seen everyday
! here. The last Republican Senate
j succeeded in passing a subsidy hill
of $400,000 in favor of the Pacific
Mail Steamship Cos. Mr. Vilas
| has been looking into the subject,
i and lie finds that the present rates
paid for the mails are ample. As
the act of Congress is not mamla- j
tory, hut merely gives him permis
sion to spend the money, the P. M.
General will, with the approval of
the President, expend not one cent j
|of the appropriation. This will be
{ very fatiguing and nauseating to
the Pacific Steamship lobby, but
! will save the tax payers the sum of
! $400.1 XX). This is only one instan
ce. But wait untill the account is
made up at the end of President
! Cleveland’s term. There will be
i literal millions in it saved to the
country.
Cure For Piles.
Piles art’ frequently preceded by
a sense of weight in the back, loins
and lower part of the abdomen,
causing the patient to suppose he
lias some affection of the lcidneys
or neighboring organs, At times,
symptoms of indigestion are pre
sent, flatulency, uneasiness of the
stomach, etc. A moisture, like per
spiration, producing a very disa
greeable itching, after getting warm,
is a common attendant. Blind,
Bleeding and Itching Piles yield at
once to tHe application of Dr. Bo
sanko’s Pile Remedy, which acts
directly upon the parts effected, Jab
sorbing the Tumors, allaying the
intense itching, and effecting a per
manent cure. Price 50 cents. Ad
dress, The Dr. Bosanko Medicine
Cos., Pi jua, 0. Sold by J. IV. High
tower.
DeMOREST’s ILLUSTRATED MONTH
LY Magazine for July is unusually
bright and entertaining. It contains
some exceedingly readable articles,
aimong which are “Among the Sea
Islands of Georgia;” “The Chinese
Exhibit at the New Orleans Expo
sition,” both of which are illustra
ted ; “The Conjugal. Poets,” “Ed
ward Jenner,” the originator of
Vaccination; “Chautauqua Lake
and Chautauqua School;” and
“Shall I get a Camera?” by Profes
sor Barnard. Jenny June furnishes
a paper, “Can Women Travel A
lone?” and the various departments
are, as usual, replete with insturc
tjve information. The frontispiece
is an oil picture, “Spring time of
Lowe.” __
Health, Wealth and Happiness
Are more intimately connected
with a sound stomach and good
ecuaditjon of the Wood than most
people suppose. Thin blood means
weakness, languor and misery. A
dyspeptic stomach means all the
horrors you can think of. Brown’s
Iron Bitters means enriched blood,
good digestion, healthy appetite,
sweet sleep and vigorous strength.
Mr. Henry Hallam, South I7th
street, St. Louis, says, “Brown’s
Iren Bitters relieved me of dyspep
sia, purified my blood, and gave me
an appetite.” Thousands of others
testify in the same way.
It is estimated by the contractors
that it cost upwards of $200,000 to
substitute Georgia granite or mar
ble for oolitic limestone in building
the new capitol building.ln addition
tothisthe cost of changing machin
ery for working materials, the cost
of the limestone already received
and ready for use, and a sum suffi
cient to satisfy the contractors for
the damage done in instiuting the
changes must he included.
Better than She Expected.
“ Your letter received. In reply
I am happy to say the Parker’s
Hair Balsam did much more for
me than you said it would, or than
I expected. My hair has not only
stopped falling out, but the bald
spots are all covered, and all my
hair has grown thicker, softer and
more lively than it was before my
sickness a year ago. Thank you
again and rgain.” Extract from
letters of Mr. R. IV. TANARUS., West Fifty
third street, New York.
In the Seventh Congressional
District the slate is being fixed up,
although the election is nearly two
years off. Judge J. C. Fain, of the
the Cherokee Circuit, and Judge
Joei Branham, ofthe Rome Circuit
are both said to be in the field at
work to secure the nomination,
j Clements, the present incumbent,
is also wide awake, and will lie hard
to beat.
Narrow Escape.
** * HOCH EHTEK, .7 UllO 1. IHSTi. “Tell
Years ago I was attacked with the most
Intense and deathly pains in my back and
—Kidneys.
“Extending to the end of my
toes and to my brain !
“Which made me delirious !
“ From agony!!!!
“It took three men to hold me on
my bed at times !
“The Doctors tried in vain to re
| lievo mo but to no purpose.
Morphine and, other opiates!
“Had no effect!
“After two months I was given up
to die !!!!
“When my wife
I heard a neighbor tell what Hop
Bitters had done for her, she at
| once got and gave me some. The
first dose eased my brain and seem
ed to go hunting through my sys
tem for the pain.
I The second dose eased me so much that I
tlept two hours, something I hud not done for
two months. Before I had used five bottles. I
was well and at work as hard as any man
could, for over three weeks: but I worked too
hard for my strength, and taking a hard cold,
I was taken with the most acute and painful
rheumatism all through my system that ever
was known.
“I called the doctors again, and after several
weeks they left me a cripple on crutches for
life, as they said. I met a friend and told him
my ease, and he said Hop Bitters had cured
him and would cure me. I poohed at him,
but he was so earnest I was induced to use
them again.
In less than four weeks I threw away my
crutches and went to work lightly and kept
on using the bitters for live weeks until I be
came as well as any man living, and have
been so for six years since.
It has also cured my wife, who had been
sick for years; and has kept her and mv
children well and healthy with from two to
t hree bottles per year. There is no need to ho
sick at all If these bitters are used,
J. J. Berk. Kx Supervisor.
“That poor invalid wife, Sister. Mother.
“Or daughter!!!!
“<'an be made the picture of health!
“With a few bottles of Hop Bitters!
£&-Sonc genuine without a bunch of green
Hopson the white label. Shun all the vile,pois
onous stuff with /Hop” or “Hops” in their
name.
Col. L. F. Livingston tliinksthero
is no doubt but that the new road
from Covington to Macon will he
built.
When you want a good smoke
go to J. F. Taylor’s, and get thc
Paradise cigar.
Best Lorillard’s Snuff in pound
jars for 75 cts at J. F. Taylor’s
NO. 22