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About The Barnesville gazette. (Barnesville, Ga.) 187?-189? | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 1890)
THE BARNESVILEE GAZETTE VOL. 23. SUBSCRIPTION $ 1.00. “nEXTRAORDINARY ATTRACTIONS! UNAPPROAHABLE PRICES JU® liVUfilly; ' • Compeition, with me, has been dwarfed and lost sight of, and my chief ambition nowis to go on and 'startle the * people with goods and prices until my name and fame shall be a household word in evory palace and cottage m the land. To biag tmd bow is not natural with me, and facts are all I care to deal with. I know it is a fact that mjstore, although dou c ie the capacity of any other § IS FILLED UNTIL THERE I.S NO Ma hh With goods culled carefully from the largest factories and markets in : He country. I know alsc for|a fact that paying cash for my goods puts me -On The la@i4e As To Prices!- • * AND f 1 Am Going To Sell The Goods. • On a margin this season that will be ° t A sSSo U u RRR R PPP r RRRr I! SSS S EE EE TTTTn 0 00 0 777777 H H EEEE BBBr U (j V Y EEEE RRRp A vsrr>Lp p RRig /VC/* $8 % s hrULe H/ S V\ee H M $r p ii if °ooo° n 8 B!eee b bbbbß\J Ilee r r 8 AJYD A , Terror to Competitors I know still further as a matter of fact that my trade has nearly doub : led in the last year. This means something. /HP explain, I Keep tlie Goo* for the Tr&de, Represent Them Honestly' to the Trade. • Squeeze the Profits Close } W ere Ia stranger here it might be necessar for’me 'to ■ particularize and specify what I keep, but every body knows that I keep everthing in mv line. I can say however that *his season has brought me to the top in CLOTHtN C 1 am proud of my record in the clothing business. The old men, young men, and boys stand as living witnesses of what I have done. Remem ber that I havefoutdone myself, and f*om the very cheapest to the very best 1 can supply everyone DRISSGOODS My Dress Goods stock is one of the wonders. All exclaim,“How love ly, yet how cheap !” 1 Oc to $2.00 peryard covers the price. I ask every body to call and look. The result will satisfy me. 100 piecesfcf Jeans, 15c to 75c per yard, 50 pieces Cassimers 25c to $ 1.75 per ycf, 150p’cs Secilians and Ginghams 8c to 15c per yd, 50 pieces satteen and per cale, price and take them. Car load trunks, with valises to match: car loads shoes and boots. A big pile of Hats, Umbrellas, Gloves, Hose, etc. Ml Domestic Goods at Factory prices. 1-4 c over market price for all Cotton on account. Come to see me, you will regret it if you dont. Yours to serve, E. L. ROGERS, k BARNESVILLE Mess. J. F. Howard, L. A. Collier and Eugene are with me, and are anxfeus to see their friends. BARNESVILLE, GA., NOVEMBER 20, 1890. MILITARY DEPARTMENT. It Is almost certain that a military department will be added to Gordon Institute in a short time. The Trus tees of the school will meet Friday evening to take the matter under ad visement, and it is believed that the feature will be added with little or no j opposition. It will ba the means of increasing | the patronage of the school from a distance and it will do the school much good. Our people want to see the military feature added to Gordon Institute. MR. C. A. MURPHEY GOES TO ATLANTA. Mr. Otis A. Murphey Las moved to Atlanta, and that will be bis bie and headquarters for the future. H e makes this change because his large iusurence business makes it neces sary. He is one of the leading fire* insurance men in the state, and gains many advantages by having his home in Atlanta. He has many relatives and friends in this city and section, who wish him all the success possible in his new home. While thf|commnity regrets to lose him body is glad of the success that caries hidfto Atlanta. # DR. CANDLER §AYS SO. < Gordon Institute is the best train ing school in the state. That is what Dr. W. A. Candler of Emory College says, and he ought to know something about it. Boys go to his school from every gJction of the state and those who go torn Gordon In stitute always take\ higher stand in their classes. Mr. E. \V. Rose was at Oxford a few days ago, and Dr. Candler told him the substance of the above, voluntarily And he tells any body that where he has anything to say about our institute. Gordon Institute is a great school and ought to have 500 pupils enrolled in one or two terms more. Leti have them. THE SOCIAL AND LITERARY CLUB. One of the best meetings, the club has held was held at Mrs. L. K. Rogers home Tuesday night, in which Robert Burns was the author. The next meeting will be held on Tuesday evening, December 2nd, with Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Swatts. The following is the program: . Author For Study—Alex Pope. Instrumental Solo-Miss May Stafford. Biographical Sketch—Miss Maude Cook. Review of Authors Works.—%rs. L. K. Rogers. * Vocal Solo—Dr. R. E. Brown. Reading: Selection from author— Miss Annie Sanford. Quotations from author. Vocal Solo—Mi’s. fit. L. Swatts. Essential tests of nterary merit— J. M. Pound. Imupromptu Remarks. Critic to Read—Miss Kate Huff. Critic to note—Miss Lucy Mur phey. The Philadelphia Times, one of the great papers of America thus pays Hon. C. F. Ciisp, a high com -1 plement: If Crisp, of Georgia, be chosen Speaker of the regenerated House, the selection will be in one way the most appropriate that could be made. Crisp was the one man on the floor ol the last House of whom Reed was afraid- The Maine Czar could neither bully him nor .V ence him, and he was Reed’s master as a par liamentaaian. How would Reed feel to find that calm, acute, satiric and powerful eye turned on him from the chair ? WHAT WILL WOMEN WANT NEXT ? • Miss Frances E. Willard, who has been active agitating for the admis sion of women to the government of the , Methodist church, is credited witL an ambition to be elected Bishop. < ff hen Baby was sick, we gar. her Castoria. When she was a Child, die cried for Castoria. When she became Mias, to Castoria. When she had Children, she gave the* Castori* *¥. 0 Jarslburn* $40.000 stoefcj Shoes, Hats, and Clothing Iwo stores filled from pit to dome. (^jNtij| bought 9 j Before The RigJ direct from the manufacturers I prepared than ever to supoly the wan people m price and have openecK^^ Bargain Store^^! on Market Street, next door to Rock m! bouse. All rw goods, but as the Will be run at a nominal expense you can duß Ham Bargains in all lines My corps of helpers is Jno. H. Danielly, J. 1 Coppedge<J^ d g e Ogletree John Reynold! and Charley Graddick, They will be glad serve their friends. Come tosee us and money m Marshs urn. 100.D00 ■ POTfNDS of ha^ —\Vjll~— mmi Than . J Q SMITH.*! DROG S*tobJ v. mBLACKBURN Manager. J Constantly on hand a carefully selected stock of DRUGS, MEDICINES, CHEMICALS,:] POPULAR PROPRIETARY MEDICINES- Paints, Oils, Varnishes, and Dye Stuffs, i Toilet Articles, Perfumery, Soaps, • Hair & Tooth Brushes. and all varieties of Druggist Sundries. Prescriptions carefully comp^ned' day and night, and orders answered with care and dispatch. g SQUARE Remedies -,.' Positively cured. No knife. No iaf jumeat. No pain. No loss of time. CATARRH, of and a biladder at HAY FEYBt, ALSO A PREVENTIVE FOR ABOVE NAMED DISEASES. Medicine, $lO per bottle. Sent securely packed, with directions for self-treatment, on receipt of price. Certificates of cures from some of the most prominent people here and elsewhere, i”f file at our office. m Boom 42, 22 Floor, 010 Capitol BTO’g. p.fl. Box 104, Atlanta, Gy Consultation free and stristlj eenfideatlaL setleitod. i DHTEB FLAGG, fi. D„ CoMltliii Fkjsiciai ui SeneaH INFALLIBLE CURES FOR STBtefURE AND GLEET. AMINAT-, WEAKNESS AND IMPOTENCY 4 NO li