Newspaper Page Text
THE BARNESYILLE GAZETTE.
VOL. 32 SUBSCRIPTION SI.OO
MILLINERY f
At The Bottom For Prices.
j. r. DLfWOURS. Prourieior ot
mm RACKET STORE
give you many reasons why you act in your own
interest by trading at the store which confines its busi
ness to the cool cash.
This business is run with less expense. We buy to bet
ter advantage from the wholesale man.
'You do not have to pay for what the other fellow fails to pay
for.
You get your goods from 20 to 30 per cent, cheaper than from
credit concerns.
•
gsp“One Swallow does not make a Sum
mer nor one cheap article a bargain house.
Every line in our stock is a Leader-
Steel rod Umbrella 50c
Gloria Umbrella 75c to SI.OO
Ladies’ Colored Umbrella, $1.75, 2.25
Ladies’ Undervests 10c to .25c
Ladies’ Sailors 25c to $1.25
Ladies’ Trimmed Hats, $1.25 to $5.75
When you buy mil
linery from us you set
the best material and
latest styles.
A. L. MILLS.
The people’s favorite trading place will offer
for the next few days the following special
drives:
Soo yds fast colored printed Lawn # 31- 2 cts yd
1000 yds full yard wide Sea Island 4 3-4 cts yd
ISo yds 7o in. French Organdies, 75c quality 48 c. yd
200 yds 32 in. white Organdies, 4oc quality 23 cts yd
1000 yds 32 in. white Law 0 , loc quality 6 cts yd
3 spools good sewing thread worth loc 5 CI)S
25 doz ladies' Undervests, silk tape, 2oc quality 121-2 G
500 yds 7c yard wide bleaching 5 cts ud
400 yds Cottonades, 2oc quality - 15 6t)S IjO
Come to see us—we will save you fully 20
Derceut on Dry Goods, Notions. Gents Purmsh.-
mgs® Shoes and MILLINER? TWs is no fairy
tale, The word, “Bargain is so ?„ S
ing that we are determined to give you wnat
Noah Webster intended it All we
ask is a look to convince you. Every thing at cut
price all through our store.
A. L. MILLS.
P. S. $65.00 Domestic Sewing Machine
.. . 527 50
Heavy Overalls 50c
Apron Overalls 55c
Working Shirts 20c to .35c
Men's Pants 50c to $2.25
Coat anti Vest $2.25 to $3.75
Summer Suit $3-5° to $5-75
Clothing at whole
sale prices, Will save
you money in this line.
COMMENCEfIENT EDITION
BARNESVILLE, GA., THURSDAY, JUNE 15, 1899.
[What is Said ot the
j Schuberts
The company is so far superior to
any that ever favored this city that
there is no room for comparison.
The voices are first-class and render
a class of music that none but artists
venture to attempt. It is seldom in
Deadwood that a company receives
the appreciation accorded the Schu
bert Glee Club.—The Black Hills
(South Dakota) Times.
The Schubert Glee Club gave the
finest entertainment at the Central
Presbyterian church last night ever
held in Denver.—Denver Republican.
The Schubert Glee Club proved
themselves entitled to the position in
which they are placed by lead : ng
musical critics, as first among concert
companies of th§ country, and the
large audience, many of whom were
musicians of a high order, was not
slow to recognize the excellent exe
cution of each number. Alpena
(Michigan) Argus.
The chapel at Belhaven College
was completely filled Saturday night
with the elite of the capital city, who
assembled to hear the celebrated
Schubert Glee Club. The concert
was perhaps the finest ever heard in
Jackson, and the musicians were
cheered to the echo at the close ot
each number.—Jackson - (Miss.) Clar
ion Ledger.
What is Said olHey
wood.
The program was long and varied,
and the frequent opportunities given
Mr. Heywood were all the more ap
preciated by the audience after his
first appearance. He is certainly an
entertainer whose equal it would be
hard to find. Beginning with Will
Carlton’s “The Law Suit,” he went
from grave to gay and from the ridic
ulous to the pathetic, carrying his
hearers with him and making them
feel his moods. The parody on “The
Raven” was highly amusing, and the
old nan’s stories, “Kingry’s Mill,”
“The Dear Old Country Band” and
others, were as natural and sweet as
a clover field on a June day—Char
leston News & Courier.
I>r. Burrows.
Dr. Lansing Burrows, of Augusta,
Ga., who is to preach the chautauqua
sermon on Sunday July 2nd, and lec
ture at. night on “The Cathedral
Aisles,” is one of the most distinguish
ed divines in the south. He is not
only a fine preacher, but he is an
orator and the people have a great
treat in slore- whert they hear him.
The Chautauqua Association was very
fortunate in securing Dr. Burrows.
It was Reed who said of the ad
ministration's curious performance in
paying $20,000,000 to the Spanish for
the Philippines: “Buying niggers on
the other side of the world is like the
farmer who buys ‘green goods’—he
never gets what he pays for, and if
he squeals, is called a sucker.”
OABTOIIIA.
B*r* th You Haw Always Bought
What is Said oi Gordon
New York Daily Tribune: “Gen
eral Gordon is a speaker of magnetic
eloquence, and the scene in the Tab
ernacle last night was more like
that of a stirring political meeting
than at a lecture. The audience,
was, at times, aroused to the highest
pitch of enthusiasm. When the
speaker of the evening was intro
duced every one of the great gather
ing arose, waved his or her handker
chief and cheered for a minute or
two. His tribute to the characters
of Generals Lee and Grant were ap
plauded most warmly. When Gen
eral Gordon finished, three ringing
cheers were given for him.”
Atlanta Journal. “Gen. Gordon
is a born orator. His voict is round
ed and full, his dictation eloquent
and graphic, his whole manner im
pressive. And for substance his lect
ure is based upon a wealth of scenes
and incidents at once new and in
teresting in the extreme. No Synop
sis can convey the slightest idea of
the superb lecture. It must be heard
to be appreciated. He held his great
audience in rapt attention. That
lecture is a sensation. It is no par
tisan speech, but comes from a great
loving, .loyal heart, which knows how
to renew its loyalty to the flag of the
union with increased devotion.”
“Heroic Bravery of Union soldiers,
the undaunted courage of the south
ern men, the self-sacrifice of the no
ble southern women, the patriotism
ot northern womanhood, interspersed
with lively ancedotes and abundant
incidents illustrating the grim humor
of the camp and the deep pathos and
the suffering on the field and in the
home as phases ot the great civil
war, were component factors of Gen
eral John B. Gordon’s story of “The
Last Days of the Confederacy,” told
to a large audience in Grand Music
Hall last evening. He told the story
in words as elegant as the burning
stars.” —The Republic St. Louis Mo.
“General Gordon’s great lecture
ought to be heard by every young
American. It is a masterpiece. Not
only as a gem of oratory, hut as a
superb outburst of patriotism, it will
live long after we have passed away.
The vast audience that heard him
last nigtit will, we are sure, voice this
expression.— Editorial, Courier Jour
nal, Louisville, Ky.
From the day that a young man start*
out to seek his first position to the etui of
his business life, his health has a world to
do with his success. When a young man
applies to a business man for a position, his
personal appearance has a deal to do with
the outcome. “ Personal appearance" doe*
not mean dress alone. It does not mean
exterior cleanliness alone. A young man
may be clean so far as soap and water will
make him, but be disfigured by unsightly
pimples, eruptions and ulcerations on the
skin. These are due to impurities in the
blood. The blood becomes impure because
it is improperly nourished. Instead of
receiving the life-giving elements of the
food, it .receives the foul emanations of
indigestion, bilousness and costiveness.
The reason that Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery is the best remedy for
disorders of this description i* that it goes
right to first causes. It gives a man an
appetite *' like a hqrse.” It facilitates the
flow of digestive juices. It corrects all
disorders of the digestion, and makes the
assimilation of the life-giving elements
of the food perfect. It invigorates the
liver. It purifies and enriches the blood.
It makes the muscles strong and active.
It tone* and steadies the nerves. It make*
a young man look as he should —strong of
body, alert of brain and clean and whole
some of *kin. Medicine dealers sell il
and have nothing “just a* good."
I had eczema in it* worst form," write*
Austin Ramsey Esq., of Saltillo. Huntingdon
Cos, Pa. “ I tried three doctors but got no t-
Uef • I thought it would set me wild, it itched
and burned so badly. The neighbors thought I
would never be cured. I took your OokUtt
tfdiesi piworgrjr' and am bow well.--
To Drink
TO THE SUCCESS
| OF YOUR UNCLE, SflM
; In A Brimming
Foaming Glass Of Our
DELICIOUS SODA
Try Our New Drink.
PEPSOL,
.You’ll Like it. Its Purity & Richness
Can Be Relied On.
Yours to Serve
J. H. BLACKBURN, DrilQOlSl
Jn n rjTr c Cf\ ' BRANCHSTORES—
• n. Dll 1 L U UU. J- tl. BATE &GO-, Nlarrletta, Ga-
BATE JEWEI RY GO-, Anniston, Ala
Baimville, 03* BATE & MUNGY, Athens, Term.
When you want DIAMONDS,
When you want WATCHES,
When you want JEWELRY & WATCHES
When you want MEDALS, CLASS PINS,
When you want a BICYCLE,
When you want SUNDRIES,
When yon want ANYTHING in the JEWELRY LINE,
See us before buying* 2£ 2£ ?£
OLD GOLD AND SILVER BOUGHT.
Buy your spectacles and eye glasses from
us so if they need any changing afterward
we are right here to do it. See the Point? •
J. H- BATE & CO.
MORRIS JACOBS.
If you want to embezzel money get a cashiership in a
if v ou want to make money get a job in a mint* if you
want to find money go to Klondike; but if you want to save
money take advantage of bargains like these :
A few Ladies’ trimmed sailors
in
left, one week at lv/w
A few ladies’ trimmed hats left
one week at 75c
worth from #I.OO to #2.75.
1 lot Silk Gloria steel rod um
brellas one week at.. 50c
1
l lot Ladies’ Silk Gloria umbrel
las one week at... 98c
1 lot Ladies) beauty pins
one week.. . 2 for 5c
Hooks and Eyes, per card, one
week at lc
1 lot of children’s garters, per
pair, one week at.. . 5c
Come to the instigator of real bargains-
Morris Jacobs.
1 lot of ladies’ .75c Slippers
one week at ..50c
1 lot of Isadies’ SI.OO Slippers
one week at . 75c
1 lot of fine *2.25 Slippers made
by Urown Shoe Cos. one week
„ $1.75
[ lot of Misses Hlack and Tan
Slippers, one week.. 65c
1 lot of men’s .50c overalls
one week at 35C
1 lot of 75c Overalls with apron
dCSr
one week at
1 lot of men’s 50c working pants
one week at.... 35c
A few genuine Marseilles coun
-1 terpanes left, one week.. $1,25
NO 23.