Newspaper Page Text
• the register. _
r: ;: - * ■
CONYERS,QA., THURSDAY AIJCi 10, ISTC.
-■ ■ . ■ -
Mf W!<'/ lirenkfaxt Isltead^
*.■ i *r>X<t f* THK at*:. 0 t*k I'Mnoi*
!.
Cll mo when Breakfast is wady—
O ra<>t her ! don't <uH me before
Do not deny im tho pleasure
Of urndt-rato rest I implore. ■
Light ho'itn of sloop are to> littlo
For'dMirftto maiden* like me ;
Primer,'f>y far, ia tny pillow
Than dtp of the daintiest tea.
Mother, 1 cannot endure it,
Call me whu JmaAfaat i rvndy.,
Oh ! pleasd don’t alfW‘xtfe.
TP 4
Can tne when hrenhfupt ia ready
O ni ther don't call me t*a> aw,
Hhopj.inif, of Court* need* attention,
Hut that ean be done befnro noon.
Jalk of the folly of fashion,
I do not consider it ho :
Parties mo t he neglected,
Andatyle ia important yon know.
Mother ! it makes mo o nervous
To think of your atop at my door :
Call mo when broakfaat ia ready,
Oh ! please don’t call me before,
nr.
Call ino alien break fast ia ready—
Oh 1 don’t rail early, I pray.
Pootora adviae to be quiet,
My spine ia affected, they afty.
Sl,'to is a potent elixer,
And better than drugs or tho knife ;
Why, thou, ao n noli in a hurry,
Sine., rest, is the aolace of life ?
Mother, do have aoino com |>ohh ion,
And elude my late rising no more :
Call me when breakfast ia ready,
O! pleuMc do not call iuu before.
IV.
Cull mo when hreakjoat is ready
O mother ! I think I'vo lx?cn told.
Multitudes struggle for riches,
And barter their comforts for gold.
Hypocrites often riso early—
Their motives are perfectly plain :
•Sundays they always sleep later.
Because thoy have nothing to gain.
Mother 1 l cannot endure it,
'X his getting up early’s a bore —•
Cull mo when breakfast is ready.
But plcuHo do not call me before.
—Hearth amt Home.
A Little Every Day.
The longest lito is made up of simple
♦fays— few or many ; but the days grow
into years, and give the measures ol our
lives at the last.
The life is at tiro last what the days
have been. Let the children, therefore,
look after the days—one day at a time—
and put into each one something that
wiltLast-—>oe(fthing worth doing, some-
imitating by those who fol
low us.
1. Everyday a little knowledge. One
fact,in a day. How small aTldug is one
fact—only one! Ten years pass* by.
Three thousand six hundred and fifty
facts are not a small thing.
tt Every day a little self-denial. The
thing that is difficult to do to day, will
be an easy thing to do fhreo hundred
and sixty days hence, if each day it shall
have been repented. What power of
self-mastery shall he enjoy who, looking
to God for Ifis grace, seeks every flay
to practice the graoe he prays for!
3, Every day a little helpfulness. We
live for tiro good of others, if our living
be in any sense true living. It is not in
the great deeds of philanthropy that the
only blessing is found. In
"Little decals of kindness, ’’
repeated every day, we find true haopi
ness. At home, at school, in the street,
in tho neighbor's house, on the play
ground—wc find opportunity every day
tor usefulness.
4. Every day a little look into tiro Bi
ble. One chapter a day. What a trnna*
nry of Bible knowledge one may acquire
in ten years!—Every day a verso coin
mitted to memory.—What a volume in
the mind at the end of twenty five years!
The Democrats should mako their se
lections for tbo next House with great
care. The Republican party is going
out of power ami the reform democracy,
profiting by tho lessons of the last six
teen years, is about to assumo tho ad
ministration of the Government. To
carry out his policy of reform with vig
or and success, Mr. Tilden will need
be by not merely a nominal majority ol
the House of Representatives, but l>y a
majority that shall embrace many of the
ablest men in the lines of Democratic
party.
The upbeavel of two years ago came
so sudenly that the Democrat were not
prepared for it, and they carried a good
many Congress districts where they had
not dreamed of success, aud where men
were allowed to become c indidates whom
•nobody expected to see on the floor of
the house. This blunder should not be
repeated this year. In the present emer
gency, inferior men in the Democratic
party should be required to stand aside,
mid iu sore aud doubtful dis' riots the
strongest meu should be brought to the
front. There is room for improvement
in the Democratic branch of the House.
Jfew York Sun.
A few pieces of camphor placed iu
the drawers 'or boxes where •seeds arc
kept wifi prQvqst the depredations of
mice.
TUc Ueg. /
01 all (he beaat that tonio thh
hc.os is the dirtiest llo.ua is dirtier than
n crow. Mid a crow ia dnlitr a
skunk. ,'
lloga don’t have no hair onto cm use
other fou la. They have bristles.
Brushes fire roud® oat of bristles.
lloga would iat!cr lay >" ‘he mnd
tlmw onto a leather bed. r J hat ia the
mason they arc always, moat nearly all
the time, seen wallering in mud holes.
jI„oh is got different kinds of rnetit on
Vin, which ia ham, back bones, tender
! fries, shoulders, sausage moat, lard,
hogs bead, cheese, piga feet, smoked
jowls, pickled pork, aouce and spair ribs.
I’ii got Home spair libs at the butcher
shop, yesterday, and they were the spair
est ribs I ever picked on.
Hogs haa got brains and things like
human—so medical men sajr—nnd next
to human they arc the moat intelligent
o( all creatures.
I need a hog at Harriura'g show, lost
summer, who could play cards and drink
whisky.
Next day, I seed a lot of men in a
saloon set tin’ around a table imitating
him.
In front of the saloon was a man lien
in tho gutter, and a little further on
down the gutter, was another hog al
luring in the mud. That was conclusive
to me that hogs and human hoins was on
the same leva!.
Hog* live mostly on what they can
pick up, 'spcially when they go into
other people’s gai dons ’er corn fields.
Hogs has a good ’eel to do with jmli
lies. Men get wans when votin’ on a
hog law tliau they do at a Presidential
election.
Hogs is animals ’with human brains
done up in akin and briatjes.
They have all the natural instinct ot
humans, 'ceptin' they don’t go to prism
fur lying in the gutter, which other folks
does.
I’ve written all about hogs I can think
of now, ’ceptin’ .that if you want to
drive a hog, start him in the opposite
direction from where you want him to
go, and he’ll take the othoi road and go
along first rate.
*l‘d like for yon lo help me a little,’
said a tramp, poking his head into a
country store. ‘Why don't you help
yourselfT 'said tho proprietor angrily.
‘Thank you, I will,' said the tramp, as he
picked up a bottle of whisky and three
loaves ot bread and disappeared.
- + • ——
An exchange cruelly remarks :
Whenever yon we a man who shakes
hand* cordially with every one he meets,
and wants to know how the women is
getting along—just keep an eye on hint.
He is a fall Hedged candidate.
At this season the question which in
tercets a boy is not so much whether his
life will bo crowned with glory and hou
or as whether t is new summer's vest is
"oin" to he made out of liis father's old
o n
trousers.
Sim; Kxol'iui. —Savannah News:
What‘B the use ot a man advertising in
a newspaper when he can ornament his
store door with a sign like this to he
seen on Jefferson street ; ‘GoDy WnTliei
for Sail litre?' That‘a what we want to
know.
‘You must have lived here a long
time,' said a traveling Englishman to an
Oregon pioneer: ‘Yes, sir, I have. Do
you see that mountain 1 Well, when I
came here that mountain was a hole in
the ground.’
A Brooklyn girl having been visited
for soma months by an exceeding bash*
Ini gentleman brought on tho wished
tor climax by tho following ruse: He
made an afternoon call, nnd alter a few
minutes uniting, slro rushed into the
parlor equipped for tho street, said hasti
ly : ‘I am in a great hurry have an
engagement with a lady friend, and if i
you come for the purpose of proposing
marriage you must he quick about it. ’
Wedding early in the fall.
A story is told of a certain professor
who was very careful about ventilation.
Being put in a room at a hotel with an
other guest, he asked the latter to raise
the window at night as the air was so
close.
‘I can't raise it,’ said tbo guest, after
working at the window for a while.
‘Then knock a pane of glass out,’ said
the professor; which was doue.
After a while the professor got up and
knocked out another pane—then he was
able to sleep ; but in the morning be
discovered that they had ouly broken
iuto a book case.
Foolish SpcmHng is the father of pov
erty. Do not be ashamed to work
Work for tho best wages you can get
but work for half price rather than be
idle. Be your own master, and do not
let fashion or society swallow up yoar
individuality—hat, coat and boots.
Compel your selfish body to spare some
thing for profit* saved. Be stingy to
your necessities. See that you are proud,
and let pride be of the right kind. Be
to proud to be lssyv
‘Something Wrong.’
A man, a satchel, an umbre]h|, and a
great deal of puffing, entered ike t en
.ial deputy Wte'day and asked dthe.Sag
maw train hsd departed.
‘Just out of fi)ght , was thp reply of-an
official.
‘Didn't you know 1 was coming.in V
inquired the stranger.
‘I guess not ; didn't hear any one say
auything about it.
‘That's strange,' mused the traveler.
‘I live out hero nine miles, and yester
day I sent in word by one of (he squar
ed men in our town that I’d come in
here this morning and go out on the Sag*
in aw train. I'm here to the minute, but
where's the train I*
‘Gone as I told you before, replied the
official,
‘Something wreng here— something
wrong,’ said the man, shaking his igrtyk
‘lf your train can’t connect with a man
after lie has wa'ke'l niuo miles, it goes
to show had management; T think I’ll
see some lawyer about it Detroit Erte
Press.
It is estimated llir.lj, there are about
900 American youth, aged from twelve
to twenty years, who are engaged in the
business of ‘amatrur journalism.’^
A scientific paper says .‘keep your
mirrors away from tho suu. It said
nothing about daughters, well kuowuig
ih *1 the thing couldn't bo did.
. ymn i.VS •* ■ - ' |
‘You are the dullest hoy J ever saw 1’
crossly exclaimed a bald-headed old un
cle to his nephew.* ‘Well, uncle.’ replied
the youth,‘you can't expect me to un
derstand things as quick as you do,
because you don't have the trouble pf
getting ’em through your hair.’
You cannot convince a ibg with ,a
rttriug of fire crackers attached to his
narrativujtliat the American Republic is
t complete succcsa.
THE
)( * X
ROCKDALE It EG 18’TER,
)(
“ PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY,
BY TUB
ROfjKDALk lir.cu TER r'unumim co.
AT
CONYERS, GEORGIA.
-0-:
HATLS OK BVB&CBK Tl' X :
One Year, - •• •j*
six Months, * 1
Three Months, 50
C tubs of Fine err more , 25 per vent, less !
The Register is a latge 21 column paper.
The Rkoistf.r is the Old Reliable..
THE REGISTER
Will give you the General *nd Local News.
Democratic at all times and under
all circumstances !
~ o
The Political Campaign for 1870—the Cen
tennial year —is now opened.
SITBSCKUiK ron Till; REGISTER
And keep posted on the coming issues of the
day.
Within tho next six months, every elective
Office in tho United States, from Bailiff to
President, will be elected.
The Campaign will be “Pod Hot and still a
Heating.”
Tho most vital issues are in this Campaign.
Subscribe for The Register, tho Old Relia
ble, and keep up with the Tima!
l pU|\l 'IV We have in press anew carni
Au Jljl\ 1 O paign book by a College
Pres. Li., and. Big pay. 50 cents will secure out
fit and territy. E. B. 'Treat, Pub,, 805 Broad
way, New York. 4w
1870. 1870.
THE GREAT CENTENNIAL.
o
Frties desiring information as to be6t routes
to the Centennial, or to any Summer Re
sorts or to any other point, in the country
hsould address B. W. WRENN,
General Passenger Agent Keunesaw Route,
Atlanta. Ga.
'SQUARE GRAND
PIANOS REXAM,MI) AT WHOLESALE
PRICED.
SOOO for sli3o.
SOSO r< r $275
itfOtt for *3ol>. •
SW) for &>SO.
TIIK
mmssonv run to.
HAVE STKI'CK IIA SO I* AN l'p ICES
ONLY ONE PRICE FOU CASH AND A
LOW ONE.
NO DEVIATION
We give no discounts.
We pay no amenta commmissions, which
double the prices of all Pianos.
We look to the people, who want a firnt-cInHS
f Piano at a fair profit over cost of manu
i factoro. We appoint the. People our agents,
and give them our Pianos ass low os any
agent can buy equally good Pianoß of any
other manufacturer, giving the Pcoplo, in
a reduced price, what is usually expended
in commissiona, rent, freight, travelling
and incidental expenses.
Thu “Mendelssohn” Piano Cos. ean sell you
a 71 octavo, rosewood case Piano, (1 feet to
inches long, with front round Comers, car
ved legs, serpentine and plinth mouldings,
withall improvements, including
Fall Iron Frame,
Over Strung Bass,
Agraffe Treble, and
French Grand Action,
which only accompany tho best Pianos of
the most celebrated makers, at the very
low price of $251, $275 or S3OO, according
to style of case, or with four round cor
ners and full Agraffe for $350, and guar
antee them in every respect equal to any
Piano made on a similar, style, or no sale.
The “Mendlessohn” Piano is manufactured
from the very best materials, find by the
most skilled and finished workmen. The
manufacture is conducted by one of the
most experienced Piano manufacturer? in
the country. This is no new enterprise,
turning out a pc or and cheap Piano, made
from groen wood, and by greener mechan
ics.
Our Piano is unsurpassed by any in t' e mar
ket for ita rich and powerful toms, and its
adaptation to the human voice in sympa
thetic, mellow and singing qualities. It
speaks for itself.
We are willing t > place it beside any other
make of Piano on its merits, either in
beauty of ease, or excellence of tone, and
“at half the money” equally good instru
ment*.
“The best is the cheapest”—
When it costs the least money.
All Pianos fully warranted for five years.
Send for our Illustrated andDespriptive Cir
cular.
TIIE ‘MENDELSSOHN’ PIANO CO.,
Office of Manufactory, 50 Broodway,
2n04418m New York.
A K ACV A per day at heme. Samples worth
/II ono dollar free. TiNto; & Cos,
Vtl x iviVF Portland, Maine. t\o!3-4j
rURE TEAS—IN SEYLED PACKAGES.
Direct from China and Japan.
DELIVERED at YOU It OWN DOOR fresh from till
GARDENS of th.ir GROWTH.
Imported direct by
THE WELLS 7 EA COMPANY
201 Fulton Stacet, N, Y.
The difficulty of getting pure Teas of really
fine quality in the United States, has induced
the Wells Ten Company to ship their Teas in
sealed packages direct from the gardens in
which they are grown, and as a further guar
antee of their being delivered in their genuine
state, they entrust the sale of them only to
reliable agents—the name of the nearest agent
to you is printed at the foot of this advertise
ment—so that tho tea pass through none hut
responsible bands, and will be delivered at
your own door as fresh as when they left the
gardens of China and Japan : the price is also
printed on each package, so that no error can
oceur.
Everybody buys Tea.
Everybody wishes h> buy it at fiurf bands—
the best qualities at the lowest price*.
Everybody desires—when they find a Tea
suitable to their tastes—to bo certain of get
ting the same article always.
Yon can have all these advantages by buy
ing of
the wells tea company.
Because they import their own Teas, and sell
them at wholesale prices—without the six or
eight intermediate profits usually charged.
Because the quality is better at the price
than is sold by any other house.
Because their long experience in China and
Japan enables them to make better selections
than ordinary Dealers —and to import them to
with greater advantages.
Because they absolutely guarantee the qual
ity of all their goods—and keep them to 'one
invariable standard, so that you can always
rely on them.
Because they do business for cash only—and
therefore make no extra profit from good cus
tomers to cover losses by bad debts.
Because their agents are responsible and re
liable men—who deliver Teas precisely as re
ceived from the Company.
Beonuse having once tried these Teas, you
will not need to go elsewhere hereafter.
Wanted —A Druggist, or other first-class
merchant, in every town and city in the Uni
ted States, to whom will be given tho Sole
Agency for that locality.
Address, for terms and full particulars,
THE WEILS TEA CO,
P. O. Box 1560 Fulton Street, N. Y.
48-lm.
Men are earning If4o to $l2O per week ! selling
Our Country
ANI) ITS RESOURCES
Complete in tho thrilling history of 100 event
ful years also of the great “Exhibition," —
grand in description of our mighty resources
in agriculture, commerce, manufactures, nat
ural wonders, curiosities, etc. all rishly illus
trated. A “Century” Map and a Bird’s-Eye
View” free. Soils marvellously fast. 1,000
more agents wanted quickly for this and our
standard “Life of Livingstone,” 60,000 already
sold, also new Bible, 2,000 illust. Has no equal
For extra terniß write to Hubbard Bros., Pub.
Philadelphia, Pa.
WATVT 17 n •^B? nts f° r the best selling
if Alt L A-J U Stationery Packages in the
world. It contains 15 sheets of paptr, 15 En
velopes, golden Pen, Pen-hoider, Pencil, Pat
ent Yard Measure, and a piece of Jewelry.
Single package, with pair of elegant G M
Stone Sleeve Buttons, post paid, 25cts. 5 with
assorted jewelry for SI.OO. This package has
been examined by the publisher of the Regir
teb and found as represented -worth the mon
ey. Watches given away to all Agentf, Cir
culrrs froe. Bride <fc Cos., 769 Broadway, N. Y.
Absolute divorces obtained from
Courts of , different States for desertion,
Ac. No publicity required. No charge until
divorce granted. Address M. HOUSE,
2-45-? m Attorney, 194 Broadway, N. Y.
\ GENTS 25 elegant 9xll Chromo--', *1 ; 100.
for *3. National Chronic co., Phila, Pa. 1
iiulibnS' STATE HHMi,
A GIIEA T DIB CO 1 1 kY !
]!y tho use of which every family may give
their Linen that hrillinnf polish peculiar to fine
laundry work. Saving time and lulior in iron
ing, more than its eptire cost. Warranted-
Sold by Truygists and Grocers Every
where.
ASK FOR DOBBINS’.
DOBBINS,HBOS. & CO.
21G-3m 13 N. Fourth St., Philadelphia.
For sale by BRYANS A SPEER, Conyers, Ga
J, BEN, WILSON i ee„
A T|L ANT A , GEORGIA,
OESKRAI, DEALERS IN’
( CRAVENS”■Cotton Gi Feeder. Send for circut aks of description and pr/c s.
\J &i<£iwy 4’ Overlay represent us at Conyers, Georyia. noll-tf
The GREAT ESTAY ORGAN!
( .
jTHh. MOST EXTENSIVE ORGAN MANUFACTORY in tux WORD ■
1000 ORGANS MADE EREKY MONTH OF THE MOST ELABORATE STYLF
MI’ROVED TONE AND SUPERIOR CONSTRUCTION.
THE MOST PERFECT REED ORGAN EVER, MADE. THE FINEST ME
CHANICS and INVENTORS OF THE AGE EMPLOYED.
The only organ manufacturers who give written warrantees. Special discounts to Churcej
and Schools. Reliable Agents Wanted in G eorgia, Alabama, Florida, South Carolina ami
East Tennessee.
and for Illustrated atalogucs to G P. Guilford, Southern Agent
52 Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, I
r phe Greatest Medical Discovery
O F TIIE XIX th CENTU It Y.
lIKAJ/riT, IV.-.AVTV, AND HAPPINESS RESTORKDO MODERN WOMANHOOD !
DR. J . BRAD FIELD'S EE MALE BEGULA T 0 R
woman’s REST FRIEND.
Its operations arc quick and sure : and it never fails to cure.
Thankful for the very flattering reception tho Female Regulator has met with from ah
tions of the country, the Proprietor btgs to announce that he has largely increased his lU *
factoring facilities, and hopes that before long he will be able to place Within the reu<
every suffering woman, this, the greatest Loon of her sex.
PRICE 1 50 per Bottle.
UST'SoUI by nil Ditiggists in the United Slnle ß .“®S
T. 11. HRADFIELD, Atlanta , Georgia, Proprietor.
READ! READ!!
It is well known to doctors and ladies that woman are subject to enormous
liar to their sex,—such as suppression of the menses, whites, painful moSsjWy I? erl hflo* , |
rheumatism of the back and womb, irregular menstruation, hemorrhage os sxccssivc
prolapsus, uteri, or falling of the womb. .. ((o( /r |
Blooming in all her Pristx .e Beauty, health, strength and elasticity. Triiit doctor a) • I
Rw'rr.F.DCK, Ga., February 1-8-. (C! J
This is to certify that my wife was an invalid for six years Had disease of the rT oa : l
headache, weight in lower part of the back ; suffered from languor, qxliaustton *?r‘l
less, lose of appetite and flesh. She had become so exhausted as4 weak, her
apprehensive she would never get well. Tried doctor after doet<?r, and patent mea
and despaired of her improvement, when fortunately she commeqcad.on Dr. , l®'e„o)tli.*fß
male Regulator. She is now well; three oy four bottles cured her. Improved in '- , ,pr ■
petite and flesh; “ she is blooming in all her pristine beauty, streooth, and elastici sh* I
ward you as her savior from the dark portals of death, —ny j ffiy benefactor. iM’ I
ow never grow less, and you never become wearv in wcilsjuisg. JOH. I
*®”Fw Sole tty AY. 11. LEE and .TONE* * CARSWELL <W' ’
s k & fr h *
To Tire Working Class.—We’can furna*
yon cinyloymen* at Which you ean make xerr
Urge pw, w> vow-own locuitics, wUßaut
away from home over nbfht. Agents
In every fown and county to take pnbscritxuH
for The Centennial Record, Urn largest publi
cation iu the United Stiiter—lo pages, 64 ( f ,i.
umns; Elegantly Min strut “cy: Terms only $i
per year." The record is ddvob-d to vfhWv, r
is of interest cpiuio, ted with the Ccteaninl
yesr. The gr at Exiiß i'iou at Philadelphia is
full \ 111 nitrated in detail. Everybody want*,
it. ' The jvhole people feel hi eat interest in
their Country's Centennial Birthday, and.
want to know- all about it. An elegant natrf.
otic crayon drawing premium pietrire is pi,-,
souted free to each subseriher. It is entitled.
“In remeurbrui coof the Ouc Huruhelth Anni
versary of the Independence of the United
States' ” Size,,23 by 30 inches. Any one can
become u suecessfnl agent, for hut show the
paper and picture uml hUndreila of snbsei ileus
are easly obtained every win re. There i* no
business that will pay like this at present.
We have many agents who are makeing as
high ns S2O per day and upwards. Now is
the time; don’t delay. _ Remember it costs
lioU'.ing to give the business n trial. Send for
our circulars, terms, and sample copy of pp,, r
which are sent free to all who pdly | do it to
day. Complete outfit free to those who dr.
eidc to engage. Farmers and mechanics’ and
| there eons and daughters make the very best oj
j ageuts. , Address ly
THE CENTENNIAL RECORD .Portland Main,