Newspaper Page Text
ROCKDALE BANNER.
TERMS :
year in advance...-fl. 00.
SuM^f ti0 ■ „ " one 50
ixn30nt hs “ .... cts
25 “
•• three
legal a dvertising medium of
tfoehlale county.
VoL 12.
Speak Kindly
A poor bov went to fi house,
, . |f the mistress would please
f v s orae matches.
irry, who lived and there, to hear happen- what
f ] to see the boy, said,
e had said. Harry simply
“Go turned with
The poor boy away
matches, looking very down
ins
,
C< after, Harry thought he
Soou ‘ °jj t’ with his
jfkg 0 } ia ve a run
lioep, so he went and fetched it,
, t j remembered that he had
U ien have
, | s | s s tick. He must a
(1 stick for a good hoop. He
g o° ask his for
would g° and papa
gome money to buy one.
He found Ids father vary busy
V jj e made his request,
M bis father did not answer him.
U asked again, when
p fly be
18 . * said, “Go away.”
“oor Harry now remembered
t just the answer he liad
that it was ‘
, ^ p 0{)r p oy -with the
jnate.ies, aj^ct an felt how much bet
been to have
teritvoim
eU hoop-stick,
e s t'll 1 wanted a
andtiottr, "r , , be would go to the
xrowB e ose fl to break
> A f
f ur a
St ilflti long in finding
1 j:mtoo f trvin 0- to break it he
r 0 stron. for him.
Uriel * ? o was st ;, l trying, some
one , behind him, and said,
«T tl u! A I can break it,” He
f eiz • c nf flic bouo-handbrokA ° • -
Harrv was surprised to find it
Mddtfeji'him , , i and before lie
for his kindness
' ,f' y '
. . .
more *■“3 Ms 11 b ro^h* r0 ° answer , “Go
away,”tothe poor , boy, and , he .
and his father had a talk over the
^ and fatLer T
ncy een cuong ar 11 b- t
speak kindly for the future.
Let us all learn the same lesson,
If we do not want to buv of the
,o r people . ’ueetw.th, . i let . us v .
we
2 y
tarts, au.l we should not add to
torso,rows by harsh words.
nittle Jnend.
Old people suffer much from
disorders of the urinary organs,
and are always gratified at the
wonderful effects of Hr. J. H.
“iwatn xvi Primus Tn done, eitv of Bn
br wcounty, ouut v was m the the city Sat Sat
wdav with a broad-wau»e smile
and a busy air Ho drowned into
14* fe'aml Advertiser sanctum
’Oft twe hltt staik# of flotton six inch
es in He^savs^tlmt
ready > developed i eloped. He says that
.
three hundred acres ofthrs
stand, and that the squares
^ Hi? M e two weeks ear
£.«*»> ^•Frimus is a hustler, ™
1. af e ® y°« ^ constipated, with
*«A Pf Dr Kidney J dl HMcL^snt^Live?
Pillets They are
vents t# yiaf. fe sudwill cure you.
a '
-.
is , Sandersville bottling works
*%piug large quant itie8 of
^oltl 4 Owen like enterprises
he equally m#
to the revenue of the tqwn
^44 in her prosperity.
i '
Grw aliflM
fniekiw refif throat and iupgtt
M T •- eyed by Hr. J. H.
.*■ a m 11 Tw m M T iue Luns Balm.
Clevekn-i ^.^4 .
«fa, nc -® , ^nibinatipix already
^MtbcDenwcaticnpwiheen pro
und vice m-esident
honaU- -rf Oen 8 - Bairn “4imer - !§ i u t)je i«qt}t
5S*? q f mnqis-a
Ot wyifig in
-jy ill m bs.-_- ■V'Y'
.- Zi
m 31
i '
■ vSL D 11 k : i u m m* An- cm to. ml).
CONYERS, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, MAY 14, 1889.
Bad Luck.
M bat some people call bad luck
is frequently nothing- but the nat
ura ^ resu ^ of their shiftlessness or
bad management. With a little
energy and system in the conduct
of their affairs the misfortunes at
to bad luck would not
tend them. Here is a case in
point:
I nr always an forever bavin
bad luck! whined a listless-look
ing man to a friend to whom he
had come for help. “Only yister
day my lioss fell into an old
on the place and broke its neck.”
'‘Why didn't you keep the well
covered?”
“How should I know the fool
critter would go tumblin’into it?’
asked the man in a tone of
“The well had been uncovered for
a year, an’ nothin’ ever fell in be
fore. Then iuy granary leaked
the other night during that big
storm, and there’s all my wheat
ruined.”
“ Well, why didn’t you have the
roof fixed before?”
“’Cause it never leaked before,
and I didn’t know that it was go
ing to leak then. And here that
very night one of my best cows
stayed off, and I done as I’ll see
her ag’in.”
“Was your pasture fence in
g-ppe] order?”
“Yes, all but Off e little place that
I callated on fixin‘ the nest day.
The fence had been bad there for
ft month, and the cows never got
bpjfWp ” lie said, in weak de
fence of h|s WslewWW. “And
then “the’worst you know,” h° continued,
of nil trea tbot my bnfn
burned down last week."
T heard vou set fire to the
liay y by dropping the ashes from
“■ 3, ■ -l -.blip smokin" in
. U - *
.
tli .
lotht irJZ eAvayofit-t Zhl mt
T dead
t^rs smoked ne“er in barns for twenty
veais, an W I 1 ne, ei set set fire mo to one
before, an’ it’s nothing bqt my
v»a<lluck that made me set fire to
ji s t
seems to fuller n.a ayound all the
time." So it goes, says up
change.
=
- . i
trcSSesf'neuvalgic J. ‘ H. pains McLean iff' thp
head take Hr. s
Little Liver afffl Kitney 1 diets.
25 cents a vial,
TM1-.
port upon the state or locality of-
1 ** i mctucemMfS . »l!
faring the beat
tiro contemplated emigration
their race from North
Now, hero is a most exeellei
cfcanee for the Republican lovers
01110^0 - 14 sincerity tiG in
to nbow then s n enty^ a J prac
w “ y ^
'
ducement. , ( t u e , w ffl offur to these
y-tisficdnegrocstoscttleamong
&<*H.
evenT^thelno^ If your kidneys 1 are wactiv^ society!
cheerful
and melancholy on the j oldest oc
casions. Hr. J- H Mc-.de.ins
Teftf^d >ou‘ ^^Sicn Halstead's : l'ie
to withdraw Mr.
nomination that lie wanted it con
' legi^at^P
The Massachu etts
is about to'deal with a “barrel
bill” A barrel-bill is either in
ft «
anti-prqliibitiqn» we forge u 1C i
; ’ --=
-
^LCKLEN Tttvto b AaMo mvTf'l SALVE.
Tim Best Balve in the world Bali
OiBs Bruises Bores; TdcerA ^
Ghaijped HaipL, feibHonu., Ghilhlain^i onjs.
and aR Bkpi Iv^lpf' qqd posi- re
fe^Jr i?2Sr^t<Sd or no pay give
to
lnn|T re
Price
Faithful In Death.
A French merchant was riding *
home on horseback one day. He
had a large bag of gold with him,
which he tied to the saddle in front
of him, and was accompanied by
a faithful dog. He alighted from
the horse and sat down under a
shady tree, taking the bag of gold
and laying it down by Ids side.
On mounting his horse again lie
forgot to take his bag of gold
with him. The dog saw the mis
his master had made and tried
to take the bag to him; but it was
too heavy for him to drag along.
Then he ran after his master, and
tried by barking to remind him of
his mistake. But the merchant
did not understand what the
dog meant. Then the dog went
front of his master, and kept
jumping up before the horse and
barking loudly. The merchant
called to him .to he quiet, and
stop that jumping.
But the dog wouldn’t stop,
Then his master was alarmed. He
began to think the dog went on
barking and jumping with increas
ed violence, the merchant was
sure he was right. He said to
himself: “He may bite me or some
one else. The only safe thing is
to kill him.”
Then he took a pistol from his
pocket, and pointing it to the dog,
fired at him.
The poor dog fell weltering in
his blood, ami as his master, un
able to bear the sight, put spurs
to his horse and went on. “I am
very unfortmmte,” be»i.lto him
self. “J would rather have lost
my bag Tfcw'le of f«Jt then wy (Mod
for
but it was not tfiev#,
In a moment he saw what it all
meant.
The-dog had seen that he had
left hm bag of money bphigd
and was trying the best he could
to get liim to go back for it when
he shot him! How sorry J he felt!
Then he turned Ins . horse and
rode back tq iqs p’app Vvhm'p llP
hull left his money.
On reaching the spot he found
^ »Su belide M
had lain down his
llmn „ v t o nrotectit. Thisbrouoht !
^ in|q slip m^PUau^ 9m
He kneeled down by his dog,!
p e fl e j bim and spoke kindly
j .• rp ] o ,1,-wr Inokotl hivingly
of
dbg “ carried home mid buried
\ "j *' A "u
j B j,ls • safden, and nvov it. 8»*‘ with
lia d^ atone slab set up
these words eugraved on it:
“In Memory of a Faithful Hog.
__
iiM tmperjeet n^uee dl{*o»tw*u"tfld 5 disordered asstm- condi
SfJ lho systmn which grow Dr.
arc confirmed by Strengthening neglect, j
J. H. McLeans
(•-«.,.
Semitone B ? to the slonmch.'
§L00 pe r bottle.
Richmond county is to get into
mass meetiag and ask the state
j eff j s j a ^ nrft f, 0
sdumi registration allowing law, to modify
the law the payment
solicitor's insolvent costs, and the
re p e .j G f t b e law making
pf ^i^' the cite coprt ex and”revenues, qtficio com
011 er of roads
^
‘iLYIilVV taPPANG,"
ays one of the beat houaowives
x New England, \\ e ice t ic
necessity lirefv of taking blodd, a goqcj pjeu»
fn I’ tbe 'Sarsaparilla ana
‘Hnluf's W i," cV'free*'from"
keeps the j;o V
. “• ViAes
•
seh KU re I could never do all
* t for this
my worK n i no
splendid medicine.
1 used to be.
Moving to Town.
From nearly every part of the
country the repoit comes that the
farmers are moving to town.
In Georgia there is a steady
growth of the towns at the expense
of the rural districts. The same
is tine of other southern states,
and especially of the black belt.
In New England tho farmers are
drifting to the towns and renting
out their farms, or going west.
But out west it is no better. Ac
cording to tho Chicago Herald,
over three huhdred prosperous
farmers in Sangamon county have
rented out their farms and moved
to Springfield. About as many
farmers in Rock county, Wiscon
sin, have moved to Janesville,
In nearly every county in the old
western states the large fanners
have cut up their farms and leased
them to tenants. It is believed
that the coming census will show
an increase of fifty per cent in the
number of tenant farmers in the
west,
A correspondent of the Country
Gentleman says that twice before
in the history of the world there
was a similar desertion of the eoun
try for the towns. Just before
the decliife of the Roman empire
the wealthy farmers flocked to the
cities. Before the French revo
lution the land owners deserted
their estates and moved to Paris.
The removal of the owners of the
sail from the country districts pro
duced a bad effect. Agriculture
ceased to advance, crops fell oft,
and commerce doelincd. Town
and country people were divided
intu t>™distinct olasses, dilbrinK
H> wealth, culture, dress and up
pearance. The country wasaban
cloned to a class of tenants who
oared nothing about progress and
civilization. After a while dashing
Ob Gvll strife
and a new order of things.
It is not an encouraging sign to
see in this generation ° a repetition
of a chapter . of . the . u . s
Uistfff¥ lmud/o.! bf tUfi (Md WWidt bine
years ago our loadiug
men, our men of wealth and eul
the ? overi,in S cb^Uv«iu foWUS
and cities, except ill tim s.-.uth,
wlduh «tlli continues to send far
mers to the legislature ami to con
But for the south tae
GHflffl'H Of til'd PfittfiB'.V would bo
-si rhnnge tho drift of
things if we would see o«y people
, sn,oy m : m the me Juutst fullest measure mensuie of i pros
per, ty and happiness. Tim use
°t °\ a j ’ ; ■? ” me"X
■
l OT 3 ih ^
m professions ami in dry
goods stores would put their brains
”nd jyJ* energy intofarmingonr conn
try wonU Siam \ mm »
, 4t i with well till
tages and good roads, life outside
of the towns would be in every
way superior to the
tenog the ualls of
»r-owded cities. I lie towns v o
not need an influx of population
from the country, but the (-WPI
try needs ft qftheJarmuamGiiodve-e Ihtef H'W
take hold
something. Me CPU gfit dry
lUiffv Uwycrs and
clerks, but we need more
farmers—we need their producte,
their healthy inHueuco, Miff thW
au ppjn.ng ,qe ^pv.cinmo
Gon$tltutmn.
1- __ J 1
-
It» ***** of Fever and Ague tho
blood is as effectually, though
cUngoroualv poiaoncl stupe*}A
the effluvium of the deadliest ch
aa it C-gglfLV» by Bie
..oisou Stand lb - J. H. McLean s
WSa.Ih. FeverCuiw will eradi
a the
- en 0 cento a botUe.
There is considerable kicking
j in Milledgevillo among the citi
zens and farmers against the ac
! tion of the cotton oil trust, who
j have H«li declared oil mill that there they if will the estab- local
j an does, ami will not build
company
if the local company does not.
local company have common
e*e<I work, and will build now re
gardless of the action of the trust
people, who have also begun work,
Speaking of the matter yesterday,
prominent farmer said: “Hedo
11 °t care if they erect a mill here,
hut the pernicious motive that
inspires them to boldly declare
that they are here to cripple our
concern is an outrage, and an in
diguatiou meeting of the citizens
should be called. n As the local
null is largely owned by farmers
of the different alliances over the
country, it will be protected by
the farmers so far as seed is cov
cerned, and are therefore ready
for a fight with the trust if forced
upon them.
Rheumatism is caused by an
acid in the booil; therefore, exter¬
nal treatment affords no perma¬
nent relief. To eliminate the poi¬
son and make a thorough cure of
the disease, nothing else is so ef¬
ficient as Ayer's Sarsaparilla.
Give it a trial. Price $1. Worth
$5 a bottle.
The following conversation took
place in an office: “Hid you ever
realize anything in the lotteries?”
“Yes, sir. I tried five times and
realized that 1 was an idiot!”
Larry Gantt, after several
mimtlto ef jonimdietio experience
m Llbertou, has letmned to
| Athens, bought l«ek the lisnnw
WsWnnnn wlueh he sold a few
months ago and will once more
take his stand on his old stumping
ground. Mr, (mutt enjoys tho rep
utation of being at once one of
the handsomest and one of the
best of Georgia editors,
Mamma (to her little boy).
“Now, Bennie, if you W good
and go to sleep, mama 11 give you
one Cathartic of 3>r. Ayer’s Pills, nice sugar-coat- time
e fl lienuie, next sudfiug you
ueed medieiue."
sweetly, dropped off to sleep at
Spalding A^t uud has fertile been selected spot in
couuty
by the commissioners as the place
^ site chosen two ox ^ thiee nules Ji*h
out fioiu Griffin and is said to >o
admirably adapted to the uses
is vnluod rt kfn.000 i,! tho bid of
Griffin. The city proposes to give
$4,000 ’ m cash besides tins farm,
Yonwillhaveuciwfurspec- . ,
Se Sigtidng Eyt «»lvea e- it
removes the film and scum vvhicli
accumulates on the eye balls, sub
due8 inflammation, cools and
soothes the J'^vcs,
strength);- weak and failing sign,
ifle, a buttle.
The twenty-first annual convea
tion of the Georgia
ation meets ip, Mae on on May
-
The course of Secretary Blaine
has been so quiet and conserve
tive that his friends say lie is no
fotigov audatious, aud attribute
die change to a “decline in his
mental and physical vigor.”
his friends do Mr. Blaine
in justice. He is showing inure
good sense and patriotism than
1 1C ever dpi & M* Ute, merely
lotting Utittgn alone.
IT 18 A CURIOUS FACT
That the body is now more
... , to , benefit , cu. t from medicine ,
than at any othejf *»eason. Hence
the gawuwttl* importa** of when taking it will do
*»ow, j«rf. It * ^rc^y
the njont
woudeiful fox ] i if> ^ *
eunelnng the blood, creating an
appetite, and giving a healthy
tone to the whole system. Be sure
get H«mIV SarHaparilla, which
«»
WORDS TO FRIENDS:
Job work solicited and satisfac¬
tion yvaranteed.
Reliable attention given advertis
.
'"</■
Th'RMS REASONABLE.
No. 12.
The people who live to he over
one hundred years old all resem¬
ble each other in one thing—they
have good tempers. They differ
in tastes and habits, and some of
j them violate the ordinary health
rules, but they are all culm and
even-tempered,
We have often heard about the
uncertainty of the law, and have
read some tilings in regard to the
uncertainty of theology, but it
H oems that there is quite ns much
uncertainty in medicine. A re
porter of the Boston Globe tells
us in that paper, that recently he
called upon ten regular physicians
on the same day, and described
bis symptoms in exactly the same
language to each. The pbysi
eians gave him ten different pre¬
scriptions, many of them utterly
inconsistent with each oiher.
If you spit up phlegm, aud are
troubled with a hacking cough,
use Hr. J. H. McLean’s Tar Wine
Lung Balm.
Fish Commissoner Cary finds
the progress in fish culture in
Georgia during the past twelve
months to have been satisfactory.
He 1ms just returned from a tour
of inspection.
the Frequently household accidents which occur burns, in
cause
cuts, in sprains and bruises; for use
such cases l)r. J. H. McLean’s
Volcanic Oil Liniment has for
many years been the constant fa¬
vorite family remedy.
BONE SCRATCHING.
Herbert Speny, Tremont,- Ill.,
had Erysipelas in both legs. Con¬
fined to the house six weeks. He
says: “When 1 was aide to get on
tion my legs, that I had nearly an itching sensa¬
run me crazy.
I.scratched them raw to the bones.
Tried everything without relief.
1 was tormented in this way for
two years. 1, then found Clarke’s
Extract of Flax (Papillou) Skin
Cure at the Drug Store, used it,
and it has cured me souud and
well.”
Clarke’s Flax Soup has no equal
for Bath and Toilet. Skin Cure
$1.00. all Drug Soap Stores. 25 cents. For sale ut
To use the language of a Wash¬
ington correspondent, wlmt is cal¬
led the Southern Situation per¬
plexes President Harrison more
than anything else. The Presi¬
dent finds the Republican party
in the South to be disorganized,
and divided into factious, each
faction clamorous for recognition
iu the shape of spoils. The num¬
ber of offices is not large enough
to go around, hence the President’s
embarrassment.
DON’T FAIL
To si:e
T. J. KING'S
Full line of Homo-uimlo Harness and Shoes
of tho host quality kept always on hand
W ill sv U for cash. «
”W^Cllder fOV Nea.tH8SS !
Kino Hoots and Shoes made to order and flt
*u.r«„u*d. AU W B d .o f rep»irin Jf dane D e-t
Never iy ami ,.ro«u^ Ripping ^ .
Keinoniberthat wo use tho celebrated Brass
Screws; will not rip—will not rust out your
shoos.
QOME TO SEE US AND BUY
0 C It GOODS OR LEAVE YOUR
0KWfi|is .
T. J. Kino.
Scott building. 1 door below. Dr.
IjCC » 8 fl rug store.
Conyers, Ga., Oct. 18th 18 8.
FOH LETTERS ADMINISTRATION'.
gbokgia. uockdaiccounty—
To*ll wfcom It may wooer*: Whereas O. V
EltloUbavinK lnpi . op et form applied to me
for |Wrnittncil t letter* ot admiuistratioa en
theMt «te of John Morgan, uteot mm ««»
t> docoa^i. tin«• « to cite «ii and •(>*ru 1 «r.
“T
ed oy i»w and rbow «a«»e if any they «n
wb> ietw.» of administration
not »* ttnmtwi to o. p. Elliott on John
Mo^ns estate. o.
April 30, li«0.