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VOL. XIX.
OTR COUNTRY
thi NEWS JU3T AS W*
' X it FROM THEM FROM
p WIEI.
Will TO
OAK GP.0VE LOCALS.
Gases of measles in our
Sererai
' action- pleasam «o
There was a very
Mr. Alloa's Sat
“iStawibw ba» “Go broken west, ont
our jettlexnent.
Lung man, glad go to west." note tha« Mrs.
' Yfe are has been so
i! lud Almand who
dangerously ill is able to be out
again. the custom
Our people keep up
;f getting married occasionally.
Mr. A. 8. J. Moon, of Walton
icanty, visited his brother, Mr.
I, A. Moon last week.
There will be an entertainment
d the school house next Saturday
light. Col. Bob Irwin is expect
dtobepresent and make us a talk.
IN YOUR BLOOD.
b&e cause of that tired, languid
Mug which afflicts you at this
ison. The blood is impure and
Ls become thin and poor. That
is why you have no strength, no
appetite, cannot sleep. Purify
your blood with Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla, which will give you an
appetite, tone your stomach, and
invigorate your nerves. .
Hood's Pills are easy to take,
jasy in action and sure to effect.
!5e.
RIVERSIDE RIPPLES.
Farmers are preparing for an¬
other crop.
| Mr. J. R. O’Neal will make
Some improvements on his house,
his father-in-law, Mr. Ben j Gran
!*de, will occupy part of his house
then completed.
Mr. H. J. Maddox is building
aaice tenant house.
Mr. Joe G. Maddox has moved
to the Gilbert place and is straigh
teaing up things generally. Joe is
* hustler.
Tbii section is well blessed in
the way of schools. Prof. Mor¬
ris baa a fine school at Riverside
*od at Tucker’s Mill Prof. Camp
has one. Miss Ida Peek has
aa ei cellent school at Smyrna.
Joe W. Maddox and J. J. Farm
f houses. are all smiles—a girl at both
W. Swann and Miss Nannie
pere visiting relatives at the
^ob Sunday.
UNION locals.
p ——
e Y ‘ J* r Datillo preached at
p *
•
“•^tue second Sabbath to a
Up® RON ne latest n?ty Cure on Earth for Pain. Cures
Snrs>s« nS Cuts Rheumatism, Bruises, Neuralgia, .Sciatica,
Barb » u he » Scalds, Burns, Swellings,
or any other pain. SALVATION OIL
^ 35 c * s * ^ e ^ use substitutes.
6 «*» Tobacco fcitMoto,iec. Dealer* or wall AC,Hew ft Ce„ 8«tto.,»*4.
CONYERS, GA., THURSDAY, JAN. 23, 1896.
large house. He is an able di¬
vine.
Misses Lufcichia and Minnie
Stanley, of Atlanta, visited rela¬
tives and friends in this and Hen¬
ry county lost week.
Mr. Jas. Bailey has moved to
the Simmons place.
Miss Belle Clayton, of Elleu
wood, is teaching school at Mid¬
way.
Mr. W. B. {Hanley and family
have moved back to Alabama.
Mr. Jas. Toney was married to
Miss Genie Martin the second
Sunday. May joy be their lot.
Mr. J. F- Rowan and son, J. A.
Rowan, have moved back to their
old home place.
Guess what girl told her best
folio v they must marry or he must
quit going? A -
(We guess you was the fellow,
cousin Charlie, but you shouldn’t
think strange of your girl—it’s
leap year, you know.—Ed.)
Miss Annie Albert, of Atlanta,
recently visited her grand mpther,
Mrs. Emiline Albert.
Mrs. Sarah McKee has gone to
Alabama to see her sick daughter,
Miss Maggie.
Mr. Mack Mitchell gave a nice
pound party Tuesday night.
TEN DOLLARS FOR A NAME.
The Georgia Southern & Flor¬
ida Ry., in addition to their fa¬
mous Pullman Buffet trains,
“Quick Step“ and “Dixie Flyer,“
have inaugurated the fastest Pull¬
man line in the South between
Macon and Tampa, the route be¬
ing Georgia Southern & Florida
to Jasper and Plant system to
fampa, leaving Macon daily at
11:28 p. m., arriving in Tampa
2:30 p. m. next afternoon; return¬
ing, leave Tampa 10:15 a. m., ar¬
riving in Macon at 4 a. m. As
the names of its two Jacksonville
Pullman trains have become
household words, it desires to
christen it3 new route with a
name that will be as appropriate
and popular as its two sisters.
Mr, G. A. Macdonald, General
Passenger Agent, Macon, has
therefore offered a prize of ten
dollars in gold for the most ap¬
propriate name, bearing in mind
that the train passes the famous
Suwanee River by daylight. All
that is necessary is to send in
this clipping, giving name of pa¬
per and date, together with the
name and address of one or more
persons who expect to visit Flor¬
ida this season, to
G. A MCDONALD,
G. P. A., G. S. & F. Ry
Macon, Ga.
J. P. Dove, of Jonesbor®, Tenn.,
was granted a diyorce from his
wife on th® 15th inst., but the
court ordered that his property be
divided between his family. The
couple had lived together peacea-
Tired Women
Find in the blood purifying, building-up
qualities of Hood’s Sarsaparilla just what
they need. Mrs.
Iga Griggs of En¬
nis, Texas, gives
m her experience be¬
f S9 m low: “I suffered
m m .%Sri almost death with
local troubles,
which developed
into a very serious
affection and made
to a surgical opera¬
tion necessary. I
'OWE was completely
broken down, had numerous boils, and
when I commenced taking Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla I weighed only 112 pounds. Now
I weigh over 126 pounds and am in better
health than for the past fifteen years.
Formerly I was covered with eruptions;
now my akin is clear. I can truly say
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
has no equal for poor run-down women.
Every ono remarks about how well I am
looking.” Mbs. Iba Gbiggs.
Hood’s Pills BL&SESSSL with
ttc.
bly for over 35 years and had a
family of eight children. While
the commissioners were at work
dividing the property, consisting
of 300 acres of land and other real
estate, the sons (some sided with
the father and some with the
mother.) fell out and fought with
pistols. A «ou father and daughter thought were
killed and the was
to be dying, and another sou was
seriously wounded These Doves
it seems, were not well mated.
a—rm iti n-------- t — 1 »r» * wwk«i*w»tw
Wfcf Hit ill psr
own iiiiift-issal
Pay but; one pro: t; hr n matei and
user and that asm. • .i ono. and
Our Big 700 Page Catalogue Buyers
Cuide proves that it's possible. Weighs
Sy 2 pounds, 13,000illustrations, describes
and tells the one-profit price of over 40,000
articles, everything you use. We send it
-/or 15cents; that’s not for the book, but
to pay part of the postage or expressage,
and keep off idlers. You can’t get it too
quick.
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.,
The Store of AH the People Chicago.
Michigan Ave. f
IT LEADS THEM ALL.
The time-honored Southern
Cultivator and Dixie Farmer gets
brighter and better as the years
roll by. The January numbers,
which begins the fifty-fourth
year of its usefulness, is on our
table, with its columns replete
with instructive and entertaining
matter. The table of contents
contains an interesting variety
that cannot fail to benefit its
readers. The front cover page
contains and illustration of a typ
ical Southern scene picking cot¬
ton in the field, a familiar one to
Southern people. We are spec
allv pleased with the number of
the departments in The Culti¬
vator, all filled with choice, prac¬
tical suggestions. From com¬
posting manure to keeping one
hundred hens on an acre, and
from managing the brood sow to
the culture of the soil, its readers
will find its pages profitable.
The editorial pagesteem with live
and progressive thoughts main¬
taining its pre-eminence as an ag
ricultural journal of the first rank,
Every one interested in farming
should take it. The snbsciption
1 s very low
for so valuable a publication.
Send $1 to The Cultivator Pub¬
lishing Company, Atlanta, Ga;
and get the paper.
We will send The Cultivator
and Dixie Farmer and the Ban
ner one year for $l‘-25,
Send in your subscription to this
office*
A SHAME.
A Milton county farmer went to
Atlanta last week to carry some
produce. He stopped at a
wagon yard. He broke out with
measles and nobody could be
found to give shelter. The Grady
hospital refused him admission
because he had a contagious dis¬
ease. The poor man, suffering
with a high fever, could not find
a place to be cared for, and his
friends had to haul back, sick as
he was, to his country home.
If the man had been stricken with
leprosy he could not have met
with more inhuman treatment—
Ex.
DEAFNESS CANNOT BE
Cured by local applications, as
they cannot reach the diseased
portion of th® ear. There is only
one way to cure Deafness, and
that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an iaflamod
condition of the mucous lining of
the Eustachian Tube. When this
tube gets inflamed you have a
rumbling sound or imperfect hear
ing, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness is the result and unless
the inflammation can be taken out
and this tube restored to its nor¬
mal condition, hearing will be de¬
stroyed forever, nine cases out of
ten are caused by catarrh, which
is nothing but an inflamed condi¬
tion of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred
Dollars for any case of Deafness
caused by catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo,O
gar^Sold by Druggist 75c.
There was a good deal of war
talk in Atlanta Tuesday in con
sequence of the press dispatches
printed here this morning that the
governor of Florida, as well as the
governors of other Southern states
had received orders from the war
department at Washington tohave
the militia of their respective
states ready to respond to a call
for d«ty, at any moment. This
action of the war department was
reported to have beea taken in
consequence of the movement of
the English flying spaudron in
the directon of the West Indies
for the purpose of backing up
Lord Salisbury’s defiance of the
monroe doctrine.
YOUR BOX WONT LIVE A
MONTH.
So Mr. Gilman Brown, ot 34
Mill St., South Gardner, Mass.,
was told by the doctors. Hi» son
had Lung trouble, following Ty
phoid Malaria, and he spent three
hundred and seventy-fiv® dollars
with doctois, who finally gaye up,
saying; “ Tour boy wont live a
month.” He tried Dr. King’s New
Discovery and a few bottles re¬
stored him to health and enable
him to go to work a perfectly well
man . He says he owes hi* present
good health to Dr. King’s New
Discovery, and know* it to be
the best in the world lor Lung
troubles. Trial Bottle Free at Dr.
W. H. Lees Drug Store.
Many Persons household
Arc broken down from overwork or
cares Brown’s Iron Bitters
assess smsss&sss
NUMBER 49.
FARM LOANS.
For Farm Loans in Rockdale
and adjoining counties, call on or
write to the Georgia Farm Loan
Co., room 613, Temple Court, At¬
lanta, Ga.
tf W. P. Davis, Afcty.
VT/'ANTEI):—Several YV trustworthy gentlemen
or ladies to travel in Georgia for estab¬
lished, reliable house. Salary $780 and ex¬
penses. Steady position. Enclose reference
and self-addressed, stamped envelope. Tito
Dominion Company, Third Floor, Omab*
»ldg., Chicago, Ill.
INSURE YOUR
property with
LEE & GAILEY.
The Banner and Atlanta Jour
nil one year, $1.00.
WE HAVE NO AOENTS
but ship from our factory at
wholesale priced. Ship any¬
where for examination: pny
freight both ways If not satis- of
rp>. A/'X factory. J00 styles of
Carriages. 1)0 styles
HiU’iieo*. Send 4ct».
l' Ay for 112 page catalogue.
KLKHART CARRIAGE AJi»
MAR,NESS MHJ. CO.,
XO.HSM *35. W. B. Pratt, Sm'j, RlUbari. Ind.
,
We
Employ
Young
.Men,
-na-msr-— to distribute
....................... our advertise¬
ments in part payment lor a high approval. grade Acme No
bleyele, which wo send them arrives on
worts done until the bicycle and proves
satisfactory. employed
Young Ladies on the
same terms.
If boys or girls apply they must bo well recom¬
mended. Write for particulars.
ACME CYCLE COHPANY,
ELKHART, IND.
DELIA GU i i UN CU. ’
MEMPHIS TENN., OCT. 8, 1895.
Acme Cvcle Co., Eikhai’t. I»d.
Dear Sirs:-—Y oms of the 1*4
inst. to 1)ami; also tlio Acme Bell
for my daughter, and to say lhal;
she is delighted with it would be
putting it too mi d. I had the
whf '1 sent out to-----Seminary,
ami at the close of school, it crea¬
ted more excitement among the
girls, than theproverbial “Mary’s
LittJe Lamb.” Again thanking
you for the nice whoe * I am,
Yogis truly,
R. YV. HARRIS,
Viee-Pres. and Uen. Mgr.
OHIO ASSOCIATION UNION
EX-PRISONERS OF
THE WAR.
Columbus, Orio, Sept. 12, 1895.
Acme Cycle Co., Elkhart, Ind.
Dear Sihs:—T he Acute Road¬
ster came to hand O. K. on the
10th inst., and I must frankly say
it meets my fullest expectations,
and I am very much pleased with
it. I consider it a strictly high
grade up-to-date wheel in every
detail of design, material, con¬
struction and finish, and is fully
equal, if not superior to many of
the best $100.00 wheels sold on
the market hero. I believe the
Acme frame is the strongest and
most rigid and the most graceful
and lightest frame built. It is a
beauty among beauties, and can¬
not fail to satisfy.
Yours truly,
Chas. T Keetcii, Rec. Sect.
• * female r
LAS RANGE, GA. COLLEGE
Opens Sept. 18 1895 Brick buildings, electnr
, .
r^:SSf: B„ 1 .H aSS*S»ifr
roundings. »
BufM w.smith.
eeSSSSSEB* Indigestion, frtm and dyspepsia,_ Stomach (ttsorders, taffa