The Conyers weekly. (Conyers, Ga.) 18??-1888, June 08, 1887, Image 1
HE CONYERS ♦ WEEKLY VOLUME X. //\ Vi V. §§ //\\ I THE “AGME.” \ \ i“—HA?‘W;7H ' 1:97 . “ ' .~»»........, m_— / / / ,1 \u / > :3 ,9“ \‘ \ r /W\ J' [A \ wangw» PA 7’0. FEB. 2. I886. ‘ \ \1 \ A:\\ ‘fisfk: 7 /’ ) l! 4/ g 333 Bmkmg I 36 yaadmg I m \" ‘ 17 / \ \\ z" 5 I / \“ The Favorite ~ /. x' ,‘ \ ‘ ‘ \ \ 3.31m: ‘ / , 1/ \\ ,/ . , unsurpassed use. A perfectly byuny of Farmers, cart, ruler, on Trainers 11:0 lnxlx.l{o£ and for Hoi‘semen. universal; I x easy and :10 haxnnced tixut u" ' ' " ' “°““"°°"‘° “M"2"“:mitzzz.°:;:::.:m:;:::=:;::r; IB. J. J. SEAMANS. DENTIST. TICE 3 WHITEHEAD HOUSE Conyers, Ga., RUG STORE. DR, M. R. STEWART, 'OMMERCE STREET, CONYERS, GA. fresh Line of Drugs and Fancy Goods just received, and will from his date be kept constantly on hand. All kinds of DRUGS, MRDI UNES, PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES- TOBAC¬ CO, CIGARS, STATIONERY, FANCY TOILET SOAPs, ind in fact every thing to be found in a ?irst Class DRUG STORE. My terms are STRICTLY CASH! And on this account I can offord to sell my goods low, in fact CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST MY PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT IS COMPLETE! All all prescriptions sent to me will be promptly and carefully Compounded. I Sell The Famous A. Q. C. Conceeded to be the best blood purifier known to the science j ^ l n you want any thing in my line call on\ - we. VERY TRULY ) DR M. R STEWART ) T3 ONYers r I GEORGIA,! I CONYERS. GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1887. HE AMERIC AN MAGAZINE. BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED. This Magazine portrays Ameri. can thought and life from ocean to ocean, is filled with pure high-class literature, and can be safely wel¬ comed in any family circle. PRICE 25c. OR $3 A YEAR BY MAIL. 8am pie Copy of current number mailed upon re¬ ceipt of 25 cts.; back numbers, 15 cts. Premium List with either. Address: a. T. BUSH St SON, Publishers, 130 & 132 Pearl St., N. Y. CET UP CLUBS. THOS E BROADNAX. 13 AGAIN AT HIS LIVERY STABLES, And desires us to say to the public that he is prepared to fur¬ nish the BEST TURNOUTS at the LOWEST PRICES Ever offered in Conyers. NEW BUGGJF, FANC Y HORSS Horses Boarded Cheap. He keeps on hand a large lot of Columbus Buggies. And STOCK which he sells or trades, just to suit the purchaser. Call and see me at my old stand. T. E. Broadnax, Conyers, Ga t PRINTING OF EVEBI DESCRIPTION AT THE OFFICE OF THIS PAPES BEET pj A N^O, O R G A N C Srrrt v Owners and Operators of the Who sell the entire products Of their immense factory direct to the public From them jon c^n purchase upon liberal toe THE BEST ORGANS MANUFACTURED. WARRANTED FOR SIX YEARS. Catalogue and full particulars free. Write us before purchasing. Address, iner tioning name of this paper, S3 I AN O ORGAN G ■ ..... OtS-vgV:. ENGINES REPAIRED. If you have an Engine that needs repairing, do not delay, for “A stitch in time saves nine.” but have it fixed up before you need it. We have SKILLED MACHINISTS and guarantee all work. We also ’.eepafull supply of Engine and BOILER FIXTURES. We are prepared to do all kinds of Engine work in the best of style and at prices as low or lower than Atlanta. Send your work at once. H, D. Terell & Co, Conyers, Gr <ji J GRENADES. Tvs Sizes—tints and Quarts. * Over Sixty Millions Sold. * FKIOE3. w Quarts. Pints, - Per Doz., $10.00. “ “ 15.00. • “STAR” % m Tubular Fire Extinguisher. Glass lute, 19x21 ia. Holds 1 quart, the 53P""In BEST this device we combine 1 QUALITIES o£ our famous Grenades with the NEW feature of having 1 an ar- m tide ling. for use that It in is can designed Passenger be used by especially Coaches Sprink¬ Iffei % in ana ornamentation. Dwellings. It It is is elegant andreliable. No cheap^. ion possible. rust; no corros¬ Plain, Ornamt’d, $12.00 per doz. 0 I5.QO per doz. m T Tho “Star” I EXTINGUISHER Bt $ Twill (HoldsSgallons,and force a stream j ★ [through hose feet 6 feet of ^ 45 with our pump, which is the best ever made. Needs no attention until used. Will not freeze, explode or get out of order. No rust or corros ion. Can be used by anyone. ___ $80.00 Price, Each. “ STAR ” CHEMICAL. Just what is needed in every village, lumber yard, Fully warehouse, equip¬ \\\ etc. ped with Hose, Bar, Ax, Crow Lantern, etc. It is cheap, and re¬ nt liable. Wt. 450 lbs. PRICE. $200.00EACli. Four years of practical use have demonstrated these to he the only reliable and thoroughly effi¬ cient Hand Fire appliances in made- We use fully. the same chemical liquid all, and guarantee Liberal discounts to agents. Send for circulars and testimonials. TheHARDEN HAND GRENADE CO. 51 & 53 Dearborn St., Chicago, III. THE EXCELSIOR ■ I A I COTTON W M l , FEEDERS AND COBDENOS [Gnarantced to be Equal to the Be*t. Pick* the Seed Clean, Gin» Fast and Make* jl Fine Staple* The Circular Roll Box is Patented, and no other ma¬ nufacturer can use it. Send for Circular. No trouble to communicate witn parties wanting these mar Lhc^R ^hean -t ,hort notice and cheap. m [MflSSty Cotton fain W0rK% MACON, Ga. HORRIBLE CRUELTY. BUCK SEMI-SAYAGES ATTACK EURO¬ PEAN SETTLEMENTS. many Natives of Sierra Leone Kkuiglitercit —The Attni-king li'oree limited l>y ltriti.il -Murine*. News from Sierra Leone, Africa, says that native warriors, under three chiefs, invaded the British settlements of Slier bro and Suitzus, pillaging and burning the villages i n route, torturing and killing native inhabitants, and taking three hundred prisoners. On entering British territory, the marauders divided French into two forces and tried to capture a fac¬ tory at Sulmat and an English factory stored on Manah river, both of which were with valuable merchandise. Capt. Bur¬ nett, the English agent, at the head of native laborers and police, desperately resisted the savages, who were compelled to retreat after the attack, leaving besieged many of their number dead. They the station, however, for four days,when the English gunboat Sirius arrived on the scene and landed a force of marines, who quickly put the savages to flight. Attaches of the French factory repulsed the attack made upon them without any outside assistance. SHOCKING DEATH. A Cardens Clerk Leave* a Trap Door Open anil a Lovely Girl Fall* Through. Rosa Weinberger, Mollic and Ellen Sunfield and their escort Leopold and Bertie Neuveirch, went to visit the wives of William Gross and Joseph Leightmad, proprietors of a fruit store in Nashville, Twin. At the foot of the stairway lead¬ ing from the store to the sleeping apart¬ ments, and just inside the door, is a trap door to the cellar. After the visitors went up stairs this trap door was opened by the clerk, Mr. Leightman, who de¬ scended to the cellar to see how the fruit was. He had just reached the floor when lie heard I he sound of voices above him, and some one in the store exclaim: “Watch out for the trap dooi 1” He wheeled, and ns he did so a body fell. Rosa Weinberger had fallen into the death-trap. and Her the skull right was lung fractured crushed, in two places hours. and she died in a tew ATTEMPTED REVOLUTION. ; uillo Cllorts to IHuko lion Carlo* Kins of Mi-xico. Some of the leaders of the so-called Liberal party in Mexico have for some months been hatching a plot, which the Mexican government has just unearthed and frustrated, by which Don Carlos, the defeated Bourbon aspirant for the Spanish throne, was to he invited to Mexico, to head a revolutionary party. It is charged that the Clerical party is at the bottom of the plot, and a number of wealthy Spaniards resident in Mexico, infatuated with the wild hope of restor¬ ing the days of Spanish ascendency, are implicated. The press warns Don Car¬ los against evil advisers, and bade him remember “El cerro de los companas,” the spot where Maximilian, Miratnon and Mexia were shot. PECULIAR ACTION OF L1UUTNINK. J. A. Sewell, of Garbin'!ville, Ga., had a valuable ox standing under some sweetgum bushes in the pasture, when lightning struck a bush about 20 feet high. Following a downward course about 8 feet it jumped to another near the ox and passed down it several killing feet, left the bush and struck the ox, him instantly. 10SHIS & LAW, r HAT TEES, AND THE BEST $1 SHIRT IN THE CITY. Yalises, Umbrella’s etc. 9 PEACHTREE STREET. ATLANTA 61®. WniTE WOMAN NOLO. In the city court of Paducah, Ky. Mollic Jackson, a white woman, was convicted of vagrancy, and it was or <leie , tJjat she bc so)d , Q the highest bidder for thirty days. The sale will be ;is iis th « advertisement has U-cn issued. The judge's action has met with a great deal of unfavorable com incut. SOUTHERN NEWS. The Atlanta, G police recently put 50 cows into the public pound, and the owners paid $2 each to get them released. Charles Simmons, Joe Thorpe and Isaac Smith, negro boys, from 15 to 18 years of age, have been convicted of arson at Macon, Ga., and will be hung. Wade Martin, of Charleston, 8. C., employed on the new capitol building at Atlanta, while conveying mortar to the topmost scaffolding, fell 70 feet to the ground and was killed. The Lomax Rifles, of Mobile, Ala., de¬ cline to compete again with the Toledo, 0., Cadets, ou the ground that it would be a reflection on the regular army judges at AVashington, D. C. Gaddis Stiff, a worthy colored man of Franklin, Ala., His mysteriously disappeared from home. body was found in the Chattahoochee, the neck filled with bird shot, several stabs in the body and the skull crushed in. Robert Williams, the local school teacher, was arrested, and the murdered man’s wife is implicated. 8. H. Phelan, a dealer in cotton fu¬ tures and head of the Atlanta, Ga., Pro¬ duce and Cotton Exchange, has failed for $300,000, and with scarcely any as¬ sets. Some negro children were playing with a shotgun at Dawson, Ga. Lowgene Williams, a girl about fourteen years of age, grabbed boy the eleven gun, pointed old, it at and Sol Wesron, fired. a dead, years load of The boy fell with a buckshot in his breast. Four little negroes, who have been liv¬ ing on Mr.Wm. Harrell’s place, at Thom asville, Ga., eat some of the wild jessa¬ mine vine and chewed some of the stalk, and were poisoned. expected Two of die. them have died and another to There is a chance for the recovery of the fourth one. At Union Springs, Ala., old Adam Owens, a negro, aged 80 years, had a young and handsome quadroon girl fora wife. He was recently found murdered, and his wife and Henry Roberts are sus¬ pected. Henry confesses to having resulted quar¬ relled with the old man, which in his pushing Adam into a burning brush heap. T. C. Cragin died of yellow fever at Key West, Fla. The board of health has declared the fever removing epidemic, and will no longer insist on patients to the hospital. This action will probably be very beneficial, as many cases occur in private bouses where patients can have comforts and nursing not to be found in the hospital. One of the most enterprising officials in the South is Chief Joyner, of the At¬ lanta, Ga., fire department, and the en¬ ergetic way he puts out for a tire kindles the enthusiasm of all who behold him. He had a chemical engine come for his department the other day, and within one-half a day after its receipt, the ap¬ paratus was ready for duty. , Engine No. 50 ran into engine 53 on the Western & Atlantic railroad at Mc¬ Daniel Station, Ga., both engines were badly demolished. The engineers and firemen on both engines escaped with hardly a scratch. Engine No. 50 was the head section on that schedule going North, and was followed by three other trains. These were stopped aimost by a miracle before they ran into the head section. At a spelling bee at Harvey, Ark., an affray took place in which Dan Maybe was shot to death. Prof. S. P. Boozer, of the Greenwood, S. C., Male High School, was stricken with apoplexy, whilst in his buggy, on his way home from school. A fatal epidemic is raging in the Good Hope sectioa of South Carolina, in Edge field county. Both local physicians are prostrated, and medical aid is badly Two freight trains collided four miles from Calera, Ala., on the Louisville & Nashville railroad. Engineer Howard Rowe and Fireman Burton were killed outright, as was also a negro tramp. P. M. Hale, long a leading editor in North Carolina, and for a while a resident of New York city as a member of the firm of E. J. Hale & Sons, publishers, died in Fayetteville, of that state, after a long illness of cancer of the tongue. The directors of the Augusta, Ga., Daily Gazette elected Bismuth Miller, the present editor of the Weekly Gazette, editor in chief. W. 8. Royal was select¬ ed business manager and bookkeeper. The other necessary offices will be sup¬ plied by the editor. A cyclone struck North East Georgia and was particularly severe around Cow¬ eta. At Mr. Turner’s, near Carrollton, the storm picked up a negro girl, carry¬ ing her over a mile above the tops of the trees, finally setting her down unharmed but without a vestige of clothing. Great indignation exists, because Vet¬ eran Owen Hier, of Barnwell county, South Carolina, a Confederate soldier, died in great destitution, notwithstand¬ ing he was entitled to something under the artificial limb fund of the state. Some “cheese-paring” member of the Legislature down last year had the fund cut from $9,000 to $2,000. NUMBER 15. LATEST NEWS. William Diehl was killed by the In¬ dians, in Arizona. The military have gone in pursuit. They are supposed to be heading for Mexico. It is reported at London, England, two officers, said to have belonged to the United States Army and Navy, respec¬ tively, committed suicide at Monte Carlo. News has been received at Manson, Calhoun county, Iowa, that Rev Dr. Reid, who left that place last winter to become a missionary in Central Africa, has been killed and eaten by cannibals. Lawrence Donovan, who jumped off Brooklyn bridge New York, jumped from London bridge into the Thames. He in tends to jump at au early day off Clifton suspension bridge at Bristol, the highest bridge in England. John Brown and Edward Hogan, be¬ longing to the Gloucester, Mass., fishing schooner, Richard Lester, who were picked up at sea adrift in a dory, under¬ went dreadful experiences. They were adrift on the ocean for over six days without a bit of food or a drop of water. William A. Wheeler, ex-Vice-Presi¬ dent of the United States, died at his home in Malone, N. Y. He had no near relatives in the world to minister to him during his illness, or to watch by his side at death, but relatives of his de¬ ceased wife and friends, who tenderly cared for him until death came. The Sultan of Turkey has ceded the Island of Cypress to England. Emperor William laid the foundation stone of the Holtenau lock of the North Sea canal. Pope Leo has ordered that High Mass and a To Deum shall be sung in all the Catholic churches of England, in honor of Queen Victoria’s Jubilee. Rev. W. C. Stiles, pastor of the Con¬ gregational Church, in Pittsfield, N. H., has mysteriously disappeared. It la feared his mind was impaired by over¬ work. New York hotel keepers recently held a meeting to devise some method of es¬ caping from the Sunday liquor-selling law. Committees were appointed and measures taken to raise funds for the further agitation of the matter. Sentence of death was imposed on Mrs. Clara Cignarale, in New York city, convicted of murder in the first degree for shooting her husband. She was condemned to be hanged in the Tombs prison yard, Friday, July 22d. The National Convention of colored men called to meet in Indianapolis, Ind., for the purpose “of considering the poli¬ tical bondage in which the race has been held since the War,” was but slimly at¬ tended, and adjourned without transact¬ ing any business of importance. An earthquake swept over the greater portion of Northern California and Western Nevada. At Sacramento 4t shook houses, making them rumble as if windows were being slammed by gusts of wind. At Carson City, Nevada, pictures and plastering fell from walls, and a large amount of plastering fell from the Su¬ preme Court room in the capitol building. ATLANTA'S EXPOSITION. Immense Expenditure, With a View to Mak¬ ing it the Greatest ISucces* of tbe A«*. The citizens of the Gate City intend that the Piedmont Exposition, to beheld October 10—22, shall be tbe most attractive affair of the kind ever held in the South. The figures of tlieir prospectus are: $160,000 for new buildings and adorning the grounds; $20,000 premium* for arti¬ cles exhibited; purse of $10,000 for rac¬ ing horses; $5,000 in prizes for the mili¬ tary; $10,000 for fireworks. President Cleveland, accompanied by his lovely wife, will attend, as well as the Cabinet officers. Gilmore’s world-renowned 22d regiment band, of New York, will give forth sweet strains daily. There will be no mistake made in sending articles for exhibition, and space can easily be had by notifying President, the chief officers, G. A. Col¬ lier, and Henry W. Grady, Vice-President. A knitting needle to a locomotive will find a lodging pla :e, and special premiums will be offered the good housewives to place their dainty delica¬ cies in competition, and present appear¬ ances indicate Southern ladies will be strong in that special feature. JEFFERSON DAVIS Write* a Letter to a Xrwmui, Georgia, Holdler Dr. A. C. North, one of tho survivors of the old 7t.h Georgia regiment, ad¬ dressed a communication to Hon. Jeffer¬ son Davis, inclosing a transcript of cer¬ tain resolutions complimentary to the ex-president, adopted by the survivors of Company A at their last annual reunion. He received a most graceful acknowl¬ edgment iu the shop • of an not <grapb letter from Mr. Davis, in which lie makes affectionate aihtsio i to the heroic serv¬ ices of the gallant 7.h Georgia er. North has lieen offered ten dollars for the letter.