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rHE CONYERS WEEKLY
OLUME X.
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EGA GOOD
B WORK
00 TO THE
:ekly office.
RUG STORE.
DR, M, R. STEWART,
MERCE STREET, CONYERS, GA.
ph Line of Drugs and Fancy Goods just received, and will from
‘datebe kept constantly on hand. All kinds of DRUtib, MKD.L
m, PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES- TOBAC
CIGARS, STATIONERY, FANCY TOILET SOAPs,
Kl in fact every thing - to be found in a
rat Class DRUG STORE. My terms are
STRICTLY CASH!
id on this account I can offord to sell my goods low, in fact
CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST
MY PRESCRIPTION
DEPARTMENT IS COMPLETE!
prescriptions sent to me will be promptly and carefully :
Compounded.
1 Sell The Famous A. Q. C.
-ceded to be the best blood purifier known to the sciencc
.n you want any thing in my line call on
VERY TRULY
I
DR. M. R STEWART 1
RS, GEORG r-- A
CONYERS. GEORGIA. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1887.
«. ENGINES REPAIRED.
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If you have an Engine fcfaftt needs
repairing, do , not delay, for l ‘A . stitch
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and guarantee all work. We alsD
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BOILER FIXTURES.
y*t„ \v e are prepared to . do j all kinds . i
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and at prices as low or lower h in
Atlanta. Send your work at once
H. D. Terell & Co
Conyers, G r
BEET Hjgagv ...., j;
■A
i WASHINGTON, ian.o-orga WARRE m
Owners and Operators of the
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From them you m purchase upon liberal te
THE BEST ORGANS MANUFACTURED.
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Catalogue and full particulars free.
Write us before purchasing. Address, me.
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CO. K
MBMMl » •
DR. J.J. SEAMANS.
DENTIST.
OFFICE 3 WHITEHEAD HOUSE
Conyers, Ga.,
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pathetic address was deliyettid by
Obauneey M. Depew. The dedicatory
tide Was read by Hugh Farrar McDer¬
mott, after which an address was deliv
ered by Rev. DeVVitt Talmage. The
closiug prayer and benediction were by
Rev W. S. Raiusford, D. D , and the
exercises concluded with the singing of
t ; le , [.xology by the Ampion chorus and
the audience.
||i|H MJ
mm fll’-i
beautifully illustrated*
This Magazine portrays Amerii
can thought and life from ocean td
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& f . BUSH Si SON, Publishers,
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51 & 53 Dearborn St, Chicago, III.
THE EXCELSIOR
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Send for Circular. No
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chines. Repaired . at . short , .
Old Gins .
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'Massey Cotton Gin Works,
MACON, Ga- I
itiffB far SMBi
Confederate and Federal General* Unite in
n Confederate Memorial Celebration.
The largest crowd ever seen in Staun¬
ton, Vn., numbering over 10,000 people,
assembled to attend the celebration of the
Confederate .Memorial Association. The
chief attraction was the prolicide df Derii
W. W. Averill, orator of the occasion’,
and a well-known cavalry leader in the
Federal army during the War. The col
umn was a mile long, consisting of mili¬
tary and civil organizations, etc. In an
elegant carriage, drawn by four black
horses, rode Gov. Lee tiiOy and Gen. Averill,
and as they passed the •Were fteqtiently
cheered. place Alter plarade, spteqking
tciok iii the opera noRse, which was
Crowded to suSOcation, referred In introducing
Gen. Avqfill, Gov. Lee th their
long acquaintance, beginning when both
were boys at West Point, and to theic
subsequent association in the old army.
Their commands had met face to face in
battle during the War that iilrit followed, bfaVe'f and
he was prepared to testify iii)
man contended bu either side than the
troops commanded by that referred gallant officer.
Inclosingj the governor to the
obliteration of Sectional lines iiud the re¬
union of tile pimple, Federal as gbneral shotth joining by the
presence of a
the with dead. the Southern AteHll veterans greeted in honoring with
Gen. waS
ringing and from cheers time to as time he stepped during his forward, Speech
he was enthusiastically cheered, Brief
addresses were made by Gen. J. D. Im
boden, Hon. A. J. McCall,of New York,
and Carlton McCarthy, of Richmond.
A SIGNIFICANT WARNING.
Tile Authorities Getting Heady for an Up¬
rising of Anarchists And socialist#.
From marly points in the United States*
notably Horn the West, conies iiitelli
gence that the anarchist leaders mean
what they say, that some stirring scenes
will be enacted all over the United States
within the next few weeks. A general
uprising has been planned with a view
to revolutionizing the present state of
society, and burying in one common ruin
all existing institutions. This tremen¬
dous undertaking is to be accomplished
by a sudden revolt. The torch is to be
applied in a hundred cities, and the cap¬
italists ot the country, their wives and
children are to be murdered—sacrificed,
as the anarchists say—in the cause of
liberty. The terrible scenes Of the
French Revolution, when “the streets of
Paris were red with blood;” the massacre
attending the uprising against the Carl
ists of England in 1830, and the riots in
the streets of Paris in 1848; the uprising
in Europe in 1871; the rioting and burn¬
ing of property in the United States dur¬
ing the great railroad strike of ’77, and,
later still, the Haymarket riot_ in ’86,
were all uprisings of the anarchists, and
unsuccessful attempts to achieve their
alms.
SOUTH CAROLINA PROHIBITIONISTS.
The executive committee of the Prohi¬
bitionists o South Carolina, met at An¬
derson. The object of the meeting, was
to ascertain what progress has been made
by those persons who were appointed to
circulate petitions for the signatures of
landowners desiring an election to be
held in August in accordance with the
provisions of the Murray prohibition bill.
In Pendleton, hot words the discussion and angry of pas¬ the
sions grew out of
question, and, but for the wise counsel of
some cool heads, might have ended in
something serious.
A NEW TYPE MEASURE.
At the session of the International
Typographical Union at Buffalo, N. Y.,
Mr. McKellar, type founder of Philadel¬
phia, presented a new system of measur¬
ing type. It would abolish the em quad
substitute measurement now universally in use and
the letter “m” and twenty-six
letters of the alphabet must make fifteen
letter “ems.” Standard fonts would no
longer exist. Mr. McKellar received a
vote of thanks.
PREFERRED THE U. S. STYLE.
Red Shirt and Broncho Bill, of the
Wild West show now in London, Eng.,
f 1 vlsl V° ,h '- t[ome ?f Commons.
Da y ivere both .n war paint and wore
en irrnous head drosses of feathers 1 hey
au rossed t .emselvcs to Baron de Worms
! ;; U T !,Skea the ‘“ y th T‘n
Farhament f lied Shut , answered that * he , i
uidn’t think much of u Laws, he said,
, passed much quicker his country
,ere in
u,au iu England.
____
SINGULAR COINCIBENCK.
The body of R. W. White, a well
known and prominent citizen of Danville,
Va., was found in the canal. He had
been unwell for some time, and went to
the rear of a drug store on the canal to
get some medicine, but failing to arouse
the clerk, he turned to go, and fell acci
dentally into the canal. It is a curious
coincidence that Dr. Hutchins, another
prominent citizen and brother-in-law of
White, accidentally shot himself a short
time a "°i “nd it was some time before his
body was found, in about the same place.
---
earth quake in turkev.
-
Severe shocks of earthquake have oc- i
cn Tre d at Vernome, in Turkestan. The
town was almost entirely destroyed, and
120 persons were killed and as many more
injured. Among the latter is Gen.
Fricd( , „ overnor 0 f the province of
Semiretb in-k i he shocks still continue,
:UK 1 the inhabitants of the town have
find for safety to the open country. j
LARGE CAPITAL
JSEIHO INVESTED IN THE
SOUTH.
Mills, Fousdris* and Railroads Springing
Up All Over.
Tuscaloosa, Ala., is to have water
works’.
Woodlawn, Ala!., faas contracted for a
new hotel.
Gould, Pearce & Co. of Cincinnati, €>.,
will move their cotton factory to Arkan¬
sas.
Columbus, Ga., intends to build a new
bgilding school lot the boys’ department of nearly $20,000. of the
public at a 1 COst
The Anniston & Cincinnati Railroad
Co, are preparing to build a round-house
and machine shops at Anniston, Ala.
Over $500,000 LaiVe been subscribed
toward organizing the company to Guild
three 150 ton iron furnaces at Flo. cnee,
Ala.
Fte Michigan capitalists who bought
an immense tract of timber land at
Bronson, Fla., will erect a plant of
$50,000.
Barrett, Denton & Lynn, of Dalton, with
Ga., have pUrdlntsed machinery a
capacity of 300 barrels per day for their
Hour niills.
The St. Mary Central Franklin, Sugar la., Factory capital &
Railrbad Ob. of
stock $250,000, has been formed to es¬
tablish a sugar factory.
As soon as the extension of the South
Florida railroad (office, Sanford,) to Black
Point, Fla., is completed, extensive docks
and piers will be built.
The Montgomery, Ala., Real Estate
Co,, capital stock $200,000, has been or¬
ganized. iron-front The company building. will erect a large
sii-story
There will be a wooden bridge built
across the river l.otei 3,000 feet, at Ormond,
Fla., and a costing from $20,000
to $30,000 will be built this summer and
fall.
The Coaldale Brick & Mining Co. of
Birmingham, Ala. capital stock $100,000,
has been chartered to mine coal and
other minerals and manufacture coke,
tile and brick.
Aberdeen, Miss., has by a popular aid vote in
decided to subscribe $00,000 railroad to
building a 12-mile branch from
Aberdeen to the Kansas City, Memphis
& Birmingham Railroad.
Southeastern Kentucky, hitherto known
as the railroad desert of America, is now
attracting the attention of investors, and
railroad enterprises are being pushed iuto
that almost unknown region of coal,
timber and iron ore.
The Mountain Shoals water power at
Enoree, S. C., has been purchased organize by
Charleston parties, who will a
company to build a large cotton factory
and about 100 tenement houses. About
$500,000 will bo invested.
Knoxville, Tenn., notes: The Scates
Warm Air Furnace Company organized
with a capital of $75,000. A spoke and
handle factory is to be moved from
Bloomington, Ind., to Knoxville. An¬
other street railroad has been organized.
Decatur, Ala., is pushing ahead. Con¬
made with the M _ ineral
tracts have been
Paint and Granite Roofing Co., of Kansas
Citv 1>V which they contract to locate
tneir enterprise at - Decatur, The land
sales still continue with astonishing road re¬
sults. The Columbus & Decatur
sold some forty-five acres of land and
have realized nearly two-thirds what they
paid for their 5,GOO acres oftown lands.
They have sold in the last three days over
two hundred and fifty thousand dollars
worth of property at private sale.
FAVORS THE SOUTH.
In a letter to some members of the
Grand Army of the Republic at St. Louis,
Mo., with reference to the proposed visit
of President Cleveland, Gen. W. T.
Sherman says: Let us do right as near
as we know how, and trust the future to
the boys who look on us old veterans as
prodigies, or old fogies lingering superflu
ent on the stage of life. I believe I know
both perfectly well, and that you would
sacr ifice life rather than honor. Therefore,
^wa^K^ ^ ’
Cobb and Jerome Hi[ , took th
wrong 8 side in 1861, but who are now with
U8 in heart and act for the Union one
and iudissoluble now and forever . In
gtead of the Grand Armv of the 180l“ Republic
meeting / only J in loyal J states of herea f’ter I am
- fa thei meeti at
n or r
Nashvin j Chattanooga, Atlanta and
Richm0D( ’ foUo wing * the example *> of our
armieg ifl hg waf fo the Union
NUMBER 16.
LATEST NEWS.
TLred thousand imigrants arrived at
Castle Garden, .New York in one day.
Prohibition was defeated in the As¬
sembly of the Massachusetts Legislature
by a vote of 139 to 74.
So many incendiary fires have occurred
m Batavia, O., that a vigilance commit
, tee has been organized.
Dan Rice, the venerable showman, has
married Mrs. M. C. Robinson, a wealthy
widow of Schulenburg, Texas.
Bryan Callaghan, may or of San Antonio,
Texas, Phil Shard in, chief of police, Al¬
derman Degner, ex-Alderman Lockwood,
Fred Herff, J. R. McCarsery, of the San
Antonio National bank, and four other
well knows citizens, were arrested for
disturbing and breaking up a prohibition
meeting. They rotten-egged the speak¬
ers and broke up the assembly.
Pascoe', the treasurer of the Interna¬
tional Union of printers, is said to be
several thousand dollars short.
M. Clemenceau and M. Foucher, the
latter the editorof the National, in Paris,
France, fought a duel with pistols. Two
shots were fired, but neither of the com¬
batants was hit.
Serious rioting occurred at Park Ridge
Park, Guttenburg, N. J. An Anarchist
picnic, for the benefit of the Chicago
Anarchists, at which Herr Must was
present, was being held in the park.
Several persons were hurt.
A collision occurred at Denbigh, Wales,
between a mob and a body of police who
were protecting an auctioneer engaged in
selling property for tithes, The mob
turned an excited bull loose on the
police, and assaulted them with rotten
eggs.
Queen Victoria, in order to invest the
jubilee ceremony in Westminster Abbey
with greater pomp, consents to assume
the state robes. She will be surrounded
with all the insignia of sovereignty, and
8,000 troops will line the route to th»
beside a guard of honor of 60 )
persons.
Emperor William, of Germany, i» down
with neuralgia.
The Apaches of Arizona are again oa
the warpath, and killed Michael Grace at
Tompova Gulch. Several troops of cav¬
alry are scouting the country in pursuit
of the savages.
The Grant Memorial Association
have invited artists to submit designs
for a monument or memorial building to
be erected over the general’s remains at
Riverside Park, New York.
The leading rubber manufacturers of
the country have for several weeks been
agitating the question of forming a com¬
bination or rubber trust, modelled some¬
what after the well-known monopoly, the
Standard Oil Trust.
The Masonic fraternity of Missouri is
greatly agitated by a decree promulgated
by the Grand Master, setting forth that
at the meeting of the Grand Lodge in
1882, it was decided that the business of
selling liquor is unmasonic and should
not be tolerated. Several Master Masons
have been suspended on account of it.
Two judges at Camden, N. J., had s
quarrel while sitting at a trial, because a
liquor license had been granted to a wo¬
man who keeps a saloon.
Archbishop Walsh, of Dublin, Ireland,
has transmitted to the Irish National
League, $200, which had been forward¬
ed to him by the Irish residents of Kim¬
berley, Africa.
M. Saburoff and M. Tatischiefl, for¬
merly Russian ambassadors at Berlin,
have been dismissed from the diplomatic
service of Russia, for publishing secret
official documents.
The municipal authorities of Paris,
France, adopted a resolution, granting
theatres, cafes and concert halls three
months within which to substitute elec¬
tric Ughts for gas.
A waterspout, near Hooversville, Pa.,
caused great destruction of property, and
200 people were temporarily rendered
homeless and dependent for shelter on
the charity of their more fortunate neigh¬
bors. Mrs. D. Z. Marrell died from
heart disease, produced, it is supposed,
b _ excitement,caused by water surround
J
ing her house. Col. James M. Cooper, a
wealthy and influential citizen of Coop
ersdale, also dropped dead from over ex
citement.
A PRINCE IN DANGER.
The reports ; the German p
concerning
crown prince s condition dntyr. ic
official bulletin is optimist in tom-,
fears are freely expressed m web in ¬
formed circles that the prince s cun. I’lin
«serious. Prof. Virchow’s report, u
now said, affirms that the examination
furnished no absolute indication that tbe
growth in the prince’s throat is not miti
gs&t.