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CONYERS Y WEEKLY
VOLUME X.
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FOB GOOD
)B WORK
GO TO THE
EEKLY OFFICE.
)HUG STORE.
DR, M, R, STEWART,
MERCE STREET, CONYERS, GA.
resh Line of Drugs and Fancy Goods just received, and will from
[datebe kept constantly on hand. All kinds of DRUGS, MEDJ
NES, PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES. TOB AC
> CIGARS, STATIONERY, FANCY TOILET SOAPs.
in fact every thing to be found in a
«t Class DRUG STORE. My terms are
STEICTLY CASH!
i nd on this account I can offord to sell my goods low, in fact
CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST
MY PRESCRIPTION
DEPARTMENT IS COMPLETE!
Lnall prescriptions sent to me will be promptly and carefully
Compounded.
I Sell The Famous A. Q. C.
e ded to be the best blood purifier known to tbe science
you want any thing in my line call on
VERY TRULY
1
DR. M. R STEWART
)
onyers GEORGI A
CONYERS. GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1887.
ENGINES REPAIRED.
If you have an Engine tliAt needs
repairing, do not delay, for “A stitch
in ve nine, . but . , have it . . fixed „ .
'up before you need it. We have
SKILLED MACHINISTS
and guarantee all work. We also
Veep a full supply of Eligible 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,
Conyevs, Ge
BEEtH sik'fri'
Jwy.'Jt © »•
V,
Owners and Operators of the
Who sell the entire products
Df their immense factory direct to the public,
From tops can purchase upon liberal ta.
THE BEST ORGANS MANUFACTURED.
WARRANTED FOR SIX YEARS.
Catalogue and fall particulars free.
Write us before purchasing. Address, me.;
turning name of this paper,
□Rrcso'cnBxa’
« m
ON. YVA RRE NCOTN„,'
DE. J.J. SEAMANS.
DENTIST.
OFFICE 3 WHITEHEAD HOUSE
Conyers, Ga.,
JAIL BROKEN INTO,
Several, nights ago West McClure, a
negro of Troy, Ala., was arrested and
jailed for assaulting a widow lady. A
mob attempted to break the jail at Troy,
where he was confined, breaking all the
doors until they reached the inner case
hardened cell, which was proof against
the sledge hammers and chisels. The
jail is now guarded Rl^es, by a strong posse
an< * the O at68 a local military
company.
PEACE WITH ROME,
Prince Bismarck has promised th#
Pope, Leonine his City moral and supp the stretch >rt in claiming the
of territory
to Civita Vecchia as a basis for reconcili¬
ation with Italy;
1 A
va 1
AIHi
BEAUTIFULLY illustrated*
This Magazine portrays Ameri¬
can thought and life from ocean td
ocean, is filled with pure high-class
literature, and can be safely wel¬
comed in any family circle.
PRICE 2Sc. OR $3 A YEAR BY MAIL.
Sample Copy of current number mailed upon rt»
telpt of 25 cts.; bach numbers, 15 cts.
Premium List with either.
Address:
E. T. BUSH k SOM, Publishers*
130 & 132 Pearl St., N, jt.
i i m Ii i
HUGHS & m.
HAT rnTjvrj I UlUiMt rx *
,
AND
(& t nt 8 Ifurttisfursf.
THE BEST SI SHIRT LN THE CITY,
Valises, Umbrella’s etc.
9 PEACHTREE STREET,
ATLANTA II®.
GRENADES.
Two Sizes—fiats sad Quarts.
Over Sixty M illions Sold.
kbit KM
rm /// prxcbs.
Pints, - Per Doz„ $10,00.
i r Quarts. . “ 15.00.
“STAR*
TnMir Fire Eitingnislier.
Glass Tufce, 19*28- in. Holds 1 quart.
MSfln this device We combine
the BEST Orenades QUALITIES o£ our
famous with the
NEW feature of having; an, or*
tide that can be used by Sprink¬
ling. It is desisted especially
for and use Dwellings. m f*a«senger It is.elegant Coaches
in ornamentation. It is cheap
and reliable. Norust;noccrcos>
ion possible.
Plain, OrnamPd $|2v0Operd&z, jg.QQ
per doz.
Tha “StaP 9
EXTINGUISHER
Holds 5 gallons,and
will force a stream
through hose feet 6 feet with of ffuinp,
45 6 ‘Ar
which is the best ever made.
Needs nitration until used.
Will of freeze, explode or get
out order. No rust or corros •
ion. Can be used by anyone.
Price. ~ffe80.00.Each.
' Tr STAR 7r “eREft1lGAl.
s
needed Just wliat in every tej
village, laiilber
yard, Fully war® house, equip¬
etc.
ped Ax, With Crow Hose. Bar,
Ban tern, etc. It
is cheap, and re¬
liable. Wt,. 450 lbs.
PRICE. EACH. j
200 . 00
Four years cl practical use have demonstrated
these to be the Fire only reliable, and made- thoroughly We effi- the
cieat Hand liquid appliances it all, and guarantee uss fully.
same chemical
Liberal discounts to agents. Send
for circulars and testimonials.
T^HARDEH H&HS G3ENADE GQ.
SI & 53 Dearborn Si, Chicago, III.
THE EXCELSIOR
r COTTON GIN
B ; FEEDERS
AND
ikSfj ^CONDENSERS
Iona Ithe ranteed to be Equal to
Best. Picks the See*
i i [Clean, Gin. Fine East Staple. and Make,
a
The Circular Roll Box is
Hi :v- - Patf mted, and no other mar
nuf acturer can use it.
S end for Circular, No
9 tro'able to communicate with
pa; dies wanting these ma¬
chines. Repaired short ,
| < Old Gins at
[notice and cheap. Gin Works,
'Massey Cotton
MA CON, Ga.
SOUTHERN NEWS,
INTERESTING BITS OF GOSSIP
CAUGHT ON THE WING.
| Social, Religions, society, Military nn.i
Other Topics Which Interest tbe
People in the South,
Mrs, S, A. Gordon, of Columbus, Ga.,
the step mtoher of Georgia’s governor died
recently.
Shearman Carr, H’young man residing
in Atlanta, Ga., had a most desperate
battle with a mad dog, and was bitten
badly by the brute.
At VfirtnsborOj S. C;, an explosion of
a. ynamite near the Court house cau.sed
some excitehiefit, coiirt being ih Sessioii.
Some think this a blundering attempt the oh
the part of the negroes to blow up
court house, in revenge for the conviction
of some of their friends. Others think it
but a practical joke.
Judge 0. A. Lochrane, of Atlanta,
Ga ; , iS dead. the He was born in Armagh, 1829.
Ireland, on 12th of August, left
lie came of a Well-to-do family, but
home at the age of id add canife to this
country. Adopting the legal profession
in Georgia, he rose rapidly, and eventu¬
ally became a judge. He leaves an estate
valued at $500,000.
Ex-Sheriff Ramey, Rowan county, Ky.,
and his son were killed by unknown per¬
sons near Morehead, in that suspected. county. The
Craig-Tolliver party are
that Governor He Gordon, of Georgia, decides
cannot interfere with the course
of justice in the case of Jacob Leggett,
of Reidsville, convicted of murder.
Miss Effie Elder, of Barnesvilie, Ga.,
was married to Capt. I. H. Adams, of
Eatonton. Sam. K. Cook, brother-in
law to the bride, attended the marriage
and was walking down to the train, when,
midway between the bank and D. A.
Stroud’s store, he suddenly fell on the
sidewalk in an apoplectic fit and died.
have The Gate City Guards of Atlanta, Ga.,
not J ct chosen a captain to succeed
Capt. Burke, Who resigned recently.
A prohibition club was organized in
Rome, Ga Hon. Seaborn Wright was
elected president, and Mr. J. F. Hillyer,
secretary.
William Miller, a boy of 18, sentenced
a year ago to imprisonment for life for a
murder committed in Glynn county, Ga.,
died of consumption at “Old-time” Camp,
in Jcffersqn county.
In the south end of Jones chapel, at
Macon, Ga., in the place formerly occu¬
pied by the old front door, a memorial
tablet has been plated to the memory of
Rev. James Jones, foilndet of the church.
Some reports against the action of the
police in Atlanta, Ga., with reference to
gambling implements that have accumu
lated for many years, caused the author
ities to direct that the whole pile be
burned up. It was done in the public
streets at noonday.
The commissioners have decided on
building a $12,000 includes jail at Waynesboro,
Ga. This building and lot.
They for propose applying to the Legislature the
the passage of a bill allowing
county to issue 7 per cent, bonds at
three, six and nine years, each bond call¬
ing for $4,000.
WHEAT DEALEES FAILING.
Great Excitement fn the Great Center, of
Western Trade.
The sudden drop in wheat at all great
grain centers in the West caused intense
excitement, and many dealers have failed.
Such scenes of wild excitement as were
witnessed on ’change have never been
known before. When the break came,
everybody frantically tried to sell wheat,
and nobody wanted to buy. In a short
time, July wheat had sold off from 80f to
77J, while September dropped from 79
to 75*.
THIS GREAT MAN SICK.
Prince Bismarck’s condition has be¬
come worse. He is afflicted with rheuma¬
tic pains, which prevent sleep, and his
doctors advise rest and change of his climate.
Ilig illness, however, prevents travel¬
ing at present,
NEW YORK KNIGHTS.
Between July 1, 1886, and April 1,
1887, the membership of the Knights of
Labor in New York city and vicinity de¬
creased from 104,469 to 61,798, the ac¬
tual falling off being 42,676, or a trifle
over 40 per cent.
GENERAL NEWS.
Something About Ireland, Labor Troubles,
Railroad Robberies, Victoria^ Jubilee,
European Complication*, Etc.
Nina Van Zandt, the proxy-bride of
Spies, tbe condemned, Anarchist, under who is
confined in Chicago, HI., sentence
of death, is dying of quick consumption.
Some of the Mexican papers are loud
in their denunciation of Americans,claim¬
ing that American capital is quietly get¬
ting possession of all the great financial
and railroad interests of the country.
A jury has been secured in the case of
Jake Sharp, the briber, custody. on trial at New
York, and he is in
The Bay State Company of New York
is about to absorb all the Boston gas
companies. Tne $10,000,0(W. amount of purchase
money is about
An epidemic of flux is raging in Bed¬
ford county, Ya A number of deaths
have occurred. Scarcely a family in a
large area has escaped the disease.
Earthquakes visited La Roche, Sur
Yon, in La Vendee, France. The people
were frightened into a temporary panic,
but no serious damage was done.
A slave dhow attacked the launch of a
British man-of-war in Zanzibar and
wounded an officer and five men. The
dhow was, however, sunk by the force on
the launch, and the slaves upon her 48 in
number, were rescued.
The Yoz de An.tioquia repOfts a land¬
slide on the El Pedero farm in Concordia
not Pedro far from Panama, his burying and Sen nine or
at Resttepo, wile
children, and the servant in the house.
In all, sixteen persons were killed.
Charles Burch, a Jersey City, N. J.,
policeman, fired three shots at his wife,
fatally wounding her. He then shot
himself in the head and died. The
couple had been married about 11 years,
and had three children, the oldest of
whom is 10 years.
There have been no new cases of yellow
fever lately in Key West, Fla., and but
one death—that of a Mr. Hoffman, who
died in a private house. There are fif¬
teen sick persons under treatment at the
present time, four of whom are declared
to be convalescent, and the remainder are
thought to be on the road to recovery.
The Louisiana Ice Manufacturing Co.,
have asked for an injunction vs. the Mont¬
gomery Ice Co., and the Capital City Ice
Co., and the Enterprise Manufacturing
Co. of Selma, to restrain them from manu¬
facturing Montgomery ice, alleging infringement of
patent. depends entirely
on artificial ice, and two companies have
a big business
The famous Daniel Dickson will case,
was decided by the Georgia State Su¬
preme Court in favor of Amanda Eubanks,
the colored legatee. Amanda Eubanks
was an illegitimate daughter of Dickson.
When dying he willed her $400,000. A
contest of the will, thus made, is what
the Supreme Court decided, holding that
whites and blacks are on an equality so
far as inheritance goes.
The Belgian Chamber of Deputies by a
vote of 82 to 41 passed the bill for forti¬
fying of the Meuz.
The executive committee of the Trades
Union Congress, in London, Eng., has
reported against the holding of an ground inter¬
national trades congress, on the
that trades unionism in England has few
points in common with continental trades
unionism.
Conductors and brakemen on the Union
Pacific railroad have been carrying out a
systematic scheme of robbery like that
exposed sylvania some railroad. months Several ago on robberies the Penn¬ of
the same character have been committed
at Central City, Neb., and it seems that
crews running east from Cheyenne are
most deeply involved.
Mr. Chamberlain the Unionist leader in
England speaking at a banquet in Lon¬
don, said he rejoiced that the signs of the
times were favorable to unionists, and the
game of lawlessness and disorder was up
at last. The people had examined Mr.
Gladstone’s statements for themselves,
and Ihe result was their faith in his rudely judg¬
ment and patriotism had been
shaken. Old reactionary toryism in was
dead and the hope of the future Dartford lay a
union of parties to carry out the
programme and other necessary reforms.
RATHER SLEEPY
Frank T. Ridgeway is on trial befo;
the U. 8. Court, at Macon, Ga., for illic
! distilling of whiskey, and defendant his lawy te
claims he is insane. The
tilled in his own defense, that he had m
slept a wink in 8 years, 5 months a
14 days; that he laid down at night a ■
rested, but that he never slept.
Hi the toils.
| I Frank Fowler was there arrested few at Rich days
Valley, Ill. He went a farmer.
I ago and hired as a laborer to a
! On Saturday a United States detective
appeared at Rich Valley and inform <1
! the fanner that Fowler was wanted in
I Tennessee for forging checks on Gov.
| Bate, thirteen months ago, for $37, out).
Reports from the county of Calhoun,
I j u Florida, state that an epidemic of
; rabies among dogs and cattle prevails bitten
there, tieveral peisons have been
I by rabid dogs. Much excitement pre¬
vails in the county, aud dog and cattle
■ killing parties have been organized.
NUMBER IT.
WASHINGTON NOTES.
aosstrYOLBAWas ABOUT ov*
, NATIONAL OFFICIALS.
Somethin*' About tbe PreiMent’s Moto
menti-Report» from the Department.,
List of Appointments, IStc., &«■
BUM FOR AFRICA.
Consul Strickland, writing from Gore
Daka, Africa, to the State Department,, Germans;
calls attention to the way the
are absorbing the African trade. They
nave a line of steamers running from
Hamburg to the coast, and are pushing:
the English close on account of tbe ex¬
treme cheapness of their goods. “Ham¬
burg alcohol,” he says, “is offered at.
thirty-two cents per gallon, and forms
the basis of most of the sparkling Afri- bev¬
erages with which the Simon-pure is
can loves to regale himself. It sur
prising to see the enormous quantities of
f»m, gin and alcohol which block up the
wharves wkeu a steamer comes in. One
can scarcely conceive where so much vile
stuff goes to, but the capacity of the
unrectitied African to absorb into bis na¬
ture this kind of rectified spirit is some
J thing phenomenal. ”
TROUBLESOME APACHES.
The Adjutant-General received the fol¬
lowing telegram from Gen. O.O. Howard,
dated San Francisco: “Gen. Miles tele¬
graphs that Capt. Pierce reports only
sixteen men absent from San Carlos, and
that all Indians on the reservation under¬
stand that the action of a few reflects up¬
on the whole tribe, and are anxious that
the offenders shall be captured. He
leaves Los Angeles to-day for Fort
Grant.”
DESIGNS FOR THE NEW WAR VESSELS.
The board Whitney 1 of examiners adjudicate appointed by
Secretary to upon and
the competitive designs finished for gunboats examina¬
cruiScrS,' have their
tions. Less than a dozen designs alto¬
gether, including both submitted. gunboat Two and
cruiser designs, were' and Eng¬
came from France, two from
land, and the remainder were from
American naval architects. The majority
of the designs were for cruisers; only
three of four were for gunboats. A prize
of $15,000 is pledged to the best design
in each class.
FLAGS TO BE RETURNED.
The governors ot the Southern states
have been notified by Adjt. Gen. Drum,
that the President has approved the re¬
commendation, that all the flags in the
custody of the War Department be re¬
turned to the authorities of the respective
states in which the regiments which bore
them were or ganized, for final disposi¬
tion. With each flag will be Bent a little
history of its capture.
SOOC NEWS FROM CUBA.
One of the effects of the commercial
agreement made by Secretary Bayard with
the Spanish Government is shown by a
dispatch announcing that the American
ship Celina, arrived at Havana with a full
cargo from the River Platte. This is
said to be the first American vessel that
lias arrived at Havana direct from the
River Platte in sixty years, the differen¬
tial duties that ruled in favor of Spanish ratified
vessels before the agreement was
having excluded American vessels from
this trade.
qUITR AN ADVANCE.
The tract of land north of “Washing¬
ton Heights,” known as “Clifbourne,”
many years ago the home of John Quincy Effie
Adams, which was bought by Miss
A. Ober, the late manager of the Boston
Ideal Opera Company, for $80,000, has
been sold for $110,000.
LUCKY CONSUL.
John P. Campbell, the newly-appointed
consul to Tam Have, Madagascar, reports
to the State Department that he met with
a cordial reception upon his arrival at
that port. He was welcomed by the dig¬
nitaries of the island and presented with
a bullock, six chickens and two geese as
a token of esteem by the Queen of Mad
agascar.
NOTES.
Two of the District police have been
complained of because they stole flowers
nt night from the White House grounds.
The President lias appointed John C.
Luning postmaster at Leesburg, I la.
The office recently became a presidential
one.
Attorney-General Garland was fifty
five years old recently, and he celebrated
the event by going on a fishing expedi¬
tion a short distance in the country.
Mr. Corcoran, the philanthropist, is
slowly recovering from his illness. The
partial paralysis was caused by a very
slight effusion of blood near the junction
of'the blood vessel with the brain.
Brig. Gen. Wesley Merritt has been
transferred to the command of the De¬
partment of the Missouri, and his p ace
as Commandant of West Point will be
given to Gen. J. G. Parke, of the Engin¬
eer Corps. North Carolina,
A delegation from
headed by Senators Ransom and Vance,
and Representative Henderson, watted
on the President, and asked a modifica¬
tion iff the executive order of consolidat¬
ing the internal revenue districts so that
the ” districts in that state will not be
changed.
EXPENSIVE LICENSES.
The price for a license to sell liquor in
Bushnell, III., i3 $2,000, and six saloon
men have applied for license. This rep
resents, about $12 apiece from every man,
woman and child in the town,
ad 2 trouble