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TO THE ESTABLISHMENT OF THE PRINCIPLE: "EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALL MEN AND SPECIAL RBIVILEGES TO MTU-EY
I iETOTED tu
AlX. Number 04 (Wdt,
GO HOME, BOYS.
don’t hang around the
;oys, of the street. If you
ners anything o do, do it
Hr Some right on, then go
C the is the street place comers for
S « About they learn to
llano, ,t the stables, learn to
and they and to
rear to smoke tol)&cco
E) many ’ other things which they
hzht not to do.
m your business, and then
0 business is
bhome. g’ If your
T play and make a business
ht Ld I like to healthy see boys games. play
earnest, I would
: I were the town give
te boys a good, spacious play
mmd. It should have plenty
if grass and trees and foun
kins, and broad space to run
hd jump and to play suitable
ames. I would make it as
leasant and lovely, as it could
e, and would give it to the boys
) play in, and when the play
ras ended I would tell them to
home.—Sunday School
?acher.
THE GREAT BENEFIT
I Which people in run down state
fhealth Grieve from Hood’s Sars
iMills, conclusively proves that this
ledieiue “makes the weak stong”
tdoes not act like a stimulant,
spading fictitious strength, hut
[owl’s Sarswarslla builds up in
perfectly natural way all the weak
Bed parts, purifies the blood, and
ssists to healthy action those im
ortadt ojgans, the kidneys and
ver.
WISE WORDS.
He who does nothing is very near
ping ill.
A forward child shows a backward
arenf.
The everlasting gloomy man can be
fnored.
The everlasting funny man is to be
leaded.
Nothing is more refreshing titan true
eliteness.
There is too much law and toolitt’e
cstice extant
The gilder and the refiner of gold can
8e no beauty in a cowslip.
All thst remains of life is deatn; all
sat remains of death is a handful of
ihes.
I It is the greatest possible praise to be
pi-ed M praise. by a man who himself deserving
I Some people see everything connected
C nh themselves and thier friends
prougli as
I Do nothing a magnifying glass
for others is the undoing
f, 0119 s B e do most good to our
r' | Do tS Wlien doing for others.
not fail to condole with any
humpback yo u meet, It shows a good
pirit to sympathize with other misfor
pines. [
1 l»0j oitioi ;:g one’s nature and emo
f [ity ns ( .ev e!op i , ) engdexity does their
tfS ‘° ugHi “ m directness ami sirnpli
^l your friend that he is looking
*!»•
alimenting him. au ore indirectly com¬
‘ ! ‘' ay be s ‘ ren ambition
>ee if
toud*. lint
helaiip:.-, ■ '.Y 6 UUl,1Ch COmes disaster mon
Mnve ?iniV-* bef<?il an!ltte,n l t
'muion tandem witii luve,
‘ S are b t ,rn happy—those
pant?- some achieve who dm
>•, happiness in
ing ho to lear
Nhad ! iVe; b ‘t no one has ever
,
L *he —not
^'^•c-imdiuatce 11 hod-earr: er or
n » ike your
tiosmith.
fnni.,,/ V , ‘ C " 1!) ambition. Love
kn -i,:/.,' ue bars ho -Vi avonm] r „ UI .
kt*... 1 on t; y 1 ami glatliien i*.n*
re a ‘fems which would
or j c lo*-e he
w ve s toe only
' ^ IFi-iG Y giier-t tha
l*b. ' “ eroa die -onlL lieuith-
Conyers, Georgia, Saturday, July 11, 189i-
ran
THE CONYERS INSTITUTE
PERMANENTLY ORGAN¬
IZED.
OFFICERS ELECTED AND THE FIVE THOUS¬
AND DOLLARS ALREADY SUBSCRIBED.
The question of education
has been one of vital and all
absorbing concern to the think¬
ing and progressive citizen of
Conyers for years. How to
meet the full requirements of
this greet issue, has most truly
tried the patience, experience
and wisdom of our most
thoughtful people.
After a trial year, most grat¬
ifying to all, both in manage¬
ment and results, a system, at
last, has been devised that will
be eminently satisfaotory, and
will most happily meet the ex
pectations of our people, in an
educational sense, and the
Boys and Girl’s High school
merges into the CONYERS IN
ST1TUTE. A charter has been
applied for, and the stockhold
ers are now in permanent or
ganization. The magnificent
sum of $5000, the amount
necessary to complete the build-
\rw i 31 A
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S 'yd A '
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mg, has been subscribed, and
the plans drawn and accepted
show that the Conyers Institute
will bo handsome and imposing,
and the furnishings will be
modern in all their appoint¬
ments; and located on the lots
purchased near the First Bap
tist church, that for situation
cannot be excelled, and on
which are two fine wells of wa
ter, and in close proximity to a
beautiful grove of original for¬
est trees, that will ever give
shade and refreshing breezes to
the scholars as they play or
study in this woodland retreat.
At a general meeting last Mon¬
day of the stockholders the
following directors and officers
were elected:
A. J. Fierce, President.
Jno. H. Almand, H. V. Hard¬
wick, J. P. Tilley, D. M. Almand,
W. U. Wallace Directors.
G. W. Calx, L. F. Scott,
Treasury. Secretary.
As to the teachers it is only
necessary to state that Prof. W.
F. and Mrs. Perry, and as manv
assistants as patronage may
require will have charge of the
school, and the public may rest
assured of as good school ser¬
vice as in any Institute of the
state.
That “necessity is the mother
of invention ’ applies witii equal
force and truth as well as art
and is well understood by every
one. That Conyers needs a
school system, perfect in its
make up, that is now offered
her admits of neither argument
or doubt.
To lay claim publicly to the
distinguishing natural advanta¬
ges of Conyers over almost any
town in Georgia would only be
awarding due. honor to where honor
is Her elevation, bracing
mountain air, pure, sparkling
water, and entire freedom from
from outward impurities sta¬
tions Conyers at once and for¬
ever a healthy and inviting
home place. By nature she is
well and lavishably favored,
and wears with merited dis¬
tinction the exalted title of
“Gem of cities.”
But over and beyond the
bountiful outdishing of “dame
nature’s” favoring smile, the
gem of all the speaking beau¬
ties is the pre-eminent tone of
her moral and religious charac
ter. To this and around this
clings the luster that lends a
a never parting splender to Con
yers.
At such a place and amid
surroundings the most admira
hie our people offer to the outer
world a system of schooling the
cheapest, most perfect, complete
and comprehensive in all par
ticulars that thought and money
can devise and execute.
In a word, Conyers can ad
mit of no rival city. Nature
has exhausted her generous
store to our eternal profit, and
our people are determinly pre¬
pared to exalt Conyers as the
chief modern city for letters and
learning.
To meet the aims proposed
will tax the resources of our
people no small degree, hut the
reward to be obtaided will be
far grander and more lasting
than glittered of trophies fresh
from the fields war.
TIGE ANDERSON'S BRIGADE.
The reunion at Marietta of
Tige Anderson’s old brigade
promises to be a most enioy
able occasion.
The programme which has
been arranged consists of excell¬
ent feautures.
There will be an address of wel
come by Captain W. T. Hudson.
of the seventh; a response
Judge George Tj;n
j i
ninth; a r utahon by Mrs. F. M.
Meyer, and short speeches by
distinguished members of the
brigade and other veteran:
A basket dinner and music
will serve as additional attra
tions.
-------
Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria.
WASHINGTON GOSSIP
News From the Great Politica
Center.
Mr. Wanamaker knows a good
deal more than he did and bis increase
of knowledge hasn’t added any to his
opinion of himself. He has been
humiliated by finding out that he was
after all only a clerk for Mr Harrison.
The long delay in giving out the list
of Steamships companies which have
been selected under the mail subsidy
law, passed by the billion dollar Con¬
gress, to carry our foreign mails, is at
last explained. Some weeks ago Mr.
Wanamaker stated that he had com¬
pleted the list and would in a few
days make it public Mr. Harrison
at once sent for Mr. Wanamaker and
told him not to make the list public
before bringing it to him for revision.
Mr. W. kicked, but had to give up the
list, and Mr. Harrison carried it with
him when he went to the summer
capitol at Cape May Point, will bring
the revised list back tomorrow, and
that it will at once be made public
It is lemut d from a source that is
authentic that no lines running out
of Southern ports south of Norfolk,
except Tampa, Fla., Galveston, Tex.,
and New Orleans, will got any of the
subsidy money, which is to be put
where it will do the most good to the
republican parly.
And that isn’t the only time that
Mr. Wanamaker has been recently
humilated by the gentleman who is
now so industriously at work to se¬
cure a renomination to tire presidency.
The last Congress, among its other
efforts to dissipate the Treasury sur¬
plus, created an entirely new office,
that of Fourth Assistant Postmaster
General, and the salary for the new
officer became available on the first of
the present month. Mr Wanamaker
supposed, of course, that he would be
allowed to select the man to fill the
office, but he was quickly undeceived
by Mr. Harrison, who not only select¬
ed the man, but also ordered the P.
M- G. to turn over to him as a part
of his duties the supervision of the
fourth-class postoffices.
This necessitated an entire reor¬
ganization of file entire department,
as the fourth-class postmasters had
been for years under the direct con¬
trol of the first assistant. Well, that
reorganization is now going on. Maj.
Hathbone, the new Fourth Assistant
Postmaster General, is a practical
politician of the Ohio school, and what
he doesn’t know about the methods
used by the republicans during the
last three national campaigns woi
hardly be worth knowing. H ■ is re¬
lied upon to swing the army of small
postmasters into line for Harrison,
and instead of the notorious dispatch
“How are the departments doing?"
which Garfield, when a candidate, sent
to Brady, of the Star route fame, Mr.
Harrison will be telegraphing to
Hathbone: “How are the post-offices
doing? Meanwhile Mr. Wanamaker
is, to use a bit of slang, not “in it”.
The pension office is gotng to be
the cause of some very lively times in
next Congress, between the invest!
galiiits tha tare to be made into its
workings and the renewal of the tight
for its Iransf r to the War department
which it now seems will certainly
made, and there is reason to believe
that the movement will be teor* 1 pop
ular than ever before, and it wij] gc
* 1: rough.
Tire 'Washirgton people are much
puzzled about the real condition
Mr. Plain's health as they can possibly
ryC • One telegram will say that he is
Price per Year, 8 LOO
perfectly veil and the next that he is
dangerously ill; one person vs ill inform
you that lie is in daily communication
with his assistants at the Department
of the State, and another that he has
had no communication with that de»
part men! since he left Washington.
You can take your choice, hut it
would be safe to charge nine—tenths
of fhe statements exaggerating Mr.
Blaines physical iiiidmental condition
to anti-Blainrepublicans who fear that
he may accept the nomination of his
party next year.
Nothing but good news conies to
the headquarters of the National As¬
sociation of Put ceifitie Clubs in this
city. The association now has
branches in every state, and the work
of thoroughly organizing the voters
in each slate is going on, more ener¬
getically in some Stats than in others,
but moving along everywhere.
The question of where will the
next national convention be .held? is
beginning to be asked of prominent
members of the party who come here.
Washington wants it, and as it will
shortly have it grand hull which will
seat 7,000 people, it sees no good
reason why it shouldn’t have it.
Some imaginative newspaper writ¬
er sent out from here a story that Mr.
Mills had decided to withdraw from
the Speakership contest. Needless
to say it was a lake without the
slightest foundation. Mr. Mills has
never bad an idea of withdrawing
and as sure as the democratic caucus
meets ins came wni he presented to
it and will not lie withdrawn until he
or some good demon at has been nom¬
inated for Speaker,
1 i .V i.V X uuuoh.v-ivd.
fV T Ti mens Postmaster of Ida
m m
vilie. Itui., writes: "Kh-etri Bitters
has done more for roe than ali other
medicines combined for that had
feeling arising from Kidney and
Liver trouble.” Jhon Leslie farmer
and stecUiui.i) of same place savs:
“Find Electric Bitters to be the best
Kidney and Liv«w medicim* made
me tent iiKn i>. w man.” .1. IV. Gar¬
dner hardware merchant same town,
says: K:eciriv BrtUM> is just the
thing for a man wit'* is all run down
and don’t cs re whet Ik -1 ite lives or
Hu-,-; he louf.o at'iv length good
appetite aud tell just like he had a
new tea-emi tit*. Ori,\ :Vh* 1 nut
tie at Di. ’A. II Lee & Son's Drug
Store.
One of 1 ho gm,u.-:,t curses of socie¬
ty uti How <•<;?»,-!ifuted is that, too
many ptopb k VG without
toil. Lv* v\buo. ' v 1 V'doiig U ought
ibUixJi: body else mast
do the work . ■ 0 >v, [ hrs j» ilLl wrong
aud the result is .m«.n tgngep and mis—
cry. Xi.c Ci-Cu.or.hover twiUv a man
or woman too good to do a lair share
of honest tor!, ami those who shirk
tber <tu! \ in this ait- only breeding
trouble. There is w< rk to do every¬
where—in rim office, on the bum, in
the store, or. • , in the work*
shop, at the bank counter and in all
the depiuttiihut of tile. BI* d is
the man who cheerfully and f;.. Ihfully
performs m. ha.tids find to
’’ for tb.-r. in alone U the true
philosophy iij'.i genuine happiness of
this life.
Augusta is in a big combine of
soothe >n The co ■ i . 3 -
: 0 rj was r*' uii«*!e after o
tWcnce in N Dm , but no 7, .
notice h«- !» iV“! in iI o a-,r-'.wge—
merit. Ii 1- r.* r raise
pi >*•«> ent
emtio*;. : i-***- »r - -f’r: rjr»- •* p an
davit. f»»r|,
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