The Solid South. (Conyers, Ga.) 1883-1892, January 23, 1892, Image 7
Js ARE dumb. Sound* Like tbe tost plood. of the especially . Indians, 1 of southern eg ions tradition to nrious ah lower -art that early | lUerofaUtnbes In very, very Country (is over against perfect form was landsoine in the ex nts being all superb anity. Knowing of Buts an d being much one another, they t arrogant. b-y and the t for their bigotry the ied the father of 1 would hat a . deluge of hern off the face dream which fore } of the or the tribes upending, there was visionary view the of a raft, which was y: a remnant of this [n those days all ani n do; and, when the ,c informed the beasts dream, and of his in tg the building of the pretested, declaring s to accompany him , P . mon '. superior „ mmilipenee uitel „ jiilt the raft, and lo. L<] 'fjhen the great m.vn’s family and 1st tsok passage and months on the sur s. The clouds cleared hd Say after the em¬ ir seventeen successive b \ the sun as a guide, a pg toward his place ;i Lflj ft animals, everyone be remembered, of khe speech), protested west, declaring in r preferred steering f | pi a ce. ' Ln, ha b eea going on to the infinite joy [had been creatures holding who the horde of I men and the reason bots of dry land began Lily [nnded, this mdely con and the man land the beasts wore [o press the face of the feet. But a great and bed overtaken the an muraiurs against the i water, they were de ouvr of speech, and uab from that day.— lie. L‘- Hie Name, i nalrnr.! ! :-tory who better to deliver little >ils than to let them out of books, xic day on the young friends, is, from of food, the most im s to the human race. bf his structure which mr'tary cr industrial sties are used in the int of view of char me, it mi be con *«es certain !;;;. ’j which frtiy justify his ice of tlie opening lines onca submitted by a vf'iftfi stfiiool; K-c tiL-caase it acs kinder ®i ! i r betr. Month’s Companion. . at Wt real i . £ h t ie i pt Afraid of Alllgato**, i M that Nsi Jli mosquitoes ob of the aUi-’.-t/, r i ' • r tii: -t long, t j ie G(ir k e ^° ( s Undin * a! L" r°*fedge. *®astants were f wa r- DID UP A GEORGIAN. TheiTCS at Birmingham Decoy a Man to tlie Outskirts and Rol) Him. Birmingham, Ala., July 29. W. H. Burton of Americas, Ga., was decoyed a stranger, taken to the outskirts r f the city and there set upon by three Trahans who beat him half to death and t ,Voe(1 him of all his money. received Burton’s fright nos* was broken, and be wounds on his head which may prove fatal. The robbers escaped. Gave It Away in His Sleep. Newcastle, Pa., July 29.--David Newton, aged 2Z, of Shenango township, has been arrested, charged with mur¬ dering William Riser, a farmer, on the 3d of April, 1889. near Wampum. New ton, Riser and J ames Booher were all drinking in Wampum on April 2. The next morning the mangled body of Riser was found on the railroad track. It was supposed he had fallen on the track and been killed while in a drunken stupor, ft is charged now that Newton talked in his sleep lately and said that he mur¬ dered and robbed Riser. Newton says the charge is false and the result of 3 pite work.___ Tliirtl Party Campmeeting. Sulphur Springs, Tex., July 29. —An Alliance campmeeting opened here with 8,000 people on the grounds, and more pouring in. It is strictly a third party •{fair. Among the speakers are Senator ’efierof Kansas, C. A. Powors of Terre -Xante, Ind., ex-president of the Farm grs > Alliance, President Evan Jones, n arr y Tracy, Macune, Ralph Beaumont 0 f Washington, and L. L. Polk of North Carolina, president of the National Al¬ fiance. Temperance Convention. Atlanta , July 29. —The Georgia State Temperance convention is in session in this city. The proceedings are moving, smoothly on, and are attended with con siuerable interest. Troubles of a Cockney Schoolmaster. When a cockney emigrates to America aid gets a job at teaching school, then his troubles begin. There was one of , the genus tried it on near Gambier, O *> so the story runs, whether it be true or n °t “’Any Hadams, you spell saloon/ he dictated to the spelling class. “I don’t know how,” whined little Harry, frightened by the strange use of aspirates and “aitches.” “Don’t know ’owl Why, young hignoramus; saloon is spalled with a ‘hess’ and a ‘hay,’ a ‘hell’ two ‘hoes’and a ‘hen. 7 yy Harry was worse at sea than ever then; so one of the boys was sent to the board to write it plainly for the class to see. Tho lad could make his letters, but he did not know how to join them in regular running writing style, and left them unjoined, thus, s-a-l-o-o-n. The teacher looked at it a moment aufi then asked, with Some asperity. ‘Why don’t you put it together right? Wuy don’t you fasten your letters to¬ gather? Why don’t you put that ‘hay’ nearer that ‘hell ?’ ” The boy’s eyes snapped, and he an gwered like a flash, . i 1 Cause 1 was afraid it would burn up!” The class was dismissed for tiie day R u t the geography class proved an other pitfall. One of the boys while writuki names of Em n cities spelled y p What?” cried the feaclier on bis ronra ;. “His that the way you spell Vcriieo?” 'ea, sir,” said the lad. »uppose Iii was to toll mu thvt f f is honiy o; / in V< ” OU say a rr‘ -’N would be pretty high, sir. Then there was an explosion.—Cin cinnati Commercial Gazette. a ® Ws; ;h ? h art to of 1.. TJ 11 t to on ? m naii not . & ice foil,of dl “Mamma, wl ere i overn: lent - that tiu miser;t v s not “go round,” bo refused to be comforted.—Haw York Recorder. His Protest was Etfectiv*. A citizen of Paris, Ky., who was fined ^even dollars for allowing his own cat on nis own premises to kill his own chick¬ ens, protested so vehemently against this interference with a man’s enjoy¬ ment of an inalienable right that the judge, per force, remitted the penalty. —Louisville Courier-Journal. Water, it should be known, can easily be kept cool without ice by infolding the earthen pitcher or jar which receives It in throe folds of cotton or linen cloth rept constantly’ wet IV anted f Duel witli the Emperor. Berlin, July 28. —A man named Guerther recently arrived in this city from New York with the announced in¬ tention of challenging the emperor of Germany to fig lit a duel. Guerther’s relatives, who are people in an influ¬ ential position, caused him to be closely watched by detectives in order to pro rent the man from getting relatives into trouble. Finally the visitors him confined in were com¬ pelled to have an insane asylum. __ Cars Made of Steel. Chicago, July 28.—A special train of five cars constructed entirely of steel are on exhibition at the Chicago ami Northern Pacific passenger station in this city. This is looked upon py some as the first sign of a revolution in rail¬ way car building, it is claimed the cars neither cost nor weigh more than old style, while being practically inde¬ structible by lire or in a wreck. Receiver of a Defunct Uauk. Anniston, Ala., July 28.—Judge Cas sady, of the Anniston city court, ap¬ pointed Captain A. P. Agee receiver of the defunct Anniston Saving and Safe Deposit company. This was done at the request of the depositors, who held two or three meetings last week to de¬ vise some way for obtaining amounts due thc-tn. Captain Agee’s bond was fixed at #20,000. IVii 1 * 1 * 01*8 in the ?Ii<TdIe Agea. fn tbe Middle Ages, when, steel and silver mirrors were almost exclusively osed, a method of backing glass for the same purpose with thin sheets of metal was known. Small convex mirrors oi glass were made in Germany before the Sixteenth century, and were in demand until comparatively modern times. They were produced by blowing small glass globes, into which while they were hot was passed through a pipe a mixture of tin, antimony and resin. When the globe was coated inside it was allowed to cool, and was afterward cut into convex lenses, which formed small but well defined images.— Wu-vli ington Star. An Ei|iatrl»teil Yankee. Captain Thonegal, of tile schoona Queen, which arrived at Astoria fron Vladivostok, Siberia, via Hakodate, Japan, tells an interesting story of hi< trip. Way out in this faraway land, on the border;; of the Sea of Japan, at this Siberian city, he found 30,000 inhabit¬ ants, and strange to say but one Amer¬ ican family among them. Nearly twen¬ ty years ago Richard Smith, a young Bostonian, ran away from a whaler which put into Vladivostok for sup plies, and remained among the Rus eians, who owned the town. By hard work and careful management Smith succeeded in saving up a few thousand difilars, and started hack to Boston, in tending to sestle down there; but when he reached his old dome he found every zufxi To use his own Ian r-- had become too a : X i 1 too mucli efiort KC > up vvu! 4i nd make money,” r. r ting his money in a stock of lie,;iin set sail for his far , where be has since t nade a fortune. He seems happy i his iaola tion, and says he will never come back to the United States again. Vladivostok is the port from which the Russian exiles are convoyed to tae isl; xnds near by, and like other Siberian ost under all rime. — d Or; A £3 ■e many wa t ,i It be ; n# about t 1 dent an i a sc hleh im * usiox si it of Europe, b 5BP. Biblos, now ci t in hundreds of When aim of tl as read ii t a by ■■/A.' unco fcj , , : t.: g ! <enow vi^iw •!»'#■; set ii:ans of con itig what Las been acquired. — liod' t MU iieruld. L> « angroLt r? a ■S-ESh-S 1 -— El CARRY A FINE LINE OF uSe-CS-.-,____ <• •« They return thanks to their many customers ol the past ^ A V and can say to them that they are prepared to agaiu s-ll t i| them good goods on goods terms. Call and see them. | Almand & Langford, Conyers , Ga. m 33 mM *3 ■i 0 2 j B g igararfi^ —«**sg Ei -a. n fo vs $ * imj TE“STT?, “PTTT T pit Ihxr j* pjggf ^c-R^ jfit* c-4 arijNjgpw u lixnmp ___ / ,-v'QfQrj *" 1 l V (' ^ F ( ' i I ' A BIG ASSORTMENT i J o*vr J A - S. k ft d Smr i eveiw T kma h‘ a so r s a full I Clothing, Hats. > Shoes s^ v vv r: ft i Ml i wtm a A. yj « oi TO wares, 1 fi'rr 7 k a no jtteav\ 1 r G roceries, £9! w IWJ w * ? I { 1 B 1 8 J s3i TO i LYiLALIFG, f ii.T. Y AT »» I I ( m ||j I 1 l, i 0 A WHOLESALE COST F/ a : Uil ff-* i n f : s r. . G y ’ i COME-- WITH WMMMMMMl » s' -AND YOU Wild___ eret J) O sure J kian>;it 13 paes. ' 2 4r w RESPECTFULLY, UudgOri IS IS'* p. TO 'jjfe Thirons’ll, aU-s assistei Pracfu to ;-i*itioJi3. il rii-t. • L/:, kri-:k. v/rm >*w ' '. .! ' i.OJ!Lv!LLL. KV. . m ■Mv, BIRMINGHAM BUS FIT Itj « a t | '- W V N . offers a thorough business training for the ka«t jp* i *? - - on tiaf Of time and money* Hook *%•■oping in all StiL it# bra nohow; Pen man-111 r'plain andr'-narmn-B w L 7 ; V ta),; hii.>i-«-b»TKl. .!«•., Uc*U in II* » t ,f . • •’ . practical ami comprel '•mhiv« manner. Jn<*f hoof* r ow»iw of study now ami on ;m . 1 , combining tboory witu pr-„.. ■m % AMOS WARD. Pres’t., BOUUlifihfcui, kik