Newspaper Page Text
E - ales Weekly
VOL. X. NUMBER o-2. o o
l ouefiman Made
le( Glad.
Hunan once heard a
pe •her who did
y ; a P * immersion for
e e in
In pis discourse he
dt0 expbio the prepo
v that if
nply K° m down to or
-
> water, and being
jit the close of this
ore d discourse, the
gave an opportunity
ireS ent to express their
on the subject, The
i accepted the invita
remarked as follows:
{readier, I ish so glad
- re to-night, for I has
laiued to my mint
g dat I never could pe¬
te. Oh, I ish so glad
does not mean in ro at
Lust CLOSE PY or HEAR
L wlcan pelieve man
[pefore. vot I jcould not un
We reat, Mr
|, dat Taniel wash cast
•n i >f lions, and came
„v,.v, I never coulu
it dat; for de wilt
ould eat him up right
iow it ish very clear to
He was shust close
ai to; and did not get
[ft at all. Oh, I ish so
sli here to-night. Again
lat de Hebrew children
t into de firish furnace,
alvaysh lookt like a
7 v , too; for I dinks dey
Lve been purnt up; but
plain to my mint now;
rere shust cast close py
To de firish furnace,
so glat I vash here to-
Iden, Mr- Breacher, it
Eat Jonah vash cast in
lalesh pelley. Now I
hid understand dat; put
Main to my mint no w;
hot taken into de whal
FL/„ at all, but shust
a his pack and rode
: 0h, I ish so glat I vash
light!
pow, Mr. Breacher, if
simst explain two more
pages ph, of happy Scripture, I
so I vash
feht! One of dem is
Mb de vicked shall pe
|‘’lake dat purns mit
brimstone alvaysh. Oh,
'
per, shall I pe cast
|Lke, E if I am vicked, or
r PY or near enough
portable shall ? I hope you
• pe cast shust PY,
ra y off, and I vill pe so
sh here to-night! De
j^age 10 <% is who dat vich saish,
Clients, obey dese
'.dal dey may
gfit ?o de tree ob life,
r in through de gates
ity, and not close py or
shust near enough to
I T have lost, and I shall
11 v ash here to-night!”
LOST
en A ir, ion and Conyers
ed package containing
shirt. Finder will be
by leaving same at
ce.
CONYERS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY SEPT- 10, 1892.
SULLIVAN GROWS SENTIMEN¬
TAL.
We are not accustomed to
associate any phase of senti¬
ment with John L. Sullivan.
He is in the minds of the pub¬
lic, a bruiser by profession, and
a sot between times. He is re¬
garded as surly, morose, vindic¬
tive and splenetic, He has fig¬
ured as a second rate actor, but
bis dramatic tours have been
fragrant with whiskey and
noisy with debouch,
In such a charactor one would
not expect either literature or
sentiment, and yet the famous
pugilist has just written a book
and its closing chapter is not
devoid of interest or merit. .We
have not seen the book, but in
a printed extract from its last
pages we find the following
which embraces some very fair
Sullivanesque sentiments:
And now as I sit calmly at
my training quarters at spot
where Long Island seems to
reach out in friendship to the
old world, with the new haven
that promises to bring it so
much nearer, and as I watch
the placid waters of Sliinnecock
and Peconic bays that have
been to shake hands in a new
found harmony, I resolve that
after this, my last battle, I shall
no longer remain in a position
where, in the words in Bryon.
“ A man must prove his fame
four times a year,” Just before
stands the colossol for of Here
ules that so long adorned the
old fighting ship, “ Ohio ” and
as Hook on him, I am reminded
that I, too, have accomplished
“ ” and that like him
I should take the skin of the
lion I captured—my reputation
as a boxer—and put it over my
shoulders hereafter only as a
mantle of protection and peace.’
Who would have pictured
John L. Sullivan reading Byron
or would have supposed that
the buily slugger “ sitting calm¬
ly” at his training quarters, af¬
ter a ten mile jog over sand} 7
roads, in a sweater, would have
pictured the u placid waters of
Sliinnecock and Peconic bays ”
as ‘shaking hands in new found
harmony.”
John L-, lias not lived amid
the culohaw of the Hub in vain.
The Birmingham News says:
“ General Janies B. Weaver,
the People’s party candidate for
President, will be among us on
the loth. It is hoped the gen¬
eral wont give further utter¬
ance to sentiments such as this:
‘ I don’t give Rebels in the South
vouchers. I would rather fur¬
nish rope to hang every d--n
one of them.”
And yet this man Weaver is
coming through Georgia on a
stumping tour for voters among
good Southern men, the old
surviving •* Rebels ” and their
sous. Think of this Third par¬
ty ites. This is the man the
Third party has put forth as a
leader.
There is more good work go¬
ing on now for the democracy
than has been done in many
years. The third party many
years. The third party may
yet prove a blessing in disguise.
What Must We Do?
Editor Hale's Weekly: Please
tell us what to do with our cot
ton. We will not make as
much as we did last year; we
have paid just as high prices
for our goods as we did last
year and we got from 7 to 9
cents for the bulk of our crop.
This year it seems that the price
will oe from (J to 7 cts. If we
sell at the present price, we can’t
pay out; and then what will we
do for goods and credit next
year ? This is no joke.
This is the point: If there is
an overproduction of cotton and
the supply is greater than the
demand, shall we force it on the
market at a reduced price and
put it in the hands of specula¬
tors to get all the profit and
part of the expence to raise it,
or shall we hold it and pay in¬
terest on our debts? We are
gone up either way; which will
pay best is the most important
question to the farmers that I
know. Some body give us their
opinion. G. P. Sawyer.
vVe don’t feel competent to
advise brother Sawyer and oth¬
ers of our farmers. Perhaps
Col. Peek could tell you what
to do as lie has some experience
in that line. J. N. H.
If all the world was devided
equally and all the debts
whipped out, it would’nt be six
months until a large number of
the people would be in debt a
while others would be ac¬
cumulating property. The his¬
tory of mankind shows that
those who manage well, those
who save theiir earnings, those
who plan and look ahead and
who are dilig3iit, are the ones
who most prosper. On the other
those who are shiftless
wasteful, and dissipate and
their oportunites, must
the veyr nature of things, be
behind in the race.—Fair
burn Standard.
Q
XJ
w R Mp m mi
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