Newspaper Page Text
H
v-.v
1 wmk if
■
,
<! m w
il >
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to used. personal The enjoyment, who live when bet¬
rightly many, with
ter than others and enjoy life more,
less expenditure, by more products promptly
-looting the world’s best to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
bxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is acceptable hue to its presenting and pleas¬
in the form most
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect the lax¬
ative; effectually headaches cleansing and system, fevers
dispelling colds, curing constipation.
and permanently given satisfaction to millions and
It has approval of the medical
m et with the
profession, because it acts on the Kid
nevs, Liver and Bowels without weak¬
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable of Figs is for substance. sale by all drug¬
Syrup 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man¬
gists in Fig Syrup
ufactured by the California
Co. only, whose name is printed Syrup on of every Figs,
package, also the name,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if offered.
OJoofs RSAfllliili free. Address F. HISCOX, 853 Broadway, New Ycrk.
PERFECTED
CRYSTAL LENSES
TRADE MARK.
duality First ud Always.
u
G. W. WEAVER 9
-
ATLANTA, GA, - - 24th YEAR,
An established business school. Book
keeping and Shorthand taught by ex¬
perienced teachers. Tonsands of students
in good paying positions. Term mode¬
rate, Studs rived dailys Send fo
circulars,
Attorney At Law,
In the Night stairs. building first roam on th
ett, up
CONYERS - - GA.
WM. B0LLMANN.
Spectacles, watches, CLOCKS
JEWELRY AND SILVERWARE.
No, 10 Whitehall Street, At'anta, Ga
$12 BUYS
One Bureau
One Bedstead
One Waslistand
One Center Table
Two Cane Seat Chairs
And One Ladies’ Rocker
At
OSLERS’.
Fly Screens a Specialty
63 & So S. Broad.
SAW
-$160 TO $5)00.
Pipes ai Boilers
TO SUIT. 100 IN STOCK.
I arge Stock of
SHAFTING,
PULLBYfi,
—AND—
SUPPLIES ©
Lombard & Co., Augusta Ga.
1 r ONLY THE TRUE
irlRON
ATONIC
disorder, build strength* health reueiv and
appetite, vigorofyouth. restore Dyspepsia,
Indigestion, that tirea fee—
k tng absolutely eradicated,
Bs. Mind brightened, brain
UDIES power increased,
cles, bonc3, nerves, force. mus¬
receive new
snir Cering their from complaints using It, find pe
cal iar to sex, Returns
K? ,, ■ . a safe, speedy cure.
ruse bloom on cheeks,beautifies Complexion.
everywhere. All venalne goods bexr
lYmpfuq 1 *' * Sent 03 ^ cent stamp for 32-page
-
cs - HARTER HEPICIME C O.. S t. Lou is. Mo.
-
boon’s j’xiospnomNii
The Great English Remedy,
ly Promptly forms and permanent¬ of Nervous
cures all
r __ w, ■■ Weakness, Jmpotenc^andatt Emissions, Spemtr
^ | watorrhea .
* 1 fieen years in prescribed" thousands of over cases; 35
is the only Reliable and Mon
iftT, j.. ■■■i—wS r4 s £
tL™* f** his dishonest SSBB.’LSMSaSS inclose price in
P*cka'«^ n we wiil store, mall. Price, one
*-. , 8e cd by return
L>r sale by Whitaker and Stewart
Hale’s Week
VOL. 13.
Ex-Senator Eustis lias
made minister to France.
Cleveland says lie will not
appoint his kinsfolk. Suppose
his name was Smith.
At this writing it seems that
Mr. B. M. Blackburn will get a
good place. He deserves one.
There will be several of the
disaffected brigade when all the
offices are given out.
We have perfect confidence
in Mr. Cleveland’s ability aud
honesty of purpose, but detest
some of his ways of doing
things.
Hoke Smith should give at
least 1,000 Georgians positions
in the interior—even if he has
to send them to Africa.
Gresham seems to be the on¬
ly man that wants the rascals
turned out. -Wouder how Hoke
stands on this qustion.
We want to see all the boys
get a good job if they eau ; as
for ourslves we are not asking
any favors of the administra¬
tion or any of the congress¬
men.
Since our last issue
has appointed some
men to office and given a
good fellows second terms.
Guess he received our pa
promptly.
The indications are now that
Governor Nor then will
Senator Colquitt as
States Senator
Nor then has made a model gov¬
ernor and we believe would
make a noble Senator.
It is disgusting to notice how
some of the weekly papers
the State boot-lick around
dailies. We like the big dailies
—couldn’t get along without
them—but we feel that weekly
press is equally as beneficial
to them.
A New York judge excused
a man from jury duty because
he was the father of twenty
one children. The judge said
that such a man had served his
country so well that no
services would be required of
him. Such a premium
upon fatherhood makes
bachelors feel bad.
What a Minister Says.
A minister has the following
good words to say for the local
uewspaper, which are as true as
gospel and which will bear care¬
ful perusal: “ Your paper’tells
us when we go to churt h, to
county, circuit aud probate
courts, and when to send the
children to school and nearly
everywhere else you have to go.
It tells us who is dead, married,
sick, bom and many other
things you like to hear. It calls
your attention to all public en¬
tertainments and matters of
interest in your town. It rec¬
ords the marriage of your
daughter, the death of your son,
the illness of your wife, free of
charge. It helps your town,
builds up your business, wheth¬
er you patronize it or not. It
sets forth the advantages, of
your town, invites immigration
aud is the first to'welcome new
comers. Time forbids to enu
merate half what it does for its
own people, and yet we some¬
times hear a man say his home
paper is not half as good as
some city paper that has no in¬
terest in his business. The
home paper is too often
Iected. ”
CONYERS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MARCH '25, 1853.
o L Yfi
—AT—
STEPHENSON
& TURNER’S
Some of the prettiest dress
goods—new, fine and stylish—
ever seen in this market are
now at the popular house of
Stephenson & Turner. They
also have a beautiful line of el¬
egant laces and trimings of ev¬
ery description to match. Beau¬
tiful embroideries and edgings
of the newest and best paterns.
The nicest lace curtain goods
you have ever seen at 10 cents
a yard. You should call and
see them and while there take
a look at the prettiest line of
gold jewelry to be found in the
country. If you want to buy
goods, new, nice and stylish,
call and see them and save rail¬
road fair and 25 per cent, on
Atlanta prices.
The merchant who appreci¬
ates your trade will ask you for
it through the columns of the
home paper. Those who do
uot just sit and wait until a
sucker comes along, and then
they do him on prices.—Foit
Valley Leader.
If you love others, they will
love you. If you speak kindly
to them, they will speak kindly
to you. Love is repaid with
love, and hatred with hatred.
Would you hear sweet and
pleasaut echoes, speak sweetly
and pleasant yourself.
Rockdale County Alliance
Will meet with Anderson sub¬
alliance at Union Hall Satur¬
day, April 1, at 10 o’clock. Open
meeting from 10 to 1. Address
es by noted speakers.
W. L. Peek, President.
B. C. Gran ado, Sec
If you ever expect to
see that dollar again leave it at
home where you cau have a
chance at it.
LA GRIPPE.
During the prevalence of ike
Grippe tho past seasons it was a
noticable fact that those who de*
panded upon Dr. King's New Dis¬
covery, cot only had a speedy re¬
covery, but escaped all of the
malady. This remedy seems to
have a peculiar power in effecting
rapid cures not only in cases of La
Grippe, but in ah Diseases of Throat
Chest and Lungs and has cured cas¬
es of Asthma and Hay Fever of long
standing. Try it and be convinced
It won t disappoint. Free Trial
Bottles at Drs. W. H. Lee & Son’s
drug store.'
Meal at the mill for sixty
three (63) cents.
Joel Markes & Sox.
Lumber Cheap.
If you want Lumber cheap
leave your order with J. E.
Whitaker at Drug Store or go
to the mill near S. W Veals.
R. B. Vaughn.
BUCLLIN’S ARNICA SALVE.
The Best Salve in the world for
Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Salt Ilkeum,
Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands,
Chilblains, Corns, and a l Skin Erup¬
tions, and positively cures Piles, or
ao pay required. It is guaranteed
to give perfect satisfaction. Price
25 cents per box. For sale by Dr
W. H. Lee & Son.
THE ONLY ONE EVER PRINTED.
CAN YOU FIND THE WORD ?
There is a three inch advertise¬
ment in this paper this week which
has no two words alike except one
word. The same is true of each
new one appearing each week, from
the Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This
house places a “ Crescent ” on every
one they make and publish. Look
for it, send them tlie name of the
word, and they vri 1 return you fi
book, beautifu ly lithographed S am -
The Fast Young Man.
-
J. T A. . 11., contributes the fol
lowing to the Rome Tribune on
“ T he Fast Young Man : ”
He sat back in his cell and
gazed out through tho iron
grate with the cold settled ex
pressiou of despair.
His face had once been smooth
and, the smile of health had
gleamed upon his cheek, but
now all was blanched by the
hand of dissipation.
The pangs of remorse had
ploughed deep furrors across
the rotund cheek and had tak¬
en the sparkle from his eyes.
I could see that his hair was
gray in streaks and now that
he was beyond the influence of
the barber shop he looked
twenty years older than I had
become accustomed to regard
him on the street.
All of the bitterness of a
ruined soul seemed to express
itself in these words which were
addressed more to fate than to
me :
“ Hang the luck! ”
Then he leaned back and said
to me in a voice I shall never
forget :
“ How changes can come !
Last summer—just one year
ago—I was going the rounds
of all the watering places; flush
as a king and had things all my
own way. For years I have
enjoyed the best of every thing,
and now here I am locked up in
with a lot of miserable
criminals.
“ Last night as 1 sat and pomierejl.
My ruined ajd wasted life
The pangs of remorse were hitter
They cut my heart like a knife.
“ What caused me to do it? VVhr.t
always
1, .Is men to destruction and crime?
T i uiodigal son you’ve read of
Hasn’t altered his course in time.
“ Champagne and a box at tho opera,
High steps with a fortune in flush,
The passionate kisses of women
Whose checks had forgotten to blush.
•< Haug the luck! ” he repeat¬
ed again, ‘ but this is tough. ’
Ah, well, it requires nerve to
smile a,t these things, you know,
when all of a fellow’s ambitions
are knocked out at 26.
Money in Wall Street.
Isn’t it about time the papers stopped
advertising Messrs. Byrnes and Park
hurst anil took up some other indi vidua Is?
Here is a novel occupation for you. A
fashionable dentist on Fifth avenue hires
a pretty blond, with soft, babyish hands
and a face full of dimples, to go about
from house to house cleaning teeth. The
young woman was recently called for at
a Wall street office. Her employer was
afraid she would refuse to go, and be
told her sbo needn’t feel obliged to an¬
swer tho call. But she went, armed
with courage and inspiration, She
cleaned five men’s teeth and came back
to tho office with fifty dollars. She will
hereatter pay more attention to Wall
street than to Fifth avenue.—New York
Advertiser.
It has como to be full}’ recognized that
the less red tapo there is about a chari¬
table scheme the quicker and most effi¬
ciently are the two parties—the needy
and the helper—brought together. The
Needlework guild is a superb examp'e of
simple benevolence, aud a plan recently
proposed by a London man to aid the
destitute of that city may be tho incep¬
tion of another equally vast and unob¬
structed philanthropy.
It is proposed that every person who is
willing to undertake to contribute to the
need of some needy family during the
coming winter shall send his or her name
in to a committee.
This committee acts simply as a clear¬
ing house, and tho plan is known as the
clearing house plan, forwarding the
name to the clergyman or recognized
head of some district where help is need¬
ed, who in return responds with the ad¬
dress of the family to be assisted. That
is all, the gifts going directly from the
reliever to the relieved without inter
•rU; aries or circumlocution
Nathaniel riawrhome wrote a IIMV*-.
watch be celled “The nouso of oeven
Gables.” His son Julian, who is the
father of seven children, calls liia house
“The House of Seven Gabblers. ”
There is no accounting for tastes
this topsy turvy world. A New York
woman wears a ring in which is set in a
circle of diamonds her first baby’s first
tooth.___
Seneca, when tired writing his treatises
on morals, found amusement in going
his accounts and calculating how
much interest was due him.
W uen a woman says tnai »uc !.*> »»raiu
of a particular man, it is a covert, per¬
haps an unconscious, confession that she
is strangely drawn to him.
The man who hasn’t any work to dc
never seems to be quite happy unless he
is bothering somebody else who has,
J GTioy and Wilson.
Tho two chitf intellectual stars, Jef
ft(ey and Professor Wilson—Uio ono near
ly 70, thu other not far from 60. when 1
first know then--’noth worthy and wiso,
wore on.riuie: contrasts in i vory possible
way. The lftilelord was small ami del
jeatoand Christopher dainty North, in build. he Wilson-**
as was as often
eft Had—was a splendid athlete, tall and
broad, who walked faster, ran faster
and leaped knowing higher than anyone spend if his his
time; not how to
health, strength and spirits; fair and
blooming, too, as a girl, with hair \\ hieli
had been yellow, and when 1 knew him
laid plentifully on bis shoulders in gray
locks.
Jeffrey prided himself on speaking
“English;” Christopher’s tremulous burr
would have betrayed him anywhere.
Jeffrey was fastidiously neat and tidy;
Christopher a notorious slut, sometimes
seen in easy deshabille, or wlutt his lively
daughter Mrs. Gordon called “a state of
nature,” till late in the day, if not all
day long, The judge hated early rising;
the professor was often up and out be¬
fore sunrise. Jeffrey had seldom taken
part in the convivial excesses which were
going out when wo came; Christopher
had become, and from all accounts not a
day too soon, a rigid abstainer from
every kind of stimulant. Loth had lived
their student years at Oxi * h Jeffrey
hated college life; Christopher adored it.
—Longman’s Magazine.
A Long Hun.
Every actor likes to boast of a long
run. Ho doesn't oare whether it is a
financially successful “run” or not. If
it is not successful financially, it always
is artistically, and so on a long run tho
success is hound to come in one way or
the other.
“Yon had quite a long run, didn't
yon?" aslced one actor of another up in
the billiard room of the Fivo A's club re¬
cently. had
Tho actor of whom this question
been asked had done the “leads” in a
melodrama on a one night stand route
for several weeks. Everybody in tho
club hail said that tho show would only
stay out for a week. They were mis¬
taken, for it did stay out nearly four
weeks. The name of the attraction
might have been “The Bucket of Blood."
That would have fitted the play anyway
better than the name under which it was
billed.
“Oh, yes,” replied the “lead,” “it was
a pretty long run, about a milo and a
half. Wo would have done tho turn
easily cross lots, as we intended, but tho
sheriff was on to that game and had a
deputy in the field, and bo we had t o
stick to tho road and sprint. We caught
tho last car of the train, and i hope that
sheriff caught pneumonia. • There is no
reason why lie should not have dono so.
We gave him violent exercise on a cold,
night.”—New York Herald.
The Loving Act of a Dog.
During mother's long and severe ill¬
ness, Carlo tool; groat interest in all that
pertained to her, watching the doctor
very closely and sitting by the half hour
with his chin on the bed by her side. We
bought our bread, and knowing Carlo’s
fondness for warm biscuit tho baker
often gave him ono which ho quickly dis¬
patched. Once, during a very severe at¬
tack of mother's, when wo wore doing
our utmost to tempt her appetite, Carlo
came in early ono morning, bringing his
warm biscuit untouched, aud laid it on
the floor by mother’s side.
Too sick to notico ibis act of his, but
uot to bo disappointed in his own plan
he came forward and lifted the biscuit
to her pillow aud retired again to his
corner to wait sumo look of thanks from
her. It came, and such a happy dog!
He had brought his choicest offering—a
warm biscuit—and it had been recog¬
nized. Was there a loving plan and care¬
ful observation in this act?—Mary E.
Holmes iu Scienco.
Whittier on Matthew Arnold.
Matthew Arnold went to see Whittier
on his arrival, and it is needless to say
that Whittier derived sincere jilcasuro
from tho visit, but Arnold s delightful
recognition of Whittier's "in School
Days as one of tho perfect poems which
must live gave him fresh assurance of
fulfilled purpose in existence. He had
followed Arnold with appreciation from
his earliest appearance in the field o'
letters and knew him, as it were, “by
heart” long before a personal interview
was possible. In a letter written after
Arnold’s return to England ho says; ‘ '1
share thy indignation at the way our
people have spoken of him, ono of the
foremost men of our time, a true poet, a
wise critic and a bravo, upright man.
to whom all English speaking people
owe a debt of gratitude. 1 am sorry 1
could not see him again.”—Annie Fiolds
in Harper’s.
Farce Comedies and Theater*.
A manager in New York—not the man
one would have expected to say it, either
—declares that farce comedies are work¬
ing a general injury to theatrical inter¬
ests: “To the legitimate theaters, be¬
cause they are taking people away from
them; to the public, because they are
lowering standards of taste; to tho vari¬
ety shows, because they are being con¬
stantly recruited from them, and to the
actors, as a class, because they Induce a
man to give up honest work and play at
tho gallery.”—New York Sun,
Kncouragliig Salmon.
The salmon syndicate of the north¬
west are all busied in encouraging the
increase of tho Pacific coast salmon.
Fifty thousand million salmon are
tarn nil loose into tho rivers of Oregon
by tho syndicate alone every year, and
as the industrious female salmon lays
900 eggs to every pound of her weight,
tho prospect of tho fish seems encourag¬
ing.
The Napoleonic Arch .
The grand triumphal arch begun b>
jwsir.sMtfJr'K
central
with the names ot m generals aud fid
Tictoric-8.—St. Louis fflobe-Democrat.
ChiW-en Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria,
NO. 12.
DUCKS, GEESE AND TURKEYS.
Opinions i jivcsKctl by a Practical Man at
an Ohio I’ttru’.cv-,' Club.
At an Ohio fV.ni . is’ club <i practical
farmer who has proved by his own e:\pe
riuice tlutt*tU, vo is a handsome profit i:i
the poultry business, properly conducted,
expressed himself as follows concernin c
the relative merits of ducks, geese and
turkeys. Ho said:
Ducks pay largo returns for tho Caro
bestowed on them, and of the various
breeds the Pokings are the Undisputed SU
periors. A veil bred Pekin# duck will
l>egin to lay in February and will keep
it up until she has about 150 eggs to her
cred it. Y< mu # ducks are tho hardiest o f
nnv variety of poultry, and once hatched
are pretty sure to live to maturity.
They can bo fed on coarser and sloppier
feed than any other kind of poultry, and
of Into years a. large demand has sprung
up for spring ducks at the time they are
about 10 weeks old.
Gueso to ho very profitable ought to
have a low wet meadow or pasture for a
range. Where this can be provided geese
may be raised with considerable profit.
Tho goslings require careful attention
until they begin I > feather out. After
that time they will thrive if given tlie
range of a good pasture a nd a small feed
Turkeys on a largo farm are consid¬
ered fairly profitable, if tho owner does
not mind the grain that a flock of these
birds manage to destroy in their wander¬
ings. However, as their wanderings are
often through the fields of neighbors, the
owner may not always feel this loss.
Turkeys have not been a source of profit
with me. Tho young birds are hard to
rear and have to bo coddled a great deal
the first few weeks. As 1 have no range
for them, I have no use for turkeys until
they are well roasted, and I believo I
can buy them cheaper than 1 can raise
them.
To get tho most profit from poultry,
the birds should not be fed too high dur¬
ing tho months when insects abound.
This will induce them to search for food,*
and in their wanderings they will de¬
stroy many injurious insects. Too many
flocks are kept, as a rule, that are of no
special breed. My experience with
chickens convinces me that tho largo
breeds are not as profitable jfra the
smaller breeds. Tho Mediterranean
class (which includes tho Leghorns, Mi
norcas and Spanish fowls) and all varie¬
ties of Hambiirgs can bo kept for much
less than tho Asiatic breeds, and as a
rule will produce twice as many oggs,
so it will be seen, that the smaller breeds
are doubly profitable.
Tlio Now Colcry Culture.
In truck gardening intensive culture
must prevail to insure satisfactory re
turns. Big yields of mnallest possible
area and in the quickest time and with
best labor is tho golden rule observed by
our progressive cultivators. Celery, a
most important old crop, is no longer grown
by tho laborious methods. With its
increased demands simpler modes have
been evolved, until we liavo now the
Kevin method, or now celery culture, as
it is also called.
This new method, which does away
with tho “banking up” for bleaching, is
described in detail by Robert Nevin and
other practical men who have tested it
in a little manual issued by tho Rural
Publishing company, New York. The
main features of this method, briefly
stated, are: Enrichment of the soil, usu¬
ally with chemical fertilizers, and care¬
ful preparation of tho same, which must
be made .level and fine. It is then marked
off in rows seven inches apart, and tho
plants set seven inches apart straight in
tho rows. Those plants, placed seven
inches apart each way, are cultivated as
long as possible with tho wheel hoc and
hand tools.
The more fertilizer used the larger the
growth of the plants and the more water
required to make tho fertilizer available:
lienee irrigating is an all important work,
as the rainfall cannot ho depended on to
give sufficient moisture. The growth is
rapid; consequently the crop is tender,
solid and brittle. It has been estimated
set as described, ono acre contains
120,000 plaifis that blanch as they grow,
and with proper treatment turn out at
rncreial 100,000 good plants suitable for corn
uses,
The Plant For Green Manuring:.
The plant to l>e grown exclusively for
green manuring ia ono tliat wo can use
as a stolon crop on land that has already
produced a crop for tho season or is
growing ono. It is doubtless^ hard to
find in connection with the ordinary
crops of the farm or usual rotations. A
New Jersey farmer writing in this con¬
nection (o The Country Gentleman says;
I am inclined to think that crimson
clover fills the bill. It fits in with my
system of partial soiling, sown after
early potatoes on my first crop of soiling
com, and is harvested tho ensuing sea
son in time f t a second planting of corn
or a crop of Hungarian grass. We bow
it the last < » August. Experience with
it in two yeaus of drought indicates that
it may bo sown safely with us on Sept. 1,
if not as late as the middle of that
month. It is a more vigorous grower
than ordinary clover. I have scarcely
had experience enough to fix its time of
: 1 1; i turity further than to say it would
give a big crop for plowing under about
June 1.
At the Experiment Station..
The dairy school of tho Wisconsin
agriculturist college station is in a pros
P TtH.eG^ia station an apparatus
for the testing of spraying nozxl-s has
been constructed, ami the station will
.....i"” 1 ' - s! ‘ : ot tba dim,Teut
kind of mir.zh-s.
At tho IJ-'fh station a hyflraulio en
gine.-r has b -n , rnphn .-d for the coming
season to I S amine the imgat.on systems
of the territory Mid to aid the farmers m
introduction of irrigation.
jwprrafKts . m , r
[Ltol’and
Chiiureri Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria,
;F
bs
m i
Hi
' /
1 HIM
Mr. Geo. W. Turner
Simply Awful
Worst Case of Scrofula tho
Doctors Ever Saw
Complctely Cured by HOOD’S
sarsaparilla.
“ "Tien I was 4 or 5 years old I had a srrof
ulcus sore on the middle linger of my left hand,
whieh got si> bad that tho doctors cut ihe
linger oft. and later took oft move than half my
nanri. iheu tho sore broke out on my arm,
came out on my neck and face on both sides,
nearly destroying the sight of one eye, also
ou my right arm. Doctors said it was the
Worst Case of Scrofula
they ever saw. It was "imply awful! Five
years ago 1 began to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Gradually I found that the sores were begin¬
ning bottles, to heal. dollar*! I kept on till I had taken ten
I I«'I got 1 for Just think of what a
return that Investment! A thmn
mhikI i>cr rent? Yes, many thousand. For
the past 4 years 1 have had no sores. I
Work all the Time.
Before, I could «to no work. I know not
what to say strong enough to express my grat
It tide to Hood’s Sarsaparilla for my perfect
cure.” G gouge W. Tdunkr, Fanner, Gal¬
way, Saratoga county, K. Y.
HOOD’S PILLS d,J not WBAk.n, but old
digestion and touo the 6toi \ach. Try them. %c.
M levs Fer 111 !
m M Wj N ,A
§ d i K
\Y,
<
m
Say, sitplown J re and .’o', me to.I yon
til it t c plnco to g i now is to
fliitaker & Stewart’s
DRUG STORE
When you want g< o„l, pure drugs of any
kind. There stojk will 1 c full and com¬
plete—they will handle nine but the
best and their i rices will be the lowejfc.
They will curry a good lin s of
PAINTS, OILS,
PUTTY,
GLASS,
PATENT MEDICINES,
PILLS,
LINIMENTS, ETC.,
TOBACCOS,
CIGARS—
Infnct they propone to keep whatever
the people want. Their goods will bo
pure and reliable and their prices will
bo reasonable.
Call on them at Stewart’s old drug
-tore, Commerce street, Conyers, Boor -
gia.
FUESC1U FT IONS CAREFULLY
r "~
COMPOUNDED.--
Scientific American
Agency for
L- ill*
im
1-1 TRADE CAVEATS, MARKS,
0E3ICN PATENTS,
I For informal Ion nml fr«*° COPYRIGHTS, 11 and hook,wri «t».
OtdcHt buroau for wnunrlng pnt.ont* In America.
|.;vory patorif, lakon out by uh in brought miiirm
tho pubJlo by u notice Riven free of charge in tho
Jbciriitifir Jittmati
'i»s««srws±a sesmsMSts
UtiUMH O iHUi'i HITTERS
Cur -ItuUKuHtiot., niHounnctw, (iuneral Debility, Dyupnputa, rhyai- Mnl*
rlci, NervoiDGH'ts, and Genuine
clans re coin rnt •nri it. All dealers Mill It.
turn trade nil rk and crossed red lines Oh wrapper.
if A S.-&WJff I for n. r cutnlogue, foul- necure me
denier to man
f 2*
FOR, rof|
WHY IS THE
om® L, u POUGLAb Al I/M J. A
*
OI’O OUfjF tlfMEM
T * « «J n
nm<io iium mi, aaur mwvputuw.itottmuhuut
$ Kp-m-i ^ynt»h?c"trtoriable #n<*s which <-<»t from »s-j»'w »««'■ ..
and durable. The be»t
fc-R
msi.ie, ii.-avy urn. »ie». ««.*
S2a til" I’uo trial will convince thews
price; one
‘Lad Ie8