Newspaper Page Text
jj- J 08 03 GRK
r t.J
,
■i f
t Lov/ssI st Prices.
■> 0
....... O 0 U 61 AS
. MM 02r»KSf
•it O.J^f«C/u*Kakca?ji *J»paUCE.3S0L«fc
. BVssss* , ,
SfcgssBgs*
Shoes
. I tes
bring “vedov’erother ...stamped on sol*.
r/f gj&Snot make*. Sold by
5 supply you we can.
u van ted. As soon as one is
the name will appear here.
Ire foe headache.
Jv for all forms of Head
fectric Bitters baa proved to
pry best. It eflecte a per¬
i cure a il the most dreaded
,1 s ick headaches, who yield toils af
je We urge all are
. botie, and give
toprocure a
aedy fair trial. * In cages of
a
d cons ipa ion Electric Bit
ire3 by giving the Deeded
the bowels, an i few cases
jgt the use of this medicines,
once. Large Son’aMrugstore Bott'es on’y
“DfsatLee &
Extracted Without Fain
Iig Qailjiau’s bought the remedy, right for to use the
I
tractRn of teeth, I will he
Rave all those wajjtinj teeth
el to give urn a trial Satis
guaranteed.. Respect., ;
Du. H. H. McDonald
U ADVERTISEMENTS
[Tl'KRS OF DISMISSION.
EIA Ita-s, Fockdalr It. K. Hi i C.-uJj| .uimiiiistrater of
lie')! Mr-. Nancy Hill and Sain
B! (ii-ce.- , repreqgpfs duly filed t> and the
pli:-s Ih petition,
r i.■)•■!,that he has fully
si.red • d estate, aml-Uiw is to
IVer-oiisi-oneerned to-nliowcause
ary can why me eai I B fr\ Hill
lation noth- eh -ig <! lr; m bis. ad
nf % .ill e-tate, un 'the first
KiuFe rua'y 1895- This Nov.
|4 U. KEAMAN3,
Ordinary
I
ts I’ATlON.
p ; otk. O S o. -Wjjcia it
po - ; 1. - c Ibis in .tin;
[Piti.H letters to the uudersL-'iieii for
ptn; pli ;.f admiui.-ttr<iiion,
annex i. on the e.-iaie < f f V
L lute of rai l county, deceased,
fdl [tipt pu>' oi < n sttui applicatim
|Xor. Monday in January 189\
2D iS'Jf. 0 SeamaVis, Ordy.
DiSMISHON. s
Pi Eeekdale county, , v -
peas 0 G Baker, Guardian of
i Irible has applied to me for
from bis guardianship of
Irible this is therefore lo not.i
ieroais concerned to rile their ob
s if any they have <,n oV before
tMonday ibsehared i n Deo. 1894 '""as he
from his guardia*.
'tba'. day. This Nov. 27 1894
O. Seamans, Ordy.
\
TO CUSTOMERS.
persons indebted to Mise Annie
r 1 y note or account, are ii)ost
i pward 11 ■ - v .hoc urgently r< quested to
us soon as |>«'&sible* and
Ml' Sin s-) matters, as I am going
jOUsinefeg “ e ’ fu k *«y and customers would much myseU’.' prefer
tt 8)i. Mrs. Respct.
Akmi: Night
Pb-SUHOLD TREASURE
feu‘‘”’Of Gana^obarie, N
[.swathe f always keeps"br
‘ e,v .f' 00 very in (he houee
i family has always found He
g resups (0 j 0 ij 0W j (s UP{J .
ffuU * ■ n °f Bo without it, if
tab , e G. A D»
Y ii ’ VY a nr- Dro - -
' "
• x, w n^eo-cry is nd ub
£t # U
CJU r“ med y 5 that he
“ ; l B m Lis family for eq-b*
it has never failed to uO
c aimed for it. Wbv --d
jS’kaiff’ ‘ at anJ Le» ' *•
9 .-'Ogn'ore, Of. J S'2? ft c
Ti “^ LAXATIVE prix ■
I
r 1 plant n rail i)t mi)
a >
PDhidniy ■ fill edy, Syrup of Fig -5
’
m| beneficial effrct
U ‘ US V 't while the
a lr- cj leap
- Mi. mineral so
fe' u-
3 ' S : f!S dicinep,
(H| * me aro
.v injurious. Being well
Soo] 1 ' l."' 1 u ' e fc, w true rem
Ef v -
1 stored by je
L ayrup Co.
VOL. XV.
John If. Jlniqnd,
Banfeu, Conyers, Qa.
Vault facilities for valuable papers
Solicits acconts of firms ami individuals.
Any accommndations, consistent with safe banking, extended.
special attention GIVEN TO COLLECTIONS or all KIN3S
«#JOJ 3 WOlfefev
—AT
Cf)E AP | PAIGES.
For the year 1395 we will be better equip¬
ped to do Job Work of every description
than ever before, and we are going to make
prices to suit the times. If you want
LETTER HE AS,
NOTE HEADS,
BILLHEADS,
STATEMENTS,
ENVELOPES.
Or any other kind of Commer or Legal
Printing, Book or Pamphlet, send us your
orders. Remember our prices will be the
Very Lowest. Respectfully,
Hale’s Printing House.
Conyers, Ga., Dec. 21st. 1894.
AND
One Dollar Gets Them Both!
tfqle’s -Weekly
And The Great
For The Year 1895.
MILES H. MELTON
/
Livery, Feed and
Sales Stable.
Conyers, Georgia.
Splendid Turnouts always in readiness at reasonable prices
£5^Your hoseses Boarded and well care for very cheap.
j£jp*Always ready to buv, sell or swap stock.
I Ask Your Patronage,
FLUID ADD Vt ♦ . • • 4 •
4 t E^D 0 V SRODEltlES.
Nlarbutt ^ Beagoa
—Carry a Splendid lino of—
PLAIN GROCERIES, FANCY GOODS,
CANNED GOODS, FRUITS, NUTS, ETC
— Besides Their splendid Line—
-- sho:ss,
«—■ ■J*■ i s m V ^ “T^T
v
General Merchandise M
They Compete in Price
-WIl H—
tfita or Any Oiit. Mi in liooraa.
HALES WEEKLY.
CON VEILS, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY JAN. 2 1800.
j n ..... Il»l iii! tm
Bai'Tines In
liij Fiijit Ilsi!
CAUSE OF THE TROUBLE.
For days tho people of Brooks
county experienced all the ter ¬
rors of o bloody race way. One
white man and 7 negroes killed
and only stopped when the mil¬
itary was called out.
ORISKN OKT3K TROUBLE.
The trouble which has arrayed
the races began some days ago.
It was discovered that a uutu¬
ber of negroes had Conspired to
kill every man that’if as in the
posse that arrested Jerry Jeffry
for the killing of M. T. Mauldin
a few weeks ago and that the
killing of Mr. Isham was the
commencement to carry out the
awful conspiracy . j
Hardly three welks ago Tip
Mauldin, a respectable whi e
man, was brutally murdered on
the public road in ‘ the tame
neighborhood by two negroes.
The people were greatly incen¬
sed over ill is murder but the
law took its course and the mur
now in jail awaiting
trial. Numbers of negroes ex¬
ulted over this murder and even
went so far as to hold a war
dance a few nights afterw; rds
around the spot in the road
where the murdered man’s liie
blood oozed out.
This eraged the people still
move and when Mr. Isliam, the
best citizen in the community,
was foully murdered by one of
tbit same gang, the pent-up
rage was turned loose and many
negroes were killed.
The last news is that all is
quiet with Pike, the negro
killed Isham still at large.
A NEW SMOKE CONSUMER.
A Contrivance Which Ca scs Abso
lute Consumpt on of Fuel.
Nuisances, to be endured, must
have an excuse for being. Lacking
this, it only remains to find 1he easi¬
est way to get rid of them. Smoke
consumers have for a long time been
urgently demanded, but, up to date,
they have been either too unwieldy,
expensive or Inefficient for practical
has been put to many tests and
las proven so satisfactory that a
number of steamship companies and
some large manufacturing concerns
have adopted it. The plan is to pul
verize the coal and throw it in a fine
jet into a receptacle in direct range
of flame from a furnace or other
blaze. It instantly ignites and
burns with a fierce heat. By an in¬
geniously contrived process oxygon
is introduced and the strongly agi
fated current of air prevents anj
dust falling, but keeps it suspended,
where it is soon consumed. Then
are no smoke, ashes or other residue,
,■ but complete and absolute consuinp
tion, as far as appearance goes
Thus there is neither waste of fue
nor any of the heavy and disagrec-a
ble work of handling ashes and
cleaning up. This latter point alone
would give the invention a right of
t 0 say nothing ef the utiliza
tion of fuel i» all of its purls, r,
! greatly increased degree of heat- nnc
the less cost attending the running
of the plant. The invention is foi
j large works and is not yet available
I for dwellings or small shops. It
needs more space and power than
s can be had in confined quarters. In
time this can, no doubt, be arranged
(Children Cry for Pitcher’s Gaston*.
NO. 1.
SUS-MARiHS SOilNEnY.
A French Plio ogr*p!icr Take* Pic¬
tures Under Water.
Photographing in colors and under
tv at or have boon two problems in
photography that have never been
solved — or rather accomplished.
However, an interesting report
comes from France that a French¬
man has been able to photograph ob¬
jects, Ash and shells, at the bottom
of the Red sea.
First, he secured a diver s eostumt
to observe at the bottom of the »e*
the metamorphoses of certain mol¬
luscs impossible to cultivate i*
aquaria. He was struck with the
wonderful beauty of submarine land¬
scapes, and resolved to photograph
what he could, siuce a gimple de¬
scription- would savor too much ef
au over-vivid imagination. At first
he worked in shallow water with a
water-tight apparatus, and the clear¬
ness of the water allowed him suffi¬
cient light to sensitize the plate*.
But proportionately as the depth
increased, clearness diminished, and
the motion of the waves clouded hia
proofs. Then the young scientist
conceived the idea of utilizing mag¬
netism in au apparatus of his own
invention. This apparatus consists
essentially of a barrel tilled with
oxygen and surmounted by a glass
bell containing an alcohol lamp. On
the flame of the lamp, by means of a
mechanical contrivance, powdered
magnetism is thrown, flaring as often
as a view is taken. The barrel is
pierced with holes on the lower side
in such a manner that m theoxygem
diminishes the sea water enters, so
preserving the equilibrium betweea
external' and internal pressure.
Beautiful submarine photographs
taken on the very b‘ed of the Medi¬
terranean at Bauyuls-sur-Mer, near
the Spanish border, have bee* pro¬
duced in this way.
THE SEA’3 INVASION.
Old Ocsan Is Tearing Away the Kng
lish Coast by th* Rod.
The flat marshes of Pevensey Imre
gained half a mile since the days of
Edward II., when the sea almost
washed the walls of the castle that
now stands , high , and , dry . . inland. ,
The same thing has happened on the
Romney flats, where the ancient
castle of Lympne has receded » mile
or more. Such spots as these look
as though the next spring tide
would add their grassy meadows to
the lost ground of sea bottom. But
on the rocky parts of the Antrim
coast we have the sea slowly work¬
ing its way inland, despite the rock
fortifications and stony in trench
meats that look so resistless. Un¬
der the waves lie tracts of bogland
tlii.it oacg upon a time must hate
The Referendum a M'stek*.
The referendum rightly looked at
is really a step of retrogression; ii
offends tho representative system
and grievously diminishes th* dig¬
nity of parliaments. Its root, prin¬
ciple is, in a word, the principle of
numbers; it. is the apotheosis of ms
jorities; an appeal from quality to
quantity. Parliamentary should repre¬
sentatives either are or hr
men of greater knowledge ind abil¬
ity than, the mass of those they rep¬
resent, aid the people which elect s
number c f worthless representatives
will probably be wanting in political
sagaci t y.
Mazzini, whose faith in the people
was almost a religion, spoke of “the
great and beautiful ensign of de¬
mocracy. the progress of all through
all under the leading of Hie best and
wisest.” Very good; but where the
referendum is applied what becomes
of “the leading of the best and
wisest?” Even as it is, such a lead¬
ing is not always to be had, as any¬
one who knows anything of Amort
an politics can very well testify.
• “The best and wisest” arc swal¬
lowed up and silenced in the crowd.
There is, indeed, a good deal of truth
in Lord Sherbrooke's humorous il¬
lustration of democracy, Ho com¬
pared it to the passengers in an om¬
nibus trying to turn the driver off j
the box and get hold of the reins
themselves; with what result we are
left to imagine.—MacmiUaa’s Mag
or VY nij lU DULLiil/in. DAT ] M A 1SJ
■
.
-o
; Spectacles, watches,
jewelry and silverware.
NQ 10 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, 1 Ga
When B«by *M sic*. »*••• Sw 'Ts^srts,
When *he wjl* a OiiiW. «k« cried torCsMtori*.
When O.« became Kim, the cluug t® Castori*,
i WhfM *•-’<! CbUrlrcn, she jsvt them Caatoii*.
OFFICIAL QRSAil
Of
n^r. -=
t
if- 0^
,fOtL £ .'-HI')
'A
fell A vv8-'- -
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement *nd
tends to personal The enjoyment when
rightly used. many, who live bet¬
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, world’s by best more products promptly
adapting the needs the of physical being, will to
attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, excellence Syrup of is Figs. due its presenting
Its to
in the form most acceptable refreshing am! and pleas¬
ant to the taste, the truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax¬
ative; effectually headaches cleansing the and system,
dispelling colds, fevers
and permanently curing constipation. millions and
It has given satisfaction to
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid¬
neys, Liver ana Bowels without weak¬
ening objectionable them and it is substance. perfectly free from
every of Figs is for sale by all drug¬
gist’s Syrup 50c and $1 bottles, but it is
in man¬
ufactured by the California printed Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is on every
package, alao the informed, name, Syrup will of Figs,
and being well you not
accept any substitute it’ ollered.
MACHINE-MADE SPEECHES, j
Turnci d Out with Marvelous Rapid*
lty by a Recant Invention.
¥•« Vr*m Bwttna ppd It Fnrniskti %»
Ordtr Anything: front % Kuifc!* El»if
t* » OUt*ct •lory —-An Fm
AfiH *rf Wu-iu 1 *f,
There, is no doubt that both the
typewriting machine and the phono¬
graph are very ingenious end useful
inventions, but the chief difficulty
with them Is that they cannot b»
niadc to ftf . t automatically. It. is in
or<)er Ut ml tJ , is WW)1 tiia , H distin
guished inventor, whoso name is for
the ;present withheld, ha 'invented
an automatic writer, and, judging
from the private, exhibition of tba
machine which war recently give*
in London to a commit too of mem
here of the Royal society, it bids
fair to prove the greatest invention
of this or any age.
In appearance the machine is saifi
to be not wholly unlike a t ypewriter
machine. It, however, is provided
wi1h a sort of hoj p; r, in which are
placed blocks of 1 yp'-mofak each ons
of which is provided with a coinpletn
word, instead of a -ingle letter.
When this hopper i filled and tho
small clectricengine which furnishes
the motive power of the machine i*
set in action it Instantly begins
to print. Of eour*. >-hat is printed
depends in s good degree upon the
selection of words which are placed
in the hopper, but it is understood
that the machine cun be used for
almost any sort of composition.
At the exhibition already men¬
tioned the hopper was filled with a
supply of word . relating to
the English political situation,
and in ten minutes after the
engine had been started the ma¬
chine had printed two full col¬
umns, each of about the length of
an ordinary column of a newspaper.
When those were read t hey were in¬
stantly recognized to in a speech on
home rule in the general style of
Mr. Gladstone. The hopper was
next filled with a choice selection of
the very finest words in t he language,
and the machine 1h coupon printed
what was at once perceived to Vie an
essay in the manner of Mr. ltuskln
on political economy. More words
were added and thn pages of what
any critic would unle Mtatingly have
accepted as passage:- ft a new
novel by Mr. Meredith delighted tha
committee. The last experiment
was made with the hopper filled with
words taken from the slang diction*
ary and the result wan a 6tory in
dialect which was held to be superior
published.N, to almost any dialect Y. Time*. story hitber^j
-i
FCRFECTED
f'Y CRYSTAL LENSES
TRur MftZK,
* uxi Lllljt.
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