Newspaper Page Text
0L. XVI.
T on TT X OA t
JCjwIxX sra ora /J H
i L a A
" Jul 7 3 , nr.:r:". ^ ^asans2s| 5 I
WE PROPOSE TO REDUCE OUR IMMENSE STOCK OF HARD¬
WARE, CROCKERY AND GROCERIES AND WILL SELL ■
revwwvov » v «. wt r * : . . r' . 7 rr i
11 Bars good soap, 25 cents.
8 Bars double nickie soap, 25 cents.
7 Bars M. & R’s. best soap, 25 cents.
•> Bars good soap, 10 cents.
25 Bars Clariet soap and 1 box Gold
Dust Washing Powder, worth $1.50,
going at one dollar.
1 Box Axle grease 5 cents.
3 5 cents boxes snuff for 10 cents.
1 Jar of snuff for 45 cents.
We carry the largest line of TOBACCO ever carried in Conyers, and sell cheaper
than anybody.
Headquarters For Hardware.
ANYTHING IN THE CROCKERY LINE AT GREAT REDUCTION.
Lamp goods at your own price.
P1H > 1C) TdlTjlj.
I / c
l
His Remarkable Courship.
“Four or five years ago,”
said a bachelor in conversation
with a reporter for the Wash¬
ington Star, “I had a sweet¬
heart that. I was deeply iu love
with, and wanted to marry,
but I vvas afiaid to ask her.
At that time I was making a
study of physic phenomena and
that sort of thing and it occur¬
red to me to make a phisieal
proposal by projecting my sub¬
jective mind around (he corner
to where tho girl lived and fix¬
ing it up all ready for me when
I should take my objective
mind around to have the affair
ratified. I wenf to see her
Thursday evening, and felt sure
that if I asked her I would get
her, notwithsttnding she was
about equallv interested in a
friend of mine, whom- I shall
call George. Having doubts
as to my courage I determined
to make a test the next evening
instead of going to see her, so I
retired early, that is about 9
o’clock, and according to for¬
mula, I exerted my mental fac¬
ulties to their utmost, and di¬
rected all my mental energies
uqon the girl and willed with
all my power t( at she accept
me. For half an hour, fully, I
shut out every thought but this
important one, and went to
sleep, or into a trance, under
the mental strain. I awoke an
hour two later and felt that my
efforts had been a success, and
that it would be ml light
day when I called: I felt so
encouraged that I went to m '
and dreamed beautiful diearns
of her till morning. At 3 o cl ock
next day I called to make
real proposal. I talked to he='
on some trivial subject or othe;
for half an hou^alld then caoie
to the all important matter.
{ 1 i Did you feel any P ecnliar
mental or emotional sensations
lastevening? I asked.
1 1 rihe blushed violently and 1 ^
was shure that my subjective
proposal had hit center.
t c How did you know anything
about it!’ she replied,
,
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CONYERS, GA., SATURDAY, MARCH 7 a iodo. one
Fresh prunes 10 cents per pound.
Fresh dates 10 cents per pound.
Fresh currants 10 cents per pound,
Fresh raisins 5 cents per pound.
Two pound can cherries for 10 cents.
Two pound can blue berries 5 cents.
Twenty-four hundred matches 15 cents.
Pound good smoking tobacco, 20 cents.
Pound good chewing tobacco, 22| cents.
Good tobacco 25 cents, sells for 35 cents.
tiiumphantly. “What time did
it occur?’
“Really i don t know, but B
must have been about 9 .30. I
remember that I thought it odd
that the clock should strike just
as it happened.’
‘Wasn’t it remarkable?’
T 1 TT coming to it by de
grees and wanted to see just
where 1 was.
“No, I dont think it was,’ she
answered indignantly. ‘George
lias always loved me and
proposal last night was quite
what I expected. We are to be
married iu June.”
Newspapers sometimes out
line their platforms in a most
original manner, as witness this
from the Avoca, la., Herald:
Our aim—Tell the truth
though the heavens take a turn
ble.
Our paper—Of the people, for
the people, and to he paid for by
the people.
Our religion—Orthodox, with
a firm belief in a hell.
Our motto—Take all in sight
and rustle for more.
Our policy—To love our
friends and brimstone our ene¬
mies. If thine enemy smite thee
on the cheek, sv ipe him "i' 1
haste and dexterity at the butt
end of his most convenient ear.
What we advocate—One
country, one flag and one wife
at a time.
Our object—lo live iu I’ om P
;UI ; oriental splendor,
-----
One .of they many n<
w aders Q f Arizona scenery
^ mad e accessible by the
opening up of new rail and tage
_ fe,. T a re makable nufural
. , io t he fonto basin
Fiagstig -. Tlli . or
550 feet long, and spans a can
y 0U sonie 200 feet deep, a the
of wll j C h flows the riv-r
The bridge ia of rock, and is
perfectly proportioned. The
underside is gracefully arched,
T d the upper perfectly level. —
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SUBSCRIBE.
Must Pay Alimony.
The new woman has her
a!ties as well as her privileges
j uclge Gibbous, of Chicago, issu
ed an order a f ew days ago com
pe lling a wife, who is complain
ail ^ j n a divorce suit, to pay al
imony to her husband pending
tlie 8U i t . The case is that of
Em illie Groth againt Heinrich
Groth. The wife charges cruel
ty and non-support. Both the
"
p artics are old and were mar
riedill j892. The attorneys
for the wi f e objected to the or
der but Judge Gibbon’s said
that in a divorce case, or in any
othpr circumstances, the same
duty rests upon the wife to pro¬
vide for a sick and helpless hue
band under the circumstances,
“The moral obligation,’, said
the court, ‘is just the same.’ An
order for $20 a month alimony
was entered.— Ex.
Weighing The Malls.
The employes of the railway
mail service aro now engaged
in the work of weighing
mails to ascertain the amount
carried, so that the- railroads
may be compensated for hau'
ing them.
There are four divisions in
the United States, and this is
^ uru 0 f the states that com¬
prise the fourth division, of
which Georgia is one.
The roads are paid so much
per 100 miles per pound. The
avera ,g e i s gotten by weighing
mails on each road each
day for thirty days.
The railroads receive com
pensation from the government
f ar hauling mail that is great I
in excess of other freights and
on roads where the mail is so
lar ^ e t,iat entire cars a ^ e re "
“that Iho
pay f rom the government for
hauling that one car alone will
more than pay the running ex¬
pences.of the tram.—Augusta
f hr011iC ^__
Bill Nye left an estate
ted to be worth between $50,000
and $60,00. He is said to
enjoyed anincome of about
from his writings for
era. years past.-Ex.
Two Judges,
An A,,,,,lean Jud K n, sit.ing
111 chambers, seeing the
amount ut 1 pancTs 1 m t.lie
hands t hat the first case was
likely to be hotly contested.
aslve , ' 1
“What / is . the amount in .
cities
tioil?*
( i Two dollars,’ said the plain
tiffs .counsel.
“I’ll pay it, ’said the Judge,
handing over the money; “call
the next case.”
lie had not the patience of Sir
William Grant, who, after lis¬
tening for two days to the ar¬
guments of counsel as to the
construction of a certain act,
quietly observed when they had
done: “That act lias been re¬
pealed.”—Weekly Telegraph.
• » •
Thousands ot Women
§ SUFFER UNTOLD MISERIES.
BRADFIELD’S
FET\/iLE s:
REGULATOR 9 3?
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ACTS AS A SPECIFIC * >> 5
la? Arousing to Healthy Action all her Organs. />
It causes health to bloom, and
reign throughout the frame. ,,
joy to I
... It Never Fails to Recjulate
“My wife has boon rntdor treatment of lead-??
triR piiysieimm tnroe year*, wlthoia
COO ..........| k".K;roiikh.K g iind*ttguits. ido r JOn , A , n . <>
Elisabetn Cady Stanton,
eighty years old, is taking mus
iclessons.—Ex.
V .....
if l i 7 "fe*.
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Ml II
mm . E \r,^y % 1
m v TR' dP s fT> \ W j
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Superior To AIS Sarsaparillas. i
Down iu Georgia, over fifty year;; ago, a marvelous juc-dicine was discovered. It was what
; is now k:iowi;,as P. P, P., (Lippman's Gnat /.'< nit Jyj, and it. fame and reputation has been
growing with the years. , i
I'or Rheumatism, Blond Poison'll;', Pain in the side, _ wrists, shoulders, back and joints,
J Dyspepsia, Malaria, Scrofula, and all Blood and?!.in Diseases, it has never been equalled.
A wonderful Fain is subjugated, influence. Health Renewed, Appetite re.,tored and sleepless nights banished by \ffl
m its 5
1» P. p. is a wonderful, tonic and strcaglhener. Weak women should always take
P. P. P. It builds tli. :n up. it ha;; the uni :. a! commendation of medical men throughout
A the country, because we publish the formula on every bottle, and one trial will convince the
most skeptical that it i; gcr .une health restorer.
Rcaci The Truth And Be Convinced.
A Wonderful Cure.
I v/a3 a martyr to nusc’ilar rhrunir.ti r; f thirty
years; tried all medicines r.rid doctor? v. iU, co per
mauent relief, I was advisttl to take I'. I’. i‘. a i:d
bclorc I had finished two \>. tic? :::y s i -;d 1
go I was able to work. I f. 1 bc-ucr t.,- - h.ve for
years, and am confident DUPRISii.'Ncivna:.viliv, of eoniT/ietr; recoverv.
J. S. Fla.
Tsotimcny fror.i the meyor.
tcutTcred with RhernnatCi’! tor fiftrea v. r:rr, trv 1
a'.l tlie so-called specific-, of 1 >uL P. t> P i pj aud puvi/■> 1 feci ■ • .*ly
j;rancIsoa mc a bottle P. ,
jicv 7 tnau. of Albany.
\V. II. WILDER, Mayor
From Two Woii-Unown Phyo:c:2r:3.
V.’e are having a big: sale for your P. P. I’., and
vre prescribe it iu a greatmany casts, aud find it an cx-
The above letters are taken from many received by us. P. p. p {Lippman's
Great Remedy,) is a medicine whose virtues are known from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
P. P. P. begins its work by purifying the blood, which is the source of all life,
and does not cease until a perfect and entire cure is effected.
Tiie mortifying eruptions that disfigure the complexion, the tired feeling that pre¬
vents thorough accomplishments of the daily tasks, sleepless nights, loss of appetite,
irritability of disposition, all mean a derangement of the system consequent from
impure blood, which can and will be cured by p. p. p.
P. P. P. ( Lippman's Great Remedy), is conceded by physicians and the people
to be the Greatest Blood Purifier of the Age. It positively and permanently
cures. For sale by all druggists or direct from us ; price jd a bottle, six bottles for $5.
LiPPPJ BROS., sets Lippman Block, SAVANNAH. GA.
PROPRIETORS,
$1800.00
5SVEM AWAVT0JNVENT0R3.
n’ior $150.00 enough cvctyinor.ih given inci,„oriotii a\vny to nny one who r.p*
us 1C1 ii:c ::ost i>atcn!.
>-.n;n,;=- 1 t:,,ne l t"Jinn.
V ..-.mntrtM r. hrr->- paten 1:: V-rovrci: .. mt3, .
? keep'track Bd tbc «**•? of their ?r im* bright; o»r ideas. b to encourage At i lie same time W2 M
#,5h «:»«the rubBc& e &c: that
IT A THE SIMPLE,TRMAL INVENTIONS
THAT YIELD FORTUNES,
n-i:s& 1 q™;o ’itiiimvaiiyct m
and down without breaking-, the passenger’s back,
stop'vr," "saur e-pan," and '‘collar-button,*’ little "nut-lock," “bottle
a thousand other things (hat me si.
any one can find a way of improving; and these siiryle
inventions Try arc the think ones of that bring largest returns tc .ao
author. to something to invent.
IT IS NOT SO HARD AS ST SEEMS.
Patents taken outtlu cTigh us receive special ait notice In
the** National Recorder," published published Washington,
D. C., which is the of inventors. pest newspaper VVe furnbh year’?, in America, sub¬
in the interests n
scription to this journal, free of cost, to all our clients.
We also advertise, free of cost, the invention each month
which wins our $150 “National prize, and Recorder." hundred? of containing thousands
of copies of the a
uketci? of the winner, throughout and a description the United of his States invention,
will be scattered among
capitalists and manufacturers, thus bringing to their
attention the merits of the invention.
All communications regarded strictly confidential.
Audios*
JOHN WEODERBURN & CO.,
Solicitors ot American end Foreign Patents,
OtSF Street, N.W.,
fox Reference—editor 385. of "Washington, this D. C.
' ■ tsF" paper. Write for our
So-pngepunphtrt, FRER.
Donald Menzne ; a cyclist of
Cape Calony, South Africa, had
a pecular experience recently.
He was riding along the main
road from Cape town to Som r
pet, West strand, when an os¬
trich, attracted apparently by
what was in his eyes a novel
vehicle, conimeucocl to waltz
around the hay cn> -Cun a lew
preliminary antics th:' bird took
r. it . its ., , head , to . . air . Men-
111 pace
,.ies. A. long «.i.
iTOlll Using its willgS the Cyclist
and , the ostrich . . manage , 1 to . run
a dead heat. However, after
«» > *b .....dr mtie
Lh P£ w; , the C stricli utilized its
stumpy wings and spared away
at a record-breaking pace, leav¬
ing the cyclist far behind.—Ex .
ccllent tiling. V/e handle about one dozen bottles a
L,;.,. j. Id. £i M. T. RICHARDSON, Piedmont, S. C.
Hot Springs Surpassed.
A boill of r. P. r., lias done me more good than
three- : t:. treatment at the Hot Springs, Ark.
JAM j M. I.I-.WTON, Aberdeen, brown Co., O.
Pimploc, Cores and Eruptions Cured.
I *. Lc grezi pleasure in testifying: to the efficient
ty. afitu-j of the popular medicine for r skin skin diseases
1.a a P. P. I*. I suffered for several years ; with
an u r.v.iyh'Ay taking aud disagreeable bottles 'urr*. a w» erupt —tion on m- my face,
Alter ■ three iu accord aucc w itli dircc
lions, I e.rii entire*/ cured.
Capt. J. D. JOHNSTON,
Savannah, Ca. of Johnston & Co.
NO. 10
Twenty Cuban re'ugecs ar
fiT-mls Atlanta last week.
of men. women and
,, 11*0111 - . 1110 . 1
ft 1*6 liGOlllg A
, for , Palet-V. ,, >.ailV , Cl , them
-
are coming to till--* country and
. , result .-Lx. „
wiil await tno
. " i Uhl.
IE m ;
f § ssiiii fffef
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jXra. 3. JP. Sell, Oatmivatamie, Katu
wifo of t ’10 editor ot The Graphic, the leafl
j -.?■ loeal xmpor ot Miami county, writes
“£ trees troubled trim ilpitations, heart disease shert
ior six years, severe p
ne:'.3 oi breath, together with such o::
tromo nervousness, tlir.t, at time, 1 ; I would
walk the floor nearly all night, Wo
consulted the best medical talent.
said there teas 11 ® help for me,
that ! had organic disease of tho heart tor
which there was no remedy. I had read
your advertisement la T .10 Graphic and
ayoar&^o, e-3 a la.st> resort, tried onobofct.oo*.
jaiieti 9 New Ctcre for tne Meart,
_ „ ke
i toot am-o bottles caeh at
Heart Ouro and Bostoratlvo Nervlno ar.d
It completely cured me. M sleep
W( , l-tn ! ' ht my h^jtboatsrogularlyand
{.‘*5^ untold lor thorn If they will
lliora'a relief
only ^^Wrtcnrotsuoid fdvo you. remedies just tmo trial.”
on ? .,™mvo
^
Restores Health
A* JJI>f$C!UIjTL