Newspaper Page Text
flu SKcchlg,
08 FICIAL ORGAN OF THE COUNTY.:
J. H. WILLIS.
Entered at the postoffiee at Conyers as
second-class mail matter.
Saturday, Mch. 7 , 1896.
ADVERTISING BATES.
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insertion.
SUBSCRIPTION RATE;
One year, in advance............... $ 1.00
Six month, in advance............. .50
The State Democratic Exec¬
utive Committee meets in At¬
lanta to-day.
Spain is miffed with Uncle
Sam because be suggests that
the little dog have equal rights
with the big one in the fight.
Hon. Chas. F. Crisp has an¬
nounced his candidacy to suc¬
ceed Hon. Jno. B. Gordon in
the United States Senate. He
will make the race and win out
easily.
In all the world there is but
one man that cau read the
translation of the Bible into the
aborigines, which was made by
a Mr- Elliot, iu what is now
Paxton, in 1649. That man is
the well-known antiquarian
and scholar, Trumbull, of
Hartford, Conn,—Rome Tri¬
bune.
What’s the tidings? Clear in
the east, clear in the west and
dark in the south. Why dark
in the south? Because farmers
are going to plant too much
cotton and will not get over 5c
per pound for it next fall—then
it will be dark in the south sure
enough.
A South Georgia exchange
makes this valuable suggestion
“We have all been talking about
reducing the acreage in cotton,
Suppose some attention be giv¬
en to the reduction of the acre¬
age in politics. Let’s reduce
the candidates tc a stand. Thin
’em out, plant them further
apart and put fewer in a hill. >>
Gov. Atkinson of Georgia
and his staff went on a little
junket the other day to the town
of Way cross, in the southern
part of the state. On their re¬
turn the govemer preserved a
dignified silence when asked if
he had had a good time. A
prominent member of the staff
however, was not so reticent.
“Talk about your dry town! i >
he exclaimed, “Wiycross is
the dryest on earth. They
don’t even allow carpenters
down there to carry spirit
levels."—Detroit Free Press.
Have you eaten of the very
latest dish ? I say latest in every
sense of the word, for it’s a dish
that goes with the midnight
Welsh rabbit. You take fresh
bread and perfect butter, Then
you have some f regli roasted pea
nuts-it’g the fad to roast them
yourself—ground fine in a cof¬
fee mill. Next mix the
ground nuts into a paste with a
little sherry or old port, spread
them on the bread, and there
you have the sandwitch every¬
body is eating. You may sub¬
stitute mayonnaise for sherry,
or add a drop of almond essence,
but a peanut sandwitch you
must have if you are to follow
the fashion,—Washington Post
List of Jurors
Drawn for April term, of Rockdale
Superior Court, 1896, by his Honor
Richard H. Clark, on the lSili day of
October 1895.
GRANDJURORS:
1 T. C. McCalla, 2 Geo. W. Warren.
3 D. M. Almand, 4 J. A. Lowe, 5 J. L.
Tate, 6 Wm. L. McKnight, 7 J. T.
Adair, 8 M. H. Wesley, S B, D. What¬
ley, 10 M . L. Wood, 11 P. 1J. White,
12 J. S. Weatherford, 13 8. H. Wood,
14 Jno. W. McDaniel, 15 W. S. Vea\
16 B. F. Tucker. 17 W. W. Swami, 18
W, Cowan, Sr., 19 Thos. E
Brodnax. 20 T. T. Thrasher. 21 Robert
Hollingsworth, 22 A. D. Summers, 23
Glenn H, Owens, 24 Walter Wood. 25
A. J. Smith, 26 S. J.Taylor’ 27 Jas. P
28 Arthur Whitaker, 29 Jag. L.
McCalla, 30 L. J. Almand.
TRAVERSE JURORS-lst WEEK,
1 M. C. White, 2 H. A. Moon, 3 Thos.
W. Huff, 4 John G. Malcolm, 5 W. H.
Massey, 6 S. L. Almand, 7 E. J. Argo,
8 J. C. Plunkett, 9 T. L. O’Kelley, 10
D. A. Packet, 11 S. A. Helms, 12 J. P
McDaniel, 18 J. W. Swann, 14 Jag. Kj
White, 15 Walter L. Scott, 16 R. o!
Gailey, 17 Jas. A. Stowers, 18 0. E.
Reagan. 19 Z. S. Christian, 20 M. A.
Waldrop, 21 H. A. Turner, 22 T. H.
Bryans, Jr. 33 Geo. W. McDaniel, 24
R. B. Vaughan, 25 John G. Johnson,
26 John R, Cooper, 27 G. J. Hollings¬
worth, 23 John William Johnson, 29
J. H. Nolan, 30 Manly F. Turner, 31 G.
N. Sanders, 32 John H. Tucker, 33 C.
Humphries, 34 Alfred F. Simssr., 35
David Vaughn, sr., 36 G. W. Cain.
TRAVERSE JURORS—2nd WEEK.
1 E. C. Grenade, 2 W. A. Browning,
3 J. E. Maddox. 4 Joseph Askew, 5 R.
J. Carr, 9 Joel Marks, 7 W. J. Williams
8 J. A. Goode, 9 Jogiah James, 10 G. A
Haralson, 11 Wm D Smith, 12 John H,
Maddox, 13 Geo. P. Tilley, 14 J. W.
McClung, 15 Wm. S. Lester, 16 A. X.
Plunket, 17 John W. Shaw, IS Jas. M,
Street, 19 D. H. Bowen, 20 Milt R.
Christian, 21 wm. U. Wallace, 22 H. V.
Hardwick, 23 j. R. Haryill. 24 John
T. Sims, 25 C. B. Hudson, 26 E. A.
HarperJST A S Farmer, 28 Linnear Parr,
29 Lemuel i Sims, 30 Egbert A Smith,
31 j S Black, 32 j H Taylor, 33 Geo.
C Mitchell, 34 M M Norton, 35 Turn¬
er i Miller, 36 O S Haygood.
SIMMONS
n.
REGULATOR
THE BEST
SPRING MEDICINE
is Simmons Liver regulator. Don’t
forget to take it. Now is the time you
need it most to wake up your Liver. A
sluggish Liver brings on Malaria, Fever
ana ills which Ague, Rheumatism, shatter the constitution and many other
and
wreck health. Don’t forget the word
REGULATOR. It is SIMMONS LIVER
REGULATOR you want. The word REG¬
remedies. ULATOR distinguishes And, it from SIMMONS all other
besides this,
Liver regulator is a Regulator of the
Liver, keeps it properly at work, that your
system may be kept in good condition.
FOR THE BLOOD take SIMMONS
Liver Regulator, it is the best blood
purifier the difference. and corrector. Look Try it and note
for the RED Z
on every other package. medicine, You wont find it on
any and there is no other
Liver remedy like SIMMONS LIVER
REGULATOR-the Kingof Liver Remedies.
Be sure you get it.
Jf. H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa.
Don’t Limp
Through Life
racked by Rheumatic pains. It
handicaps your whole career.
Of course you wouldn’t if you
could help it—and you can.
«rW({cura§iG
goes straight to the Liver, where
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Dys¬
pepsia, Headache and most
other ills start.
It cleanses this organ and
makes it active again—the acid
leaves your blood, and you’re
cared. Testimonial below.
I hare been treated for eeneral
debllltr and without chronic rheumatism for
ten bottles rears any relief, Three
of yoar mediclDe ha, cured me.
8- F CLAUS, Warrenton, Fla.
Ask roar Druggist or Merchant For IL
CULLEN fc NEWMAN,
Sot* Proprietor*,
KaoxviBe, Tennessee.
18 -E 3 TABLXSH T-! I i-ee.
J. if. almajvd co.
,
STILL LEADS THEM ALL.
SHOES Always on ha D d a full CROCKERY lin of DRY and GOODS, GLASSWARE, NOTIONS, and HATS Full
and Compete andiCLOTHlNG, a
line of
tan Hardwire art Fan Sanies.
Don’t buy your sup¬
plies etc., until you see
US>
We respectfully solictt your patronage.
3 . B. iililOTD % 60 .
To GEORGIA, Bocxdale County:
the Superior Court of said county
The petition of Andrew J. Pierce and
Mrs. Jane X. Pierce, of said county,
respectfully showetb that they and their
successors desire to be incorporated un¬
der the name and style of the Conyers
Leather Manufacturing Company, with
a capital of two thousand dollars, with
the privilege of increasing the same, to
twenty thousand dollars, to be divided
into shares of one hundred dollars each
with no individual liability except as to
unpaid subscriptions
The chief place of business to be in
said county of Rockdale, with the right
to establish branch offices and agencies
at other points if needed.
Petitioners make known that the
main objects of said incorporation are
pecuniary holders, gains and profits to its share¬ and
and the special objects
aims are to procure a site and necessary
material and erect, operate and main¬
tain a Tannery in said county, and to
that special end and purpose, purchase,
otherwise procure, bides and otber ma¬
terials, used by tanners; for the pur¬
pose of barter and sale, or tanning into
leather of any and all kinds, and to
manufacture the products of said tan¬
nery into any or all articles that can be
manufactured out of leather or'hides;
or anv other articles or things that can
be manufactured out of, or with them,
in conjunction with other materials;
and to barter, sell, or otherwise dispose
ot the same, and to do any and all acts
and things needful in establishing and
conducting privileges said business; purchase, With full
powers and to own
and sell any property, real or personal,
for the purpose of carrying on the busi¬
ness of said incorporation. To sue and
be sued, haye and use a common seal,
and have and exercise all powers and
privileges usually conferred upon cor¬
porations of similar character. To elect
and appoint and emply such officers,
agents, attorneys and other employes
that are deemed necessary, and pass
such by-laws, rules and regulations as
are needful for the conduct of said bus¬
iness and for the control of its officers
and employes in the aff airs of said cor¬
poration.
Wherefore petitioners pray the grant¬
ing an order incorporating them and
their associates and successors for twen¬
ty years (with privilege of renewal) in
the name and style, for the purposes
hereinbefore set forth.
And in duty bound, etc.
This Feb. 26th, 1896.
A. C. McCalla, Atty. for Pe’trs.
A true copy from the records of
Rockdale Superior court, this day filed
in my office.
Feb. 26th, 1896.
W. T. Rockdale Huson, Clerk County, S. C
La.
Farm To Rent.
Paper mill farm to rent cheap apply
to
D. M. Almand
President of Union Paper mill.
NOTICE.
lam selling
the Clark
Cutawayhar
row. Some¬
thing every
farmer needs
Call on me
at Planters
W arehouse
J. A. Goode.
DISEASES OF THE SKIN.
The intense intense itching itching and and smarting smarting inci¬ inci
dent to mfmx eczema, tetter, tetter, salt-rheum, salt-rheum, and and other other
diseases of the skin is instantly allayed and Skin by
applying Chamberlain’s bad Eye have been
Ointment, Many cured very by cases It is equally
permanently j^riuuucuLiv efficient for itching luicu pil uj "es it. and favorite
a rem
edy for frost sore nipples; nipples; bites, bites, _ and and chapped chronic chronic hands, chil
Mains, stile sore sore box. eyes. eyes.
For by druggists at 25 cents per
Try Dr. Cady’s Condition Powders, they
sre just what a horse needs when in bad condi¬
tion. Tonic, blood purifier and vermifuge.
LEGALADVERTISE
MENTS.
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE,
By virtue of an order from the court
of Ordinary, of DeKalb county, Geor¬
gia, I will sell at public outcry before
the courthouse door in Conyers, «a ,
on the first Monday in April, 1896, dur¬
ing the lawful hours of sale, a one
third undivided interest iD a parcel of
land (except as to the trees, wood and
timber thereon) containing 22/£ acres,
more or less, and situate in the 16th
district of Rockdale county, Ga., and
is part of lot number 276. Said interest
to be sold as the property of Mrs . An¬
nie Z, Powell deceased. Said parcel of
land has on it a valuable rock quarry.
Terms cash.
J. A. Wright,
Adm’r. of Annie Z. Powell, dec.
Printer’s fee $3.63.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION
Gkorgia, Rockdale County: T. J. &
W. E. Treadwell, administrators of the
estate of John Treadwell, deceased,
applied to me for Letters of Dismission
from their trust as such as administra¬
tors of their said deceased, application and I will the pass first
upon on
Monday in April, 1896. at my off ice in
Conyers said county. Given under my
hand and official signature, this Jan.
8th, 1896. A. M. Helms, Ordinary.
LETTERS OF DISMISSION.
Georgi*, Rockdale County.
Whereas John H. Almand, adminis¬
trator of J. Wesley Grier, represents to
the Court in his petition duly filed, th.V
he has fully administered said deceased
estate, this is therefore to cite all per¬
sons concerned to show cause, if any
thev can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from his trust
and receive letters of dnmissmn on the
first Monday in May, next. Given un
der my band and official signature, this
Feb. 4th, 1896.
A. M. HELMS. Ordinary.
Georgia, Rockdale County:
W J. Gee, guardian of 8. B. Fuller,
M. L, O. Fuller, J. S. Fuller and S. E.
Robert, has applied to me for a dis¬
charge from his guardianship of said
wards, and I will pass upon said ap¬
plication on the first Monday iu May
next, 1896.
A. M. HELMS, Ordinary.
APRIL SHERIFF SALES.
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in
April, next, at the courthouse door in
Conyers. Rockdale, county, oa., within
the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder for cash, the following property
to-wit:
One hundred one and one-fourth
acres of land, more or lesg, same being
the north half of land lot number three
hundred and nineteen iu the 16th dis¬
trict of originally Henry now Rockdale
county, Georgia. Said land levied on
as the property of George P. Jones, to
satisfy an execution issued iroin the
city court of Atlanta in favor of the
Home & Foieign Investment & Agen¬
cy P. Company, limited, against said Geo.
J ones. This 5th day of March, 1895.
iW. H. M. Austin, Sheriff.
Printer’s fee $3 75.
FREE MEDICAL REFERENCE BOOK
(64 pages) for men and women who are
afflicted with any form of private dis¬
ease peculiar to their sex, errors of
youth, bles, contagious diseases, female trou¬
etc., etc.,
Send 2 two cent stamps, to pay post¬
cians age, to in the this leading specialists Dr. HATHAWAY and physi
CO., 22}4 country. Broad
& So. St., Atlanta, Ga
-HENRY REflG/ffl
PROPRIETOR.
My shop is comfortable.
My towels are clean.
My tools are always keen.
My attention is respectful.
My aim—to please all.
Give me a call when you need
dressing up.
t Tl
II ■i
IflMHE-RE-TO SERVE THEpu
My turnouts are strictly first-cl
My ass and PwiecQ
prices are reasonable aud tt :
Don’t fair to call ypatro as alvj
on me when a .
you Deed Zykina
Ja§„ W„Sw
Georgia Stats fey
Ammoniatei Snlt
TO SOUTHERN PLANTERS:
the as a elements Home Production of Plant food of to undenkbk^ be from mJ 0 ^ guar
and from materials eminently the avj
ces, adapted 0
our
AMMONIA.
tilizet This is derived important from and CottonSeed most expensive M®| inm. 0 ,r I
Amma 1 Bone, thereby securing to those who ’ 1
ed effects on Crops of both Animal J!u u i 1
foimer being entirely Soluble, and immel Ve f
vigor the Plant, while affords noJSSU j
to the latter
purpos, but also permanontly Improves the land 1
m tion a vegetable of the previous form year’s that which has been absorbed “1
AVAILABLE crop.
The Chif Plant Food in PHOSPHORIC Su2] ACIft
obtained from Bone Phosphate our Ammoniated (3
of Lime in South (3
Florida Pebble Phosphate, well reconized sources
and both being being dissoked in pure Sulphuric J
taining Phosphoric planrs Acid, meat which and is immediately bread does available im! s]
as thd human
hence there can be no doubt as to the postive benefia
for those who use this Fertilizer.
POTASH
present The growth in sufficient of any quantity, plant will and be it imperfect is if PotaB J
a great mk
pose that with Phosahate and Nitrogenized materia®
raise scientific crops agriculturists without Potash of the on our world old worn confirm out fieldj
tions of tboemplj the
our mvn State Chemist of Georgia iu
Patash, which we furnish in our goods by using Mrgne.-il MurlaB
ash,a eoncectrated form, free of Soda and of°p]anl|
which are very detrimental to the development
raercial Fertilizers, no matter how reputable or well kJ
brand may be with Potash, cannot long command iavotl J
enligtened agricutural community, since by practical
Potash enters so materially into the necessities of our ■
it serves to nurse the plant through protracted di oughts tl J
fresh and green, and in perfect condition to receive
J ant, strength and food supplied by Ammonia and 1
Phosphoric A^cid. rel
We do not use “Sludge” Acid (the refuse of oil
producing a valueless, strong odor, which sensible many<*l plant!
is of no agricultural benefit, but possibly iu
injury. The opinions of the State Chemist of Georgia, 1
and North Carolina, are positive as to the superior ■
availability of Organic Nitrogen, such as is found in Ca
Meal, Blood, Tankage and Bone, and of their being* eil
adapted to permanent soil improvement, as well as rl
effect to carry a crop to maturity. The superior field
tained from the use of our goods past seasons in Georgia]
Alabama, South Carolina and Tennessee, attest the e
of our combination of carefully selected materials, and 1
with piide to the fact that in all the hosts of Agricultural complaint
for years there has been an entire absence of
THIS WELL-KNOWN and POPULAR FERT
is in great request from all who used it, being particulan peri]
to our soil and climate. Its mechanical condition is
in its natural, handsome dark color, most durably sack!
being offered at a minimum price for first-class goods,
not a more attractive fertilizer on the market.
This Brand having proved a paying investment to tb
have used it, we have an abiding faith that it will cos
largely increased sale, and continue to please all who use
IT IS MANUFACTURED ONLY BY THE
SOUTHERN FERTILIZER C0IP1
S GEO. W. SCOTT MFG. C0„ AW
uccessors to l COMER, HULL & CO., Savanna!'
Offices—ATLANTA and SAVANNAH, GA.
Factories—ATLANTA, SAVANNAH and HOME.G,
FOR SALE BY—
Smith & Lifsey
CONYERS and COVINGTON, GA., at prices to
COMPETION.
Bring your job work'
this office. It attend will [I
ceive prompt
and you get the k 1 * 1
prices.