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About Conyers weekly. (Conyers, GA.) 1895-1901 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 22, 1898)
|, :E lvanv. G it the Old, Ring in the New! mo n£’ L Our great effort is to pease you. ^ 9 ^ 0 ^ he Summer Season is Drawing to a Close. ■03>*+ eootd THE COMING FALL SEASON WILL BE A BUSY F WITH US. WE ARE PREPARING TO MEET fciTH Set A FULL STOCK WHICH WE WILL SELL live prices.” usual we will he in the cotton market Twill pay the best market price. Allfarm ujucts will find a ready market with us. I Out store has been headquarters for the people for many years and we 'ill to come to see us and feell at home. We propose to sustain the well lished reputation of our house for honest straightforward dealing. Yours very truly, D. M. ALMAND’S SONS. t goods we are selling with the I at which they are going has giv ! agood run of patronoge the past vceks- We wish to say to [e that our stock is large, and of the very best quality and irices suit the people and Don’t miss our store when fant Dry GOods. C. B. HUDSON. 1 E BLOSSOH. 'unhealthy—if her sjou at it. P bve except flirta !°uly half fair. Ns, women impos pree court expos peet, P 8 into dream horrible that a [ e blill L but the Nliy have their humanity to man less thousands die studies love Ul r educe his ig -ietice. H the wa y» Uetter even than the *u, @lf pra 0 AJ f ^7 $ A<\ CONYERS, GA., SATURDAY, OCT. 22, 1898. Cupid is always as a baby, because love never lies to grow up. After a girl passes twenty-five she might as well marry: she wiil fade anyway. It is always a case cf love's labor lost unless it becomes a member of the union. A girl may forgive a man for kissing her, but never for apolo¬ gizing afterward. No girl is to good to be hug¬ ged. The Bible tells us to hold fast to a good thing. Somehow the author of a love story never sees the warts on the face of his heroine. An old bachelor say 3 there i s but one thing sweeter than love’s young dream, and that is to wake up and find yourself still General News. More than 100 collisions oc¬ curred on the Japanese roads in 1897. Boston is to have free water fountains in all parts the city next summer. An ordinary canteen holds two quarts, With the 277,000 canteens filled the army would carry 3,644 hogsheads. The fixed bayonet was not used in the charges either at San Juan or El Caney. Tt is claimed it should be made small er and sharper. Tarascon is going to show his gratitude to the creator of Tar tariu by erecting a statute of Al¬ phonse Daudet on one of its squares. At Kerman, Persia, meat and bread aie under two cents a pound, eggs 5 for a cent, a small iemb nine cents, The passion flower which grows in the South American forest can only he enjoyed where it grows, as it fades almost soon as it is picked. Lisbon has a population to¬ day of about 340,000. It. lias a few historic buildings, most of them having been destroyed by the earthquake of 1755. A line soldier in England costs $2,75 a year, and even then says a writer in Blackwood, he is often a mere boy or an inva¬ lid and weakly man. A. ton af Atlantic water yields after evaporation, eighty-one pounds, of sault. of the Pacific’ seventy-nine, of the arctic and antarctic, eighty-five, of the Dead sea, 187. The gold yield of Victoria during the first seven months of the present year amounted to 447,130 ounces, showing an in¬ crease of 6,019 ounces as com¬ pared with the same period of 1897, A rooster in Limestone, Me., was struck by lightning and de¬ prived of all its tail feathers save two. The chaticleer sur¬ vives the shock, and the owner christened him Cervera. C^S.S’l'OK.IA. Beara the The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of Theriajority is over 70,000 'The democratic majority in the late state election continues to grow larger as the returues from the remote counties come in. It is over 70,000! And still the country is safe frotn the opposition to democra cy. Governor Candler has made n phenomenal campaign through out, and his majority over Ho¬ gan, the populist candidate, is one of the very largest ever giv¬ en any governor in this state. 70,000 democratic majority— oh, well, the populist-republi¬ can fusionist is not in it. He is simply a lonesome, unknown quantity in Georgia politics. They will have to cross on the democratic band wagon if they can’t swim—and they no more in the swim than Spanish bullet is in the cristic Sea” of middle Georgia. Hail to democracy ! Congratulations to Uncle len Candler, the “banner nor’’ of Georgia.—Ex. Delicate Children They do not complain of anything in particular. They eat enough, but keep thin and pale. They appear fairly well, but have no strength. You cannot say they are really sick, and so you call them delicate. Whatcanbedoneforthem? Our answer is the same that the best physicians have been giving for a quarter of a cen tury. Give them iltt of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypo It has most re markable nourishing power. It gives color to the blood. It brings strength to the mus cles - a ^ ds power to the r er Y' s - mean |. rob u T t , flesh if given a small amount three or four times each day. 50 c.and$ 1 . 00 ; aiidruggists. iV\ m k 4 I —#tl- iff! v 5 5? V 4; a — i i M v- I . Shipments of Orocicery, Glassware, Lamp L'oous etc., just opened up. Shipments of Dress goods ar¬ ming that will delight the ladies. We are ready with the season and shall keep in the front row. 15 1 0 I A > r r OF SI.F >15^ .1 l.JSS r JF II¥. Some ladies slippers in our stock are being sold at less than cost. They are great bargains. GOMES TO OUR PLAGE. JOHN C. STEPHENSON. WE BUY m mm U glfFF 2 5 sm s w Brin 03 ir a our cotton seed . to us. We buy for the Conyers oil mill and will pay the highest market. Encourag e the mill. Bring 1 us your seed L. J. A Irn a oil or J. S. Johnson. 326 3 BBS BJ 5 B We have eutered the General mercantile business in Con¬ yers and offer to the people a Newline of General Merchandise at reasonable prices, We will keep everything usually kept in such a store and at prices to suit the times. HOME MADE FLOUR, GRA¬ HAM FLOUR, and good home made MEAL can ALWAYS be found at our store. We will carry a general line and we invite you to call on us at our store on Commerce street when you come to town. We have selected fall grown seed wheat and oats for sale. We will buy your cotton seed and pay the highest market price for same. Carry your cotton to our ginnery where we give genuine sat isfactiou. Respectfully, ■XTT'illia.xx-j.s ‘Wlxitcutecx. It may be hard and for you to live within year means, but if you are an honest must do it, To spend more money than you make is to open the way to untold troubles and to insure the final i rU j n 0 f y 0 nr reputation and character. Eor no to gratifiy your own taste, to please even’ jour family, nor Mp a ueefni should you adopt a po*i<Y fraught with evil After all the people who I compelled to practice the FIRE INSURANCE. T! ILLY 6. KcELVAKY- NO. 42. rigid economy get as much good out of life as anybody else. •‘Plain living and high think¬ ing often together.” To be able to do without luxuries is better than to have them. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought i Bears the , Signature of