Newspaper Page Text
I.XVH.
v. so ACRES!
Vj
containing , .• doU O r\ aci OS
jl f arl ll
. W0i.I -51 j 7 i
/ flrom town, W&i V-l 6Ci,
proved ; For and particulars well
B ms easy.
, ^ A „ c
1 Or PvvV. .-••• *
i r, tj AT.-MAND, Conyers, Ga.
~
UR STORE
1gfast iu ‘° » 1 l an "
‘ faiiflv Grocery More
, d die demand* in
, M ,er lo
L customers. kinds
am to all
cy an d Plain Crackers
Canned Goods,
Candies etc.
[n bw artier m sm'Gl quantities
to have fresh goods
at all times.
lioost anything for the ta¬
f tie cm bu found at our
store, always new.
La Ue do not discriminate
treat all custom¬
ers alike.
pods delivered in the city
pptly and free of charge.
Ik at our goods and get
ur prices before buy=
ng
Yours truly,
m ifi
1 *3 j ••• 85 j ! -A'J- — m X
ASTORIA
For Infants aiul Children.
Kind M Hava Always Bought
Ureof^^
* -»*C?i 9
Man born of woman is small
r'lge and few in a hill. In
Wl ke is full of colic, parc
k and catnip tea, and in old
Deis full of cuss words and
fiunatisni. In his youth his
r 1 ' bis maternal ancestor tak
bmaoross her knee and ex
k lo him all the sympathy
L nature with the heel end
p'slipper, and when he is a
pi'own he dodgeth Hie tax
Nor and the sheriff tho rest
N life. IWeadelhbkea
j'l “i*,a,U,;eC kor tree and chu-Y 2 1Y‘ dL
i: 11 like sank-spurs to your
11 >''gs. Ho swelleth with
li .-1 and cuttelli froz
fur n wa
a Lore, bu is melted as
^ m a fire at the next con
and cast in the ash bar
his name is Denms.
l°f office his friends forget
\y° 'b 'i rotten Hke a vine a
stump and ]ie
busted, which
il!t down m tbe
cow
^ ,! "e the red bugs get
m
,;0<i beneath ins under- j
‘ in He dic-th !
=' out 0 f the
r '' Jllti goeth
10 t0 a place ' too
, Wtar clothes Verily
: ,8i Guvl 0 f t!
' lia ' u man is worse
l « -ginnuig
' J and the
N hi yetii Hot !
a Time iii
t D\V it. —Ex.
s '' J |1J Ka;e Always Bough!
i m A I
, ! f /
CONYERS, GA., SATURDAY, JULY 22, 1899.
DROPSY CUBES with Tetfi'tulilf
Kfincdiw. Hnvn cured
many thin.-s.-iud ca~es
cnllctl hopeless. Inter,
days atlfast two-thirds of all symptoms remov¬
ed. Testimonials and TED DAYS treatment, free.
DR. B. H. GRXEJi’S SOBS. Boa: K, Atlanta, Ga.
Talk About a Dram.
Ingersoll’s Eulogy on Whis
e> and Dr, Buckley’s Reply.
Ixokksoll's Toast.
< < I send you some of the most
whiskey that ever
the skeleton from the I
or painted landscapes i:i
brain of man. It is mingled
of wheat and corn. In it
wl! find sunshine and shad¬
that chased each other over
the billowy fields, the breath
of June, the carol of lark, the
dew of the night, the wealth of
summer and autum’s rich con
tent, all golden with impiison*
ed lighr Drink it and you w ih
hear the voices of men
maidens singing II ai vest Home,
mingled with the laughter
children, Drink it and vou
will feel within your blood the
starred dawn, dreamy, tawny
dusks of perfect day 8 For for
ty years this liquid j >.y has hoen
witiiiu the staves ot oitk, long¬
ing to touch the hp of man.
Dll. BUCKLEY’B REBUY.
< 4 I send you some of the most
wonderful whiskey that ever
brought a skeleton into the clos¬
et or painted scenes of lust anti
bloodshed in the brain of mam
It is the ghost of wheat and iO.’u
crazed by the loss of their nat¬
ural l o bes. In it you find a
transient sunshine chased by
a shadow as cold as an
midnight in which the breath
of June grows icy, and the
ol of the lark gives place to the
foreboding cry of the ravin.
Drmk it and you will {i « v «
woe, sorrow, babbling
wounds without cause; ) o» r
e Y es shail behoid 8ltan S e vvo,a ‘
an and your heart shall utter
tbiog.. Driuk i,
a “ tl >OU shali near l “ e volLes of
demons shrieking, women wail
mg and worse than
children mourning for the loaa
ot a taLller who yet lives inK
ifc dee P and !oUg aud 8erpeUt8
Wlli 1,,ss in ^ our eiU ’*’ co11 lhem ;
8elves about > uur , ' eck ’ A ° d
seize - 011 wilh t^ir Logs:
last « bueth like a serpent and
sliu 8 eth llke au adder ' Fort >’
eaiS lllj s liquid death has been
between ctaves of oak as
iess theie as pu.e water. I send
lC to > ou that y ou may put an
enemy in your mouth to steal
away yout brains and yet I call
inyseif your triend.”
That Second Chapter.
The new pastor was preach
ing his first sermon, In the
middle of it he stopped abrupt
iy and asked:
“How Many of you have read
the Bibl"?’
Fifty hands went up
•‘Goody said the pastor.
many of you have read the
second chapter of Jdt: •j ’
Twenty live hands went up.
a w m smile spread over the
J Y“ „/
0ROc bntwteu
learn something to your in
terest.‘
There is only one Chapter in
the book of Jude.—Guthrie ( 0 .
T ) Leader.
• —4‘
CASTOR! A
For Infants and Children.
lbs fas¬
ti aile —’ It SB
eigwturo // ersry
a £ vrapjsr.
< i There arc probably fewer
fish in Georgia,” sa)stlie A tlan
ta Journal, “than in any other
in the Union. ’’That being
the case it ought to he remedied
through the United States fish
commission'. G orgia has some
sixty rivers and three times as
many creeks, capable of an out.
put of hundreds of thousands of
pounds of fish per year.-Savau
nan News.
Toombs In Boston,
Bob Toombs, when on a visit
j. 0 Boston, just after the war,
was asked by a gentleman of
(bat c jty if it were true that we
“ploughed negroes in the south:,
Toombs asked his questioner in
return what was the value of a
negro.
• One thousand dollars/
p]j ec j the Bostonian,
“How many negroes would it
take to run a plow? 1 asked Mr.
Toombs.
■‘About four, was the answer.
‘’Then* do you think we are
- fools enough to employ
ST 000 worth of negroes to pull
a plow when a $200 mule would
do?
Does the Bostonian intelli¬
gence grasp the idea that ii
would be folish for southern
farmers and people generally
to lynch the best common labor
i6 posegses? Would we deliber
ateJv cxjio cur djDing )0Gm
and kitchen he)p to im
t imprudent white help f rom
thfe scum of crea tion? 1 It was
butla8t week the Citizen editor
saw a uegro bj . ick maS0 n and a
negro carpenter at work on a
now being built l,v
Cip , 4i „ T M . F e lker 0 ,i Thorn
ton avenue. These negroes have
the frie mship and cor lidcLc oi
cili//311 of this CO mmumty
d any effort t0 1)revcut th eit
pursueing their avocation peace
fully would meet with armed
force, but should a negro at
tempt any Sam Holt capers in
he wouId be lynched
incomintly. The memories ol
Bunker Hill nor Getty s burg
would not help him any,
the strictures of the partisan
eastern press.—Daiton Citizen
Xhewickedmosquitoisnever |
8atigfied until he lands behind
Hie bars.
Some women take pains with!
their personal appearance,while
others give them.
VYo nan’s gte. t r longing is to
love: man s to be loved 1
Every time a genius invents n
good thing some other genius
makes a fortune out of it.
Give a woman iter own way
a bout everything,
A wealthy Osage Indian went
to Cotl’eeville. Kansas, a few
days since to buy a vehicle to
haul his family around in. His
pockets were lined with mcuey
and he wanted something fine.
Nothing suited his fancy exact¬
ly until he saw a hearse return
ing from a funeral, The fine
plate glass,the polished wood¬
work and the stately black
plumes struck him as
ingly fine and he followed the
diiver to the undertakers estab
I shmeno where lie asked the
price of the ‘‘glass wagon.“ T 1 e
undertaker priced it to him at
$oOO and the ‘heap rich Injuu“
counted out, the coin, rolled the
vehicle out and hitched his pon
ies to it and rolled back to the
reservation in a very contented
frame of mind. It. is said that he
loads the family in side the
hearse, closes the door, mounts
the driver s seat and goes gallop
ing to all the social functions
wil " i,> forly of his !,ome -
— Ex.
When vo i want a woman o
really want a tiling very bad,
you have got to begin, by taking
it away from her
Glue nUbUbtaiued
pig's feet and sugar from a hogs
head.
OAEMTOHIA.
Boars the Tho Kind You Have Always Bought
,,i-n n 11 —hwt~
Signature
of
Trade with our advertisers.
No husband over gives his
wife Ins reason for staying out
lute at night. He gives her his
excuse.
The only way to get rid of
the English sparrows is to make
them the rage for trimming hats
— Atchison Globe.
The fop of a hill is harder to
find than the bottom
A gambler always wants a
good deal for his money,
IfS a wise child that knows it
knows lees than its father.
|^i Cs# I IsJ | Cr W
8 K «• 8 » i Sk nHJB |
f
ii can’t take plain
oil. Doctor says, try it. He
might as vv'di.teli me to
Sard or butter and try to take
them, it is too rich and
will upset the stomach. But
you can take milk or cream,
so you can take
Scott’s Emulsion
It is like cream; but will
feed and nourish when cream
wifi not. Babies and chi!
dren will thrive and grow
fat on it when their
food does not nourish them,
Persons have been known to
a pound a day when taking er.
ounce or Scott’s Emulsion. It
the digestive machinery in working
order so that the ordinary food is
properly digested and assimTaied.
50c. BOWNE, sn-i Chemists^ rtl! druggists. Nev/ Ycrk.
SCOTT U
NO, 28.
ti cams Mil Miii a
We are receiving a splendid line of pat¬
ronage and the flour we are making from the
new wheat crop is giving splendid satisfac¬
tion. Wo ask the people to bring us their
grinding and we guarantee that they will be
pleased with their bread.
Don't fail to give us a trial with your
next turn.
Yours for good bread,
A. N. PLUNKET.
DR. LEE’S DRUG STORE
£SP~I.STHE . PLACE TO BI V Til l-] FOLLOWING
GOODS:
Books, Stationery, School Supplies,
Toilet Articles, Fancy Goods, Per
fumes Jewelry, SPECTACLES, Marbles,
Tops, Balls, Fish Hooks, Fishing Lines,
Pocket Cutlery, Lamps, Gardet Seeds,
Tobacco and Cigars, Violin Strings,
Guitar Strings, Banjo Strings, etc
WALLACE” &QUIGG.
WAREHOUSEMEN and DEAL
IN ALL KINDS BUILDING
MATERIAL.
Come to us for Brick and Lime
and Coa. Our prices are right and
goods first-cass.
: *•«
Removal sale of
“ine 1 Mil littery: •)
My entire stock of new and stylish milli¬
nery will be sold at a marked reductiion, I
wish to reduce my stock before the fall sea
son and before I remove my goods into another
store. Those who wish bargains in millinery
should come to me at once as I v/ill save you
money.
Yours for millinery,
Miss Emma Riley.
lTl'iEP (5001.
O--
If you want a cool, delicious
and refreshing drink, patronize
Br. LEE'S Seda Fountain. Every
one, especially the ladies, say
Elgin Stewart is an expert in mak
ing Soda Water, Lemonade, Milk
Shakes, Peach Cream, Chocolates,
Gingerale, Mineral Water, etc.
He also serves fruits with ices,
such as Strawberries, Pine Apple,
etc. You will always meet with po¬
lite attention at this fountain.