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THE PERSON WHO IS
HUNGRY FOR BARGAINS WILL FIND
J. J. LANCFORD & SONS
The place to get a “Square ]VEeal in Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes
and Hats.
___________________ GENT‘S FUHNISHINGcS
Our Gents Furnishing department will be the most complete
we have ever shown. Jail and inspect it.
GOOD Repair Shop
I am repairing Bicycles, W atches.
Clocks, Guns, Pistols, Machines
Etc., on short notice and in a satis
factory manner. All work well and
neatly done and at reasonable
prices. Shop first door above C. B.
Hudson’s store. Come to see me,
Satisfaction guaranteed.
c. B. IRWIN.
School Books
]| pads, pencils, sndinks*
■
OF ALL KINDS AT
RIGHT PRICES
GAILEY DRUG COMPANY
AS A FOOT).
--P~~ PrsUia m-e U. Fm . rit .
SOJA BRANS. i Cztuet
P. Ctnt.F. Cent. P. Jest. P. Ctst.
Green Fodder 4 0 «.7 10.5 1.0
Dry Fodder..... 14 4 i 22.3 89.6 5 2
Grain 34 0 4.8 33 8 16.9
cow raAs.
Green Fodder.. 2 4 4.3 7.1 4
Gftain......... Dry Fodder.... 10.6 20 1 42.2 i.a
| 20 8 4.1 $8 T 1.4
AS A FERTILIZER.
R'«W P.Aell! PoUrt
P. Coat. P. Seat. P. Coat.
Soji Cow Beans. 2.82 ! OT 1 08
Peas.. 1 95 1 06 52
As you will understand protein fur¬
nishes the materials for lean flesh, blood,
muscles, hair, wool, albumen of milk,
ate., and is a very important ingredient
of all feeding stuffs. Fibre is the frame
work of plants, the ooarse fodders, as
h&y straw, o-attains a large proportion of
Hb.-e, henco less digestible. Nitrogen free
cutract includes the sugar, starch, etc.,
and forms an important part of stock
feel, especially the gains. Fat inoludes
besides real fats, wax, the green color¬
ing matter of plants, etc. The oulture
of the Soja Bean is very much like that
of cotton. The rows should be from 8
tJ 5 feet apart.—Georgia Agricultural
Dcimrtment.
AdminiMlrator’s Sale.
Georgia, Rockdale County:
By virtue of an order of the court
of will Ordinary be sold in before and for the said county,
courthouse
door.In between the lawful town of hours Conyers, Ga.,
sale on the 1st
Tuesdap real in belonging November, liXX), all the
estate to the estate of
J. M.Hutf, deceased, as follows:
The old home place containing 130
acres, more or less, bounded by es¬
tate of B. J. Mar but and others.
Sixty-six (66) acres, more or less,
bounded by J. W. Almnnd and others
Fifty (50) acres, - more or less,
bounded by J. F. Harris and others.
Seventy (70) acres, more or less
bounded by Thomas Turner and
others.
Seventy (70) acres, more or less,
bounded by J. H. Hull and others.
Also oue house and lot on Academy
street, in Conyers, Ga., bounded by
Mrs. J. A. Goode and others.
Also about 3 acres pasture or va¬
lot with an alley to Academy
street; bounded by J. F. Wallis and
otners hi the city of Conyers, Ga.
Theso are valuable lands and the
administrators will take pleasure in
showing the above purchase.' property to anv
one wishing to r Terms ~
cash. This Oct. 4,1900.
J. H. & R. I*. Huff,
Adiar's. J. M. Huff.
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A woman is most interest¬
ing to other women when she
has just fallen in love, and
most interesting to mon when
she has just fallen out of it.
When a woman - writes a
story it most always has an
< < 0,God!l must telt him
all!” in it somewhere in it-.
After a girl’s first love af¬
fair is over, for about two
weeks, her heart is as cold as
a dogs nose .-“Ex.
Subscribe for The Banner
Cpi
jloklr Anyone sondlng a * ketch opinion and description whether may
r, aecert&in our free an
invention ta probably patentable. Corumunica
tiougatrtctlreonadeutial. Handbook on Pateot*
sent free. Oldest agency for aecurtng patent*.
Patent* taken through charge, Mann * Co. reeatve
sp.-.-i at notice, without in the
Scientific American.
A hiuidtomoly tllu*tr*t«d weekly. I Arc eat Hr
relation »f *ny ectcnttOo. lournul. Term*. W *
year: four month*. $L Sold by *11 rewsdewlerm.
The Mnlllateu Bill Swindle.
, The antiquity of a swindle rarely
Interferes With its success if it be
skillfully .managed, else one confident*
game that has recently been played
here profitably would never have been
revived. It depends on the practice of
the United Slates government in re¬
deeming any part of a torn bill for the
amount of money It represents. The
fralue of a part of a bill of is very exactly
determined by means an apparatus
which measures the fragment of the
bHl with the greatest accuracy. This
mechanism prevents anybody from get¬
ting In return for part of a torn bill
any more than it is really worth.
That fact is not generally known,
and it is the ignorance of the public
in the matter that has lately made
possible the success of a well dressed
Swindler who has been, operating down
town. He has with him parts of a $10
bill bearing the Lill number. He ex¬
plains to waiters, barkeepers, cashier*
similar persons that he is too busy
to go to the subtreasury and redeem
the bill for which be conld secure the
full value. He offers for that reason
to dispose of the torn piece for a small
sum and has succeeded In getting from
$5 to $7 for fragments of a bill that
could never be redeemed for more than
half those sums.
The purchasers, of course, had confi¬
dence In the mistaken theory that the
full value of a bill would be paid at
the treasury for any part of It, how
ever small the section might be. By
dividing a $10 bill into five or six pieces
and selling them on such liberal terms
this form of swindling may be made
very profitable.—New York Sun.
A Supreme Court Jest. I
An eminent lawyer, one of the most
eminent In the United States, was in
the midst of an argument In defense of
the patent rights of his client to a
newfangled collar button that was be¬
ing unlawfully manufactured by the
tpeople cm the other side of the ease.
The distinguished counsel was describ¬
ing the patent referred to and Its many
advantages when Justice Shiras Inter¬
rupted him and in a most serious man¬
ner observed:
’T should like to ask the learned coun¬
sel if his client manufactures a collar
button that won’t roll under the bed.”
Of course the court was shocked,
Some young people In the seats re¬
served for speetators tittered, and the
marshal, rapping on bis desk with his
gavel, roared, “Silence in this honora¬
ble court!” The eminent counsel main¬
tained his gravity, although bis soul
must have been deeply stirred, and had
presence of mind enough to turn the
incident to his own advantage, saying
with emphasis:
“I have the honor to inform the court
that the collar button manufactured by
my client is unique in that as well as
In other respects, but my client would
not be so selfish as to patent so impor¬
tant a benefit to mankind."—Chicago
Record.
Wrestle With This Problem.
Here Is a little genealogical problem
which perhaps some of our readers can
solve. A man writes to the Liverpool
Post, saying: “I have, like the rest of
human beings, two parents. They in
turn had each two. These four grand
parents had each two, and so on. Now,
if we take on an average four genera
tions to a century 33 generations have
passed away since the time of William
the Conqueror, and by the simple proc
eas of multiplying two by Itself S3
times 1 find that at the date of the Nor¬
man conquest I must have had S.5S9,
934,582 ancestors of that generation.
But this is eight or nine times the to¬
tal population of the globe at the pres¬
ent day and must be fully 30 or 40
times the total number of human be¬
ings living In the eleventh century, so
that there must be a fallacy in my cal¬
culation somewhere. Can anybody tell
ne,” he asks, “what the fallacy is?”
CAPITAL MONUMENT CO.
DAVIES & NERI, managers
.
614 TEMPLE COURT. BELL ’PHONE 8339.
ATLANTA, GA.
MONUMENTS.
Granite and Marble Work of Every Description.
Mail orders given prompt attention.
NEW MEAT MARKET
I have opened up a meat market in Corner store room
in Night building.
WY\W keep nice, kesh rneate,
sausage QlA: reasonable
pnees.
\ bo\\c\\l\lY^3 \ 3 atr 0 n
age o^the qeoq\e.
Give me a Oo.ll*
Suit*
<a»ol &GQh< 3 laiing.
I am prepared to give prompt
satisfactory attention to all
who need my services
Supply of Undertaking goods
complete.
Hearses furnished \v uncut ex¬
tra charge.
W. V. ALMA Si).
Office Almand Hardware Co’s
. CASTOR IA
e»
?cr Infant* and DhMffca.
ife ft*
tf
F*. T. VAouaWx'tas,
DEJfTIST,
CONYERS, . GEORGIA.
Work guaranteed, Prices
reasonable. Teeth extracted with¬
out pain or bad affects, by use of
nitrous oxide gas. (Laughing-gas)
Over 60,000 administrations with¬
out a single dangerous synitom.
Office over post office.
F. T. Hopkins,
D.D.S.
THE
GEORGIA
RAILROAD to Routes,
For information as
Schedules and rates, both
Passenger anil freight
write t' - * either of the uudeisignec
You. will receive prompt reply
and reiiable information -Tackscn
C. 0 McMillin, A. G.
.
T. P. A.- G, P. A.
auausta, ga
S. E. Magill, °- a CM
Gen'l ATLANTA °TthInS AlH Ji ^ ?
W. W. Hardwick, W. C. McMn:
Gen’l Agt. C. F. &P- A
MACON. MACON
if. R Hudson, AV. W. McGovern
T.F.&P. A. Gen’l AgM
ATLANTA, AUGUSTA.
A society e ditress remark
that “Most men never thin
of marriage until they Maybe
lose their hair. ’
to rta ^
true maybe not. But c ^
begin o
ly some men never
loose their hair until a
they marry •