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W. & HARP, Publisher.
VOL- 1*
T H E
CONYERS EXAMINER,
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Sv J W. E. HARP,
two dollars per annum.
at
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w Af
year. Business Manager.
GEO. W. GLEATON f
attorney at Law,
ONYEBS : : • : GEORGIA,
jiH p r a£ tice in the Superior and Supreme
,
• ftation jieen to the may3 collection -’ of
y
A. G. MeGALLA,
Attorney at Law
CONYERS, : GEORGIA
Will practice in Rockdale and adjoining cottn
ties.
A PAP Kit TIIE PEOPLE.
T HE: LOU 1SV \ LLE
COURIER-JOURNAL.
Largest, Taper Host and Cheapest Family
in h U lilted States.
EDITED DY
henry wattebson.
The Coin ier-Jonrnal is a combination (made
in 1808) of three eld Louisville papers, viz. :
the Journal, established in 1830 ; the Courier,
in 1813; and the Democrat in 1844. Its rep
utation is national, as well as its circulation,
nftd it is pronounced one of the ablest, spiciest,
wittiest, strongest and best, arranged papers in
the world; its matter being especially ad ,ptcd
to tht) Merchant, the Farmer, Ladies and Cnil
dren.
The Weekly Courier-Journal is not a mere
hasty hotch-potch thrown together from the
daily edition, but a complete, able, spicy, fam¬
ily newspaper, carefully and intelligently ed¬
ited in ever column and paragraph.
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A new edition of Prentice’s Poems, beauti¬
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Letters should be addressed to
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President Courier-Journal Co., Louisville, Ky.
NEW ATTRACTION!
L H. Almand, Son & Co
JJAMNG purchased one of ALLEN’S PA
01LSAFES
! lf '*/* thillons capacity, are now prepared to
oils from “HEADQUARTERS/’ and
Wl11 sell such oils as
linseed,
L.VRD,
TRAIN and
P r that MACHINE,
' (es defy competition, The Oil Safe
'curiosity, within itself. jan5 ’78 tf
FARMERS
BEST Steel Turn and Scooter
and Plow Clevises, Singletrees, Haines, Col
Lines, at
ALMAND SON & CO’S
t OATS
1 bush/i’^I/FIFJOF L H, OATS an 75 cents CO’sf per
ALMAND SON &
Knocked Do’wn.
J. the^v^^P, ^ & CO, have Reduced
ilg and Fish WCek ^ on Sn & ars > Syrups
bMfo a. AND °attle powders,
111 0r prevent
s e—a .
plffl 01
I I m 1 0 1 am D
J SR rfj
©
“ Error Ceases
to be Dangerous, While Truth is leftF to Combat it.’*
ree
CONYERS, GA.. SATURDAY. MARCH l«, lS 78
GO TO
bq>b Mioroan's
FOR WINES,
LIQUORS,
CIDER,
Oysters, . CHAMPAGNE, &c.
Sardines,
Crackers,
Soaps, Blacking,
FINE CIGARS and TOBACCO.
Pickles, Peanuts, Candies, &c.,
BOTTLED BEER OF THE BEST BRANDS,
A Specialty.
&STAH Kinds of FANCY DRINKS,
at buort Notice.
A FINE BILLIARD TABLE
attached and Privately arranged.
Under the Whitehead House,
Conyers, Ga. Feb. 16, 1878.
II can at will anything make start you. money else. $12 faster Capital per at day work not made required for at us home than ; Ave
by the industrious, Men, women, boys and
girls Avanted everywhere to Avork for us. Now
is the time. Costly outfit and terms free.—
Address True & Co., Augusta Maine.
LOOK BEFORE YOU BITS.
WEAVER & SILHIBUX,
DEALERS IN
NOTIONS, Oil£©8©S, J
HATS, CAPS,
BOOTS, SHOES, Ac.
OF ALL KINDS.
Fine Tobacco and Cigars, Confectioneries
and in fact, Everything Kept in a
FIRST CLASS STORE.
HONEST DEAlINf, IS OUR MOTTO.
IJkfflTTERMS CASH and Short Profits.
Conyors Ga. Feb. 16, 1878. tf
J. II, .11,MAI SON & CO
J J^AVE IN STOKE and to arrive,
Forty Tons of
Groceries 9
which they are prepared to SELL ON TIME,
to parties who are not Afraid to Make the
BIGHT KIND OF PAPERS.
Conyers, Ga. Feb. 2, tf
VEG-ETINE
Purifies the Blood, Renovates
and Invigorates the
Whole System, i
Its medical properties are
Alterative, Tonic, Solvent,
and Diuretic .
Vegetine RELIABLE EVIDENCE.
Vegetin©
Vegetine Mr. H. R. Stevens
Dear Sir,—l estimony will most the cheerfully
ndd my t to great num¬
Vegetin© ber you have already received in fa¬
vor of your great do and good think medicine, enough
VEOETiNE.for in I praise; not for X
Vegetin© can be said its was
troubled over thirty Catarrh, years with that
dreadful disease. coughing-spells and had
Vegetin© such bad that it
would seom as though I never could
breath cured any more, and and Vegetine
has me; I do feel to thank
Vegetin© God good all a medicine the time as that Vegetine, there is and so
1 also think it one of the best med¬
Vegetin© icines feelings for at coughs, the stomach, and weak and sinking advise
everybody to take the Vegetine, is of
Vegetine for I can assure them it one
the best medicines that GORE, ever was.
Mrs. L. Sta,
Vegetine Cor. Magazine and Walnut
Cambridge, Mass.
Vegetine
Vegetine GIVES
Vegetine Health, Strength,
Vegetine AHD APPETITE.
Vegetine My daughter has received great
benefit from the use of Vegetine.
Her declining anxiety health all was her a friends. source
Vegetine or great to restored
A lew bottles of Vegetine appetite.
her health, strengthLiind
Vegetine Insurance No. and 49 Sears Real Estate Building. Agent,
Vegetine Boston, Mau.
Vegetine CANNOT BE
Vegetine EXCELLED..
Vegetine Charlestown, Mass.
Vegetine Dear H. R. Si Stevens. r,—This is to certify that I
Vegetine in have usedyour family for “Blood several Preparation’’ years, and
think mv Scrofula Canker¬
that tor or Affec¬
Vegetine ous Humors or Rheumatic
tions, it cannot be excelled; and, as
a blood purifier thing or spring 1 have medicine, used,
Vegetine it is the best almost everu turns, hing.
and I have used eve >ry nd it to
I can cheerfully need of reco mmena h medicine. wj
Vegetine any one in suen 'lJiNSMORE, a a mecucui
Y 0 U K P A 3 A U
Vegetine No. 19 Russell Street
Vegetine IT IS A
Vegetine Valuable Remedy.*
Vegetine South Boston, F«b. 7. 1870.
Vegetine MR. Sterns. VjfGETrNE.^and
b<Atles ot your am
Vegetine and general uebility recommend of the system. it to a'J
Vegetine I can heartily the above comp.amta.
suffering S1361SMwk from
v K ee,.
Vegetine 86 Atboas Stree*
VEGETINE
Prepafed by
H.R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass.
yegetine is Sold by"ill Druggists,
POKTttY.
little chris' letter TO JESUS.
A postman stood with puzzled brow,
Ahd in his hand turned o’ei‘ and o’er
A letter, with address so strange
As he had never 3 een before,
The writing cramped, the letters small,
And by a boy s rough hand engraven
The words ;
ran thus : “To Jesus Christ,”
And underneath inscribed, “In Heaven”
The postman paused; full well he knew
No mail on earth this note could take,
And yet ’twas writ in childish faith,
And posted for the dear Lord’s sake.
With careful hand he broke the seal,
And rev rently the letter read;
Twas short, and simple too,
For this was all the letter said:
“My Lor i and Savior, Jesus Christ,
I ve lately lost my father dear j
Mother is very, very poor,
And life to her is sad and drear.
Yet Thou hast promised in Thy word,
That none can ever ask in vain
For what they need of earthly store,
If only asked in Jesus’ name,
“So I am writing in His name,
To ask that Thou will kindly send
Some money down; what Thou canst Spare,
And what is right for us to spend.
I want so much to go to school;
While father lived I always went,
But he had little, Lord, to leave.
And what he left is almost spent.
“I do not know how long ’twill oe
Ere this can reach the gslden gate ;
But 1 will try and patient be,
And for the answer gladly wait.”
The tidings reached that far-off land,
Although the letter did not go,
And straight the King an angel sent,
To help the little boy beloAv,
Oft to bis mother he would say.
“1 knew the Lord would answer make
When he had read my letter through,
Which I had sent for Jesua’ sake.”
Ah ! happy boy, could you out teach
Mj heart to trust my Father’s love,
And to believe where aught’s denied
’Tis only done my faith to prove.
[ Christian at Work,
Listen to the Georgia Grange: If
the planters of South would make their
plantations strictly self sustaining, and
buy nothing which they could them¬
selves produce cotton would never be be¬
low thirty cents per pound, and they
would become the wealthiest people un
der the sun.
The Fort Worth Democrat says that
Wiley Horn, of Parker county, Ala., was
recently presented by his wife with five
boys at one birth, and the mother and
boys are doing well, Mr. Horn is forty
tight years of age, and the father of fifty
two children
Law is like a siive ; you may see
through it, but you must be considerably
reduced before you can get through it.
It is proposed in Indiana to change
the marriage service so that it will read.
‘Who dare take this woman ! And the
bridegroom shall answer, ‘I dare.’
There is a family in Madison county,
Florida, of remarkable stature. The
father is seven feet four inches high, the
mother is six feet eight inches, two sons
are seven feet three inches, and one
daughter is seven feet nine inches.
A self asserting parishioner, who was
trying to browbeat his pastor, said ‘You
can’t make twice three seven, not by a
good deal, great as you may think your¬
self.’ ‘I can come within one of it/ qui¬
etly replied the clergyman.
‘Suppose we pass a law/ said a severe
father to his daughters, ‘that no girl 18
years old who can’t cook shall get mar¬
ried until she learns how to do it ?’ ‘Why.
then, we’d all get married at 17 !’ res*
ponded the girls in a sweet chorus.
Two Hollyoke women gave birth to
three babies each on the same day. One
of the fathers is described as being ‘as
much set up as a country store/ but the
other declared that the triplets were ‘too
darned much of a good thing.’
The dressed . carcass of „ a call weighing ...
150 pounds contains 93§ pounds of wa
ter, and 5fq pounds ot d.y substance;
the lattei quanti.y is ma e up o
pounds of dry nitrogenous substance and
24f pounds of fat.
A sharp old gentleman traveling ont
West got a seat by bis wife by request¬
ing the young man who sat by her ‘to
please watch that woman while he went
into another car, as she had fits.*
A lady asked a minister whether a per*
son might not be fond of dress and orna¬
ments and not be proud. ‘Madam,’ said
the minister, ‘whenever you see a fox’s
tail sticking out of a hole you may be
sure the is within.’
The Cutlibert Appeal says the planters
of that section are manufacturing their
own fertilizers to a large extent this seas
8 on. They are made principally of lime,
salt and saltpetre, and are said to make a
valuable compound.
The doctors.
A GOOD STORY TOLD ABOUT ALEXANDER
STEPHENS AND BOB tOOttBS.
(New York World.)
A doctor named Royston had sued
Peter Bennett for his bill, long overdue,
for attending the wife of the latter. Alex.
H. Stephens was on the Bennett side,
and Robt, Toombs, then Senator of the
United States was for Dr. Royston. The
doctor proved his number of visits, their
value according to local custom, and his
own authority to do medical practice.
Mr. Stephens told hi 3 clieut that the phy¬
sician had made out his case, and as there
was nothing wherewith to rebut or off¬
set the claim, the only thing left to do
was to pay it.
“ No,’ said Peter, ‘I hired you to speak
to my case, and now sperk.”
“Mr. Stephens told him there was noth',
ing to say ; I have looked on to see that
it was made out, and it was.
Peter was obstinate, and at last Mr.
Stephens told him to make a speech him
self, if he thought one could be made.
“I will/ said Petter Bennett, “if 3ob>
by Toombs won’t be too hard on me,’
Senator Toombs promised, and Peter
began :
“Gentlemen of the jury—You and 1 is
plain farmers, and if we don’t stick to>
geiher these ’ere lawyers and doctors
will get the advantage of us, I ain’t no
lawyer nor doctor, and I ain’t no objecs
tions to them in their proper place ; but
they ain’t farmers, gentlemen of the jury.
Now, this man Royston was a new doctor,
and 1 went for him to come ’an a doctor
my wife’s sore leg. And he come an’
put some salve truck onto ic and some
rags, but it never done it one bit of good,
gentlemen of the jury. 1 d m’t believe
he’s no doctor, no way. There ts doc¬
tors a-* is doctors, sure enough, but this
man don’t earn his money, and if you
send for him, as Mrs. Sarah Aikinson did,
for a negro boy as is worth $ 1 , 000 he
,
just kills him and wants pay tor it/
“I didn’t!’ thundered the doctor.
“Did you cure him ?’ asked Peter, with
the slow accents of a judge with a black
cap on.
The doctor was silent, and Peter pro¬
ceeded :
“As I was saying, gentlemen of the ju
ry, we farmers when we sell our cotton,
has got to give vally for money we ask,
and doctors ain’t none too good to be put
to the same rule. And I don’t believe
this Sam Royston is no doctor, nohow.’
The physician again put in his roar,
“Look at my. diploma if y ou think I am
no doctor.’
“ His diploma!’ exclaimed the news
fledged orator with contempt. “Ilis di¬
ploma ? Gentleman, that is a big word
for printed sheepskin, and it don’t make
no doctor of the sheep as first wore it,
nor does it of the man as now carries it,
A good newspaper has more in it, and
I’ll pint out to ye that he ain’t no doctor
at all,’
The man of medie'ne was now in a fu
ry, and screamed out: “Ask my patients
if I am not a doetor ?’
“I asked my wife/ retorted Peter, “an’
she said as how she thought you wasn’t.’
“Ask my other patients,’ said Dr. Roy*
ston.
This seems to be the straw that broke
the camel’s back, for Peter replied with
a look and tone of unutterable sadness ;
“That is a hard sayin, gentlemen of
the jury, and one that re*quires me to die
or to have powers as I’ve hearn tell
ceased to be exercised since the apostles.
Does he expect me to bviug the angel
Gabriel down to toot his horn before his
time, and cry aloud : “Awake, ye dead’
and tell this court and jury your opinion
of Royston’s practice * Am I to go to
the lonely graveyard and rap on the si¬
lent tomb, and say to ’em as is at rest
from physic and doctor’s bills, “ Get up
here, you, and state if you died a natural
death, or was hurried up some by doc„
^ He says Mk his ients
gent | emJn of the jaryj tlieyVe all dead ,
wher3 is M ,. s Beazley - a ,„ a0 S am ? Go
the worms in the graveyard where he
^ Mrg peak( , 8 wom>n Sarah wag at .
tended by him, aod her funeral was ap¬
pointed and he had the corpse ready.
Where is that, likely Bill as belongs to
Mr. Mitchell ? Now in glory a’ expressiu'
his opinion of Royston’s doctorin’, Where
is that baby girl ot Harry Stephens' ?
She are where doctors cease, from troub
lin t and infants are at rest.
“ Gentleman of the jury, he has eat
chickens enough at my house to pay for
his salve, and I furnished the rags, and
I don’t suppose he charges me for ma
kin’ her worse and he even don’t pretend
to charge for curing’ of her, and I am
humbly thankful that he never give her
nothin’ for her inwards, as he did his
other patients, for somethin’ made ’eqa die
mighty sudden—’
TWO DOLLARS Per Annfm,
Here the applause made the speaker
sit dowu in great confusion, and in spite
of logical restatement of the case by Sen¬
ator Toombs, the doctor lost and Peter
Bennett won.
On Wednesday last, in the Randolph
settlement, four miles from Clarksville,
Tennessee, a negro named Winston An*
derson, aged fifty, attempted to commit
an outrage on a young wite girl ten years
of age. He failed to accomplish his hel¬
lish purpose and made no effort to get
away, The young lady would not tell
her father of the matter, but told some
girls who reported to an old negro wo¬
man. It was then told to the fatbei. The
negro had fled. He was pursued and
captured in Rcbartson county Friday.
He was immediately placed in jail in
Clarksville. On Friday night about one
o’clock Jailor Perkins was awakened by
the breaking in of his door. He found
himself in the presence of several armed
men, who demanded of him the keys,
lie gave them up, and a part of the mob
went up to the cell of Anderson, put a
rope around his neck and carried him off.
The body of Anderson Was found Sat¬
urday morning hanging on a small thorn
tree about one mile from town. He was
evidently choked to death, as theie were
no marks of violence on bis body. There
is considerable excitement among the
negroes, who threatened to lynch Per¬
kins on Saturday night for giving An*
derson up. Perkins has moved his fam*
ily out of the jail, and with friend were
prepared to receive them. The white
people all talk one way, that the negro
deserved his fate.
ALL ABOUT HEADS.
“Heads are of different shapes and si¬
zes. They are full of notions. Large
heads do not tell just what a person is by
the shape of his head. High heads ave
the best kind. Very knowing people
are called long headed. A man that
won’t stop for anything or anybody is
called hot headed. It he isn’t qui'e so
bright, they call him soft headed. If he
won’t be coaxed or turned they call him
pig headed. Animals have large heads.
The heads of fools slant back. Old heads
are coveted with hair except bald heads.
There are barrel heads ; heads of ser¬
mons—and some ministers used to have
fifteen heads to one sermon ; pin heads ;
beads of cattle, as the farmer calls his
cows and oxen ; head winds \ drum heads;
cabbage heads ; at logger heads • come
to a head, like a boil ; heads of chapters;
head him off; head of the family ; and go
ahead—but first be sure you are right/’
THE TRUE WIFE.
What, do you think the beautiful word
‘wife’ comes from ? It is the great word
in which the English and Latten lan¬
guages conquered the French and the
Greek. I hope the French will some
day get a word for it, instead of that
dreadful word “femme.” But what do you
think it comes lrom ? The great value
of the Saxon words is that they mean
sorathing. Wite means “weaver’. You
must either be housewives or house
moths ; remember that. In the deep
sense, you must either weave men’s fors
tunes and embroider them, or feed upon
and bring them to decay. Wherever a
true wite comes, home is always around
her. The stars may be over her head ;
the glow-worm in the night cold grass
may be the fire at her foot; but home is
where she is and for a uoble woman it
stretches far around, better than houses
cealed with ceder or vermillion shedding
its quiet light far for those who else are
homeless. This I believe to be the wos
mans true place and power.— RusJcin.
There was a duel, the other day, in
Elberton. Ga , between a newspaper man
and a couutryman. It was a sham duel
on the part of the former, but stern real*
lty to the latter. The countryman fired
first, and to his untutored eye his antago
nist fell dead. ‘Foul play/ shouted one
secoud of the quill driver: ‘Murder/
cried the other, ‘let me kill the scoun¬
drel/ and he seized a shot gun and fired
its two blank cartridges at him. The
countymen took to his heels and ran six
miles in forty minutes.
The Supreme Court of Georgia deci¬
ded the other day in the case of McDade
vs, the Georgia railroad company, that
the employee of a railroad company who
receives a physical injury, partly by his
own faults or partly By the faults of other
servants or employes of the company,
cannot recover.—Atlanta Tribune,
Buffalo hunters just in from the range
report that there are now in the neigh¬
borhood of 1,400 Kiowa and Comanche
Indians about 150 miles northwest of
Fort Griffin, camped between Middle Pe
cos and Red rivers, and acting in a dem¬
onstrative manner. The SixthCavahy
have been ordered to the camp.
frO. 12.
GOOD ADVICE TO THE BOOSTS.
Probably not oue in a hundred can do
any one thing thoroughly.—They can all
dig away at anything that comes handy/
but, as for excelling in ah f trade, busi*
ness, art or profession) that is utterly out
of the question. One of the j oUng mett
calls upon us ; perhaps he is a graduat e
of some college, has his diploma, and
plenty of recommendations from clergy
men and members of Congress. We ask
him what he can do? He is notpatticU*
lar—can turn his hand to most anything.
We give him a trial, and find he cannot
write*a decent hand, nor spell or punctu*
ate correctly, nor Write with any degree
of rapidity, nor read a strange nianu*
script, nor do anything whatever With
promptness and judgment, which is re¬
quisite in business, He has no khowl
edge on any subject ; has simply a jum¬
bled mass of information, which may be
Sound or otherwise, and which be cannot
turn to any practical account. He has
been all his life reading about how things
are done instead of learning to do them*
This is wrong. Young men should
i educe their education to practice as
they go along, They should learn to do.
1 hey should study less, practice, or Work
more ; read less, and think more ; that
instead of being useless, superficial, im¬
becile automata, they may become thor**
ough, practical, executive men, capable
of doing what they undertake, to the last
degree of perfection, aiid with a vigor
and rapidity in keeping with the charac¬
teristics of the age.
The Mexican ladies dress in the *mo 3 t
vivid colors and striking contrasts. They
combine the handsome articles of attire
with the commone t and poorest. In
the intervals of dancing the women re*
tire to the dressing room and refresh
themselves with wine or beer and cigar¬
ettes. Even the younger girls smoke*
The dancing is similar to ours, except it
is much slower. They only have one na¬
tional dance, which is called the ,danza.*
This is danced in the slowest possible
manner, and is well adapted for warrft
climates. A young lady, in describing
it, said ‘it was the easiest thing in the
world to learn—'you only can stand still
and be hugged.’
—--- ^ mm m -—
Power of a Little child.— Two ttieti
engaged in an angry dispute on San
Francisco street, during which one shook
his fist beneath the other’s nose and ap¬
peared to have worked hiniseli into a fe
ver heat of passion, Just then a little girl,
almost an infant, who had been going by,
but stopped, apparently paralyzed by the
man’s fury, moved quite close to him,
and, looking up into his face, inquired t
‘What, makes you so cross, mister?’ It
was so unexpected that the man evident**
ly experienced a complete revulsion of
leehrig. Gradually his countenance
cleared, and finally was lit up with a
smile as he patted the little peacemaker’s
bead, and remarked as he ttloved away,
ignoring the other man altogether i ‘t
guess you’re right, little pet/
Neuralgia and Rheumatism. —A very
simple relief for neuralgia is to boil A
small handful of lobelia in half a pint of
water till the strength is oUt of the herb,
then strain it off and add a teaspoonfol
of fine salt.—Wring cloths' out cf the liq¬
uid as hot as possible and spread over the
part affected, It acts like a charm.—
Change the cloths as soon as cold till
the pain is all gone; then cover the
place with a soft, dry coveiing till all
perspiration is over, so as to prevent
taking cold. Rheumatism can often be
relieved by application to the pain'ul
parts, of .cloths wet in a weak solution of
saLsoda in water. If there is inflamma¬
tion in the joints, the cure is very quick {
the wash needs to be luke warm.
Old Georgia is the best place after all
for Georgians. Last fall a number of cit„
inerts of Stewart county emigrated West,
notwit,h8tafidind the advice of friends and
all that could be said and done to keep
them from forsaking their old homes.
Now they ate all dissatisfied ahd would
willingly return if they had the means to
do so. Such is the experience of nearly
all who forsake Georgia to better their
condition in the far West,
•»
Wiiting paper which will resist the
most intense heat has recently been in¬
vented, A single sheet will carbonize,
but will net burn, wl ile if a roll of pre«*
pared paper be placed in the fiercest fire,
although the outside leaves and extreme
edges may carbonize, the interior will re¬
main unaltered, and the writing and print¬
ing will be perfectly legible, Paper al¬
ready written or printed upon may un¬
dergo the process of preparation witbont
injury.