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THE CONYERS WEEKLY
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0 RENA 9 ES,
Vi fffm Due? Sixty Millions Sold.
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prtioBs. 1
ww Psnt flYr;-. 3 , - Pm Dot., $10.00. IT DO;.. I
■ - "—
Tutelar Fire Minister 0 »
Glass Tube, I0z2i in* Hoi5s 1 quart. -T-K II
this device we combine /
the BEST GUA LITIES of our
famous NEW feattne Grenades oi having with the
an ar- Wm
tide OiAt can be used by S^riuk
liag* It is designed ‘especially ‘j>
for use in Pacsenger Coaches 9
and Dwellings. It is elegant ] K
in ornamentation. It is cheap
and reliable. -No rust; no corros¬
ion PlaSu, possible. •
0r8i»tnt’tl, SJ2.00 per doz. -
f 5.00 per fioz.
The i m ,1
EXTiWGUISHES
Holds 5 gallons,and ‘M
will force a stream
through hose feet 6 feet with of
which 4 =j our pump,
is the best ever made,
Needs no attention until used.
Will not freeze, explode or get
out cf order. No rust or corros¬
ion. Can be used by anyone.
Price, $8 0.00 Each,
16 STASR ** ©HEWSICAS-.
Just wliat. is »
needed in every
viliage, lumber
jrard, Fully ware house,
ei®. equip¬
ped Ax, with Crow Hose, Bar,
Lantern, etc. It
is cheap, and re¬
liable. m. 450 lbs.
a© IsSoasiratsS
roar yearn ol oily srwsPsi urs have
tiese to be tbe reliable sai thoroughly ?S
oieat Sana I'ise spylteases made- ffo use tbs
same chemical liquid ia all, sad guarantee fully.
Liberal discounts to agents. Send
for circulars and testimonials.
M&R0E8 HASS GG» \
SS &. 53 Dearborn St., Chfeaao, ill I
HUGHES k MW,
eaa
HAT
AND
dfttts Jnrttisljerg,
THE BEST $1 SHIRT IN THE CITY
Yalises, Umbrella’s etc.
9 PEACHTREE STREET.
AT LAI f A il®.
THE AMERICAN
MAGAZINE.
BEAUTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED.
This Magazine portrays Ameri¬
can thonyht and life from ocean to
ocean, is filled with pure high-class
literature, and can be safely wel¬
comed in any family circle.
PRICE 25c. OR $3 A YEAR BY WAIU
Sample Capg of current number mailed upon re
oeipt of 2 t ate.i bath numbers, IS ete.
Premium List with either.
Address:
a. T. BUSH & SON, PubUshaM,
130 & 135 Pearl St., ft. Y.
C 2351 ,r\ J MI i WBrnr' ' §
CONYERS. GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1888.
I
PIANO ^? ORGANC gk
__ CO.NmT j
r«a3flHEEi rQNWARREN
Owners and Operators of the
Who sell the entire products
of their immense factory direct to the public.
From Ilia you can purchase epos libsnl tas>
THE BEST ORGANS MANUFACTURED.
I WARRANTED FOR SiXJYEARS.
Catalogue and full particulars free.
IVrite us before purchasing. Address, men
tioning name of this paper,
3b; O'ET’SHBO’
0 IA N O o R G A jsL G kSss b
r-rt Si A
DK.J.J. SEAMANS.
DENTIST.
OFFICE 3 WHITEHEAD HOUSE
Conyers, Ga...
STORE.
DR, M. R, STEWART,
COMMERCE STREET, CONYERS, GA.
Fresh Line of Drugs and Fancy Goods just received, and will from
this date be kept constantly on hand. All kinds of DRUGS, MEDI¬
CINES, PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES. TOBAC¬
CO, CIGARS, STATIONERY, FANCY TOILET SOAPs,
And in fact every thing to be found in a
First, Class DRUG STORE. My terms are
STK1CTLY CASH!
And on this account I can offord to sell my goods low, in fact
CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST
MY PRESCRIPTION
DEPARTMENT IS COMPLETE! |
1
An all prescriptions sent to me will be promptly and carefully
Compounded.
I Sell The Famous A. Q. C.
Conceeded to he the best blood purifier known to the science*
Whsn you want any thing in my line call on
i
me. VERY TRULY
■
DR. M. R STD WART j i
| |
j
n ONYERS i n I FAnni H I H A
UlaWiVUliH, T Tl
(
________________________________ j '
EXCELSIOR ............. __' ____
THE
UriTl/® COTTON GIN [ | |
i FEEDERS
AM)
a-! i ! Jg | COHDENSEES
Guaranteed to be K^naJ Seed to
. Pfefa* tbe
Clean, Oi»s Pwt And Malms
a Fine Staple.
USG g & The Circular Roll Bo* n
Patented, and no other roa
nttfacturer canti«“.
IS Send for Circu lar.
trouble to communicate with
warrtirg
rfldfflna R-yatead at abort
notice aed cheap
HWM8y C0«0n ^ _ j M. ui, **®*" df<
MACON, «*■
Subscribe for This Paperi
NOW IS Tm: TIME.
ET WILL PAY YOU?
A »
GREAT STRIKE.
COAL O PEIt A TOTtS AND THEIR
EMPLOYES AT WAR AGAIN,
Afcer Settling nj> (heir Ditfereneca with
their Employers, the Slen Ordered Out
Agralu—500 “lUiikerton” Men on Duty
The coal strikers who resumed work
reported for duty as usual at Post Rich- .
mond. A few were late, but a majority
were on time and went to work appar¬
ently with a will. Freight along the
wharves was banded as usual, and in the
round house all was bustle and activity.
Some of the meu, however, were not so
cheerful and discontent was plainly writ
ten upon their faces. The discharge of
the four men who had been prominent in
the proceedings of the executive board of
the Reading assembly, Bernard J. Shark
ey, Ambrose Hide, Thos. B. Bennett and
John B. Kelly—was the causo of this
dissatisfaction. The sudden change of
front °n the part of the railroad officials
1 1 gjeat surprise to the leaders and
. inkers and
cans
n d ,? e indignation. The strik
ers t thought the ( , company would only ^ in
or ip mi oye ^°! and i that the men who ^ sobe were ien<l so
,
summarily dismissed would not be dis
turbed. The determined attitude of the
railroad company annoyed the men and
made them very stubborn, and they
threatened to renew hostilities,
Most of the men were at work along the
wharves, but there were not a few idlers.
They gathered at various meeting situation, places
and excitedly discussed the
Some of them roundly denounced the
the Reading officials for w hat they termed
‘ 'persecution” of their leaders.
Shamokin Reading railroad Knights of Labor at
declare, that they will not re¬
turn to work until their discharged asso¬
ciates at that place arc reinstated. Three
train crews of non-union men are at work,
but there are 85 locomntives there with¬
out crews. The coal miners in that local¬
ity are all idle owing to a lack of trans¬
portation facilities. Railroad strikers,
however, declare that, the miners will go
on strike as soon as requested to do so.
Good order prevails among the strikers.
Chairman Lee, of the executive com¬
mittee of the Knights if Labor, revoked
the order to go to work, and once more
called out Philadelphia and Reading men.
The tact that about thirty members ol
the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers
obtained engines held by the Knights
has made the feeling between these par¬
ties very bitter, and probably 300 new'
hands have been'employedin the place ol
old ones and sent to points where they
were needed.
At noon the whistles of one of the
engines was blown five times, lev™ as a signal
I» .top work. The crow, of
.■iigiQo. keodo.i the signal ami pot out ihr
fires. The superintendent of the com
pany states that the other seven crews
remained loyal to the company.
Over TOO coal handlers left the yard
and leaders said thay obeyed an order to
strike and the superinsendent said they
had gone homo on account of the rain
and intended to come back again.
Superintendent Keim denies that thers
is a strike, and while there was no trou
ble of any kind during the day, tin
company sent for additional police ana
obtained the services of 50 uniformed
men. It has, in addition to these, 50(
Pinkerton detectives and private police
men vicinity. scattered The around the this coal piers and
reason for action was
a fear that some damage to property
might be attempted. The men assert
there the is no excuse and for sending policemei
to anxious scene, they say that they an
as as the company, that no prop
c?rty shall be damaged.
The following notice was posted a*
Willow street, wharf in Philadelphia
•A reward of $1,000 will be paid s an, j
gWf.f- W.ir? SSSffal
nronertv ntendent”' T A SwieMrd theSnoon General Su
L. uer In near ,
•
200 ^ and freight enpneen,, bn.ke.me. ,
■me remen wereca e< o .f ,u mg, paie
f c ; p - V tO0l,
Notw ;7r hstandmg the ,, fact , ,,, that . Knights ,,
U]wt leaders at Pottsville declare hat
,.heic is a geneial strike all along the lint
>t the Reading railroad, there is no per
ceptible interruption of operations. Dk
usual complement of coal and trains left
mostly of non-union crews Brother
hood engineers, a number of whom had
lost their places on the Reading road
through the Brotherhood lockout of 1877.
Their places were then taken by Knight)
of Labor, and they now gleefully retal
mte - Knights of Labor leaders 'at. pear
discomfited and disheartened at the
l!at i on and outtook. Around Port Rich
mond quiet prevail* everywhere. <
Urgely-atte®ded meeting of local A * I
-’-mbly No. 6 835. Whif-li is the largest
"ne on the Reading lines, was held at
Mutual hall, until nearly midnight. T 'his
stevedores, assembly is composed of coal-handlers.
and, in fact, all of the ('in
ployes around Port Richmond, an I lias a i
membership [hose of nearly 3,900. All of
loud present were very enthuitastic, and
were in the declaration that this
trouble will be a fight to the finish.
IUNCKllflIX !• I,AVTH l Mi.
TheJobetfll. Water Works Co., which is
digging main;- and blasting sthrough rock,
left their giant powder exposed where
some boys who infest, the streets could find
jt. A crowd of youngsters stole a quart
rarl f u p () f explosive and expi-ri
men ted with it The result was the
blowing up of the entire crowo. Th<
^ ( , xp j od „ d with terrible force, hurling
C7eorge Houser. John Rosenitrch and
Frank terribly Jackson burned. forty His face feet Hauser burned w,-; to
was
a crisv his eyes blown ou*. lit- >jw
burned off end his clothe: rne.-i ! i IB
his body.
THE NATIONAL CAPITAL,
interesting summary of in¬
formation ABOUT CONOR e.ss.
Tli© Departments Very Busy -Rapid Recon¬
struction of the Nftvy-Cott«reSsioiial
Proceedings—Personals.
GOSSIP.
The Secretary of the Treasury has ap¬
pointed John M. Wicker to be storekeep
erand , at , fcanford, „ , N. . . „ C.
gauger
The Secretary of the Treasury has ap
pointed the following storekeepers and
gaugers: W. S. Sawyer, in MadisoD
county, N. C.; and J. L. Sherman, in
Yadkin county, N. C.
tucky, Maj. has J. M. Wright, of Louisville, Ken
been appointed marshal of the
United States Supreme Court in place of
Col. J. G. Nicolay, who has held that
position about fifteen years,
Paul P . Bo wen. who hag been spoken
0 f as a & p robab i e successor of T. V. Pow
derly the Knights of Labor was dc .
feated fnr ve . e lection as master-workman
of his assembIy . There was a strong fight
made against him, and the ticket put for
W ard by conservative members of the
assembly, J and headed by j. H . Sphultis,
wa3 elec ted '
philanthropist, . w ^ Corcoran celebrated the ,, aged his , millionaire 89th .... birth
da 7’ ?» mind ^ perfectly clear, and he
Jf “ , fai W S°° d Physical health, though
the \c is effects somewhat of the weak paralytic on lus stroke legs of from last
^mmer ^ Congratulations poured the in mails, upon
by telegraph and through
and “f? “ 1118 f ? e !? d ? als ? scnt flowers
and other tokens of their estcem '
The Central Traffic Association of Chi¬
cago, HI., has authorized Commissioner
Blanchard to prepare amendments to he
submitted to Congress to amend the inter¬
state act. A move is to be made to in¬
sert provisions which will protect rail¬
roads freight from fraudulent misrepresentations the clas¬
of shippers in regard to
sification of commodities shipped, and to
prevent sale of “seal])” railroad tickets.
The jubilee present of President Cleve¬
land to the Pope is a copy of the United
States Constitution, beautifully engrossed, for¬
richly bound in book form. It was
warded to Rome through Cardinal Gib¬
bous, who received it in Baltimore from
President Cleveland. It was President accompanied
by a letter, in which the his cordial re¬
quested the Cardinal to send
congratulations to the Pope on the ap¬
proaching jubilee. The book is gilt
edged, contains fifteen pages, each page
eighteen inches square and is bound
with vellum of cream color. The words.
4 ‘The Constitution of the United States of
Amerio," or......I!,,- omrr io *ilt Ml*
Tho book M> in . liandKme <™o
tyman purple.
within The the bringing provisions of express the companies interstate
of
commerce act is found to he practicable, Express
and on SO me accounts desirable.
companies, which are simply branches of
a railroad, organized and operating indc
through its ordinary staff, or by an with
pendent bureau, or by a combination
other railroad provisions companies, the are found Fn to be
covered by of act. cast)
of independently organized operating express under com
panies, for however, transportation, the language con- of
tracts
the act, as it now stands, is found to be
so framed ; not to bring them distinctly
within the provisions. TJie words “wholly
bv railroad” iu the first section, do uot
well define the business of express com
panies, which use very largely the services
of teams, messengers, stage coaches and
steamboats.
___ -.............. .
***** head cut off.
A distrcsi l„ g "Client occurred in
»***. & cliil.i
wife followed him, earring her
m arms and their little son ran after, call
to his father to return. Just on a
railroad “ crossing, Saloman paused, looked
ck , was knocked down by a passing
j n a „ d b ] s head was cut entirely occurring off bv
car wheels, the tragedy wife. The in
the man’s poor
’ nea rly * crazed 8evered with grief % ea<]) and kisS(;d hor
kldly ked thc
. and imploring * forgiveness for
’
too MUCH monkey.
-----
The best part of Wakefield, Wis., is in
ashes and Wakefield among tho bank, buildings Haywood, destroyed
ar, ‘ tke West
cott & Murphy’s general store, the post
R. A. Morris’s jewdry Coliseum store. thi-atn Mail
mi Hud’s clothing and store,
!l dozen saloons a large number /I
dwelling houses, about merchandise forty building* in
all. A great deal of n a
saved. The fire was started in the Onli>
rum theater, where a monke” overturned
a lamp.
(JltAOSTONE «iNOUB4U.Ef».
Mr. Gladstone arrived at Dover, Eng¬
land, on bis wav to the Continent, \
small crowd assembled at the depot.
Mr. Gladstone was greeted with hoots.
A number of roughs outside the depot
threw snowballs at, him. none of which,
however, struck him. A delegation of
Kentish liberals waited on him at. the
town ball and presented him with an ad
dress,
WAR PROBABI.K
Tt has become a settled conviction ol j
the diplomatic circles in Berlin that tht |
Czar’s pacific tendencies faction, have beer, and over that j
come by the pan slavist j
he is now under control of the war party. .
the leaders of which arc likely to pree.P 1
itate a war by some act of prov^at.o..
committed tbf* Czar .s fall
NO. 45.
WOOIFOIK* OTJTDONE.
A Man Kills His Wife and Six Children
and Then Commits Suicide.
A tragedy took place in Lee county, Ga.,
which almost rivals the Woolfolk tragedy
in the number of its victims, and eclipses
it in that the criminal added his own dead
body to the funeral pile. The scene as
described is shocking in the extreme.
Nathaniel Read was of a sullen nature,
extremely jealous, and highly passionate,
and was always at outs with his family,
which consisted of a wife and six chil¬
dren. His wife lived in dread of him,
and his children cowered in his presence,
and always sought some place where his
eye could boy who not rest staid upon with them. the family. According Read
to a
was taciturn and angry. He would sit
for an hour at a time with an ugly-look would -
ing dirk in his hand, which he
pass over his other hand, as if in the act
of strapping it. Whenever the children
would come near him he w ould grit his
teeth and mumble curses. After dark he
feigned sudden sickness, and told the
boy to go for a doctor. The boy ran, and
it was several hours before he returned
accompanied by a physician. They were
astonished to find the house a mouldering
ruin, while the stench from the roasted
corpses was unendurable. Not much
could be done in the way of investigation
until daylight, when about fifty neighbors knife
were drawn together. The bloody
was found beside the well. It was evi¬
dent that Read mnst have cut his victims’
throat,, seven in number, as they slept, the
and then set the house on fire. In
well, Read’s body was found. A frightful have
gash was in his throat, which must
been inflicted just as he jumped into the
well.
SKDITIOUB HANDBILLS CIRCULATJKD.
The university students have made
things pretty lively lately in St. Peters¬
burg, Russia, for the police, A large
number of seditious handbills, printed on
the hektograph, are in circulation. of the A11
attempts to discover the source
handbills on the part of the police, have
been fruitless. The handbills appeal to
the students to join the party of liberty
and to avenge their comrades, ‘‘who were
murdered in Moscow'.” “The student’s
grievances,” the handbill says, “are
great, but they are nothing compared
with the sufferings of the people.” The
authorities have decided not to reopen
the universities until the end of February
so yeuFmveet.
A Remarkable Coal-Tar Product
,
Much Sweeter than Sugar.
‘ 10 _ I5uffa _ , 0 „ . .
“This«saccharine,’ _ said the ohen* . .
f 8 0 8 10 i vt ou,u ' i mau tt
tobtopyrf , i prodiicU, .l.^ i orgm^olo.el ftnd’ii . p^te. ,
owibbir' i, just alxtut
two thousand five hundred times sweeter
than cane sugar. This little bottle came
from Merck, of Darmstadt, and costs
three dollars. It is the new cure for
diabetes mellitus, that killed Frank
Tracy.” nothing,” said portly
“New cure a
gentleman “It representing discovered the grape-sugar in 1879 by
works. was
accident, and it’s going to do more bum ¬
ness than curing diabetes. Our house
has imported one hundred pounds of it
at a cost of something over one thousand
dollars, and we're going to see what it
will do in the way of making glucose The an
exact substitute for cane sugar.
estimate of the sweetening power of
saccharine is that one part added to
2,800 parts of glucose will bring the lat-
ter up to the cane sugar or sucrose stair
dard, and if only some smart fellow
could succeed in crystallizing the com
pound ho could become as rich as A- an •
derbilt. But we can’t granulate it as
yet, and thus we must be content to use
^ses’’ W ^ MlbstitUfcl ° n PUr ‘
«- «
SKuSfaS obtained S?
km prising tL new line of chemicals
residuum of petroleum distilla
Ste tion. In searching for a German synthetical chemist sub
for quinine a
discovered a sweet instead of an expected though*
bitter principle, and it is now
that it can be produced insufficiently
large importance, quantities to become of commer
oia l
The chemist said to the Courier man :
“There is no more limit to the petroleum possibili
ties of discoveries from
thaT) t jj ere ] 8 0 f the coming powers begin
of electricity. acquainted We are only with the
n j ng to get
outside edge of electricity, and
j’m-willing to bet you ten dollars that
be f ore you’re ten years older you’ll and buy sea
folks go to the corner grocery
a quart of electricity in a Fauro cell to
cook to buy dinner kindling with, wood. just as Now they this go potro- now
Jeum is a distillation, as far as I can
make out, of substances in the heart of
the earth. It is believed by some acien
tists that in the stinking stuff which we
call crude petroleum w>- have the essence
of the flowers, the herbs, the plants and
the whole flora of millions of years ago,
and that the colors, such as we get in
aniline tints of magenta, solferino and
the rest, and the seines of coal-tar per¬
fumes, are nothing more nor less than
the colors and odors of the flowers of
m j]lir, n s of years ago, before the ancient,
oftkg were carbonized into coal strata,
and when chorus girls were young and
obarm i n g. This stuff lias been stewing fine
up f or ages, and just as we get lily a of
cnr0 f or heart disease out of the
the valley f Coneallaria mnjalis), ‘antifebrin’ so are we
getting fine medicines like
and saccharine from honey-boaring and
alkaloid-laden flowers and plants that
bloomed when the megatherium elephants.” was
commoner than Barnaul's
---- ■ ■ -
^ ^ 8av that tbp savage has a
tvY,” „ thn „ piv jH zed
pJ L -Yhen ™ a • c tqgcthe?
t T pnff ,