Newspaper Page Text
8
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER.
Entered at the Post Office at Atlanta, Ga., ; as
second class matter, Oct. 1G 1891.
Subscription, One Dollar Per Year, Six
Months 50 cts.. Three Months %5.
In Advance.
Advertising Rates made known on appli
cation at the business office.
Money may bo sent by bank draft, Post
Cilice Money Order, Postal Note or
Registered Letter. Orders should bo
made payable to
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER.
PEOPLE’S PARTY TICKET.
FOR PRESIDENT,
JAMES B. WEAVER, of lowa.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
JAMES G. FIELD, of Virginia.
For Presidential Electors,
At Large—A. L. NANCE, of Hall.
W. R. KEMP, of Emanuel.
1. GEORGE H. MILLER, of Chatham.
2. A. R. JONES, of Thomas.
8. JOSEPH J. STEWART, of Sumter.
4. J. W. F. LITTLE, of Troup.
6. W. O. BUTLER, of Fulton.
«. W. F. SMITH, of Butts.
7. A. F. WOOLEY, of Bartow.
8. GEORGE T. MURRELL, of Clarke.
». J. N. TWITTY, of Jackson.
10. D. N. SANDERS, of Taliaferro.
11. It. G. HYMAN, of Johnson.
TO ADVERTISERS.
The circulation of the People’s Party
Paper is now 17,000 copies to actual sub
scribers. No better medium could be
found for reachihg the farmers of Geor
gia and of the South, and advertisers
ire requested to consider its merits. The
oilowing certilicate of the postmaster at
Atlanta, Ga., the office of publication,
leeds only the additional remark that
.he paper used in the publication weighs
44 pounds per ream to fully explain
itself:
Atlanta, Ga., July 25, 1892.
This is to certify that The People’s
Party Paper, during the week ending
July 23d, 1892, mailed sixteen hundred
and sixty-chree (1,663) pounds at this
office. J. R. Lewis, P. M.
The circulation is steadily increasing,
and most advantageous arrangements
can be made for space.
THE PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER.
Friends, we ask you to do all you
can for us in the way of new sub
scribers. We have given you a first
class weekly paper for nearly a year
at a dead loss of ever $3,000. All
this burden has fallen on Mr. Wat
son. lie has not only lost $3,000 on
the paper, but has given it eight
months’ work free of charge.
Won’t you do your share in the
reform work by aiding us?
Vie have had to contend with
very many difficulties, and have done
the very best we could.
In the future we hope there will
be less complaint about the mail, for
we are exerting every energy to rec
tify every mistake.
The joint debates outlined by
Mr. Watson will appear regularly in
this paper, stenographically reported
by Mr. Driscol. No other paper in
the State has them.
Help us friends. Each ought to
do his part in this noble work.
People’s Paper Co.
ATTENTION, TENTH DISTRICT.
Let every Peoples’s party candi
date in the Tenth District remem
ber that Air. Black has entered into
agreement with Mr. Watson that
every voting precinct in the dis
there shall be one People’s
man on the board of mana-
SEE TO IT THAT THIS AGREEMENT
IS OBSERVED.
Demand that one of our men sit
on the election at eaoh precinct, and
see to it that this man is one whose
intelligence and fidelity and courage
are above question. He must see
every vote counted and never allow
the ballot box to get out of his
sight.
The Democrats in Sparta and
Augusta especially need watching.
They will do anything on earth to
carry this election. Demonstrate to
them in a firm, conservative spirit
that the agreement between Mr.
Black and myself shall be kept.
Demonstrate to them that while we
mean to be the cause of no trouble,
we also mean to have our rights as
men and as citizens. T. E. W.
The campaign committee urges
that every possible effort be made to
get subscribers for the People’s
Party Paper. It is the safest, surest
and cheapest campaign work that
can be done.
MR. WATSON’S APPOINTMENTS.
LaGrange, October 12.
Smarr’s Station, October 14.
Macon (at night) October 17.
Gordon, October 19.
Dublin, October 21.
In Macon I desire to speak alone
and will not divide time.
In LaGrange I will divide time
with Mr. Moses; at Smarr’s Station
with Mr. Cabaniss; at Dublin with
Mr. Turner. No substitutes need
appjy at any of the appointments
The Congressmen of the different
districts must dance up and “tote
their own skillets.”
This challenge carries with it the
division of time as already indicated.
Southern Alliance Farmer please
copy. Tuos. E. Watson.
September 12, 1892.
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7. 1892.
THE AMERICAS PEASANT.
The above is the title of an ex
tremely interesting story by' T. 11.
Tibbles, published by F. J. Schulte
& Co., of Chicago, being one of the
Ariel Library series. The introduc
tion is by Gen. Charles 11. Vanwyck.
The story is of a strange race, who
passed through political experiences
very| like those of this country for
the last thirty years, but brought to
a final settlement by organization
among the farmers and producers.
The experience of the heroine is
given by herself in an assembly en
gaged in ascertaining the reason for
the degradation of the people :
I did not know that anything could
make me speak before so mauy, she
said. Her tones were tense. Noth
ing but a great sorrow could give
me voice. To-night it has come to
me to see, as I have never seen be
fore, the whole long road over which
I have traveled thus far in my life.
Usually it is almost as hard to see
distinctly that which has passed as
that which is to come. But to-night
I remember—l remember every thing,
and I see the significance of things.
Years ago I was very happy. I
thought work was a privilege. Rest
was only the spice of work. Life
seemed an opportunity for accom
plishment. It seemed to me that I
bad more energy and more happiness
in me than I could find time in the
short lease of life to rightly expend.
When I married and went with my
husband to the piece of land which
we called our own, I felt as if life
could hold nothing more. It is true
that the ground was not really our
own, but I felt that it soon would be.
I told myself that all we had to do
was to be patient for a little while,
and to work. And it is easy to be
patient and to work when there is
hope in the heart. Besides, we loved
the ground. We liked the smell of
its fallowness. It was always a mir
acle that the plants, the grains, the
fruits, came up out of the ground. It
was like having God speak to us. To
raise a field of grain is almost like
creating it. You seem for a time to
be in partnership with the Creator. I
did not mind rising very early in the
morning and going to bed late at
night. I did not mind when my
body ached and my head was dizzy
with fatigue. I continually saw in
my mind’s eye the beautiful field we
were rescuing from the wild. My
responsibilites grew year by year.
But I subdued the body. I thought
only of our independence. I was will
ing to bear my full share of the bur
den. I have helped to plow, to sow,
to reap. But 1 could not stand it to
see him I loved so bowed with labor,
and do nothing to help him. His
face seemed to me to be changing
every day. It was growing haggard.
Besides, it had a look of being con
quered. I sometimes thought it look
ed like the face of a slave. That,
more than anything else, pierced my
heart. My happiness was gone. It
was not that I was tired of work, or
that I was afraid of the responsibil
ities that had come upon me. It
was that I could not see the end—it
was impossible to longer anticipate
any fortunate result—l was begin
ning to lose ray hope. My hands,
when I looked at them, I discovered
to be hard. They had lost their
shapeliness. And I bad always so
loved beautiful forms. When I look
ed in the glass I had to confess that
my beauty was gone. No grace was
left me, only a terrible capacity for
work. Sometimes I feared my hus
band would think of me no other
way than as a drudge. I used often to
think of the children of my neighbors
who were growing up around me,
and to be thankful that I had none.
For what knowledge of beauty, of
courtesy, could I have given them in
the midst of this incessant drudgery ?
Life to them must have seemed noth
ing better than a servitude. They
would have seen the toil, but they
coaid not have seen the benefits
aarising from “it. Indeed, it was the
some with ourselves, It was not
strange that when, day after day, we
lived without pleasure, diversion or
luxury, our lives began to grow grim
and sad, and even devoid of gracious
ness. I have sometimes thought the
very tones of our voices changed.
The modulations are gone. That is
the result of a frightful monotony.
The vivacity also has vanished. We
do not laugh. We are old before
our time. And now, after these years
of sacrifice, after having given our
selves up to continual labors, after
having gene without all that makes
life lovely—without travel, and music,
and books, and pictures; without
leisure for friendship, or even con
templation ; without reserve of
strength, over and above our daily
tasks, even for worship—l face the
fact that we are no nearer the end of
our toil than the day our tasks began.
Our wheat has grown to plenteous
harvests. It has found a ready
market. Our cattle have multiplied
and been sold. Our orchards have
grown to fine fruition. Day and
night we have worked, but there are
no results. All this has brought us
nothing. We have been making
ropes of sand. We have been trying
to fill a sieve. And now, with my
youth gone, my hope killed, all the
joy taken out of my heart, with pov
erty my only portion, and old age
only a few sad years distant, I ask,
Who has got that energy I and mine
gave ? That energy was an entity.
It was a palpable thing. It was a
possession. But it has gone. Some
one else has stolen from me all of the
profits of it. And lam penniless. I
have been held up on the public
highway. And now I think I have a
right to ask who my despoilers are.
Campaign Lying and Brag.
National Watchman.
The foolish and disgusting vice of
lying with intent to deceive the peo
ple, to say nothing of the base depra
victy of it, is now at the height. The
covering capacity, so to speak, of
these campaign lies is something mar
vellous. Take any leading plutocratic
newspaper and read its summing up
of the political situation every day
for the party whose dirty work it is
employed in doing for the time being.
Each day the prospect brightens.
All is harmony and enthusiasm in the
ranks ; all in the ranks of the oppos
ing. party disorder, wrangling, sulk
ing desertion, confusion, and dismay.
Take the case of the Maine election.
Maine is a Republican State, about
the vote of which in the Presidential
or any other election there is not a
particle of uncertainty or doubt in
the mind of any sane man. The
Democratic Committee have issued a
congratulatory address to the people
of the United States on the result of
that election. Now what is that re
sult ? It is that after a lazy, loung
ing walkover, the Republicans have
swept the field, winning everything
in sight without bringing anything
like their full vote. They have elect
ed all the Congressmen, the whole
State ticket, the legislature by an in
creased majority, gaining eight or
ten members. The People’s Party,
only organized three weeks before
election day, polled 4,000 votes, and
the Prohibitionists slightly more than
3,000 votes. In all this what is there
to congratulate the country upon
from a Democratic standpoint or to
enthuse any sane Democrat? But
the mystery vanishes when we re
member that the Mr. Dickinson who
is Mr. Cleveland’s man on the nation
al committee is the same Mr. Dick
inson who, along with Mr. William
Vilas, was going to carry Michigan
for Mr. Cleveland at the last election,
provided a certain scheme could be
carried out which was carried out, A
place was made in the Cabinet for
Mr. Dickinson by putting Mr. Lamar
on the Supreme Court, promoting
Mr. William Vilas to Mr. Lamar’s
place and giving the place Mr. Vilas
had to Mr. Dickinson. These com
pleted arrangements became a part
of history, and so did the result of
that Michigan election, which result
was a very greatly increased major
ity against Cleveland.
True to Nature.
Coming home from town a few
days ago I found my neighbor, farm
er John, engaged in digging a ditch
alongside the road. He stopped me
and poured into my ears a dismal
tale. He said he had worked bard
all the year, economized in every
way, lived on poor food, and went
scantily clothed, yet could not raise
money enough to pay his banker the
eighteen per cent. In years gone by
I had tendered my sympathy, but on
this occasion I looked him squarely
in the eye, and said, emphatically:
“Your statement causes my soul to
dance with joy.”
His head went down and he stam
mered out;
“Why I th ought-you were a friend
of mine 1”
“So I am John, and that is why I
rejoice at your statement.”
“Why, Mr. Bunder, what do you
mean ?”
“I mean just this: Last fall I
went to the polls and cast a vote to
give you money at two per cent, or
double what the banker pays for the
money he loans you. I did this to
help just such men as you. Now
what did you do? You came up to
the polls arm in arm with the eigh
teen per cent banker and cast your
vote as he dictated. Now, sir, you
voted for eighteen per cent interest,
and I voted for two per cent tax and
you won, I lost. Your vote killed
mine dead. You got what you
wanted and what you voted for,
while I did not. Now, John, don’t
you think 1 would be a chump if I
did not feel glad when you get what
you want and what you vote for?
Shake, neighbor.”
John did not shake then but mum
bled cut something I did not quite
understand. Passing his place yes
terday, he called out to me:
“Mr. Bunder, I wish to speak to
you.”
“What is it John?” I asked.
“I have been thinking about what
you told me and I want to say to you
right here and now, that I will never
kill your vote again.”
SAMPLE COPIES.
We receive a great many requests
for bundles of papers for distribu
tion. While we are perfectly willing
to send a sample copy to any one
desiring it, we are not able to fur
nish the paper to subscribers at cost
and at the same time send out large
numbers of papers free. We will,
however, send bundles of papers at
actual cost to those who wish to dis
tribute them in aid of the campaign.
Notice to P. P. Men.
Cannot the county committeemen
and other zealous workers in the re
form cause interest themselves in
collecting a quarter or a dime from
each earnest P. P. man for campaign
purposes? The enemy say that we
will fail for want of election funds.
We neither seek nor desire a corrup
tion fund, but we do need a fund to
disseminate reform literature and to
pay the expenses of the speakers.
It is the people’s fight; let the peo
ple sustain it. Send contributions to
Oscar Parker, Secretary Campaign
Committee, 117| Whitehall Street,
Atlanta, Ga.
Pleas© Take Notice
Os the change m price of this pa
per in clubs. Our temporary offer
of the People’s Party Paper in clubs
of 10 for 50 cents per year is with
drawn, and in the future we will be
compelled to have 75 cents in clubs.
We will, however, permit those who
are now making clubs on that rate
to complete the clubs already begun
at the 50 cents rate, but after that
will be obliged to require 75 cents.
Tn centTYZ
IvFqR the campaign!*'
YOU CAN GET
THE KANSAS AGITATOR,
4 Battling People’s Party Paper,
till after the election for 10 cents.
Get up a club of 10 and we will
send you a reform book.
Address, THE AGITATOR,
Garnett, Kansas.
"THEPEOPLE’S rightsT
Published Weekly at Montezuma, Ga.
Devoted exclusively to the cause of the
People in their great fight against
corrupt parties and wicked
legislation.
Official Organ of the Third Congress
sional District.
Price to Jan. 5, 1893, 50 cents.
Send us a big club.
Address, W. S. KILLEBREW,
Montezuma, Ga
MANUFACTURERS OF
Engines, Boilers and Mills.
Also repair locomotive engines and all kinds ol
Machinery, Engines. Boilers, Mills,
Gins, Pumps, Presses, Elevators, Etc.
Repair machinery at your place and furnish
plans for mills.
Send in your portable engines for repairs.
AH orders filled promptly.
FOR SALE.
One s horse power Woodtaper and Moss en
gine on wheels, good as new.
One Stationary engine, 12x18, very cheap.
SHEARER IS AN ALLIANCEMAN.
435 LUCKIE ST. TELEPHONE 1418
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
ECLIPSE ENGINES
ERIE CITY IRON WORKS ENGINES AND
’ BOILERS, AUTOMATIC STATIONERY
ENGINES.
GINS FROM $2 TO $2.50 PER SAW
Boilers, Saw Mills, Moore Co. Corn Mill*
Pratt Gins, Seed Cotton Elevators, Cane Mills,
Cotton Presses, Wagon and Platform Scales, Foos
Scientific Grinding Mills, Hoe’s Chisle-Tootl
Saws, Shingle Machinery, Wood-Working Machin
ery, Shaiting, etc.
MALSBY & AVERY,
Southern Manager*
81 South Forsyth Street, ATLANTA, GA
CATALOGUE by mentioning this paper.
THEIM’BELiy
Offers the greatest opportunities to actual far
mers and homeseekers of any section in the
United States. The soil is unexcelled for fer
tility. Water good. Climate temperate and
very healthful; settled by intelligent and
progressive people, with the best of social, re
ligious and educational advantages.
Land is now rapidly anpreciating in value
but the best improved land can be bought
at from §6 to 810 per acre and good improved
farms from 810 to sls per acre.
Fifteen years residence in this section, five
of them spent in locating settlers, has given
me a thorough acquaintance with the land in
this section.
Full information as to the country with
prices, terms and description of a large list o!
land which can be bought very cheap, will be
given by addressing
E. S. JOHNSTON,
Mitchell, S. D.
The Nitoal Wtlum.
A PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER.
An Four-column Weekly.
PUBLISHED Alt
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Under the Direction of the Congressional
Committee of the People’s Party.
TST. A.. DUN NINTO
Has been selected as Managing Editor.
It will be impersonal, impartial and aggres
sive, and at all times seek to place before its
readers carefully prepared matter such as a
residence at the seat of government is calcu
latecMft| furnish.
TlM«gh character of the men interested in
theYoapei, the ability of Mr. Dunning,
and the advantage of being at the Capital
are sufficient guarantees for the kind of paper
that will be issued.
Among the contributors will be—
Senators W. A. Peffer and J. H. Kyle; Con
gressmen T. E. Watson, John Davis, Jerry
Simpson. W. A. McKelghan, B. F. Clover, J.
G. Otis, O. M. Kem. K. Halvorsen, T. E. Winp.
W. Laker, Dr. M. G. Elizy, and many other
well known writers.
TERMS, - - - FIFTY CENTS PER YEAR.
Twenty-five cents until Nov, 9, 1892,
Address all communications to
THE NATIONAL WATCHMAN CO.,
No. 13 C Street N. E.
WASHINGTON, D. C .
HAVERTYS
FURNITURE BAREAIHS
FOR SEPTEMBER
“BIG SALES AND SMALL PROFITS” IS HIS
MOTTO.
PARLOR, BED ROOM. DINING ROOM.
KITCHEN AND HALL FURNITURE,
~ > AT
Lowest ■ Prices - is - Atlanta.
Ladies’ Desks, Wardrobes, Chiffoniers, Combination Book-
Cases, 801 l and Flat-Top Desks, and other
Furniture AT COST.
Battan and Fancy Chairs, Lounges and Cots, Feather Pil
lows, Mattresses, Lawn and Veranda Chairs,
AT SUMMEB PBICES.
Furniture Polish furnished with our Furniture.
Don’t forget the place. Place your orders with us, and we
will please you with Goods, and save you 25 per cent.
ZEE-
T7 Whitehall street., YYtlaiita, Ga
PERKINS MACHINERY COMPANY.
THE FABm FAVORITE."
nv * Ak mll l made. Prices low and terms easy. Wf
zjaßUKHft- ~ manufacture the best top-runner oora t»w
on tho and dealers in engines,
ers ' oott ' on gins, presses, feed mills, shazt*
inft’.pulleys, belting,woodworking maohia*
ery; also, second-hand machinery at li><
prioos.
PERKINS MACHINERY CO„
41 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
NOT A REVOLT;
IT IS A REVOLUTION.
Tom Watson’s Book
Now on hand.
For sale at the
Office of the
Peoples Party Paper.
A campaign terror.
Everybody needs it.
Speakers must have it.
Price, One Dollar.
Hear from The North.—Down With
Sectionalism I
The Progress Farmer, National Organ,
of the F. M. B. A-, the Farm Organiza
tion next in strength to the F. A. & I. U.,
will be sent on trial three months for ten
cents. Make up a club of five or ten and
send for it it. It is a large 8 page weekly
and tells all about the reform movment
and Peoples party in the North. Away
with party hate, and down with section
alism ?
THE PROGRESSIVE FARMER,
Cor. Main and Casey Sts., Mt. Vernon, 11l
—OFFICE OF THE
NATIONAL EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
OF THE
People’s Party of the United
States of America.
Hotel Richelieu.
St. Louis, Mo., August 20, 1892.
A New Novel by Hon. Ignatius Don
nelly, and a chance to help
the People’s Party.
Hon. Ignatius Donnelly has justwrit
ten a new book, a novel, entitled “The
Golden Bottle.”
He has prepared this romance with a
view to helping the People’s Party
movement; not only by making the
story illustrate the great questions of
the day—the land-loan, the demoneti
zation of silver, government ownership
of railroads, and the universal era of
reform that will follow in the footsteps
of the triumph of the People’s Party;
but also by arranging with bis publish
ers and cutting down profits from the
price of every book sold by orders sent
to the undersigned, so that one-half the
purchase price will go to the Campaign
Fund of the People’s Party. That is
to say, if any person orders the book
from our Committee, and sends $1.25
for a bound copy, or 50 cents for a copy
in paper covers, one-half of the amount
so sent will be turned into the cam
paign fund of the People’s Party of the
United States, to be used in distribut
ing documents and paying expenses of
speakers, and the other half will be
sent to the publishers, who will for
ward the book, by mail, to the pur
chasers, prepaid.
Those who have read the book in
manuscript, say that it is a wonderfully
interesting story, based on an original
conception and putting forth very
singular and remarkable ideas. If it
has anything like the sale of Mr. Don
nelly’s other books, it will yield a large
revenue to the People’s Party. We
urge every friend of tne cause not only
to subscribe himself, but to request his
friends and neighbors to do so. They
will get a book at the regular price,
which they would probably desire to
buy anyhow, and besides helping along
the campaign of the People’s Party.
Let every one help in this good work.
Remember that this is not done to se
cure a sale for the book, for it will sell
anyhow, but to help the cause of Re
form, even at the risk of lessening the
sale of the book in other quarters.
“ The Golden Bottle ” will not be
ready for two or three weeks, but send
in names and money at once. There is
likely to be a great demand for copies
of the book, and they will be sent out
in the order in which the names are
received—first come first served. Be
sure to write your name and postofiice
plainly. Address
J. H. TURNER,
Hotel Richelieu, St. Louis, Mo.
H. E. Taubeneck, Chairman.
M. C. Rankin, Treasurer,
J. H Turner, Secretary,
Lawrence McFarlin, Sec’y.
3 g ELECTRO MAGNETIC
I EMENEGOGUE PILLS
ftp-i O4* jS SJf for irregularities. Nover
lai!. Latest discovery. $2.00 per box. All
forms of female diseases treated successfully
at office or by mail. Practice based on mierobg
theory—cures guaranteed. Dropsy cured—
partial treatment free. Bacterio Med’cal
WE MUST HAVE A
hsip&ip Fnd
BADGES!
’ BADGES!
BADGES’
They are beautiful. Gen. J. B. Weaver’s
picture on one side and Gen. James G.
Field’s picture on the other side. They
are made of the new metal, pure alum
inum. They will be sold in lots of fifty
or one hundred at Ten Cents each.
They will be retailed at Twenty-five
Cents each.
Send in your orders at once and
thereby help your National Committee
to push the work. Address
M. C. RANKIN, Treasurer,
Terre Haute, Indiana.
Or J. 11. TURNER, Sec’y,
Richelieu Hotel, St. Louis, Mo.
To Brother Alliancsmen and Others.
On account of the low price of cottou we
have put down our machinery to correspond.
We can sell rebuilt gins—good as new—for SI.OO
per saw. Gin Feeders and Condensers $2.00
per saw. We have in stock the Gullett, Van
Winkle, Hall, Pratt, Gate City, Whitney and
Winship.
We can furnish Feeders and Condensers for
any make of gin, new or second band. We
have some good rebuilt Engines—4 horse pow
er SIOO 00, 6 horse power $200.00, 8 horse power
S3OO 00, 10 horse power $400.00, &e., to any size
required. Saw Mills worth S3OO for $200; those
worth S2OO for $125. Corn Mills worth $250 for
$150; those worth $l5O for S9O. Water Wheels
worth S3OO for $l6O. Gin Saw Filers sls to $25:
Gummers S2O to 30. Terracing Levels (good
ones) $5. Theodolites $6 to SB. Sulky Com
post Distributors S2O.
We have also the best and cheapest Mill on
the market, for grinding corn and cob, peas,
cotton seed and table meal, for SSO. You can
make fertilizer that costs S3O per ton for sl3
with this mill. We send formula with mill. If
you want any kind of machinery or want ad
vice as to the best kind or capacity, &c., write
us. We take machinery on commission and
repair at our own expense. Gin and engine
repairing done. Old gins made new for one
third the cost of new ones.
CRAMER & ABBOTT,
555 Marietta St., Atlanta, Ga.
P. S. We have several4o saw Gin outfits, with
engine to pull them, and a press for s2uo. 50
saws S3OO. 60 saws S4OO. 80 saws SSOO. We
sell swap or trade to suit customers.
PLANTERS’ HOTEL,
—W. Mitchell Street,—
Atlanta, - - Georgia.
Meals, 25 cents ; Rooms, 25 to 50 cents.
Nice, large rooms, convenient to busi
ness. Board per week, $4 00
TV. H. TVEBB,
(8-12-3 m Proprietor,
Election Tickets!
Candidates will find that they can save
money by sending orders ?or ©lection
tickets to >
ELAM CHRISTIAN,
Printer and Publisher,
102 1-2 Whitehall St., ATLANTA,
T Toy Are Going West
AND WANT LOW RATES
To Arkansas,
Texas, Missouri, Colorado, Oregon and Catfor
nia, or any point WEST OR NOHTHWEST—
m . IT WILL PAY YOU
To write to me.
FRED. D. BUSH,
D. A., L. &N.K. E
St., Atlanta. Gr
HEW OFFER!
Mr. Watson’s Book has been
received at this office.
Any one sending us $1.50
can get a copy of the book and
this paper for one year.
In clubs of ten we will send
ten copies of the book and ten
papers one year for $14.00 and
send one book and one copy
of the paper one year to the
club raiser..
Eggs For Hatching.
poS.“
jangled Hamburgs, Partridge Cocliini and
P ucl£B - Eggs, $1.50 for 13. AU firs'-
class stock—none better in America. AcfirXi
Hupevfile,’Ga, aVIS ’ HapevUle Poultry Tam