Newspaper Page Text
8
PEOPLE'S WRH PAPER.
Entered at the Post Office at Atlanta, Ga.,£as
second class matter. Oct. 16 1891.
Subscription, One Dollar Per Year, Six
Mouths 50 cts., Throe Months 25.
In Advance.
Advertising Rates made known on appli
cation at the business office.
Money may be sent by bank draft, Post
Office Money Order, Postal Note or
lit gistered Letter. Orders should be
made payable to ,
PEOPLE’S PA RTY PAPER.
PEOPLE’S FARTY~ TICKET.
FOR PRESIDENT,
JAMES B. WEAVER, of lowa.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
JAMES G. FIELD, of Virginia.
For Presidential Electors,
It 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.
5. W. O. BUTLER, of Fulton.
6. W. F. SMITH, of Butts.
7. A. F. WOOLEY, of Bartow.
8. GEORGE T, MURRELL, of Clarke.
9. J. N. TWITTY, of Jackson.
10. D. N. SANDERS, of Taliaferro.
11. R. 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
are requested to consider its merits. The
following certificate of the postmaster at
Atlanta, Ga., the office of publication,
needs only the additional remark that
the 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-three (1,603) 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 over 83,000. All
this burden has fallen on Mr. Wat
son. He has not only lost 83,000 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 ?
Wo 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 Mr. Black has entered into
an agreement with Mr. Watson that
at every voting precinct in the dis
trict there shall be one People’s
party man on the board of mana
gers.
SEE TO IT THAT THIS AGREEMENT
IS OBSERVED.
Demand that one of our men sit
on the election at each 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.
Smart’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 Ms. Moses; at Smart’s Station
with Mr. Cabaniss; at Dublin with
Mr. Turner. No substitutes need
apply 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.
L Southern Alliance Farmer please
copy. Thos. E. Watson.
September IfJ, 1892.
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER, ATLANTA, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14. 1892.
From a Native of Georgia.
Dear Sir : I was raised in Mor
gan county, Ga., and there lived near
High Shoals until I attained my ma
jority. My grandfather’s name was
H. J. Thompson. I am personally
acquainted, of course, with the Ha
nies, Powels Hataways, Robert-
and many other families of note,
for among such people my ancestery
moved. I was taught by my parents
that of all the States South of the
Mason and Dixon line, Georgia was
the Empire State of them all, partic
ularly in her hospitality.gl was taught
that such men as Stephens, Cobb,
Hill, Grady and many others could
not be excelled not only in oratory
or statesmanship, but in the gener
ous way in which they received
strangers within their gates. But,
my dear sir, when I read dispatches
in the papers of the last few days as
to how shamefully Gen. Weaver and
Tom Watson has been treated in your
State, I am almost tempted to ex
claim that Georgia is no longer my
native State. And if it be true that
visiting ladies were treated as the
dispatches tell, then I must say that
the people who once made Georgia
famous for her courteousness and due
respect to ladies no longer live, and
there has sprung up within her midst
a lot of cut-throats, scalawags and
vagabonds that care neither for their
mothers or native land. I hope the
reports are false.
Gen. Weaver will speak near here
on October 7th. He will also
speak in Pulaski, Tenn., where it is
charged he is afraid to go. And I
will state, here and now, that while
he has a few opponents here among
the office seeking politicans, he nev
ertherless will be given a welcome as
any visitor is entitled to and a patient
hearing.
I notice a report in the papers of
your State a long list of purported
affidavits of citizens of Pulaski, Tenn.,
concerning Weaver’s record. I wish
to say that the papers of this State
know better than to publish such or
the ones that I shall particularly refer
to from the fact they know that the
statements are lies from beginning to
end.
“People living in glass houses must
not throw stones.” So I ask the old
Confederate soldiers of the South,
the question, who snubbed and ig
nored the daughter of the Confeder
acy, Winnie Davis, while President,
saying that it was “highly impolite to
fraternize with the daughter of Ex-
President Davis, of Confederate re
cord?”
This campaign lie, Mr. Edi
tor. It is a matter of record, and
happened at Richmond, Va., and ex
tensively commented upon by the
whole Democratic press at the time.
I wonder if these Confederate sol
diers will vote for this war-hired
proxie-stuffed-profit, South hater,
Confederate hater, negro affiliation
lover; for he invited Fred Douglas
(col.) to his grand receptions when
at the White House, and snubbed
Winnie Davis. I wonder if these
old Confederates will vote for Ste
phenson, of the duplex, triplicate
stealing record ? (I suppose you
know that Adlai was a greenbaker
six years ago, and voted in Congress
with the thirteen leprous greenback
ers, one of which Weaver.)
No, sir. I say these old Confed
federates—three-fourths of them, in
Tennessee—will vote for the party of
the people ; principles of life to the
government; principles of, by, and
for the people, as in days of yore.
They are fast learning that there
is really no /difference between the
old rotten machine, Demo-Republi
can parties.
One of your State papers in par
ticular—the Journal—has sent Thad
Horton to Pulaski, Tenn., to “dig
up” his record. Now, so far as
Thad Horton’s character is con
cerned, as a private citizen, I have
nothing to say, but of his record as a
reporter of a partisan political news
paper I shall hew to the line, let the
chips fall where they may. Os
course, we all understand that the
man Horton is paid, or hired, to get
up such reports as suits the occasion,
and if he did not color them to suit
the demands of such ilk as Hoke
Smith, of course we all understand
that Hoke would turn him off and
hire him over again. Now to the
point.
Os all the certificates that Horton
professes to have, not a single one of
them is from a farmer who is in fa
vor of the reform move, and there
are hundreds qf them all around
Pulaski. All of them, perhaps with
two exceptions, are from men who
were invisible in time of war and are
now invincible in time of peace.
Most every certificate he says he has
is from lawyers, merchants and pro
fessional politicians, who are afraid
of their bosses. You see their can
didate for Governor, Pete Turney,
is at present the Supreme Justice of
the State; they are afraid he wont
be elected, and they know that the
cry of “Wee be unto them” would
be applicable to their cases in the
Supreme Court in the event of his
defeat, which is very probable.
To show you that Thad Horton’s
statements are untrue, I cite you to
one in regard to a man he refers to
as Thomas Harris (his name is Theo
Harris, and most everybody in four
or five adjoining counties knows
him). Horton states that Harris has
been insane is the reason why he
wrote pieces in defence of Weaver.
Now, the facts are that if Theo Har
ris was ever insane nobody in this
county ever knew anything about it.
He is one of the best known men m
Giles and Lincoln counties, and
everybody that knows him knows that
whatever he states is true in every
sense £of the word. He has been
county surveyer of Lincoln county
for a number of years, and is con
sidered by all to be a reliable, law
abiding, truthful citizen. To sub
stantiate this, I refer you to the
county officers of Lincoln county,
Fayetteville, Tenn.; Captain J. H.
Bauman, Fayetteville, Tenn.; R. H.
Ragsdale, bounty trustee, Pulaski,
Tenn., and any truth-loving citizen
in either of those counties.
Why did not Horton get the cer
tificate of Major Ballentine, on whose
premises Weaver stayed while at
Pulaski? so Hortbn states in his re
port. Major Ballentine is the ex-
Democratic Congressman from that
district, and is loved and revered by
all who know him, and is not a Peo
ple’s party man, so far as I know.
I will tell yOtt why he did not take
his statement Weaver, it
was because it didnot suit the per
verted, twisted and colored manufac
tured statement that lie proposed to
have got from some others. He
knew that the statements of Theo.
Harris, Maj. Ballantine; Rev. Robt.
Caldwell, and- sutffi men, would kill
anything he could from any other
citizen in Giles that was to
the contrary, and‘he knew that the
statements that these men made about
it was in sum and Substance pre
cisely in keeping with Gen. Weav
er’s Texas and Ldtfisiana letter on
the subject. (Said statement I pre
sume you have seen.)
Os course we all know of the rav
ages and depredations that was com
mitted during the war by both ar
mies. I myself, can remember too
well w r hat a sad condition Sherman
left our people in, down in Georgia,
but all will agree, so f&* as Tennes
see is concerned, that the worst dev
ilment that was done was committed
by home-made soldiers, bushwhack
ers who knew the situation, who knew
the country, etc. Who knov/s but
what Cleve’s and Steve’s hired prox
ies did some of this Pulaski devil
ment that is charged to Weaver?
Who knows but wnat these same
proxies of Cleve ami- Steve are now
drawing pensions by “unanimous con
sent” of our Democratic members of
Congress?
The old parties ilay the game of
I shall and I sfiant,
I can and I c&fi’t,
1 will and I wont,
I’ll be d-d if I don’t.
Mr. Editor, excuse this lengthy
letter. I only write it to show you
what the situation is here. I knew
that it was not likely that one out of
a hundred around. Pulaski would see
the dirty, twisted, doctored state
ment of Thad Horton in the Jour
nal, and would not, therefore, be an
swered. Hoping that the truth may
prevail, I am
Yours truly,
Geo. A. Gowan,
Cornersville (my home), near Pu
laski, Tenn.
A Foul Blot.
Virginia Sun. (
Distressing news comes from Geor
gia. General Weaver has been gross
ly insulted and wantonly outraged.
He had been commissioned by hun
dreds of thousands of the people of
the West to bear their greeting and
message of good will to their broth
ers in the South, (and his words of
peace have beep cast back in his
teeth, and the .hand of friendship
spurned, c i..
It makes- the, honest and loyal
heart bleed that men whose interests
are the same, whoso welfare and hap
piness depend upon their coming to
gether, should yet be kept apart by
the prejudices and passions of a time
worn and hideous partisanry.
Is the War never- to be ended?
Are the South and West never to be
united? Is New England greed to
continue to drain every other sec
tion ? And all because a certain lump
of New York avoirdupois desires to
hold down the Presidential chair. As
things are now going, the Democrat
ic party is becoming the party of in
tolerance and brute force, before
which the painted horrors of the
Lodge bill pale into ? frisignificance.
The press is largely responsible for
this deplorable exhibition of savage
ry on the part of Georgian hoodlums.
These creatures are necessarily cow
ards, and in no Sense represent the
real people of that Btate, who are the
peers of any peddle in chivalry and
courtesy. But the press for weeks
past have "been Working upon the
prejudices and inflaming the passions
of an impressionable people, and all
for partisafi 2 purposes. We charge
that these Georgia toughs would nev
er have da&d°W ‘scandalize public
opinion by their outrages,
had they not been egged on and sup
ported by the Cleveland press of that
State, and the Cleveland managers
are the real culprits.
There is ’sohiMhing of the same
lawless spirit Abroad in this State
and city, and We warn the Democrat
ic press and politicians to have a care
how they in’flame the like incendiary
and barbarous passions.
We note with pleasure, however,
that the Times denounces these out
rages in unmeasured terms, thus al
lowing its better judgment to assert
itself on the approach of General
Weaver to this city. The Dispatch,
as usual, utters its milk and water
platitudes, I while the little State
blows its penny whistle to the tune
of “Hurrah for the Georgia braves,
who insulted a lady.” It is one of
the blessings of civilization that so
few people read “our more or less
esteemed contemporary.”
SING, BOYS, SING I
Order a supply of the “Alliance
Songster.” Yun will be surprised and
delighted. Eighty-six thrilling, soul
stirring songs! 20 cents per copy.
Address Oscar Parker, Sec.,
1171 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
Please Take Notice
Os the change in pnee of this pa
per in clubs. Our temporary offer
of the People’s Party Paper m 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.
CENTS JQ
IVFOH THE CAMPAIGN
YOU CAN GET
THE KANSAS AGITATOS,
A Rattling 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.
TIE PEOPLE’S RIGHTS
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, E. KILLEBREW,
Montezuma, Ga
MANUFACTUREHS OF
Engines, Boilers and Mills.
Also repair locomotive engines and all kinds of
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.
All orders filled pi-omptly.
FOR SALE.
One $ horse power Woodtaper and Moss en
gine on wheels, good as new.
One Stationary engine, 12x18, very cheap.
SHEARER I» AN ALLIANOBMAN.
435 LUCKIE ST. TELEPHONE 1418.
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
if COMPANY.
i
ECLIPSE ENGINES
ERIE CITY IRON WORKS ENGINES AND
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GINS FROM $2 TO $2.50 PEE SAW
Boilers, Saw Mills, Moore Co. Corn MiU«
Pratt Gins, Seed Cotton Elevators, Cane MUI».
Cotton Presses, Wagon and Platform Scales, Fool
Scientific Grinding Mills, Hoe’s Chisle-Tootb
Saws, Shingle Machinery, Wood-Working Machin
ery, Shafting, etc.
MALSBY & AVERY,
Southern Managers.
81 South Forsyth Street; ATLANTA, GA.
Catalogue by mentioning this paper.
THE CORN BELT
Offers the greatest opportunities to actual far
mers and homeseekers es any section in the
United States. The sofi 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 appreciating in value,
but the best improved land can be bought
at from $6 to 910 per acre and good improved
farms from $lO to sls per acre.
Fifteen years residence in this section, five
of them spent in locating settlers, bag given
me a thorough acquaintance With the land is
this section.
Full information as to the country with
prices, terms and description of a large list ol
land which can be bought yery cheap, will be
given by addressing
E. S. JOHNSTON.
Mitchell. S. D.
fie National Watctaaa.
A PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER.
An Eight-page Four-column Weekly.
PUBLISHED AT
WASHINGTON, D, C.
Under the Direction of the Congressional
Committee of the People’s Party.
IST. JL. JDTTN ISTIJSTG
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
lated to furnish.
The high character of the men interested in
the papei, the ability of Mr. Dunning,
and the advantage of being at the Capital
are sufficient guarantees for the kind of paper
that will be segued.
Among the contributors will be—
Senators W. A. Peffer and J. H. Kyle; Con
fressmen T. E. Watson, John Davis, Jerry
.impson, W. A. MeKeighan, B. F. Clover. J.
G. Otis, O. M. Kem. K. Halvorsen, T. E. Winn,
W. Baker, Dr. M. G. Elizy, and many other
well known writers.
TERMS, - - - FIFTY CENTS PER YEAR.
Twenty-five cents until Nov. 9, 1832,
Address all communications to
THS NATIONAL WATCHMAN CO.,
No. 13 C Street N. E.
WASHINGTON, D. C .
HAVEHTT’S
FURNITURE BARGAINS
FOR OCTOBER,
“ BIG SALES AND SMALL PROFITS ” IS HIS
MOTTO.
' - <-■
PARLOR, BED ROOM, DINING ROOM,
KITCHEN AND HALL FURNITURE,
AT
Lowest - Prices - h - 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 SUMMER PRICES.
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.
ZML SZJLYTEZRTY.
*77 Wh.iteh.all street, -A.tlan.ta, G-a.
PERKINS MACHINERY COMPANY.
THE PAKKER'S- FAVORITE.”
. A ■9T mill made. Prices low and terms easy.
djjSgfefo.. MxrOV' rfM manufacture the best top-runner ovm mUI
on the market, aiyl dealers in engines, bofe*
era, cotton gins. presses, feed mills, shfets*
Ing 1 , pulleys, betting, wood working ma&ats.
ery; also, second-hand machinery at 1»V
priced.
PERKINS MACHINERY CO.,
4l 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 !
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 parry 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 Fdchclieu.
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 juatwrit
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 his 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 oj 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 the 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 sals for the book, for it will sell
anyhow, but to help the cayse 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. TherMs
likely to be a great demand for copies
of the book, and they will be sept out
in the order in which the names are
receivad —first come first served. Be
sure to write your name and postoffice
plainly. Address
J. H. TURNER,
Hotel Richelieu, St. Louis, Mo.
11. E. Taubexeck, Chairman.
M. C. Rankin, Treasurer,
J. H. Turner, Secretary,
Lawrence McFarlin, Sec’y.
8 a mr* A ELECTRO MAGNETIC
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kJ | ha W for Never
iail. Latest discovery. $2.00 per box. AU
forms of female diseases treated successfully
at office or by mall. Practice based on mwobe
theory—cures guaranteed. Dropsy cuffed—
partial treatment free. Bacterio Medical
®road®t.. Atlanta, .Ga. (Strictly
onildeiitiai.)
WE MUSTHAVE a
Campaign M
, 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 aluij)-
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. IL TUBNEWfr,
Richelieu Hotel, St| e( j y ;Mo.
To Brottetf‘'liancemsa ; y a Ju'
On acccnptl Irt&e low pri, wa
have put de T machinery tc" wnd.
•We can evil r&wuuVghsfci gc site Ofi
per saw. Gin Feeders anil Condense*® 82.60
per saw. We have in stock the Gullett, Van
winkle, Hall, Pratt, Gate City, Whitney and
Winship.
We can fu/nUb Feeders and Condensers for
any make of gin, new or second hand. We
have some good rebuilt Engines— i horse pow
er SIOO.OO, 6 horse power $200.00, 8 horse power
SBOO.OO. 10 horse power $400.00, &c., to any size
required. Saw Mills worth s3oofor $200; those
worth S2OO for $125. Corn Mills worth for
$150: those worth $l5O for S9O. Water Wheels
worth S3OO for $l6O. Gin Saw Filers sls to SSS;
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 elm
make fertilizer that costs S3O per ton for sl3
with this mill. We send formula with mill. It
you want any kind of machinery or want ad
vice a« to the best kind oh 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.
CIiAMER & ABBOTT,
555 Marietta St., Atlanta. Ga.
P %i S. We have several 40 saw Gin outfits, with
engine to pull them, and a press for s2ijo. 50
saws 60 saws S4OO. 80 saws SSOO. We
sell swap or trade to suit customers.
PLANTERS’ HOTELS
—l2| 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
W. H. WEBB,
(8-12-3 m Proprietor,
Election Tickets!
Candidates will find that they can save
money by sending orders for ©lection
tickets to
ELAM CHRISTIAN,
Printer and Publisher,
102 1-2 Whitehall St., ATLANTA,
If You Ara Going WesT~
AND WANT LOW RATES
To Arkansas,
Texas, Missouri, Colorado, Oregon and Calf or
nia, or any point WEST OR NOHTHWEST—
IT WILL PAY YOU
To write to me.
FRED. D. BUSH,
42]Wall St., Atlanta, Gr DA • * N - u - *•
NEW OFFER IF~ ’
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.
Silver Laced Wyandota, Silver Spangled
Polish, Golden Penciled Hamburgs, Silvef
Spangled Hambui-gs. Partridge Cochins and
Cayuga Ducks. Eggs, 81.50 for 13. All first
class stock—none better in America. Addreal
H * peviUe Poutey 1 3 r “'