Newspaper Page Text
PLAYING DOUBLE.
Desperate Game of the Wall Street
Boodlers.
By sending out two circulars the
gang that still claims to publish the
national organ of the Alliance have
given themselves “dead away.” It
has been reported that Horace Ken
ney now owns a majority of the
National Economist stock and it
would be ran in the interest of Wall
street Democracy, though pretending
to be a reform paper. 1 f there is any
further doubts on this score , read
the two circulars below and the clo
ven foot will appear plainly :
American Industries Co.
General Publishers,
114 Fifth Avenue.
Horace Kenny, Treasurer.
New York, 1893.
Dear Sir: —We send you, by
same mail as this, sample copy of
“American Industries,” published
weekly m New Y ork City, and de
voted to the cause of right and labor.
Believing that the platform as en
unciated by the Democratic party af
forded the best security for the peo
ple, this journal supported the Dem
ocratic party during the last cam
paign, and is still supporting it. It
has the earliest and best information
regarding political news to be had
from the seat of government. We
call your attention to the endorse
ment from the Democratic politicians
and labor men.
Your name has been handed to us
as one interested in procuring sub
scriptions for good papers. We
should be pleased to have you act as
our agent for procuring subscriptions
for our paper, should you feel dis
posed to take the matter up.
The subscription price of the
“American Industries” is $2 per
year. We allow a commission of
—i. e., on all subscriptions you send
us >d and retain $1 for yourself. The
name of the party you send with the
dollar will be entered on our subscrip
tion list for one year.
Please advise us whether you are
willing to work for us or not, that
we may select some one else in your
vicinity if you do not care to take
hold. Yours truly,
American Industries Co.
OFFICE OF THE
National Economist Pub. Co.
239 North Capitol Sr,.
Horace Kenney, Sect’y. and Treas.
Washington, I). C. 189.
Dear Sir With this we send
you a copy of the “National Econo
mist,” the oflicial organ of the Na
tional Farmers’ Alliance and Indus
trial Union. This paper has been
established some six years, and has
always had great growth in the farm
ing communities in the South and
West. It is not a partisan paper, and
adheres strictly to the doctrines as
enunciated by the Farmers’ Alliance.
It is published weekly and for the
sum of $1 per year.
Your name has been handed to us
as that of a circulator or subscription
agent for papers of this class. We
shall be pleased to have you examine
this paper carefully and act as our
agent for procuring subscriptions.
We pay our agents 25 cents com
mission i i. e., on every subscription
of $1 each, you remit 75 cents and
the name of the party you send in
will be placed on our mailing list for
one year.
Please pay careful attention to our
premium list as offered from time to
time, and if there is anything among
them that you desire for yourself,
we shall be pleased to furnish it to
you at cost price to us.
Trusting that we will be favored
with your assistance in securing sub
scriptions for our paper, and that a
mutually profitable connection may
be formed, I am, Yours truly.
National Economist.
A Gaudy Social Outlook.
Washington Post.
Society will observe that the am
bassador movement is beginning to
boar fruit. It made no changes just
at first. Sir Julian Pauncefote re
mained, although it is said we are to
have among the attaches some gen
tlemen of higher rank than hitherto ;
which, of course, is a great gain to
the upper circles in that it furnishes
dinner and reception lists with a glit
tering array of titles. Mr. Patenotre
remains also, and so does Baron
Fava. But it seems that Germany is
to contribute a nobleman instead of
Dr. von Holleben, the modest and
scholary gentleman who represents
that nation under the old arrange
ment. He is to be succeeded by the
Baron von Saurnea-Jeltsth, and this
gives us not only a Titled Person,
but a name which opens fascinating
fields for the study of foreign lan
guages. Our aristocracy will have
little more to learn in the way of
German after mastering that prob
lemon pronunciation.
There is more to corner however,
Russia will soon have an embassy
here instead of a mere legation. The.
change will not necessarily affect the
head of the establishment, for he is a
prince already and no reasonable
person could ask more. But it may
bring a few additional titles to the
prince’s retinue. Then, there is
Spain and, peradventure, Turkey,
too. Why should we not have a
duke from the one and a pasha from
the other? Siam, also, is about to
be added to the list. We should be
able to do something with Siam. A
Chevalier of the Order of the Nine
Gems or a Lord High Chamberlain
io the Sacred Elephant would be
reasonable, we should think. And
is for Austria we expect nothing less
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER. ATLANTA. GEORGIA. FRIDAY, JUNE 23. 1893.
than a cavalcade of Magyar and Ger
man noblemen, quite dazzling to be
hold and fit for great exploits in
society.
We congatulate the upper circles
upon so gay a prospect, Recent
events have whetted our appetite for
noble things. A duke ; a grand duke,
and a princess of the blood, following
close upon each other s royal heels,
have lashed ambition into ecstacy,
and here upon the threshold of the
rabid term we find ourselves consum
ing in a splendid thirst. Never again
shall we sit down content with simple
counts and honorables. Hereafter
there must be a duke at every dinner
table, and no assembly will be com
plete without a string of princes.
The dispensation of the embassy will
do its sacred work, however. All
the East breaks out with purple and
with gold. Our faith looks up.
THE EUROPEAN ARMIES.
How They Compare With Our Own
Snug Force of 25,000 Men.
Germany’s election this week,
which will decide whether the army
shall be increased, makes interesting
the following fresh figures, showing
the present strength and expense of
the principle European armies. The
following table will show the armies
of Europe on a war footing in 1869
and 1892:
1869. 1892.
France. 1,350,000 4,350,000
Germany 1,300,000 5,000.000
Russia 1,100,000 4,000,000
Austria 750 000 1,900,000
Italy 570,000 2,236,000
England 450,000 602,000
Spain 450,000 800,000
Turkey 320,000 1,150.000
Switzerland .. . 150,000 389,000
Sweeden-Norway 130,000 338,000
Belgium 95,000 258,000
Portugal 70,000 154,000
Denmark 4.5,000 91,000
Holland 45,000 185,000
In 1869 Europe had 6,958,000 sol
diers and now she has 22,248,000.
ANNUAL EXPENSES IN FRANCE.
1869. 1892.
Brussels 492,000,000 991.000,000
France 471,000,000 691,000,000
England .... 484,000,000 663,000,000
Germany. . . . 224,000,000 561,000,000
Austria 182,000,000 311,000,000
Italy 141,000,000 289,000,000
Spain 100,000,000 142 000,000
Holland 41,000,000 • 59,000,000
Belgium 29.000,000 40,000,000
Switzerland . . 2,000,000 36,000,000
Portugal .... 22,000,000 35,000.000
Sweeden .... 18,000,000 45,000,000"
Europe expended, in 1860, 2,228,-
000,000 francs on its armies, and
now she expends 4,069,000,000 francs
and the various governments find
they have not yet enough.
Note.— A franc is equal to twenty
cents of our money. *
UXCLeNa.M'S LI ABILITIES.
What the Treasury Statement for the
Month of May Shows.
Washington, June 2.—The public
debt statement issued to-day shows a
net decrease of $739,425.99 in May.
Os this $657,175.50 was in the
amount of bonded indebtedness, and
882,250.49 in the increase of the
cash in the Treasury. The interest
bearing debt increased $300,000. The
debt on which interest has ceased
since maturity decreased $37,490,
and the debt bearing no interest
$619,695.50. The aggregate inter
est and non-interesjt bearing debt
May 31 was $961,750,888.63. On
April 30 it was $962,407,764.13. The
certificates and Treasury notes, offset
by an equal amount of cash in Treas
ury, outstanding at the end of the
month was 4594,531,017, an increase
of $1,485,604.
The total cash in the Treasury
was $754,122,984.47, the gold reserve
$95,048,640 and the net cash bal
ance $26,517,514.80. In the month
there was a decrease of $5,764,749.-
32 in gold coin and bars, the total at
the close being $196,518,609.76. Os
silver there was an increase of $5.-
163,874.48. Os the surplus there
was in national bank depositories
$11,649,142.54, against $11,270,696.-
69 at the end of the previous month.
Count Chaptai’s “Souvenirs of Na
poleon,” just published, are full of
interesting matter. “Napoleon,” says
Chaptai, “was always on his guard
against the ambition of his gen
erals. * * * With the exception
of two or three, who had had known
him in his youth, and who had main*
tained a certain freedom with him,
they approached him with trembling,
and they could not say that they
ever had a moment of familiarity
with him. He loaded them with
money, he gave them estates in the
conquered countries because he
wished to create opulent houses in
his court. * * * I never caught
the Emperor eulogizing any general
and I often heard him criticise them
sharply, sometimes for their want of
talent, sometimes for their bad con
duct. He often said in speaking of
marshals : ‘These people think them
selves necessary; they don’t know
that 1 have a hundred division gen
erals who can very well replace
them.’ He never tolerated the
smallest infraction of discipline in
his generals. General Gouvion St.
Cyr once presented himself at bis
levee at the Tuileries, d’he Em
peror asked him calmly : ‘General,
you come from Naples ?’ ‘Yes, sir ;
I have turned over the command to
General Perignon, whom you sent to
replace me.’ ‘You have undoubt
edly received the permission of the
minister of war?’ ‘No, sir; but I
had nothing more to do at Naples.’
‘lf in two hours you are not on your
way to Naples, before 12 o'clock you
will be shot on the plain of Gren
elle.’ ”
If you are a People’s party man,
you should subscribe for The Peo
ple's Party Paj*«*.
PEOPLE’S PARTY PLATFORM.
Adopted at the Omaha Conference of
Laboring People, July 4, 1892.
Assembled upon the one hundred-and
sixteenth anniversary of the declaration
of independence, the People’s party of
America, in their first national conven
tion. invoking upon their action the
blessing of Almighty God, puts forth in
the name and on tiehalf of the people of
this country, the following preamble and
declarat.on of principles :
The conditions which surround us best
justify our co-operation. We meet in
the midst of a nation brought to the
verge of moral, political and material
ruin. Corruption dominates the ballot
box, the legislatures, the congress, and
touches even the ermine of the bench.
The people are demoralized. Most of
tne States have been compelled to isolate
the voters at the polling places to pre
vent universal intimidation or bribery.
The newspapers are largely subsidized or
muzzled, public opinion silenced, busi
ness prostrated, our homes covered with
mortgages, labor impoverished and the
land concentrating m the hands of the
capitalists. The urban workmen are de
nied the right of organization for self
protection ; imported pauperized labor
beats down their wages ; a hireling
standing army, unrecognized by our
laws, is established to shoot them down,
and they are rapidly degenerating into
European conditions. The fruits of the
toil of millions are boldly stolen to build
up collossal fortunes for a few, unprece
dented in the history of mankind, and
the possessors of these, in turn, despise
the republic and endanger liberty. From
the same prolific mode of governmental
injustice we breed, the two great clas
ses—tramps and millionaires.
The national power to create money is
appropriated to enrich bondholders. A
vast public debt payable in legal tender
currency has been funded into gold
bearing bonds, thereby adding millions
to the burdens of the people.
THE OLD PARTIES ARRAIGNED.
Silver, which has been accepted as
coin since the dawn of history, has been
demonetized to add to the purchasing
power of gold by decreasing the value of
all forms of property, as well as human
labor, and the supply of currency is pur
posely abridged to fatten usurers, bank
rupt enterprises and enslave industry. A
vast conspiracy against mankind has
been organized on two continents and is
rapidly taking possession of the world.
If not met and overthrown at once it
forebodes terrible social convulsions, the
destruction of civilization, or the estab
lishment of an absolute despotism.
We have witnessed for more than a
century the struggles of the two great
political parties for power and plunder,
while grievous wrongs have been in
flicted upon the suffering people. We
charge that the controlling influences
dominating both these parties have per
mitted the exising dreadful conditions to
develop without serious effort to prevent
or restrain them. Neither do they now
promise us any substantial reform. They
have agreed together to ignore in the
coming campaign every issue but one.
They propose to drown the outcries of
plundered people with the uproar of a
sham battle over the trriff, so that capi
talists, corporations, national banks,
rings, trusts, w’atered stock, the demone
tization of silver and the oppressions of
the usurers way all be lost sight of.
They propose to sacrifice oar homes,
wives and children on the altar of Mam
mon ; to destroy the multitude in order
to secure corruption funds from the mil
lionaires. ,
Assembled on the anniversary of the
birthday of the nation, and filled with
the spirit of the grand generation who
established our independence, we seek to
restore the government of the republic
to the hands of “the plain people,” with
which class it originated.
THE WAR IS OVER.
We assert our purposes to be identical
with the purposes of the national con
stitution — “To form a more perfect
union, establish'!justice, insure domes
tic tranquility, provide for the common
defense, promote the general welfare
and secure the blessings of liberty for
ourselves and our posterity.’’ We de
clare that this republic can only endure
as a free government while built upon
the love of the whole people for each
other and for the nation ; that it cannot
be pinned together by bayonets ; that the
civil war is over, ami that every passion
and resentment which grew out of it
must die with it. and that we must be in
fact, as we are in name, one united
brotherhood of freemen.
Our country finds itself confronted by
conditions for which there is no prece
dent in the history of the world—our
annual agricultural productions amount
to billions of dollars in value, which
must within a few weeks or months be
exchanged for billions of dollars of com
modities consumed in their production ;
the existing currency supply is whoffy
inadequate to make this exchange ; the
results are falling prices, the formation
of combines and rings and the impov
erishment of the producing classes. We
pledge ourselves that if given power we
will labor to correct these evils by wise
and reasonable legislation in accordance
with the terms of our platform.
We believe that the powers of govern
ment —in other words, of the people—
should be expanded (as in the case
the postal service) as rapidly and
as far as the good sense of an intelligent
people and the teachings of experience
shall justify, to the end that oppression,
injustice and poverty shall eventually
cease in she land.
THREEFOLD DECLARATION.
While our sympaties as a party of re
form are naturally upon the side of
every proposition which will tend to
make men intelligent, virtuous and tem
perate, we nevertheless regard these
questions, important as they are, as
secondary to the great issues now pres
sing for solution, and upon which not
only our individual prosperity but the
very existence of free institutions de
pend ; and we ask all men to first help
us to determine whether we are to have
a republic to administer before we differ
as to the conditions upon which it is to
be administered, believing that the
forces of reform this day organized will
never cease to move forward until every
wrong is remedied and equal rights and
equal privileges securely established for
all the men and women of the country.
We declare, therefore—
1. That the union of the labor forces
of the United States this day consum
mated. shall be permanent and per
petual. May its spirit enter into all
hearts for the salvation of the republic
and the uplifting of mankind
2. Wealth belongs to him who creates
it. and every dollar taken from industry
without an eqivalent is robbery. “If any
will not work, neither shall he eat.’-’
The interests of rural and civic labor are
the same : their enemies are identical.
3. We believe that the time has come
when the railroad corporations will
either own the people or the people must
own them, and should the government
enter upon ’he work of owning and
managing any or all railroads we should
fa ver an amendment to the constitution
by which all persons engaged in the
government service shall be placed un
de'; > civil service regulation of the most
rigid character, so as to prevent the in
crease of the power of national admin
istration by the use of such additional
government employes.
PLATFORM PLANKS.
1. We demand a national currency,
safe, sound, and flexible, issued by the
general government only, a full legal
tender for all debts, public and private,
and that without the use of baking cor
porations ; a just, equitable and efficient
means of distribution, direct to the peo
ple, at a tax not exceeding 2 per cent, be
provided, as set forth in the subtreasury
plan of the Farmers’ Alliance, or some
better system ; also by payments in dis
charge of its obligations for public im
provements.
a. We demand free and unlimited
coinage of silver and gold at the present
legal ratio of 16 to 1.
b. We demand that the amount of cir
culating medium be speedily increased
to not less than SSO per capita. •
c. We demand a graduated income
tax.
d. We believe that the money of the
country should be kept as much as pos
sible in the hands of the people, and
hence we demand that all State and
national revenue shall be limited to the
necessary expenses of the government,
economically and honestly administered.
e. We demand that postal savings
banks be established by the government
for the safe deposit of the earnings of
the people and to facilitate exchauge.
2. Transportation being a means of
change and a public necessity, the gov
ernment should own and operate the
railroads in the interest of the people.
а. The telegraph and telephone, like
the post-office system, being a necessity
for the transportation of news, should
be owned and operated in by the govern
ment in the interest of the people.
3. The land, including all the national
resources of wealth, is the heritage of all
the people, and should not be monopo
lized for speculative purposes, and alien
ownership of land should be prohibited.
All land now held by railroads and
other corporations in excess of their
actual needs, and all lands now owned
by aliens, should be reclaimed by the
government and held for actual settlers
only.
SUPPLeMENT TO THE PLATFORM.
Whereas other questions have been
presented for our consideration, we here
by submit the following, not as a part of
the platform of the People's party, but
as resolutions expressive of the senti
ment of this convention :
1. Resolved, That we demand a, free
ballot and a fair count in all elections
and pledge ourselves to secure it to every
legal voter without Federal intervention
through the adoption by the States of
the unperverted Australian or secret
ballot system,
2. Resolved, That the revenue derived
from a graduated income tax should be
applied to the reduction of the burden
of taxation now resting upon the domes
tic industries of this country.
3. Resolved. That we pledge our sup
port to fair and liberal pensions to ex-
Union soldiers and sailors.
4. Resolved, That we condemn the
fallacy of protecting American labor un
der the present system, which opens our
ports to the pauper and criminal classes
of the world, and crowds out our wage
earners ; and we denounce the present
ineffective laws against contract labor,
and demand the lurther restriction of
undesirable immigration.
5. Resolved, That we cordially sympa
thize with the efforts of org’anized work
ingmen to shorten the the hours of labor
and demand a rigid enforcement of the
existing eight-hour law on government
work, and ask that a penalty, clause be
added to the said law.
б. Resolved, That we regard the main
tenance of a large standing army of
mercenaries, known as the Pinkerton
system as a menace to our liberties, and
we demand its abolition ; and we con
demn the recent invasion of the terri
tory of Wyoming by the hiered assassins
of plutocracy, assisted by Federal of
ficials.
7. Resolved, That we commend to the
favorable consideration of the people
and the reform press the legislative sys
tem known as the initiative and referen
dum.
8. Resolved, That we favor a constitu
tional provision limiting the office of
President and Vice-President to one
term, and providing for the election of
Senators of the United States by a direct
vote of the people.
9. Resolved, That we oppose any sub
sidy or national aid to any private cor
poration for any purpose.
THOMSON, GA., Nov. 28,1892
To my Friends and Former
Customers:
Having bought the
Ira Brinkley stock of goods,
I am prepared to show
you a nice line of
General Merchandise,
which I will sell very cheap,
Shoes a specialty.
S. F- MORRIS, Main st,
I PILES “ Suppository!
is a sovereign remedy for Piles, (bleeding.Eg
tching, blind, inward, etc ), whether of re ES
cent or lonsr standing. It gives instant rc-SS
lief, and effects a radical and permanentg
cure. No surgical operation, required H
Try it and relieve your sufferings. Send®
for circu ; ar and free sample. Only 50 cts.gl
a br>x. For sale by druggists, or sont bj m
mail on receipt of price.
M ARTIN RUDY. Lancaster. Pa.
LIFE INSURANCE.
A.. J. STORY,
Thomson , Georgia,
Kas the Agency for the State of Georgia
for the
MASSACHUSETTS BENEFIT
BOSTON, MASS.
—AND—
THE NATIONAL MUTUAL,
OF NEW YORK.
Mr. Story is a straight out People's
Party man. and is meeting with great
success. Give him a trial when you
want to insure.
ADKINS HOUSE,
Northwest Cor. Bread and Campbell Streets,
Augusta, Georgia.
Centrally Located. Five Minutes Ride
on Electric Cars from Depot.
Will be pleased to have friends from
the country. TERMS, $1.50 Per Day.
J. ADKINS. Propne tor.
DURHAM’S
Female
Bitters,
A Specific for
Irregular or Painful
Menstruation, Sterility,
or Habitual Abortion,
And for
Uterine Derangements
Generally.
Correspondence Solicited,
and kept Strictly Private.
jfcgTßeferences given
if required.
G. W. DURHAM, M. D.
Thomson, Ga.
BirTWeTC
REFORM IS OUR MOTTO!
N. S. HODGES & CO.,
MITCHELL, GA.,
We always keep a First-Class
stock of Dry Goods, No
tions, Hats, Clothing,
Boots, Shoes, etc
Groceries of every descrip
tion, Crockery, Tinware and
Woodenware; in fact, every
thing from a knitting-needle to
a sewing machine, can be found
as low as the lowest for Cash.
Our Undertaker Department
Is kept supplied with a full line
of Coffins and wood Caskets.
Come, everybody! Every
thing to please; nothing to of
fend. Good goods to sell and
good will to give.
To Brother Alliancemen 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 #I.OO
per saw. Gin Feeders and Condensers $2.00
per saw. We have in stock thejGullett, Van
W inkle. Hall, Pratt, Gate City, "Whltney and
Winship.
We can furnish Feeders and Condensers for
any make of gin, new or second hand. We
have some good rebuilt Engines—4 horse pow
er SIOO.OO, 6 horse power $200.00. 8 horse power
S3OO 00. 1U horse power $400.00, Ac.. 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 1 he 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 several 40 saw Gin outfits, with
engine to pull them, and a press for S2OO. 50
Baws S3OO. 60 saws S4OO. 80 saws SSOO. We
eejll swap or trade to suit customers.
FRICK COMPANY.
A
ECLIPSE ENGINES
tRLE CITY IRON WORKS ENGINES AND
I BOILERS, AUTOMATIC STATIONERY
ENGINES.
GUNS FROM $2 TO $2.50 PER SAW.
Boilers, Saw Mills, Moore Co. Corn MlUs
Pratt Gins, Seed Cotton Elevators, Cane Mills,
Cotton Presses, Wagon and Platform Scales, Foot
Scientific Grinding Mills, Hoe’s Chisle-Tooth
Saws, Shingle Machinery, Wood-Working Machin
ery, Shaiting, etc.
MALSBY & AVERY,
Southern Managers.
81 South Forsyth Street, ATLANTA, GA-
Cataloguk by mentioning this paper.
ATLANTA, GA.
24th Year. The best in the South. Con
cise methods in book-keeping. A simple
and rapid system of shorthand taught.
High standard of scholarship. Low rates
of tuition. Three months course in either
book-keeping or slwrthand, $25.00. Over
4.000 students in business. Send for hand
some circular containing testimonials,
references, etc.
WHAT IS THE
NATIONAL WATCHMAN?
It is an 8-page, 4-column paper, devoted ex
clusively to the reform movement. The only
purely economic journal published at Wash
ington. It contains a complete record of tho
Acts of both Houses of Congress. It is a
paper for Business Men. Lawyers, Professional
Men, Farmers, and Mechanics. It is a fear
less, outspoken, brilliant sheet. Published
weekly. Subscription price, 50 cents per year.
OUR PREMIUM LIST.
To the person sending the largest list of
yearly subscribers each week we will glveafine
Gent’s Open Face Watch, Stem-wind and set.
Solid Nickel Case, which wears white, and do
notrust, fitted vki>h Celebrated Victor Jeweled
Movement. Compensation Balance; will keep
accurate time. Remember, no certain number,
but the one sending the laxgest list each week.
In addition, we give the following pre
miums:
For 2 yearly subscribers- We give
one People's Party Badge, containing pict
ures of Generals Weaver and Field, suitable
for a watch-charm ; or sent on receipt of 25
cents, c
For x yearly stitrscribers— One copy
of Philosophy of Price, by N. A. Dunning.
It is a work on domestic currency and fully
explains the financial system now in vogue,
and points out the defects in it; or sent on
receipt of price, 25 cents.
For <i yearly subscribers—One copy
of Hon. Tom Watson’s Campaign Book. It
is a book that every voter should have; or
sent on receipt of price, sl.
For id yearly subscribers— One copy
of Dunning's History of the Alliance and
Agricultural Digest.
For 15 yearly subscribers— One copy
of Ancient Lowly, by C. Osborn Ward. This
work is a complete history of the ancient
working people, giving the key to the failures
of the great nations of olden times, com
mencing with the birth of Christ. It is a his
tory that all Christian people will find to be
of great assistance to them in the study of
Christianity. Ministers, Sunday-school sup
erintendents and teachers will find it of great
value; or sent on receipt of price, $2.50.
For 25 yearly subscribers—A fine
nickel case, hinged-back, white enamel dial,
stem-wind watch. Will keep good time, open
face, will wear well; or sent on receipt of
price. $3.
For 20 yearly subscribers— Family
Medicine Case, manufactured by Capital
Chemical Co. A complete treatise accom
panies this case. It has twelve distinct rem
edies, and every remedy guaranteed to do
just what is claimed. This case will be given
away as a premium for twenty yearly sub
scribers at 50 cents each; or sent on receipt
of price, $5.
For 200 subscribers, one No. 3 Alliance Sewing
Machine, price S2O; for 250 subscribers, one
No. 4 Alliance Sewing Machine, price $22; for
300 subscribers, one No. 5 Alliance Sewing
Machine, price $25.
We sell the Alliance Sewing Machine on the
installment plan—slo down and balance in
two equal payments. We pay all freight cast
of Rocky Mountains. Address—
NATIONAL WATCHMAN CO.,
Washington, D. C.
jE*/, -''r ii. B
I I
I I
3 Padgett Pays the Freight! 1
SSr A large illustrated'Catalqgue show- Hj
«rra ing hundreds of designs of Furniture, BM
mH Stoves and Baby Carriages will be gG
Era mailed free, if you mention this JW
paper. I will sell you P’ukniture,, jEg
3H etc., just as cheap as you can buy
■B them In large cities, and pay the $3
BEI freightjto your depot.
WW Here are a few samples: ' ?
EE A No. 7 fiat top Cooking Stove with
20 cooking utensils, deUvered to any
depot, for sl2 00.
W A 5-hole Cooking Range with 20 jSS
mH cooking utensils, delivered
depot, Tor 513 00.
A large line of Stoves in proper
tion. Special agent for Charter Oak MB
BE Stoves. MB
A nice Parlor Suit, upholstered in ms
IEsS good plush, fashionable colors, de
gag livered anywhere for $30.00. A large S 3
line of Parlor Suits to select from- IBM
EE A Bedroom Suit, large glass, big
awg bedstead, enclosed washstand, full
suit 9 pieces; chairs have cane seats,
Ml delivered anywhere for $22 00.
Other Suits both cheaper and more
expensive.
25 yds. of yd.-wide Carpet for $7 50. SV
1 pair Nottingham Lace Curtains,
Ml pole, 2 chains, 2 hooks, 10 pins, all SEg
&W for SIOO.
-99 A nice Window Shade, 7 ft. long, 3
aE ft. wide, on spring rollers,with fringe
tor 50 cents.
No freight paid on Shades and Cur- kSE
tains unless ordered in connection
flat with other goods. raw
-.M Send for
1 Uz. Padgett, P
805 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.M
PROFESSIONAL CARD.
DR. E. eT pARSONS,
SURGEON DENTIST,
WASHINGTON, GA.
References given on application.
Twenty years experience in active practice.
He will visit communities desiring his ser
vices. Visiting Alliances a pleasure.
Correspondence solicited.
IMPLEMENTS.
PRICE.
The Victor Guauo Distributor, $ LOO
The Sure Stand Cotton Planter, 6.00
The Victor Corn and Pea Planter, 6.00
These Implements work on a common
Haiman plow-stock, which we furnish,
or the farmers may put the attachments
on their own
the stock and put them up, the price is
$6.00. If the farmer puts them on his
own stock. $4.50 each.
SEND MONEY with ORDER
AT ONCE.
Over 3,000 in use, so you need not fear
to order. Address
W. E. H. SEARCY, Agent.
Griffin, Ga.
GUANO! GUANO!GUANO!
We are prepared to sell the
best brands of Guano on the
most accommodating terms to
the farmers of Warren county.
We will sell the following for
cash cotton options in the fall :
Edisto,
Green's Formula,
Walton Guano,
IVoltnn Ariel SPECIAL RATES IN
\\ aiton zacici, car load lots.
Call on J. C. Evans, at Norwood,
and R. H. Fowler or J. C. Evans
at Warrenton.
PILCHER & EVANS.
February, 27, 1893.
Look ! Look ! Look !
EXTRA STRAIN
BROWN LEGHORN EGGS
At |I.OO per sitting. Chicks have free
range. Sure to hatch. Address
MRS. T. J. ANDERSONG
Mulberry, Jackson County, Ga.
7