Newspaper Page Text
8
PEOPLE'S I’ARH PAPER
Entered at the Post Office at Atlanta, Ga,, a
second class matter. Oct. 16 1891.
Subscription, One Dollar Per Year, Six
Months 50 cts., Three 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
Rt gistered Letter. Orders should be
made payable to
PEOPLES PARTY PAPER.
TO OUR READERS.
We know that you are interested
in our paper and that you want to
help us so far as lies within your
power.
Look over the advertisements in
this paper and buy from those who
patronize our columns.
In making your orders, do not fail
to mention that you saw the adver
tisement in this paper.
DON’T SEND STAMPS.
Don’t send stamps if it can be
avoided. Under no circumstances
send stamps of large denomination;
we can neither use * them nor sell
them. Hereafter we will be com
pelled to return stamps of larger de
nomination than two cents to the
sender.
WE NEED YOUR HELP.
Are you fully satisfied that this
paper is worth the subscription price?
If so, you will help the cause and
help us by showing it to your neigh
bor and asking him to subscribe.
Appointments for Speakers.
President Ellington will address
the people of the following counties
on the dates named :
Morgan county, July 11.
Jasper county, July J 2.
Pickens county, July 14.
Ft. Buffington, Gherokee county,
July 15.
The Progressive Farmer.
We are enabled to offer the Pro
gressive, Farmer and The People’s
Party Paper at $1.50 for both pa
pers. The Progressive Farmer is
the leading Reform poper of the Old
North State, and deserves to be sus
tained because of its intrinsic merit
as well as for the sake of its founder,
Colonel L. L. Polk. For free sample
copy, address The Progressive
Former, Raleigh, N. C.
Here’s Your Chance.
The Missouri World, published every
week at Chillicothe, Missouri, gives the
general news, and is People’s party
through and through It is straight goods
and circulates in the North, South East
and West. You want the World, and we
will send it and The People’s Party
Paper both one year for sl.lO If
you want a free sample copy of the. Mis
souri World, drop a card to it at Chilli
cothe, Missouri Under this offer you can
send stamps, silver, express order, post
office order, currency, cash draft, postal
note or private check,
Appointments for the Ninth District.
By the order and desire of our
President of the State Alliance,
I call upon the county Alliances of
the different counties of my District
to arrange their July meetings so as
to have them on the days of my ap
pointments; and further, would in
sist that we have county rallies at each
of these meetings, and I will have
Colonel T. E. Winn or Bro. Wilson
with me, or some other speakers.
List of appointments as follows:
Hiawassee, Towns Co., July 10.
Blairsville, Union Co., July 11.
Morganton, Fannin Co., July 12.
Ellijay, Gilmer Co., July 13.
Jasper, Pickens Co., July 14.
Ft. Buffington, Cherokee, July 15.
Dawsonville, Dawson Co., July 17.
Dahlonega, Lumpkin Co., July IS.
Cleaveland, White Co., July 19.
Gainesville, Hall Co., July 20.
The places of holding above stated
meetings may be changed by notify
ing me at once. Brethren, I do in
sist that you do everything in your
power to get all alliancemen and non
alliancemen to come out and let us
reason together upon the great ques
tions of the day and purposes of the
Alliance in a strictly non-partisan
spirit. J. R. Henderson, D. L.
Alliance Rally in Taylor County.
The Alliance of Taylor county will
have a big rally at Hayes’ Camp
Ground July 19th. Brothers Elling
ton and Peek have agreed to be pres
ent. All those who wish to partici
pate with us have a cordial invitation
to attend, and .especially do we hope
that the adjoining counties will meet
with us and help to make it the
grandest Alliance rally that Georgia
has ever known.
Papers friendly to the cause are re
quested to publish.
H. M. Mitchell,
Sec’y T. C. F. A.
Muscogee County.
The Muscogee County Alliance will
meet at Upatoie on the first Saturday
in July. State Lecturer S. A. Walker
and District Lecturer J. W. Wilson
will address the people on Alliance
principles. Dinner on the ground.
Everybody invited.
R. J. Boyd, President.
E. G. Ritch, Secretary.
DeKalb County.
The next quarterly meeting of the
DeKalb County Alliance will meet
at Lithonia on Saturday, the 15th
day of July, 1893. Able speakers
will be present to entertain the audi
ence. A full delegation from all the
sub-Alliances is expected, as busi
ness of importance will come before
the body. Come with full baskets.
W. T. Lankford, Sec’y.
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER. ATLANTA. GEORGIA. FRIDAY, JULY 7. 1893.
DECLARED THEM SPURIOUS.
French Chamber of Deputies Ingen
iously Hides the Theft Scandal.
Paris. June 22.—1 n the Chamber
of Deputies to-day M. Clemenceau
was accused by M. Millevoye of giv
ing private government letters to
England.
M. Millevoye produced a list of
names of the persons and of the
papers whom he alleged England
had bribed and the amount of money
given as the bribes. He read, amid
an uproar that almost drowned his
voice: Le Temps, 50,000 francs;
Edouard Le Matin, 30,000 francs;
Le Jour, 15,000 francs; Rochefort,
SO,OOO francs, and Clemenceau, 50,-
000 francs.
At this point the uproar and con
fusion in the chamber became tre
mendous. The members of the Ex
treme Left rose from their seats and
demands were made that M. Mille
voye leave the chamber. M. Mille
voye, however, stood his ground,
and when a semblance of order and
quiet was restored he shouted:
“The whole thing is a scandal.
Bardeau received 50,00 francs.”
M. Bardeau sprang from his seat
and exclaimed:
“I expect the chamber to vindi
cate my honor.”
Mr. Clemenceau and all the mem
bers of the party of the Extreme
Left again rose from their seats and
ho >ted. After a time they insisted
that the rest of the paper be read.
M. Millevoye again started to read,
but M. Deroulede, who is also a
Boulangist, stated that he could not
listen to him, and would resign his
seat rather than do so.
The order of the day was then
moved to the effect that the cham
ber condemned the documents as
spurious, and regretted the time that
had been foolishly wasted listening
to their presentation. This was
adopted by a practically unanimous
vote.
Flopped Some More.
All this Farmers’ Alliance, Knights
of Labor, were started by the Demo
crats and the Cobden club to break
up the Republican party.— Augusta
Chronicle.
It was only a year ago that the
Chronicle said:
“It was the boast of Republican
renegades that the Democratic party
should be split. The Alliance move
ment was the Trojan horse in which
the Third party was concealed.”
Having jumped from one extreme
to the other; claiming first that the
People’s party was a Republican
ticket to break up the Democratic
party and then that it was a Demo
cratic scheme to kill the Republican
party; and both assertions being as
far from the truth as the East is from
the West, perhaps the next move of
old Nancy will be to come out with
the truth and say the People’s party
was organized to kill both the old
parties which are owned by the plu
tocrats.— The Wool Hat.
Where Is the Ark of the Covenant ?
St. Louis Republic,
Previous to the destruction of the
“Temple of Solomon” by the Baby
lonians the Ark of the Covenant
was contended therein, but what be
came of it after that time is not
known. It is believed by some to
have been taken away or destroyed
by King Nebuchadnezzar, while cer
tain of the Jews believe that it was
concealed from the invaders, and ac
count it among the “hidden things”
which the Messiah (who is yet to
come) will reveal. That the old ark
was not in the Second Temple all
writers agree; and its absence is one
of the important points of difference
between the two temples, the second
being held as much inferior on that
account. The reason that it is
thought to have not been in the
Second Temple is because Ezra,
Nehemiah, the Maccabees and Jose
phus never mentioned it.
He Mortgaged Himself.
The most remaikable instrument
ever put on the records of the United
States was one filed with the Regis
ter of Mecklenburg county, North
Carolina, at Charlotte, in July, 1881.
It was nothing more nor less than a
mortgage deed in which one Charles
Didenover, an intelligent but impe
cunious man, conveyed aimself “ and
all right and title to himself,” to an
other “ to have and to hold forever
providing always,” to secure a debt
he owed the mortgagee. The instru
ment was duly witnessed, “signed,
sealed and delivered,” and put on
record by the Register of said Meck
lenburg county. Didenover was a
married man, and, according to the
laws of the Turpentine State, before
he could deliver “ real property ” his
wFe had to join him in signing the
instrument and acknowledge the
same before a notary public or other
magistrate. This she did, waiving
“ all right, title and claim to said
husband to said mortgagee.” Taken
from any point of view it is the most
unique document that has yet been
“ spread upon the records ” within
the United States, the deed of the
tree to itself not excepted.
“The People’s party could have
secured five times the vote it did last
year but for its utter incompetent
managers,” says the National Econo
mist of May 20. Perhaps so. How
would the Economist have managed
it? We have two specimens of its
campaign management. One was
the sending out of the Tillman Dem
ocratic campaign circular, and the
other was taking $6,000 from the
Louisiana campaign fund without
rendering an equivalent.— The Great
TFesL
E. A. ANGIER.
ATTORNEY AT LAW
171 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Practices in all the Courts,
State and Federal.
The Telegraph reports that as Mr.
W. C. Patton, a prominent planter of
Spalding county, was returning home
from Griffin’on the 26 th, he was ac
costed by John Atkinson, a negro of
bad reputation, who cursed and
abused him in a violent manner and
finally drew a pistol with intent to
shoot, whereupon Mr. P. drew his
pistol and fired, the ball entering the
negro’s back, piercing his heart, kill
ing him instantly. It is a little sing
ular that Atkinson should have had
his back turned to the man he was
in the act of killing. Did Mr. Pat
ton also have his back turned to At
kinson when he fired the fatal shot ?
People’s Party Rally, Aug. otli, 1898.
Mt. Herron, Randolph Co.
“ I will yield to your request, and
meet you at Mount Hebron on Aug.
sth, 1893.«—T. E. Watson ”
Upon the receipt of the above from
Hon. T. E. Watson, a meeting was
called for June 17th; 4893, at Mount
Hebron, and quite a number of peo
ple were present —including a dele
gation from Calhoun county.
The object of the meeting was to
make suitable arrangements, and have
all things ready prior to the day of
the rally.
On motion, N. T. Crozier was made
chairman, and D. C. Andrews secre
tary of the meeting
On motion, the following commit
tees were appointed by the chairman:
Committee on Arrangements--T.
H. Andrews, J. J. Jernigan, H. S.
Weathersby, J. C. Hall, 8. A. Lofton,
Pomp Joiner, W. T. Calhoun, Mar
shall Culbuth, S. Ivey and Richard
White.
Committee of Reception—Dr. M.
A. Baldwin, T. J. Perry, J. O. Hol
man, W. O. Harper, T. G. Spearman,
B. Bennett, Enock Hall, W. T. Cal
houn.
On Publication and Correspon
dence—W. T. Crozier, D. C. Andrews.
The committee takes occasion in
this publication to say that a grand
time is expected, and that everybody,
irrespective of party affiliation, race,
color, or sex, is very cordially in
vited to be with us. It is expected
to feed the people on that day, so we
hope everybody will lend a helping
hand. Let us make it a grand suc
cess. Come one, come all, male and
female, white and colored, and bring
baskets filled to the top.
Living issues alone will be discuss
ed, and no division of time allowed,
hence ail will be pleasant.
People’s Party Paper will please
publish weekly, and the Bainbridge
Globe, Liberal Enterprise and Leader
of Cuthbert, please copy, also, all
other friendly papers.
N. T. Crozier,
D. C, Andrews,
In behalf the people.
Wilkes ( ouaty Alliance.
The next quarterly meeting of the
Wilkes County Alliance will be hely
at Mallorysville the 15th of Juld,
1893. Brother W. Y. Carter, Dis
trict Lecturer/will be present to en
tertain the audience. A full delega
tion from all the sub-Alliances wil
please meet promptly at 10 o’clock a.
m., as business of importance will
come before the body. Everybody
invited to attend—ladies especially
Henry C. Walton, Pres.
E. M. Anthony, Sec’y.
TO ADVERTISERS.
The circulation of the People’s Party
Paper ie now 12,000 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 circulation is steadily increasings
and most advantageous arrangements
can be made for space.
Write for ad. rate card. -
Kansas the Battle Ground
An effort is persistently made by old
party papers to create the impression that
the voters of Kansas have returned to
their former party affiliations. To con
trovert this you need only to
INFORM YOURSELF
as to what is really happening by send
ing for the
WEEKLY TRIBUNE,
Junction City, Kansas. SI.OO will pay
for one copy one year.
The TRIBUNE is recognized as the
pioneer People’s paper of Kansas having
stood consistently in line with the reform
principles for over 19 years. It has earned
a national reputation under the staunch
editorial management of Hon. John
Davis, twice elected (in 1890 and 1892) to
represent the sth Kansas district in Con
gress The paper will remain his per
sonal organ during his congressional
term, and his contributions to its columns
will be frequent, lacking nothing in old
time vigor. The spirit and tone of the
paper will advance with the progress of
the Industrial Movement, and any one
desiring to keep abreast of the times will
do well to send postal for sample copies,
mentioning The People’s Party Paper,
or remit as ab ive, SI.OO for a year’s suo
scription, or 25 cents for a trial trip of
hree months.
CHAS S DAVIS, Editor,
Junction City, Kansas.
THE DAKOTA RURALIST
THE RURALIST is one of the pioneer
Alliance papers of the Northwest. It is
edited by H. L Loucks, president of the
N. F A. & I. U., with J. R. Lowe, pres
ident of the South Dakota Alliance as as
sociate editor, which is a sufficient guar
ante z that it will be a stalwart advocate
of Alliance principles.
It is a 16-page paper, published at Hu
ron, 8. D. Price, $1 per annum. Sample
copies EREE.
nun
BLOOD
PURIFIER!
r* —«—- —< y - —■
THE BEST
RENOVATOR
OF A WORN-DOWN SYSTEM.
■ 1 ,
MADE OUT OF
Native Herbs!
X—" l 1,1 - . jm.'i if > WWWWPIW'I"
HAS
Stood
THE
Test
OF FIFTY YEARS.
—i. . II I
REMOVES ALL
IMPURITIES
FROM THE BLOOD.
BUILDS UP AND
STRENGTHENS
THE ENTIRE BODY.
Give It a Trial.
Beats Any of the Complicated
Nostrums Now Being
Palmed OH* On The Public!
Contains No Ingredient
Injurious To The Throat, As
So Many Other Proprietary
Medicines Do.
Try It.
FOR SALE BY
Dr. G. W. Durham,
THOMSON, GEORGIA.
PRICE,
SI.OO Per Bottle.
Cholera. Cholera-
Thousands are now dying in the East. Cholera will be the
plague here this summer. The World’s Fair will bring it.
DR. E. B. LOUDEN’S
Cholera Compound
Is the only known preventive. None ever known to have
taken the dread disease who have used this compound
TAKE IT WITH YOU TO THE WORLD’S FAIR,
and take no chances on the dread disease.
Price s2.o® per bottle, or $9.00 per half dozen bottles.
Address The Louden Medical Company,
Agents wanted. TIFFIN’, OHIO.
O. S. LEE, “
THOMSON, - - G-EORC-IA
I HAVE JUST RECEIVED
A COMPLETE LINE OF SHOES,
For Spring Trade. I guarantee price and quality on every
pair sold. Also, an elegant stock of
DRY GOODS, NOTION'S, Etc.
I continue to sell BETTER FLOUR for less money than
any house in Thomson. A full line of
FLJLZSTTA-TlOlsr SUPPLIES
Kept on hand for sale at lowest prices. Give me a calland I
will save you money.
R- LOMBAku & '
rOUQdry, MaGhlHB, Bollor "ENGINES. 4to 75 horse power.
. and qin works, BOILERS 6 to 150 horso power.
RailrOßi, Cotton Factory, t
Mill, Kogin. and Gin . I ELD A* ILLS, SSO to SIOO
Suppiie*. Saw Gins, Holler Gins, Furnace Grates,
AUGUSTA, fejwglsME a; Cane Mills, Kettles, Evaporators,
ri Stacks, Fronts. Building Castes,
U .Grates, Stacks, etc.. Bolts,
Shafting, Pulleys, Hangers.
Belting, Packing, Injectors.
Jet Pumps, Piping. Valves, [sizes,
Ftitjngs, Saws, Bar Iron, all
All kinds of Machinery Work, new, and.Re-
i ' pairs promptly attended to.
Write us before you buy and get our price
TRADE ABC MARK.
PEOPLE! FBJOPLE! PEOPLE
LOOK AT OUS LEADERS:
TOBACCOS. RAVEN’S
n“kVd Rye,’ chew. HOBSE ' CAT^ E “ ttd POULTRY
Hoe Boy, 9 in , ss, medium chew, rOOD
Big Seller—Big I (Feent plug, TO CURE CHOLERA
9 ”?• I 3 ’ fin t B chew ’ AND REGULATE THE SYSTEM.
Old Bob, 9 in., 4s, fine chew,
7-inch 5s from 30 to 35 cents in caddies. GUARANTEED.
“GET THERE” Flour, our leader. Honest value. Nails, Lime
and Kerosene Oil, We clothe the people inside. It is economy to buy
the best goods, but at an honest price. Yours to serve,
ARRINGTON BROS. & CO-
21 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
WHEN IN THOMSON, GO TO
H. A. BURNSIDE'S,
WHERE YOU CAN BUY ANYTHING YOU WANT.
Best Shoe Stock in Town. Dry Goods, Shoes, Hats and Notions. Also
a Select Stock of Groceries. The Best Tobacco for the Least Money.
In fact, a dollar gets a hundred cents’ worth every time. Come and
see. We will be glad to show you our stock.
H- A- BURNSIDE,
THOMSON, GEORGIA
THERE IS A WIDE DIFFERENCE
between a Piano that is not right in any one essential and one
that is right in all respects, particularly in tone, touch and
durability. Viewed apart you may not notice the difference.
Buy th® one lacking in essentials, and compare it with
gVEBEIt
Piano.
and then the difference will be apparent. The strange thing
about it is this: You are sure to be asked nearly as much
for the cheaper as for the better piano. This seems incredible
It is true. Why?
THE JOHN CHURCH COMPANY,
OI isr CIIST IN - -A-TI,. OHZ 10.
PEOPLE’S PARTY STORE
Keeps constantly on hand a full line of
FAMILY GROf’ER’ES and
PLANT \TION SUPPLIES,
DRY GOODS CLOTHING,
NO i IONS, BOOTS and SHOES.
Also a full line of
WINDOW SHADES.
CURTAINS, POLES, Etc.
We carry a full line of GLASS and
CHINA WARE, and would be pleased to
have yon call and examine prices and
quali'y before you buy.
Our motto is: “ Equal Rights to all,
Special Privileges to None.”
G H. IRVING & CO.,
THOMSON, ..... GEORGIA.
FOB SALB.
QAA ACRES OF LAND IN FRANK
OV/kJ lin county, Georgia, on the
waters of the Tugalo River. Will sell in
50 or lOOacrelots, or in a body. Thia land
is well adapted to Corn, Wheat
Cotton. Vegetables and Fruit, and has as
fine springs of pure cold water as can
be found in the State. Will sell cheap
for cash or on five years time with in
terest at 7 per cent.
Parties wanting cheap homes will do
well to examine this land before buying
elsewhere. Address
SLOAN BRUCE,
till auxA Avalon, Ga.
DO YOU KEEP HENS ?
IF SO, SEND FIFTY CENTS FOR A
year’s subscription to
SOUTHERN POULTRY TALK.
Tells all about how to make hens pay j
how to run incubators; how to feed,
hatch and care for chicks for profit; tells
how to keep the egg-basket full, dnd is
fillad with useful and instructive matter.
Every number worth ten times its cost.
Address J. H. Davis, Box 22, Atlanta,
Georgia.
People’s Party Paper and Southern
Poultry Talk both to one address for only
sl.lO.
Something UTew!
I HAVE A RECEIPT FOR THE CURE
of the
Opium and Morphine Habit.
This prescription cured a man who took
one bottle (60 grains) of morphine per day.
All who are affl cted with this dreadful
disease should procure this remedy with
out delay, and be cured with the least pos
sible cost and without pain or hindrance
from business. For additional informa
tion, address
G. W. SHERRER, M. D.
Rayle, Wilkes County, Ga«