Newspaper Page Text
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PEOPLE'S i’Min I'Al'Ell
Published Every Friday At No. 8
South Broad Street
Thos. E. Watson, galto p£»'i!i en t
Lulu M.
A. J. s7^iTA^e7^7^ affcr;
Watson’s Appointments.
Crawfordville, Monday, October
15.
Warrontop, Tuesday, October 16.
Culverton, Wednesday, October 17.
Harlem, Thursday, October 18.
Gibson, Friday, October 19.
Tennille, Saturday, October 20.
Louisville, Monday, October 22.
Mclntyre, Wednesday, October 24
Thomson, Saturday, October 27.
LincSlnton, Monday, October 29.
Dr. W. H. Felton’s Appointments.
Wednesday, Oct. 10, Pino Log.
Friday, Oct. 12, Adairsville.
Saturday. Oct. 13, Acworth.
Tuesday, Oct. 16, Summerville, 11
o’clock. _
Tuesday night, Trion factory.
Wednesday, Oct. 17, LAFayette.
Friday, Oct. 19, Trenton.
Saturday, Oct. 20, Ringgold.
Tuesday, Oct. 23, Buckhannan.
Wednesday, Oct. 24, Austell.
Friday, Oct. 26, Rockmart.
Saturday, Oct. 27, Cave Springs.
Tuesday, Oct. 30, Floyd Springs.
Thursday, Nov. 1, Calhoun.
Saturday, Nov. 3, Marietta.
Monday, Nov. 5, Cartersville.
Business Manager.
Since the organization of Our
Publishing Company, with the view
of the publication of The Daily
Press and The People’s Party
Paper, Major Charles E. McGregor
has been the efficient business mana
ger of the company.
Wednesday, of last week Maj. Mc-
Gregor was elected to the state
senate from tho Nineteenth district
by the overwhelming majority of
1,300.
We congratulate Senator Mo-
Gregor.
His official position ns senator
would conflict with his duties as
business manager of Our Publishing
Company; hence, ho has resigned.
To the position of business mana
ger, Miss Lula M. Pearce has been
elected.
This position, she will fill in con
nection with those of secretary and
treasurer.
Stand By Your Daily Paper.
Now that the campaign is over we
ask our friends to remember that
The Daily Press has met their
enemies single handed and has
stemmed the tide of misrepresenta
tion which flowed from ali the dem
ocratic dailies.
Without The Daily Press we
would have been utterly helpless as
we were in 1892.
Without The Daily Press we
would never have won the splendid
position our party now occupies.
Without The Daily Press we
cannot hold what we have gained.
Friends, take more interest in
your pai.-er. Do not leave us un.
supported. En-.:onr::go us with your
aid. Give us your co operation.
We must have a- daily paper ar d
to do so you must stand by us in tho
work.
For ...i 'l March I
C mra-lcs you have made a mag
nificent advance. In spite of whole
sale frauds during tiie elections ami
the stealage siuce, the fact remains
that populism holds the vantage
ground in Georgia.
Don’t waste a m -ment in idleness,
overconfidence, or discouragement.
Don't fret about what we did not
gel.
Don’t glory too mu oh in what we
Dress the line and move right on.
Wb must strain every muscle to
win tlie Congressional races. We
can do it if you go into she fight
with the vim of 1592.
Let every man of us determine
that during the next thirty days we
will concentrate every energy we
possess to this noble work. Our
enemies are divided and discouraged;
let us be united and confident.
Compare our situation now with
what it was in 1892, and bo encour
aged. At that time we held no
party machinery, had few newspa
pers of ayy sort; had no Dailvpaper
at all; had no organization; had no
experience, and had against us the
bitter hatred and unreasoning preju
dice of a united, intrenched, and ex
perienced Democracy. •
we hold much of the elec
toral machinery ; have newspapers in
every section ; have a Daily which
shoots down a campaign lie the mo
ment its head pops up; have a com
plete organization; have a valuable
cargo of experience; have no solid
line of hostile forces to ccmbat, but
on the other hand, have in our front
only a scattered and disorganized
remnant of a demoralized and re
treating enemy. Friends, push for
ward. Let every man do his duty.
Let us have no laggards, and no
croakers.
Gather yourselves together for a
mighty effort in November, and let
us sweep this greedy gang of demo
cratic ringsters, boodlers, and recre
ants off the face of the earth.
Let us teach them that Southern
Congressman who voted down the
price of cotton and shut off the sup
ply of money must look for their re
ward, not from tho people they sold
out, but from the Wall Streeters. Let
us teach them that Congressmen
who promised to vote us “more
money,” and who redeemed the
pledge by voting us lees, cannot for
ever humbug the people they be
trayed. Comrades, be up and
doing: bo active and watchful: be
bold and determined : do your full
shrre of the work: cheer on your
neighbors restrain the imprudent
and encourage the irresolute. '
Only one more month lies before
you:—then come tho great National
elections.
As you love homo and fireside,
justice and liberty, help us lead
Georgia to the front of the reform
columns.
The West is ablaze with enthusi
asm ; let the South catch tho glow:
Nebraska, and Kansas, and Colorado,
and Nevada are taking position,—
don’t let Georgia be behind.
Shall they say in the West that
the battle was lost because the South
was asleep on the post of duty?
Shall they say in Washington that
the day was lost because there were
no soldiers in the South as true to
the stern demand of duty as were
those of the West?
Will you allow them to say that
our great campaigns waste away in
idle noise, and never make themselves
fait at the ballot box?
When your chosen leaders meet in
National Council those of tho West
must we hang our heads in shame
because Georgia has done so little?
Companions, do not put this bitter
cup to our lips!
You have the votes; see that they
are cast and see that they are
minted 1
For four long years we have fought
your battles, met your enemies, and
shared your toils.
Victory at last is in sight.
Give us thirty days of your best
work as you did in 1892, and we will
rout forever the apostate politicians
and pap suckers who are trying to
debauch the South with the policies
of John Sherman.
Our Railroad Commission.
When we consider the vast net
work of commerce, the ciashings of
conflicting interests, and the difficul
ties of arranging rates which are just
to the shipper and satisfactory to the
transportation Companies, we are
naturally inclined to imbibe a feeling
of pity for our Railroad Commission.
Knowing bow big.their job is, and
presuming that they aro trying to
master it, we find ourselves trying to
devise some method by which we
can help them on with their gigan
tic task.
But when we go to Atlanta we
become puzzled. Wo lose ourselves
in misty doubts and hazy uncer.
tain ties.
Our anxious eyes fall unon Col.
Trammel, the Pred lent of the Com
mission, and we grow ashamed of
our fears on his behalf, lie is round,
ruddy, and complacent. No line of
care plows tho furrow down his
cheek. No cloud or frown haugsyjarf
his brow. No wearied expression
troubles his calm, contemplative eve.
Ill; voice has all the smoothness of
official velvet, and in his manner is
the soft repose which murks the
Caste of Vere de Vere.
Nothing about him suggests that
the railroads aro hard to control
Nothing about him suggests conflict,
struggle, friction, or doubt.
Judging from Colonel Trammel’s
sedate and somewhat dreamy air
you would suppose that the task- of
controlling the railroads was easier
than picking up chips.
Then, there is Allen Fort. Notice
him as he bends lovingly forward to
a gooi dinner at the Kimball House;
see how fat he has grown; view the
rosy flush which gives bloom to his
handsome face.
Does he look like a man of toil
and trouble ?
Has the job of bossing the rail
roads made any havoc with his
health? Has ho found any difficulty
in dealing with a task which General
Toombs thought was going to prove
so exceedingly difficult that he left
in our constitution a clause under
which we can buy the roads if we
find it impossible to control them?
Apparently not. In his placid
countenance, in his rounded figure.
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER, ATLANTA. GA, OCTOBER 12, 1894.
fast verging to fat, toil has left no
proofs.
From fields of strife he can de
monstrate his absence by the self
evident alibi of an unscratched skin.
No scar can anywhere be seen to
show that, he , has met the enemy.
.Monopoly, and has routed it. If
there has been any meeting between
Corporate greed and Allen Fort it
was in a carpeted room, over a glass
of punch; and the etiquette of the
occasion was pitched to the high
plane of “Gentlemen of the French
Guards, you fire first.”
The other member of this singular
Railroad Commission is that lucky
citizen, Mr. Gunby Jordan, of Colum
bus.
• We have not the honor of Mr.
Jordan’s acquaintance, and therefore
we cannot say whether ho looks wor
ried or not.
It may be that Mr. Jordan’s part
of the job is to stay at home and
tote the careworn expression of a
hard worker, while the other two
march up to the treasury and draw
the $7,500 which this able trio are
supposed to earn. At any rate, Mr-
Jordan seems to find the leisure to
manage his National Bank, and Lis
railroad interest during the same
time that ha helps to “control” ail
the railroads in Georgia.
Each of these three gentlemen
draws $2,500 per annum for “con.
trolling” the transportation Compa
nies. The work is worth every dol
lar they get—if they do the woVk.
Do they do it?
If so it is wonderfully easy, and
we should all congratulate ourselves
that there is no difficulty where we
feared there was.
These gentlemen are respectfully
asked to state through our columns
bow often they meet?
Aud how long they work?
And what kind of work it is?
They are humbly asked why they
allow so many notorious deadheads
to ride on Free Passes when the
Inter-State Commerce Law forbids
it?
They aro hereby asked if they do
not ride on free passes themselves?
They are hereby asked why they
allow the small towns in Georgia to
be gouged by illegal rates in viola
tion of the “Short haul and Long
haul principle” ?
They are hereby asked if they in
tend to take no action upon the
conduct of the Southern Railway
Company in buying up competing
lines within this State in violation of
tho Constitution?
They are hereby asked whether
the advance in rates they allowed the
Companies last year ought net now
to be discontinued and the old stan
dard established- -in view of the
pitiable condition to which live cents
cotton has reduced the shippers?
Finally, they are respectfully asked
if their secret of “controlling” the
roads so easily doss not consist in
letting the roads have it all their
own way?
Who Is Running the Government ?
President Cleveland is spending
his time at Buzzard’s Bay, in Massa
chusetts, catching fish.
Secretary Carlisle is also there,
presumably to cut bait and unhook
the .fish.
Secretary Smith is in Georgia,
making what he supposes to be stump
speeches.
Secretary Lamont is in New York
helping Hill’s campaign forward.
Secretary Herbert and family are
cruising around in a government
‘vessel “inspecting” the naval stations
and the scenery of New England.
Secretary Morton is in Europe
hobnobbing with the aristocracy.
Vice-President Stevenson is in Il
linois making campaign speeches.
Mr. Eckels, Comptroller of tho
Currency, is in the West making
stump speeches.
Assistant Comptroller Mansur, has
been in North Carolina campaigning;
he is also booked for West Virginia.
Chief Jordan, of the Treasury
Department, is in Pennsylvania
making stump speeches.
Scott Wyke, Assistant Secretary
of tho Navy, is doing the same.
Commissioners Bell and Murphy
of th Pension Department are simi
larly engaged.
Asdntant Seorg’ary of State, Uhl,
is booked for campaign speeches in
Michigan.
i /ambassador Bavard, who was
John Sherman s associate in “the
I Crime of 1873,” is coming home
from London to make some Bank-of-
I En 'land speeches in New York and
the East.
All of these men are paid high sal
aries upon the supposition that they
will discharge certain duties.
With the President gone, the Cab.
inet gone, the heads of Departments
gone, and Congress gone, it is a mys-
tery how we are going to get along.
If Coxey only knew it, now is his
time to go and get on the gra-is.
Ths democratic office holder is
frightened so preciously near to
death by the young giant of Popu
lism that the question is no longer
one of saving tho grass : it is one of
saving his own bacon.
Yours Vs. Ours.
You of the Democratic party ad
mit the need of more money. You
say in your platforms’, both State
and National, that there should be
an increase of our Currency.
So say we of the Populist party.
But your plan is to have this in
crease of money to come through
State Banks of issue. Ours is to
have it come from the United States
Government.
Your plan is to have each state
settle for itself a system of issuing
notes which are to circulate a 8
money.
Ours is to have Congress select
one uniform system for the whole
Country. Your plan would result
in forty four different kinds of
money.
Ours would result in only eno
kind.
Your plan would have the volume
of notes issued to be regulated by
private greed and local influences.
Ours would require that the amount
of notes issued should ba regu
lated by the supreme law-making
power of the republic.
Your State Bank money cannot be
made legal tender, therefore is not real
money, and therefore can never pay
your taxes, your mortgages or your
notes, except by special agreement.
If your creditor should demand
“money” in payment for his debt,
your bank bills are worthless because
they are not money, not legal ten
der, and cannot be made so.
Our plan would give us legal ten
der money, “sure enough” money,
good for all taxes, and for all debts
both public aud private. i
Your plan creates a privileged
class to which you delegate the
nower to issue their due-bills and to
make the people pay interest for the
use of those due-bills. You thus
have a favored few enjoying, under
the law, the special privilege of de
riving a profit out of their debts.
Our plan proposes to do away
with privileged classes; restore to
the government the sovereign power
of issuing money; and to have this
money go straight from the govern
ment to the people without the in
tervention of any banks of issue.
Thus we put every citizen and every
business upon an equal footing, with
out special favors to any.. Your plan
leaves the business men of one state
utterly uncertain about the value of
the Bank notes issued in another. A
Georgia merchant cannot possibly
keep himself posted on the ups and
downs of forty four different sorts of
money which may vary in value ev
ery day in the week.
Our plan gives to the people a
currency 1 which they know to be as
strong as tho government—good
everywhere the flag floats, and guar
anteed to live till the government
dies.
Your plan giyes circulation to
notes which, at best, can only have
back of them the strength of one
State in the Union.
Ours gives you notes which have
back of them the combined strength
of every State in the Union—every
acre of land, every dollar’s worth of
personal property from one ocean to
the other.
Your plan has been tried time and
again, and has invariably failed. The
temptation on the part of the Bank
ers—the gentlemen who draw inter
est on what they owe—to put out
too many of the due bills has always
proved irresistible. Wild speculation
ensue, everything booms, bubbles*
and then explodes.
' Our plan has never failed. No
; dollar issued by the government and
! made a full legal tender ever fell
' one cent below the value of gold-
J The bonds of the government are
I eagerly sought and command a pre
; mium. What are they but written
’ promises backed by the strength of
i the government? If the Credit of
. tho Nation puis a premium on Bonds,
1 why could not its “fiat,” its decree,
i its law, put smaller notes at par?
Your plan, you say, is to make a
| money which will “stay at home.”
■ A money which stays at home
i simply because it is worth nothing
i outside of the state is certain!y not
a currency to bo proud of.
Our plan proposes a currency
which will stay at home or travel
abroad, just as its owner desires!
but our currency will be good
money, all the same whether
it stays at homo or travels.
We would be ashamed to offer tho
people a system of money .which is
too feeble to live on the other side of
a State boundary. We might as
well go back to beads and shells and
be done with it.
Your plan has been denounced by
every great statesman this country
ever produced.
From Jefferson down to Benton,
and from Benton down to Joe Brown
the testimony of the wise men is
unanimously against you,
Our plan was practiced by Jeffer
son, defended by Calhoun : it saved
the government in 1812, and upheld
the flag of the Union in 1861.
You try to ridicule us by saying
we want to make money by “putting
the machine to work and stamp
ing it.”
How else is money made ?
Don’t you make gold coin by set
ting the machine to work and stamp
ing it ?
Isn’t silver coin made the same
way?
Are not Bonds (which you so
mnch dote on) made the same way ?
Your plan for State Bank money
will require a “machine” in every
town; and private speculators will
say bow much in paper notes the
machine shall grine out and “stamp.’'
Our plan for National money pro
poses that the “machine” shall be
worked, as it now is, by the national
government, and that it shall
“stamp” us an amount of money reg
ulated and fixed, not by private ad
venturers and greedy speculators)
but by a law passed by Congress
and approved by the President of
the United States.
Which plan is best, yours or ours ?
Where Are the Returns?
The law says that election returns
shall be consolidated and official
statements made out by 12 o’clock
on the day after the election.
Why is it that returns cannot ba
had?
Why is it that about fifty counties
arc yet to be heard from ?
What crime is being committed by
“the men who control ?” In the Chi
cago Times appears a telegram from
Atlanta claiming that Atkinson has
carried the state by 10,000.
In the Atlanta Commercial, the
majority is put at 15,000.
In the Constitution office 20,000 is
the figure.
In the Journal office it wobbles
from 20,000 to 26,000.
What does all .this show? •
That a great crime is being per
petrated on the people by politicians.
That Hines carried the state and
that the returns are being doctored
to suit the bosses.
A few days ago a certain Judge
said cynically, “If the populist car
ried the State do you suppose we’d
be fools enough to let them have it?’’
The populists carried the State
and the Supreme Court Amendment
was defeated, but the slate had been
made up the other way—and the
slate is greater than the people.
A Hero of the Common People.
With a keen sense of paih, with a
feeling of sudden loss, we read the
news of the death of George Zeigler
of Screven county. Shot a few day ß
ago in a political difficulty, he now
joins the number of those devoted
populists who have given their lives
to the cause.
We knew him well. Away back
in the seventies when we found a
temporary home among his people,
he was one of our friends, and a
stauncher man never stood by our
side.
Big hearted, bold and true, he
warmed every hand that he touched,
and drove away doubts and misgiv
ings with a flash of his lion eyes.
No discouragement could live m
his presence: no fear could with
j stand his confidence: no call to duty
could find him unwilling: no defeat
could leave him unready to light
again.
A manlier man never cheered a
comrade, followed a leader or bore
the colors of a noble cause. With
all the strength of his Tugged na
ture he loved the principles of Pop
! ulism.
| To carry Screven county into our
! ranks was a hope of his life ; aud as
I the brave man was closing his eyes
in the eternal sleep the friends he
laved were mustering all around him
to win the victory he had longed to
win, aud had worked to win. The
brave soldier died, but the cry of
victory mingled with tho last sounds
he heard.
Never more shall we hear his
ringing voice as we meet tho gallant
mou of Screven. No more shall he
cheer us on as we form the lines and
lift tho standard of tho people.
The Harry Hotspur of the Ogee
chee rides with us no more—bis
; hand is cold and his great heart is
' still.
i God rest thee, comrade! Il was
not alone in Screven that eyes were
wet when the word came that George
Zeigler was dead.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
Hon. Joe Terrell, Attorney-Gen
eral, has been down to Meriwether
to find out why his home county
went against the dear old democratic
party.
He says the negroes did it.
Hon. Warner Hill has not yet
been heard from. He also abides in
Meriwether.
* • *
Hon. Joe James went all over the
State telling the people how to vote.
His own county of Douglas put an
accurate valuation on Joe’s advice
and went the other way. Mr. Cleve
land will perhaps think he wasted a
big mess of political pottage when
he gave the District Attorneyship to
a man who cannot carry his own
county.
» * •
Judge Hines ran ahead of the
ticket everywhere; Mr. Atkinson
ran behind his ticket everywhere.
This proves how much more wis
dom there was in the choice of Hines
by the Populists than in the choice
of Atkinson by tho Democrats.
■» • *
Hines carried the State and we
all know it. Telegraph triggery
will be submitted to this year—but
not any other year.
Mark what we say: the good men
of all parties are going to unite and
put down this Clay-Atkinson method
of swindling the people.
Tammany tricks are not going to
prosper in Georgia, If Mr. Atkin
son does not heed the rebuke which
the better element of his own party
has given him he will be treated, by
these identical men, to a sterner
treatment “bye and bye.”
* * *
Candidly now: did you ever see a
greater change in public opinion than
since last Wednesday?
Did you ever see political ties
loosen more rapidly ?
Did you ever nee old party lines
fade so fast ?
Did you ever see a bigger crop of
independent political talk?
Did you ever know a new party to
gain so much public respect and
consideration in so short a time?
A revolution ? Os course, it is a
revolution—peaceful, quiet, but pro
found and lasting.
Even the closest observer can
hardly over-estimate the tremendous
difference between Saturday and
Wednesday on a comparison between
Populism and Democracy.
# * *
Atkinson brings himself out on
top—at the expanse of his party and
its future. Hines brings his party
out on top—assured of its present
and its future.
Atkinson has sown discord and di
vision. His personal ambition and
his reckless methods have disrupted
his party and scattered it into war
ing factions which impatiently bide
the time when they may knife each
other.
. Hines comes out of the fray a
moral victor. His party united, ag
gressive and confident: his campaign
a wonder of cleanliness and good
temper; his friends more devoted)
arid his enemies more respectful.
He knows he has won the light,'
and submits to a fraud which he can
sec as it progresses, rather than ap
ply a remedy worse than the dis
ease.
* » *
After deducting clerk hire and of
fice rent, the populist campaign fund
amounted to less than S6OO.
Wc made this magnificent fight on
less money than Steve Clay’s Free
pass privileges on the Railroads were
worth.
We paid our way on the trains.
The democratic leaders went as
dead-heads at the public expense.
Not a dollar was spent by us for
whisky, for votes, nor for any other
unworthy purpose. Wo spent our
S6OO in paying traveling expenses of
our speakers; in sending out news
papers and pamphlets; and in post
age on correspondence.
Beyond this we spent nothing.
# * *
A cleaner campaign was never
made.
Where did we get the S6OO ?
From voluntary subscriptions
among the Populists of Georgia.
The National Committee was un
able to send us a dollar.
The Silver League did not send us
a dollar.
The Republican party did not con
tribute a dollar, nor would it have
been accepted if offered.
We were determined to make a
i campaign which should be absolutely
' honest—and we did it.
* * *
I The net result of the Campaign is
that Georgia democracy stands dis
credited in the eyes of the people
everywhere. The prestige of its in
vincibility is broken. Its disordered
and shattered ranks reel to coyer
under the protection of their news
papers and their office-holders. Out
side of these breastworks the dear
old party docs not venture to throw
even a picket line.
We have smashed them in Carroll
—as purely a white county as any
in this Slate.
We have smashed them in Polk
as perfectly a representative county
as any in the South.
We have routed them in Greene
in spite of Uncle Bob McWhorter;
and Charley McGregor is now care
fully drying, in front of his wigwam,
the gory scalps of those splendid
warriors, John Hart and Hal Lewis.
Wilkes county finds herself unable
to repeat the atrocious political crime
by which Milton 'lleese, in 1892,
stole Caleb Ramsey’s seat in the
Senate; and thus the 29th is to be
rapresented in the Senate in 1894
by Claiborne Sneed, one of the
worthiest men this commonwealth
ever produced.
* • 0
The stealing goes merrily on. Ef
fingham county has beam taken out
of our column, just as Pike was, by
the illegal action of the “men who
control.”
The law says election returns shall
not be thrown out for technical defects
but this law is construed to apply
only to returns which are democratic.
Populist returns must not have an
i undottod or a t uncrossed—else out
they go.
« * •
If ever a man received a rebuke
from the people which ought to cut
like a lash, Atkinson got it Wed
nesday.
His tricksters may continue to
obey telegraphic orders to steal pop
ulist counties ,but the plain fact's of
the case cannot bo wired out of
existence.
Mr. Atkinson stands condemned
by the honest people of Georgia, and
he knows it.
* * »
Hon. Wm. Walden of Glasscock
county made tho following statement
in a recent speech:
“He said he carried $2,500 of his own
money to the Georgia Railroad Bank
for deposit two or three years ago and
was informed that, bis money would be
taken on deposit, but not one cent of
interest would he receive.
He could not understand this and in
quired arouud town to know why this
was and was informed that they could
get all the money needed from tho
slate treasury without Interest,thereby
saving the cost of paying interest on
individual deposits.”
How can we be surprised that the
many are poor, while the few are
rich, when the great state of Geor
gia empties the pockets of .the many,
by high tax rates, and then gives the
money to a few favored bankers to
use free of interest ?
* * *
Examine the financial reports of
the last issue of the New k ork
World, a democratic paper.
'You will see that the National
Banks of that. City are using $14,-
000,600 of your tax money free of
interest.
How much the other Banks have
we do not know.
During Cleveland’s former admin
(intration he let them have the free
use of $58,000,000 of your money.
It is a fearful outrage upon law
and justice to tax your money out'of
your pocket in order that tho pock
ets of a few pot Banks may have the
use of it.
But you cheerfully stand it be
cause the crime is democratic.
* * *
It is a most cheering sign that a
powerful public sentiment in favor
of honest elections has been aroused
when the Atlanta Constitution fear,
lessly denounces the manner in
which tho “men who control” have
been stealing populist counties by
throwing out precinct returns upon
technical defects wilfully made by
the democratic managers. In every
instance where we have had to sub
mit to this outrage, the managers
who committed the mistakes were
democrats, and the men who took
advantage of them were democrats-
In no instance have returns favora
ble to democrats been thrown
for any defects whatsoever. Honest
people of all parties are getting very •
sick of this rascality.
* * *
Hon. John Temple Graves and
Hon. Marion Harris have been en
couraged in their manly protest
against the methods of “tlie men
who control." May their gallant
tribe increase until there shall be no
man in Georgia who dares to issue
.such campaign orders as “elect At
kinson delegates regardless of cost.’
Sketches of Roman History, by Hon.
Thos. E. Watson, sold at this office