Newspaper Page Text
WATSON’S SPEECH. |
(Continued from Sixth Page.)
Hanna, the man who is said to have
paid Mr. Cochran SSOOO for making that
speech, and weeping over the woes of
the laboring man. When he says that
there never was a time when a dollar
would buy more than it buys now, I
tell the laborers he has made the strong
est possible argument that can be made j
on their side of the question. That
dollar buys cotton that country labor j
produces. It buys wheat and corn that
country labor produces. It buys also
the shoes that city labor made. It buys
the cloth that city labor made and it •
buys the flour that city labor ground. .
If a dollar will buy more food and more !
clothing than ever before, then that ,
dollar has got a bigger control oyer
labor’s products and over the laboring -
masses than it ever bad before in the j
history of the w’orld. (Cheers.) In
stead of being an argument against a
rise cf prices that is an argument for it.
Instead of being an argument in favor
of the laborer it is an argument against
him. How is the laborer to be bene
fited by a rise in prices? A rise in
prices means an increase in the amount
of money in circulation. It means an
increase in the amount of money
invested. It means more in
dustries to awaken and develop our
dormant resources. It means more
railroads binding our prairies with
bands of steel to the great commercial
centers. Labor being a commodity
just like any other commodity and j
regulated by the some great law of sup- |
ply and demand, it necessarily follows ,
that there are better wages or prices
when there is a larger demand. M here i
is the man who does not know that in '
1866 and in 1867 laborers got more for i
their labor than they do now ? Every
railroad was being pushed to its utmost
capacity, the whirl of spindles made
music in every mill, the song of the
reaper made melody in every field, and
the whole country was prosperous.
Labor had more employment and bet
ter wages in 1867 than it had ever be
fore or since. Ain’t that so? (Odes
of ‘Yes, that is right.’) Then they be
gan to destroy our money, There began
to be a greater supply of labor than j
there was any demand for. The result :
was that labor went under with a
jump. When labor was idle prices had
to take a tumble. Where one laborer
was working on half wages half of the
laborers made no wages at all. Fall
ing prices bankrupted the merchants,
banks to suspend and
i/ ' - ■■■* ~r * 5 •
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‘C s r--i.•••.'. !
. ISh ■
•’ :i " 11 1 e;in
':)<■ t hr
pel
to ■Who the pledges they
more where it ought to be with
Mmore money in circulation among the
people. The manufacturer would sell
Ins goods because the merchant would '
have the wherewith to pay for them.
The demand for goods would increase
and the ’demand for labor would grow
and the. prices for it would go up.
“Mr. McKinley asks : ‘Where’s the
working man who wants to look in a
market report every morning to ascer
tain the value of the dollar that he
has received for his toil?’ When has
any working man ever had a dollar of
that kind ? When has any working
man had to look in a newspaper to find
out the value of his wages ? The labor
ing man’s dollar buys as much as a gold
dollar. (Cheers.) No man in this whole
crowd has got a gold dollar. You
could not rake up enough gold money
from all these thousands of people to
pay my hotel bill. (Laughter.) Let the ;
laboring man be - paid in any kind of a
dollar as long as i t isas goodas any other
dollar, ar d will do for him what any
other dollar would do. Give me plenty
of green backs and I will be as happy
as anybody you ever saw. I don’t care
what’s the price of corn. (Laughter
and cheers ) It is as good for me and
my needs as any other dollar.
“Mr. McKinley asks the question,
why don’t the capitalist invest his
inonej 7 ? I answer, because it pays him
better to hold it. It pays him better
because the price of gold is going up
faster than the legal interest would be
on any investment he could make. If
you have got any gold just sit on the
lid of the chest and watch it grow, it
will go up because the law makes it go
up and the syndicates owning the gold
made the law. The price of gold will
keep on going up till you break the ’
trust by making more money. (Cheers.) I
Make the government open its mints
and go to making money. (Cheers.) l|
have heard men talking about the gold I
standard. They said the farmers, labor- I
ers, merchants and everybody ought l
to be for the gold standard. God for- '
’ give them, they know not what they :
do. (Cheers.) They are perfectly hon
est. They are as honest about it as
you or I, but they are dreadfully mis
taken. (Laughter.) What would the
gold standard mean if adopted into law?
That you can’t pay your debts with sil
ver money or with paper money. That
you can’t pay them in anything but gold
money. Don’t you know that under
the gold standard and your merchants
were compelled to pay their debts in
gold coin that every one of them would
be bankrupt before night? There is
rot a bank in the Southern States that
could stand the pressure. You could
not pay your debts if you had to pay
them in gold. Have you got any gold?
Das your neighbor got any ? Who has
got it ? The Belmonts an 1 the Roths
child* and the Morgans, and they want
yen to come under their whip and make
you beg at their hands the gold with
which to pay your debts. If the gold
standard is adopted we will be a nation
of the most abject serfs the world ever
saw. (Cheers.)
A voice—‘We will get up a little fight
on that’
Watson—“No danger. There is not
going to be any fighting. I believe in
the final triumph of right. I have not
yet lost confidence in the people of this
republic. (Voice —‘Hurrah for Wat
son!’) 1 believe that those who would
establish the gold standard will them
selves speedily realize the dreadful
abyss into which they would plunge
themselves, their friends and their
neighbors, and would help to secure
the necessary legislation that will re
store prosperity to this countrj’ and
help ns in the cause of more money and
less taxes.
“Can you remedy this situation by
electing McKinley and Hobart? (Loud
cries of ‘No, no, no.’) If there is a man
here who believes that these things
can be remedied by electing McKinley
and Hobart let him hold up his hand.
(One hand went up ) One, thank God.
(Great cheers.) When I say thank God,
I simply express my pleasure at seeing
the gentleman on my right in such a
hopeless minority. He is just as much
entitled to his opinion as I am to mine.
He is going to be mistaken in his vote,
because McKinley and Hobart can not
remedy this situation. They do not
even propose a remedy. They simply
propose to enact into law something
that is now a mere strained construc
tion and ruling of law.
“Can you remedy the situation by
electing Bryan and Sewall? (Loud
cries of ‘No, no, no,’ from all over the
hall.) Are you certain of that ? (Loud
cries of‘You bet we are.’) I say no.
Why? Because Mr. Sewall represents
that element in the Democratic Tarty
which is exerting itself to the utmost
to tie Bryan’s hands so that he can not
carry out his contract. It can not be
done with Bryan and Sewall, because
you can’t have Bryan and Sewall.
(Laughter.) Mr. Sewall can not carry
his own family. (Laughter.) When
ever my own son takes the stump and
begins to make speeches against me
like Mr. Sew all’s son is doing against
him I will get off the ticket and crawl
under the bed and hide myself. Mr.
! Sewall can not carry the ward in which
,he lives. He can not carry the town in
which he lives. He can not carry the
State in which he lives. He is a wart
on the party. He is the knot on the
log. (Loud laughter.) He is a dead
weight to the ticket. Every man ought
to know that if Mr. Bryan is to be
elected he will be elected by the votes
which the People's Party gives him. If
he carries Nebraska, where he lives, it
will be the Tom Watson Pbpulists who
will carry it for him. (Loud cheering.)
If he carries Kansas it will be the Pop
ulists who carry it for him. If he car
ries lowa it will be the Populists who
carry it for him. If he carries the great
State of Texas it will be the Populists
who give it to him. And I put it to
you Democrats if you want our votes
don’t you think you ought to tote fair
with us? You say, ‘let’s go into copart
nership,' but you want to be both part
ners. Why, even in that kind of a
copartnership where the law says that
! man and wife are one, but it takes two
to make the bargain, and yet you Demo
crats who can’t get along without our
1,800,000 votes say that our partnership
ought to consist of the same two part
ners, and you want to be both. Well,
we want to fuse with you, we don’t
want to swallow you and we don't in
tend that you shall swallow us. (Great
cheering.) You ask us to take Watson
off the ticket. Why? Would you be
so blind as to defeat Mr. Bryan by tak
ing Watson off of his ticket ? Even in
the height of political passion and pre
judice why would you deteat Mr. Bry
an by demanding that Watson come off
the ticket ? The moment I got off the
ticket there would be thousands of pro
tests from people who would not con
sent to any such arrangement. (Cries
of ‘No Watson, no Bryan.’) I have no
ill will against any man that lives. I
cherish no animosity because of past
associations. I came to Texas not to
f-tir up strife between men, but to try
and make peace among all of our peo
ple. 1 come to speak to the Democrats
of Texas to urge harmony between the
Democrats and the Populists. If Mr.
Bryan is elected the Democrats must
realize that it can not possibly be done
without the Populist vote. Tie Popu
lists have gone as far as they could go.
We went outside of our party to give a
Democrat the first place on our ticket.
We could have gone no further. No
fair minded Democratcould have asked
any more.
“We don't want to destroy the Peo
ple’s Party in this country. If 1 came
off of the ticket it means the death of
the Populists Party. If you arc honest
in demanding silver legislation you
should not want the party to d ie. Where
would the s'lver cause have been in lt(H
and in 1895 if it had not been for the
People’s Party ? Ask somebody else to
kill the People's Party but don’t ask
me. I sat by its crad e. 1 have fought
its battles, I have supported it princi
ples since its organization. I have taken
pride in its growth, it % sorrows have
been my sorrows and don’t ask me as- |
ter all of my service with the People’s ;
Party to kill it now. I am going to
stand by it till she dies and I want no ;
man to say that I was the man who
stabbed it to the heart. The People's
Party must never die. It has done too
much good to die. It was the People’s
Party, my friends, that made the Demo
crats come to taw, (Cheers.) We were
a coal of fire on the terrapin’s back and
it never had any idea of traveling until
it felt the force of the fire. For the
last four years we have been shooting
atone another. You now say let’s
quit it, and make friends. We say, All
right; We are willing. Then you say
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER, ATLANTA, GA., SEPTEMBER 18, 1896.
to u.s, ‘Hand us your gun' and we reply
‘Please excuse us.’ (Laughter.) We have
been showing them in the last four
years what we could do. We don't ask
the Democrats to throw down the r
muskets and when they ask us to give
up our guns we say ‘please excuse us.'
Vou keep yours and wc will keep our'n.
If you had both the guns the tempta
tion to shoot might be too strong to re
sist. VVe can’t let you get the drop on
us that way. 11 you mean to be fair
you ought not- to want us to give up our
guns. You would want us to keep them
just as you keep yours. Your leaders
have fooled us iu the past just as they
have fooled you in the past and there
is no reason why they may not do it
again. If the People's Party were dead
the old leaders might get in again and
then where would we b? ? Just where
Moses was when the light went out.
Sewall has got to come down. He
brings no votes to Bryan, be drives
voters away from Bryan. I would
bring votes to Bryan and bring thou"
sands of them. Sewall can come down
without hurting his party. I have got
to stand on the ticket where my friends
placed me. It would disband my party
injure the cause of silver, and hand me
down to infancy as a coward or a traitor
(Great cheering) I can't come down. You
may try to run me off, but I am going
to fight before you do it. lam willing
to go into partnership with you, but I
don’t want any Jonah and the whale
business, with yon playing the whale.
You might forget to do what the whale
did with .Jonah. We might never get
out any more. Sewall is a national
banker. He does not have the man
hood and patriotism which my friend
Reed has, who is a national banker,
and who felt the cause so deeply and
so earnestly that he resigned from the
bank in order to help us make this
fight. (Loud cries from all over the hall
of ‘Reed, Reed get up and show your
self,’ in response to which Mr. Reed
arose and bowed.) Reed is almost as
pretty as I am. Because the People’s
Party represents the laborers and the
patriotism of this country you can not
kill it. Mr. Sewall is a national bank,
er and therefore out of touch with his
people. Mr. Sewall is a railroad king
and therefore out of touch with the
people. Mr. Sewall is a bondholder
and t herefore out of touch with the peo
ple. And I make bold here to say that
Mr. Bryan himself has laid down the
rule which, if carried out, will take Mr.
Sewall off the ticket. He said in New
York in a public speech that a candi
date running upon a platform should
not only indorse every plank in that
platform but should indorse every sen
tence and every word of it. Apply that
rule to Mr. Sewall and Mr Sewall would
get off while I stepped on. Mr. Bryan
must have meant that, let him deny it
if he didn't. That construction has
been put on his words in Georgia and
has been put on it by Democrats. It is
the only construction that can be put
on it. Mr. Sewall does not stand
squarely on the platform. Watson
dot s. Let Sewall scoot and Watson ar
id e. He should remember the contract
between us which 1 suppose is binding
on both parties.
“I understand that there is a feeling
here of resentment against Mr. Bryan
because he has not accepted our nomi
nation and because he does not accept
me as his running mate. You must
realize that Mr. Bryan’s position is one
of great difficulty, and you must realize
that he can only act when it becomes
absolutely necessary to act It was
not absolutely necessary for him to act
until the People’s Party hud done its
duty. Our national committee has not
done its duty, but I pledge you my
word that it shall do its duty. Senator
Butler, the chairman of the committee,
has given me his word of honor that the
notification of Bryan and Watson wiil
take place not later than the 15th of
this month, ana when Bryan is notified
he will accept, don’t you doubt it. Do
you suppose that he can afford, to in
sult 1.800,000 voters? Has he got money
to burn? Has he got votes to throw
away ? If the gentleman doesn’t want
tho-e I,Boo,ooovotes why did Senator
Jones go to St. Louis and beg for them.
(A voice—‘will you accept?’) Yes. I
will accept. (Cheers). I tell you this:
I see no reason why any man in this
campaign could not at this time say
precisely where he stands and which
way he fs going and what lie intends
to do. ’ will tell you what, as leader
of the People’s Party I intend to have.
I not only give you my statement that
I will accept, but I pledge you my word
that Bryan will make a statement, and
he will accept. lam not going to be
made a foot mat for some politician to
wipe his feet on. If anybody
thinks I am they are mistaken
in the man. We are willing to
say to the Democratic leaders we
will stand by you in this fight loyalty
and bravely, taking our fortunes as you
lake yours, go up or down with you,
but you have got to treat us like men.
I am a Southern man like you, my
father was a confederate soldier. I
was born to the soil just as you were
born, and I am willing to come with
you, but you must respect me, respect
my party and respect the section which
1 represent. (Cheers.) Just as well talk
plain about these things. There have
been some Populists who felt called
upon to get mad at the insult which
Senator Jones had hurled at the Popu
list party and its nominees when he
said we could go back to the ‘niggers’
where we belonged, but I advise you
as I advised the boys in Georgia, to
stand by the St. Louis platform and
the nominees of the St. Louis conven
tion. You must do it. lam going fron
here to Kansas and ask of the West
that it stand by the ticket as it should
do; that it take down the Bryan and
Sewall electors and put up Bryan and
Watson electors. We \vantthe contract
carried out there. No Bryan and Se
wall for us. (Cheers.) lam going to
succeed if I can. Let's make the same
rule apply here in Texas. Stick to your
Bryan and Watson electors. (Cheers.)
Have no Sewall on them, have no Mc-
Kinley. Don't put McKinley on your
ticket, don’t you do it. (A voice
“ Chop high if your lose your hatchet.")
Hew to the line no matter where the
chips fall.
“Boy's, let's be honest and let's be
consistent and let's practice what we
preach. If we support Sewall we will
not be practicing what we preach, and
if we support McKinley we will be do
ing the same thing. (Cheers.) But I
must stop. (Cries of “No, No.*’) Let
me say in conclusion (A voice—“ Tell
about Indianapolis.” What about In
dianapolis? Let every man manage bis
own funeral. (Yells, laughter and
cheers.) I appeal to all the people to
vote for the Peoples party in this cam
paign. Ours is the only party whose
representatives in congress have voted
in accordance with the pledges they
made. Ours is the only party that
preaches the Same doctrine East and
West, North and South, country and
town, to blacks and to whites. Ours is
the only party that makes war upon
class rule and special privileges. All
of you who stand for good government
according to the Jeffersonian rule
stand for us, and the Jeffersonian rule
of equal and exact justice to all men, to
the black as well as to the white, to the
strong as well as to the weak, to capi
tal as well as to labor, to town as well
as to country, to East as well as to
West, equal and exact justice to all
men and special privileges to none.”
(Wild yells.)
Then followed an enthusiast! • hand
shaking with the Populist nominee
which lasted for fully fifteen
minutes. The crowd which surged
around him was so large that be had to
get into the middle of a party of men
who fought and pushed their way to
the outside, where a carriage was in
waiting. Even at the carriage door
there were a large number who detain
ed him long enough to shake his hand.
Many even ran after the hack and
shouted words of approval to the
doughty little Georgian.
THE HONOR ROLL.
The Alliances of the following
counties hive resolved to invest their
portion of the State Alliance sand in
stock of Onr Publishing Company:
Harris County Alliance.
Miller County Alliance.
Cherokee County AHiaica.
Twiggs County Alliance.
Mitchell County Alliance.
Tattnall County Alliance.
Taylor County Alliance.
Meriwether county Alliance.
Newton County Alliance.
Red Bud Sub-Alliance, Gordon
County.
♦Jefferson County .Alliance.
Taliaferro County' Alliance.
Clayton County Alliance.
Forsyth County Alliance.
Douglas County Alliance.
Morgan County Alliance.
Pine Mountain Alliance, Douglas
County.
Fulton County Connell Sub-
Alliance.
Johnson County Alliance.
Rockdale County Alliance.
Laurens County Alliance.
Banks County Alliance.
Clarke County Alliance.
Harris County Alliance.
Washington County Alliance.
Early County Alliance.
Campbell County Alliance.
Laurens County Alliance.
Chattoga County Alliance.
Butts County Alliance.
Schley County Alliance.
Brooks County Alliance.
Richmond County Alliance.
Lowndes County Alliance.
McDuffie County Alliance.
Habersham County Alliance.
Troup County Alliance.
Milton County Alliance.
Cobb County Alliance.
Terrell County Alliance.
Paulding County Alliance.
Colquitt County Alliance.
Bullock County Alliance.
Floyd County Alliance.
Quitman County Alliance.
Jasper County Alliance.
Emanuel County Alliance.
Hancock County Alliance.
Other counties will be published
as they act.
The Missori World,
Published Weekly at Chillicothe,
Mo., is a People’s Party Paper
that gives the general news and
makes a specialty of Populist news,
correspondence and speeches. It is
not a local paper but is as good for
one state as another. It circulates
in every State in the Union. It is
four pages, 8 twenty-four inch col
umns to the page. Price 50 cents
per year (52 numbers). Sample copy
free. Address.
Missoubi World, Chillicothb, Mo.
We will send Thb Wobld and
Pkoplb’s Party Parbs both 1 vear
for sl.lO.
News anil Job Outfit for $250.
To parties contemplating starting
a paper I can furnish an outfit con
sisting of 1 nine column hand press,
1 stone, 1 job press and a lot of
newspaper and job type, etc., all for
$250. All in good order and ready
for business. Write me it you want
anything in this line. Address,
C. C. Martin, Louden, Tenn.
THE IDEAL LAWN FENCE
Wt‘ a'so manufacture many other
designs in Wire, Wrought. Iron and
Steel Picket, for Lawns. Parks, Farms,
Cemeteries and Grave Lots. Tne
cheapest and best. State your wants
and let us quote .you prices. Catalogue
free. We nay the freight. Mention
this paper.
GATE CITY FENCE WORKS
Atlanta, Georgia.
CHEAP MACHINERY.
New and second hand Engines. Gins
Saw, Corn, Grist and Feed Mills,
'Threshers, Shingle Machines, Planers,
Water-wheels, etc. Sample, prices of
outfits. 1-6 h. n. Skid Engine, GO saw
g n outfit and power press *3OO. 1-4 to
6 h. p. skid engine, 45 or 50saw gin out
fit and hand press S2OO. 1-4 to 6h. p.
Frick Engine on wheels and 24 in ext
ender Farquar Thresher $l5O, etc. We
manufacture different sty les of Feeders
and Condensers and fit them to any
make of gins, and repair all kinds of
Gins cheaply with latest improvements
and keep gin and other repair mate
rials on hand. We exchange machin
ery, and repair, or sell on commission.
H. N. CRAMER & CO.
555 Marietta Street. Atlanta. Ga
—)THE(—
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(Established 1879.)
The
Leading w
People’s Party Paper.
“Equal Rights For All, Special Privi
leges For None.”
An 8-page 6-column weekly paper,
containing the best thought on all re
form questions.
Among its many able articles maybe
mentioned those from the pen of
J. CLARK RIMPATH,
IL 0. FLOWER,
IION. JOHN DAVIS,
SENATOR TILLMAN,
SENATOR TELLER.
Terms of Subscription in Advance:
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The Nonconformist and the Peo
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ITS A LIVE PAPER.
Is Coxey’s Twice-a-Week Sound
Money.
Every number has a great let
from Washington, and once a week
a cartoon from tha pen of Heston the
Nasby in reform journalism. By
• pecial arrangement we can furnish
Souijd Money with this paper one
year for $1.25, the best combination
for the money offered anywhere.
Three papers a week fora year. You
may not agree with Coxey, but his pa
per “is all right” and will make pop
ulist votes, if that’s what you are
after (we are), you will only need to
read one number to be fully con
vinced.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
PIEDMONT AIB IOTB,
Condensed Schedule of Passenger Trains* i
VoB |F«t.Ml| No. 18 I
Northbound. N 3 ‘ B No. 36 No. 12 Ex. j
June 14, 1836. Daily. *>aily Sun.
Lv. Atlanta, ('. T. p qq m U 15 p 750 J 4 351’
“ Atlanta, E.T. 1 qq D 12 15 a 850 a 5 35p
“ Norcross 12 56 a 933 a ' 6 28 p
M Buford. *' ‘' .. • ■ 1018 a 7 P
“ C4ainesville... 228 p 201 a!0 42 n <™p
* Lula. 2 48 p 2 23 a 1105 a J J2p
M Cornelia 246 a 'll 27 8 P
“ Mt. Airy . . 2 50 »ill 30 a 8
“ £> ccoa .- 3 35 p 3 17 ft 1153
M Westminster 3 48 a'l2 20p*
** Seneca 4 is p 4 05 al2 41 p
Central .. 445 433 a 120 p
“ Greenville 530J525 a216 p
Spartanburg, f, 13 p 6 18 322 p
“ GalTneys 6 53 a 411 p
“ Blacksburg .. 708 p 708 a 430 p
“ King’s Mt. 7 31 a 500 p
“ Gastonia 753 a 528 p
Ar. Charlotte.... 309 p 333 a 6 20p
“ Danville 12 00 a 1 30 pH 25 «p
Ar. Richmond .. 600 a 640 p 600 a
Ar. Washington.. 342 a 940
“ Baltm’ePßß. 8 05 a 11 25 p
“ Philadelphia. 10 25 a 3 (X) a
** Kew York ... 12 53 m 6 20
Ves. Fst.Ml N 0.17
Southbound. No. 37 No. 35 M 5 ’ 14 Ex.
Dally. Daily. Dail y Suu.
Lv. N. Y.,P. R. R. 4 30 pl 2 15 a
“ Philadelphia. 655 p 350 a
“ Baltimore.... 9 20 p 6 22 a
“ Washington.. 10 43 p 11 15 a
Lv. Richmond 2 00 a 12 55 p 2 00a ■
Lv. Danville .. 550a605 pG4O a
“ Charlotte . 9 85 alO 55 pl 2 20 p
M Gastonia 11 30 p 1 10 p
“ King’s Mt.. 135 p
“ Blacksburg 10 49 al2 09 a 203 p
M Gaffneys 12 24 a 220 p
“ Spartanburg. 11 37 a 1 09 a 305 p
“ Greenville... 12 28 p 150 a 440 p
** Central 115 pi 2 85 a 540 p
“ Seneca . 1 35 p 2 58 a 606 p
“ Westminster 1 622 p
“ Toccoa... 2 18 p 3 50 a 658 p..... .
“ Mt. Airy 740 p 6 25n
- Cornelia 4 21 a 745 p 635 a
•» Lula. 3 13 pl 4 39 a 812 p 657 a
•• Gainesville . 381 p 457 a 886 p 720 a
*• Bufordl 907 p 748 a
M Norcross 943 p 8a
Ar. Atlanta. E.T. 4 55 p 6 20 a 10 30 p 930 a
Lv. Atlanta. < . T.i 355p5 20 a 930 p 830 a
“A” a. m. “P ’ p. m. “M” noon. “N” night.
Nos. 37 and 38—Washington and Southwest
ern Vestibule Limited. Through Pullman
Sleepers between New York and New Orleans,
Via Washington. Atlanta and Montgomery, and
also between New York and Memphis, via
Washington, Atlanta and Birmingham. This
train also carries Richmond-Augusta sleep' ■»
cars be ween Danville and Charlotte. Fi 0
Class thoroughfare coach between Washing!
end Atlanta. Dining ears serve all meals en
route.
Nos. 35 and 36-Unitod States Fast. Mail. Pull
man sleeping cars between New York, Atlanta
and New Orleans.
Nos. 11 and 12—Pullman sleeping cars between
Richmond and Danville.
The Air Line Bello train, Nos. 17 and 18, will,
from June Ist to October Ist, 1896, be operated
between Atlanta and Mt. Airy, Ga., daily ex
cept Sunday.
W. H. GREEN, J. M. CULP.
Gen’l Supt., Traffic M g’r.,
Washington, D. 0. Washington, D. C.
W. A. TURK, 8. H. HARDWICK,
Gen’l Pass. Ag’t., Ajw’tGon” ’om. Ag’t.,
Washington, D, 0. Atl&utn, GA
DO YOU WANT
A New Stove or Range? A Pistol?
A Cane Mill? Or Any Hardware?
A Cider Press? Or Any Tinware?
A Gin Belt? Or Any Wooden ware?
A Shot Gan ? Or anything in the Hardware line?
If you do > ou can Save Money by buyingfrom
Culver & Corbin*
New Coleman Building.
MJYCON, - - - . GEORGIA.
CHAS. F. BAKER. JERRY T. SMITH.
BAKER & SMITH, ■
COTTON FACTORS.
Fireproof Warehouse, Comer Reynolds and Campbell Streets.
Augusta, Georgia.
for BUCKEYE CULTIVATORS.»
CONSIGNMENTS of Cotton Solicited.
Personal Attention Given to all Business.
New York World,
~ THRICE-A-WEEK EDITION I
18 Pages a Week I 156 Papers a Year ’
IS LARGER than any weekly or semi-weekly paper published, and is the
only important Democratic “weekly’’ published in New York City. Three .
times as large as the leading Republican weekly of New York City. It will be
of especial advantage to you during the Presidential Campaign, as it is pub
lished every other day, except Sunday, ami lias all the freshness and timeliness
of a daily. It combines all the news with a long list of interesting depart- '
ments, unique features, cartoons and graphic illustrations, the latter being a
specialty. All these improvements have been made without any increase in
the cost, which remains at one dollar per year.
We W 9l send this unequale
ana the Peoples Party Paper io ’be ~t
one year for-- - - - - - V
The regular subscription price of the two papers is $2.00.
WATSOH S BOOKS
NOT A REVOLT (CAMPAIGN BOOK), . $ 25
Five Copies, ... .... 100
RAILROAD QUESTION, 10
Ten Copies. - - 75
STORIES OF ANCIENT ROME 10
Ten Copies,7S
MILLEDGEVILLE SPEECH, per copy 05
THE STORY OF FRANCE, Vol. 1. Cloth-bound, per copy - -1 00
Can be had of
OTTZi 30.,
Atlants, Gsorgip
.;i6 to i..
Silver Army.
Great Campaign Document.
The “SILVER
SUPPLEMENT’
To the FARM, FIELD AND FIRESIDE,
the most complete instructive and con
vincing- discussion of the silver question
ever published.
We Will Send from
One to 10,000 Free
Send us your name with stamp to pay postage.
w-5 pv zr j we will send tbe Farm, Field and
a OS* Z Fireside until Jan. 1,1897. Fresh
1 s ii ver ma tter every week
FARM, FIELD AND FIRESIDE,
CHICAGO ILL.