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V'/ ' an k s
A grW deceived I
into
on Stat<^H|||sWKr repealed it would
afford thJUptry all the relief need
ed. Such an idea is very erroneous,
as it would simply he the privileges
of the National banks extended to
the States. The entire system is
wrong from the fact that it is based
upon special privileges and bonds.
We want money that will be put Tn
circulation without having to be bor
rowed. 9
Our people have borrowed 100
much already. Any increase in
the National bank circulation, or
State banks, ffinder the same system,
would be of very little benefit to the
people.
We want United States treasury
notes put in circulation by paying all
demands of the Government, and
when once in circulation they belong
to the one who “hustles” for
them.
Banks don’t run any’ industrial en
terprises, to put their money in cir
culation. They loan money to others,
* and that is the only way their money
gets in circulation. Suppose we
start a State bank in our town ; how
will their new currency get in circu
lation ? It will only go out as it is
loaned out.
When the notes mature, won’t it
have to go right back into the bank
in payment?
Won’t it carry more back than
went out ? Os course, it will carry
back interest with the principal, and
then if some other man don’t borrow
it, oi' the first borrower make another
note, it will remain idle in bank, and
we will have less money in circula
tion than we had before.
When the silver mine owner car
ries his silver to the mint, and coins
it into dollars, he pays it out to the
miners, who in turn pay it out in
trade, and it goes out into circula
tion and belongs to the people.
Not so with the bank notes. When
the governor endorses them, they
are turned over to the bankers, and
not paid out to no one except as
they' are loaned. The governor can
not get a dollar of it without borrow
ing it. Now let us take into consid
eration the fact that not one dollar
of paper currency is now issued, nor
has been in twenty-five years, that
goes into circulation except as it is
loaned. We cannot readily under
stand why every banker who issues
money wants the coinage of silver
stopped. The people have no money
except coin, and the three hundred
and fifty millions of treasury notes
that was not retired after the war.
The balance belongs to the National
banks, and whenever they think the
people’s collatjetal not good they
stop loaning, and then the money
stops circulating, as it has in the last
six months.
Let us suppose for il’f-Stration, that
the people had one billion dollars in ;
coir., and.it rOj}Wed two billions .to
■ ao'*.irt» busily fedaKlry. Tne
other billion <Wml Lave to be sup
plied with paper, and the governor
instead of issuing and paying its ob
ligation in this paper money, and
thus getting it in circulation, issues
bonds to pay its obligations, and gives
the banks the privilege of issuing
that billion of dollars, and puling it
in circulation by loaning to the peo
ple.
Now we start out even. The
people have one billion dollars (just
half enough) to do their business, the
banks have the other half, to loan the
people. Now take into consideration
the fact that every dollar loaned by
the banks carries one dollar and
twelve cents (on an average) at the
end of each year, and any schoolboy
can tell what will become of the
people’s billion. It will in a few
years be in the banks with the other
billion, and the people will be just
as they are now, completely at the
mercy of banks.
That’s our financial system; and
that’s what’s the matter with “ Han
nah” just now. The chartering of
State banks would just simply be an
extension of the National system
that has brought us to our deplora
ble condition.
W. F. Smith.
Flovilla, Ga,
CAMPBELL COTNTY ALLIANCE
Red Oak, Gd., Oct. 8.
Ecitor People’s Party Paper :
Please publish the following res
olutions and oblige:
Resolved, By the Campbell Coun
ty Alliance that we reccommend our
present Representative, Hon. Joseph
L. Latham, to use his influence at
the approaching session of the Gen
eral Assembly of Georgia to have
that body memorialize Congress to
pass a law for the free coinage of sil
, ver at the ratio of 16 to 1.
That we, the Farmer’s Alliance of
Campbell county urge our Repre
sentative, the Hon. Joseph L. Latham
to use his influence and vote against
any future appropriation for the
Georgia Military Encampment, since
we believe it a useless waste pub
lic funds. 4k
S. B.
WANTS A
K-li’or Poi-i.il's l'.\» i I’u-hh
party
are the
luok. Congress is
str.-i: oiieu tin' i’opiiii
r.lNi:n paper.-, Hn'lu.jM®
h| e, J ( ;ia.
I' has lol',: hern cCC'-C 1
ran I : /C.,,..■
- J , iie.. o’ . iJN ' ' u "' ?
ai l nil p ilhi.i i i . is, -
inp Jh| .
r. n
business. 1
■hliA It i.iljfl
TEOPLE LANTA, OCTOBER
ceiver appointed to take
Grover Cleveland, Congres JSH'CyCC
remnant of the dear old
party. Now, Tom, I wantySgE
have this attended to at
you see they are all going to staves 1
like an old barrel in dry weather
when the’ hoops arj/all.bursted ex
cept one. The admen hoop is too
weak, wiflff the Dpnfeaqjats at one end
and the at other, and
she fiUMhcLto tumble?<Jr
, IJaay nu«h for our Populists and
suv<4 m Congress.
J. J. Caylor:
Varnells, Ga.
HIT ’EM HRRDER.
Editor People's Party Paver :
Hit who ? The Democrats. It is
a fight, boys. The Democrats are
fighters. They have fought us ever
since we started. We have plead
for peace. We have spent much
time—too much—in explaining. We
have cried, “Let us reason these
things.” While we were doing this
the Democrats were hitting us from
every side. In the last campaign
they knocked us down and stamped
on us shamefully. We must change
our tactics, boys. We must throw
the enemy on the defensive; he
naturally belongs there. It is hard
to fight a winning fight on the defen
sive. Don’t spend so much time in
warding off the adversary’s blows,
but hit him back. Hit him fast and
hit him hard. Hit him with great
chunks of solid truth. It is the
truth that hurts. Truth is keener
than a two-edged sword. Hit him
with bis record. Hit him with those
promises he has not kept. That
will make him weak in the knees
and dizzy in the head. Hit him
with Cleveland and his “niggers.”
Great Ciesar, what a liek I how it
hurts! how it stuns'. Keep hitting.
There is no lack for weapons.
Once there was a little man who
could whip all the big ones. He did
it by hitting them in the same place
all the time.
That is the way to do it. Keep
those campaign pledges before the
people. Make them stand on the
tariff.
Who ever heard a democrat in the
last campaign say the financial ques
tion was of any importance ? Keep
that (and the force bill) before the
people. Tell it early and tell it late.
Be diligent in season and out of sea
son. The democrats say there is no
use of keeping up this agitation when
there is no election on hand,—it’s a
useless stirring up of strife. No
good in it. Os course not. Did you
ever know a democrat to see any
good in anything, unless the thing
had an office attached? All the
democrats have done since the elec
tion has been to get the offices and
draw the pay. That is all they see
any use of doing, until their terms
are out; then they will,get up a ter
i rible racket to get the offices again.
The djnjocrats’ campaign is only for
the spoilt of office. It has never
occurred to them that the Populists
fight for principles.
Boys, we are fast gaining ground.
Pile in the licks fast and thick, and
the victory will soon be ours.
L. C. Allen.
Hoschton, Ga., Oct. 6, 1893.
People’s Party Meeting in Oglethorpe.
Center Hill, Oct. 4th.
Organized by electing Jas. A.
Green Chairman and W. R. Ellis
Secretary. The following resolu
tions were adopted :
We reaffirm our allegiance to the
principles adopted in National Con
vention at Omaha, July 4th, 1892.
We are opposed to any Legisla
tion that has state banks of issue for
its object. We demand that all
money shall be issued by the Gener
al Government direct to the people
without the intervention of banks.
We are planted on the principles
of Jeffersonian Democracy as declar
ed in the platform of the People’s
Party, and there we propose to fight
and any offers of compromise we
recognize as coming from our politi
cal enemies.
We request our friends to assist us
in perfecting a permanent county
organization of the People’s Party.
We call a mass-meeting to meet at
Antioch, Oglethorpe county, on Oct.
27, to consider the importance of
perfecting the county organization.
Everybody envited to come and
snend the day. S. A. Walker and
other speakers will be there.
That these resolutions be publish
ed in the People’s Party Paper
and in all papers friendly to us.
W. A. Smith,
Ben Murror,
Committe of Arrangement.
Jas. J. Green, Ch’m.
W. R. Ellis, Seo’t’y.
Jonesboro, Ga., Oct. 7, ’93.
Editor Pborlb's Party Paver :
Clayton County Alliance passed
resolutions assuring the laboring
people of Atlanta, who have de
clared for the principles demanded
by the Alliance and are to be found
in no political party except the Peo
pole’s, that they would gladly take
them by the hand and forward move
on the enemy
s - 1 ;:i!
T. J. Bottoms.
HEAD
level and her judg
ient good when she
»uts her faith in Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription. There
is no be«Wy with
out gooaTffbaftfe.
Nobody expects to
become really beau
tiful from the use of
complexion beauti
fiers. Bright eyes,
clear skin and rosy
cheeks, follow mod
erate exercise, fresh
air, good food, and—the judicious use of the
“ Prescription.”
All women require a tonic and nervine at
some period of their lives. Whether suffer
ing from nervousness, dizziness, faintness,
displacement, catarrhal inflammation of the
lining membranes, bearing-down sensations,
or general debility the “Prescription”
reaches the origin of the trouble and corrects
it. Guaranteed to benefit, or the money is
refunded.
The way to cure Catarrh—there is but one
way—take Dr. Sago’s Remedy. There’s SSOO
reward offered for an incurable case.
Massey
&Son,
TENNILLE, GA.,
DEALERS IN
Groceries, Hardware,
Farming Implements Etc.
We want your trade, and if FAIR
DEALING AND MODERATE
PRlCES—giving us a living chance
will get it, we only ask a trial to re
ceive it.
To the hundreds of farmer friends
who have given us their confidence
and patronage in the past, we tender
thanks, and solicit continuance.
Respectsully,
MASSEY & SON,
Tennille, Ga.
If you wish to subscribe or renew
your subscription to this newspaper,
we will receive the same and attend
to it for you, thus saving you postage
and correspondence.
WHEN IN AUGUSTA,
—GO TO THE—
NEW YORK OYSTER HOUSE
AND RESTAURANT,
Two : Doors ab>iwe -Corner.-
Opposite Dyes Building.
First-class Restaurant for Ladies and
Gentlemen. Lodging at reasonable rates.
Oysters and Fish served in all Styles at
25 cents. A. A. TRAYLOR. Proprietor,
806 Broad Street.
[HE WOOLHAT~
Is apa er of the peapie, published in
Richmo 1 county, the citadel of organ
ized moss ekism. It is edited and print
ed at home, (every line of it) by wool hat
boys, and no paper is better qualified to
mirror the motives of the people in this
great revolution. Do you want to know
what the PEOPLE hope or fear, or how
step by step they will press to victory ?
Then.
Subscribe for the Wool Hat.
It was the child of necessity. Started
by a one-gallows plow-boy who had
never set a type ; printed at first on a
press made out of a tobacco box, in the
face of ridicule and the most determined
hide-bound partisan opposition, it has
advocated the caase of the people with
out fear or favor. Its success has been
phenomenal, and it is now firmly estab
lished as an organ of the people and a
thorn in the flesh of organized rings. Its
course in the past is its pledge for the
future, and if you want a live paper from
Richmond county, subscribe for THE
WOOL HAT.
Terms—f 1.00 per annum : 3 months 25
cents. Clubbed with The People’s Par
ty Paper at $1.50.
THE WOOL HAT,
Grace wood, Ga.
HAVINGRECEIVED MY
Fall and
Winter
Stock,
I am now ready to supply my
People’s party friends with any
thing found in a general mixed
Stock, comprising
Boots, Shoes,
L Dry Goods, Notions,
Kr Sugars, Coffees,
Flour, Meal,
wanted in a
feViinrantei to sav*- any pur
MWMB-u per cent in Boots and
Imu-e
■■ '
Here We Are.
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
Wooden ware?; 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 giv£.
To Brother Ailiancemen and
Others,
On account of thft low price of cotton wo
have put down our machinery to eoriuspond
iWe can sell rebuilt g'iri.s -good as new i< i <1.0)
' Per saw. Gin Feeders and Condensers. s2.tio
per saw. We have ip stock tne Gullett, Van
Winkle, Hall, Pratt, Gate City. Whitney and
Winship.
We can furnish Feeders and Condensers for
any make of Gin, new or second hand. We
have some good rebuilt Engine.' I horse pow
er. $10(1; 6 horse power* $200; 8 hors,- power.
$300; 10 horse power, S4OO. etc., to any size re
quired. "tiw Mills worth $301) for s2nu; those
worth S2OO for $125. Com Mills won us: >u tor
sti)o; those wort i slsl tor $1)0. Water Wheels
worth S3OO fur $l6O. Gin Saw Filers sl-> io £2'»;
Guiuiuers S2O to S3O. Terracing Levels (good
one.'iss. Theodolites $6 to ss. Milky Coni
post Distributors S2O.
We litiv. also the best and cheapest Millon
tlie market, for grinding corn and cob. .peas,
cotton seed and table meal, lor SSO. 'i o’u <an
make fertilizer that cosis S3O pi r ton lor oiii
| with t his mill. We send formula with mill. If
i you want any kind of machinery or want ad
vice as to the best kind or capacity, etc., writ*
us. We lake machinery on commission and
repair at our own oxp'-nse. Gin aird ungin-.-
repairing done. Old tftns made new for one
third the cost of new ones.
H. h. CRAMER & CO.,
555 Marietta rit., Atlanta, Ga.
P. S, We have several 40sawGiu outfits,
with engines to pull th m. and a pre-s lor S2OO
5L> saws S3OO. 60 saws, siuo. 80 saws sjuo. W e
sell, swap or trade to suit purchasers.
FRICK.-C3MPANY.
Mb®
ECLIPSE ENGINES
nix city ikon works enginm and
IBOILERB, AUTOM.X'DC STATIONXBY
KKOgjtaL .1 '
aiHS JBOM $a TO »8.80 FSB BAW.
©oilers, Saw Mills, Moore 00. Cora MWa
Fratt Gins, Seed Cotton Elevators, Cane MMs,
Clotton Presses, Wagon anij ’Platform Scales, Foot
■ Scientific Grinding Mills, Hoe’s Chialo-Tooth
Shingle Machinery, Wood-Working Machin
•ty, Shafting, etc.
MALSBY A AVERY,
Sonthenru
81 South Forsyth Street, ATLANTA, OX
CAtalooum bv mentioning thia paper.
"
Female
Bitters,
A Specific for
Irregular or Painful
Menstruation, Sterility,
or Habitual Abortion,
And for
Uterine Derangements
Generally.
Correspondence Solicited,
and kept Strictly Private,
given
if required.
G. W. DURHAM, M. D.
Thomson, Ga.
OSCAR PARKER. J. J. BARS E
PARKER <fc BARGE,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law.
Defenses, Damages, Divorces, Com
mercial and Criminal Law.
Will practice in the Superior Courts of
Fulton, DeKalb, Douglas, Campbell,
Clayton, Cowet* and Carroll counties,
the Supreme Court of Georgia and the
United States District and Circuit Courts.
Charges always reasonable.
Office 61 Whitehall Street Atlanta,
Wg°’ s
Liver Regulator
Stimulates the Liver to
HZTUJLLTHZIT JLCTIO3ST,
Expels Malaria,
Tones up the System,
Cures Indigestion,
Headache,
Constipation,
Nervousness,
Sleeplessness,
And Is a Splendid Appetizer!
READ THE FOLLOWING TESTIMONIALS.
Jlrwinton, Ga., May 30, 1893.
I can’say Lingo’s Liver Regulator is the best Medicine now in use.
Miss Anna Simpson.
Macon, Ga., May 23, 1893.
I certify’that I have known the medicine known as Lingo’s Liver Regu
lator now for over twenty-five years, having used it in my family for that
length of time, and can say that as a Liver Medicine I do not think it has
an equal. C. F. Daniel.
Americus, Ga., May 22, 1893.
I cheerfully endorse the good quality of Lingo’s Liver Regulator. I con
sider it one of the best medicines I ever used. Mbs. S. A. Summers.
Commissioner, Ga., May 31, 1893.
I cheerfully endorse Lingo’s Liver Regulator as being one of the best
medicines now in use. 1 have obtained more relief from the use of it than
any I have ever used. Mollie Dixon.
MRS. S. A. WADE’S TESTIMONIAL.
Wriohtmiobo, Ga., April 10, 1893.
I have used Liago’s Liver Medicine, and reoommend it above any other.
Mrs. S. A. Wade.
/
PREPARED BY A </)AREFDv COMPETENT PHYSICIAN
I prepare the Lingo’s Liver Medicine knowing so well from years of
experience the effe| 3ts of its constituents, 1 uiil!Sj ta '^ UPJ ‘ c Dl .'
uee wiUt fiigiiiy gnuLying a
* G. W. Dubham, M. D.
Thomson, Ga., April 12, 1893. ■ ' *' M.,,,.
TESTIMONIAL OF MISS WOODIS, OF OCONEE COUNTY, GA*
Dr. G. W. Durham—Dear Sir: While I can’t say that I gave the
Lingo’s Liver Medicine a fair trial (using your other medicine at the time)
I am satisfied I derived great benefit from it, as I feel better than I have
in a long time. I recommend it to my friends and will order more for myself.
Bishop, Ga., April 1, 1893. s. C. Woodis.
DR. CLIATT’S TESTIMONIAL.
It is unusual for a practicing physician to favor the introduction or sale
of Patent Medicines, but when an article of undoubted virtue and reliability
is brought to our notice, it becomes simply u duty to use it in our practice
and make its merits known to others; as in the case of Lingo’s Liver Regu
lator. we know it to be an excellent medicine, being all that it claims to
and heartily recommend it to all suffering from indigestion, headache, nerv
outness, loss of appetite, and all other ills arising from a disordered liver.
Thomson, Ga., April 11, 1898. J. N. Cliatt, M. D.
REV. S. C. McGAHEE.—READ WHAT HE SAYS.
The Lingo’s Liver Regulator did me great good. I can truly and
without reserve recommend it to all who need a Liver Medicine.
April 15, 1893. S. C. McGahijb.
WHAT THE MEDICINE IS.
Lingo’s Liver Medicine is a purely vegetable preparation, prepared by a
man of long experience. It is applicable in all cases where the ailment
originates from the Liver—Constipation, Jaundice, Dyspepsia, Malaria, etc.
Unlike most liver medicines, it is, with rare exceptions, free from un
pleasant effects following their use, such as nausea and prostration. Sick
headache, nervous headache, flatulence, heartburn, sour stomach and colic
yield rapidly to its effects.
In conjunction with the various preparations of Chinoonia, Arsenic, ete.
it is invaluable in curing malarial diseases.
Prepared by Dr. G. W. Durham. Address
DR. G. W. DURHAN, Thomson, Ga.
or HARRISON & HADLEY, Thomson, Ga.
If your system is run down and your liver irregular, or
you are suffering from Malaria or Indigestion, give the Medi
cine a trial. You will never prefer any other after you try
this.
Price, $1 per Bottle
If your Druggist does not keep it, write to
Harrison Hadley,
THOMSON, GEORGIA,
OR
J. T. LINGO, & CO.,
COMMISSIONER, GA.
DARDEN. Norwood, Georgia,
JAbNIGAN, Warrenton, Georgia
3