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PRAISING
DR. COPELAND.
Many Famous Men Who Are
Warmly Advocating His
System.
Merchant?,, Bankers, Millionaires, Ex-
Congressmen, Lawyers and Farmers.
Treatment at #5 a mouth, Medicines
Included—lts Wonderful Efticicrey Now
Quite Generally Conceded,
The fourdatibn principle of the Copelaud
Medical enterprise is that the sick must not
perish for want of medical care. Dr. Cope
land’s idea is that no stricken human being,
tottering under chronic infirmity, must be de
barred from treatment by the inhumanity of
prohibitive fees. The Copeland fee rate is the
lowest ever known to 1* gltimate spe ialty prac
tice. All told, and including all medicines 4
the charges came to but $5 a month.
The main thing, however, is that the Cope
land treatment, while inexpensive, is honored
and laurel ed for superior excellence. It has
become especially celebrated for its telling
tflicacy in chronic mal. dias where the old
school methods do lamentably, notoriously
and habitually fai’, Leading specialists ir
different cities, aft-r study of the Copeland
system, admit this, and are teday proclaiming
their adoption cf that better system, while
hundreds of distinguished people known to
the entire country, are bea ing like testimony
from experience.
__ -gp
'I/
wOlr
REV. W. J. IIAMBY, AtlCxi a,
Testifies to the elliclencv of treatment in Bron
chial Ca arrh.
George G. Hughes, the Kentucky lawyer
one of the leading practitioners before the
state and United States supreme courts—writ
ing from Burlington, Ky., says: “The Cope
land experts did for me what their most fa
mous cotemporaries failed to do. They cured
me of an old and horribly catarrh that had run
apparently into consumption and been pro
nounced utterly hopeless. I would not take
one million dollars for the benefits I received
from the Copeland treatment ”
SPECIALTIES—Catarrh, Asthma, and all
diseases of the Ear, Nose, Throat and Lungs,
Laryngitis, Bronchitis, Asthma, Consumption,
Epilepsy and all nervous affections, Diseases
of the Skin and Blood, Rheumatism, and all
Chronic affections of the Heart, Stomach,
Liver and Kidneys.
HOME TREATMENT.
Our system of mall treatment by means of
symptom blanks and correspond, nee Is perf.ct
and effectual. Write for symptom blanks.
Copeland Medical Institute,
Pnonia 31fL__3g1 S' 322 kiswr Huflding
Pryor and Hunter Sts , Atlanta, Ga.
SPECIAL NOTICES.
Under this head small notices without display
will be Inserted at the rate of one cent per
word for one insertion (each initial and fig
ure counting as one word). Kight cents per
word pays for 10 Insertions; sixteen cents
per word for 2B insertions (6 months); twen
ty-five cents per word for 62 Insertions (1
year). No notice less than 20 words or 8
lines accepted. Every notice must be paid
for In advance in full for the time ordered.
ATTENTION, patriots all—l make M.p’e
Syrup and Sugar. Patronize patient pro
ducers, procure pure products fresh from the
forest For free prices and particulars, ad
dress D. A. Kneeland, Mountain Home Farm.
Waitsfield. Vermont. 390
CORE DRILLING by a new cheap process
for taking out solid cylindrical cores in all
kinds of stone, iron ore. coal, phosphate rock,
etc. Cores taken out from 2 to 10 Inches in
diameter. Address C. F. Preslar, Blooming
ton, Indiana. 389
VELVET BE4NS for sale, shelled at $1,50
per bushel, cash with order. Address A. B.
Newton, Winter Garden, Fla. 391
TWO fine Jacks for Sale. One in his prime,
he other coming in. No better in north Geor
gia Will sell to suit the times. For farther
informa ion address W. H. 0. Freeman,
Trickum, Ga. 192
MAMMOTH Strawberry Corn yields % more
per acre than any corn in existence. 25e per
quart, prepaid. W. J. Flatt, Templeton, Tenn.
FARMERS, I have one-horse, top-row cot
ton and corn plow, saves the labor of one horse
and hand, cultivates both sides, one passing.
Cheap in price; does the work. Agents want
ed. J. 8. Thomason, Atlanta Ga.
TWO Bale, to the acre 125 Bushels Corn I
have for sale cotton seed and corn of the above
varieties. Best improved. For terms, etc.,
address, John D. Sullivan, Sullivan, S. C.
BARGAINS—By mail 100 best liver pills 25cts
For weak people 100 Iron Tonic and Nerve
Pills 60ets. Reference, this paper. S. J. Mc-
Lnight, Dalton, Ga 412
Cabpbntebs—The addresses of two or three
jood, reliable carpenters in or near Augusta,
Ja.. are wanted by the Gage Tool Co., Vine
land, N. J.
Agents wanted to sell Tires, Macintoshes,
Belting and Rubber. Free samples, P. O.
1371, New York, 404.
DON’T BE IDLE when it is so easy to make
money canvassing for pictures to be copied
and enlarged. 1 furnish free outfit and allow
you 30 days to deliver and collect before you
pay for goods. Experience unnecessary. Write
today, inclosing stamp. Address E. F.
McCormick, Dept , B. Van Bnren and Clinton
Sts., Chicago, 111. 436
HOLIDAY OFFER—To quickly introduce my
Work, upon receipt of only SI.OO, within the
next 30 days, I will make you a regular $3 00
Crayon Portrait, 14x17, (Life Site.) Satisfac
tion guaranteed, or money back. Send tin
type or cabinet; it will be safely returned.
Send quick. Clbm Mabtin, Arcanum, Ohio.
(50)
Skbdlbish Potatoes, secondcrop Triumphs,
five hundred barrels, red and white. Three
Dollars. A. L. Swinson, Goldsboro, N. C.
LOANS AT 8 PER CENT including com!
missions, negotiated on choice Georgia farms.
Best terms ever offered for gilt-edge security.
Call on or write to T. W. Baxter & Co., 810
Norcross Building, Atlanta, Ga.
LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES bought for
cash. T. J. Willison, Blymyer Building,
Cincinnattl, Ohio.
PAINTING PHOTOS on glass learned in one
hour. Instructions given. Abtist Photo
Pbint Co , 1624-26 A 28 Locust St.. St, Louis,
Missouri.
WANTED—A live man in every town to start
in business with my Illuminating House and
Store numbers Indorsed by Department of
Public Works New York City. Also my Illu
minating Signs, they are O. K., and great Sel
lars—a boy can make them, show as distlctly
at night as in the day. over 1,000 percent profit
—are you the man. Send in your name, chance
of a lifetime, full particulars. G. W. Tallman,
Post Office Box 373. New York City
LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES bought for
cash. T. J. WILLISON, 47 Blymyer Building
Cincinnati. O. 464.
DTI DO absolutely cured. For free sample
r lLr>n address Hbbmit Remedy Co.. Dept.
* p p KB.iborn 84, Chicago 408
FOR MEMORIALS™. X
dress, THE BROWN PUB. CO., Youngstown,
Ohio. * 204
Bryanism is not Populism—not by a
jugful.
HOW THEY VOTED.
A Fine Specimen of Democratic
Economy
SOUTHERN DEMOCRATS IN THE FIELD.
Pledged to Reduce Taxation Th« y Grubbed
All the Salary They Con’d Get—Meth
ods of the Purified Re-organ
ized Democracy in Ga.
If there is any one thing which the
Democrats have emphasized (in their
campaign speeches) more than any
thing else, it is the necessity of econo
my in the administration of public
affairs. They have fairly stood on
their tip-toes and become b’ack in the
face while they pledged themselves, if
they got a ehance, to run this govern
tr ent on a regular home-made Jackso
nian simplicity plan. Not a Democrat
scarcely in the land but that denounced
the sa’ary grab of 1872. No sooner,
however, had they got into power than
they seemed to forget their pledges to
the people, and have even outdone the
Republicans in reckless extravagance.
The 52d congress, with its 148 majority
in the house, passed a bill giving some
thing over 8360,000 for extra clerk hire
But the 53rdcongress, notwithstanding
their pledges to the people of retrench
ment ard reform, have gone further
than any other congress ever went, ir
a reckless disregard for their pledges,
and in the face of the hardest times
the nation ever saw, voted themselves
extra mileage, something never don<
before, extra statonery, and paid
clerks for two months while the con
gress was not in session, as follows :
‘To pay clerks to senators, and per
diem < lerks, and those retained in the
service of the senate during the recess
of the 53rd congress, and the resolution
of the senate, of Sept. 30, 1890, 822,088.
“For mileage of members of the house
of representatives and delegates from
territories 8130,000 ; for the second ses
sion of the 53d congress, §45,000.
“To "enable the secretary of the sen
ate and the "clerk of the house of rep
resentatives to pay to the officers and
employes of the senate and house,
borne on the annual and session rolls
on~the 3d day of November,
cluding the capital police and official
reporters of the senate and house of
representatives for extra services dur
ing the 53d congress, a sum equal ta
one month’s pay at the compensation
then paid them by law, the same to be
immediately available.”
The senate claim of §360 for each of
its clerks was bitterly fought, but the
appropriation was carried through by
the following vote:
FOB THE SALARY GRAB.
Democrats:
Alderson, W. Va.; Baldwin, Minn ;
Bankhead, Ala,; Barwig, Wis.; Beltz
hoover, Pa ; Berry, Ky : Black, Ill;
Brawley, S. C.; Brickinridge, Ark.;
Brickner, Wis.; Brown, Ind.; Bryan,
Neb.; Bunn, N. C.; Bynum, Ind ; Cad
mus, N. J.; Campbell, N. ¥.; Cannon,
Cal.; Caruth, Ky.; Catchings, Miss.;
Causey, Del.; Clark, Ala.; Coombs, N.
Y.; Covert, N. ¥.; Cummings, N. Y,;
DeForest, Conn.; Denson, Ala; Dono
van, O.; English, N J.; Geary, Cal.;
Geissenhamer, N. J.; Goodnight, Ky.;
Hall, Mo.; Hammond, Ind.; Harter, ().;
Hatch, Mo., Hayes, Iowa; Hines, Pa.;
Hooker, Miss.; Houk, Ohio; Layton,
Ohio; Lisle, N. Y.; Livingston, Ga.;
Lynch, Wis.; McGuire, CaL; Martin,
Ind.; McCreary, Ky.; McDannold, Ill.;
McEttrick, Mass.; Money, Miss.; Outh
waite, Ohio; Patterson, Tenn.; Payn
ter, Ky.; Pearson, Ohio; Pendleton. W.
Va ; Price, Iowa; Richards, Ohio; Ritch
ie, Ohio; Robbins, Ala.; Robertson, La.;
Ryan, N. Y.; Schermerhorn, N. Y.;
Sibley, Pa.; Sperry, Conn ; Stone, Ky.;
Talbott, Md.; Tarsney, Mo ; Tracy, N.
Y.; Turpin, Ala.; Washington, Tenn.;
Whiting, Mich.; Wise, Va, —76,
Republicans:
Altrich, Ill.; Apsley, Mass.; Avery,
Babcock, Wis=.; Baker, N. H ; Bing
ham, Pa. Boutelle, Me.; Bowers, Cal.;
Brosius, Pa.; Burrows, Mich.; Caldwell,
Ohio ; Cannon, Ill.; Childs, Ill;; Cogs
well, Mass; Cousins, Iowa; Curtis,
Kan ; Curtis. N. Y.; Daniels, N. Y ;
Doolittle, Wash ; Draper, Mass ; Ellis,
Oregon; Hainer, Neb.; Harmer, Pa.;
Hartman, Mont ; Heiner, Pa.; Hender
son, Ill.; Hepburn, Iowa; Hermann,
Oregon; Hicks, Pa.; Hilborn, Cal.;
Hulick, Ohio; Johnson, Ind.; Johnson,
N. D.; Keiper, Minn.; Loudenslager,
N. J.; Lucas, S. D ; Mahon, Pa.; Marsh,
III.: Marvin, N. Y.; McCleary, Minn.;
Meiklejohn, Neb.; Mercer, Neb.; Moon,
Mich.; Morse, Mass.: Northway, Ohio;
Payne, N. Y.; Phillips, Pa.; Randall,
Mass.; Reyburn, Pa.; Robinson, Pa;
Settle, N. C.; Shaw, Wis ; Stephenson,
Mich.; Stone, Pa.; Strong, Ohio; Sweet,
Idaho; Tawney, Minn ; Thomas, Mich ;
Updegraff, Iowa; Van Vorhis, Ohio;
Wadsworth, N. P.; Wright, Pa—6s,
AGAINST THE SALARY GRAB.
Democrats —Alexander, N. C.; Ar
nold, Mo.; Baily, Tex.; Barnes, Wis;
Bartlett, N. Y.; Bell. Tex ; Black, Ga.;
Bland, Mo.; Bower, N. C ; Branch, N
C.;Breckinridge,Ky.; Bretz,lnd.; Brook
shire, Ind.; Cabaniss, Ga.; Clark, Mo.:
Cobb, Ala ; Coffeen, Wyo.; Conn, Ind.;
Cooper, Ind.; Cox, Tenn.; Crawford, N.
C.; DeArmond, Mo.; Dinsmore, Ark.;
Dockery, Mo ; Eppes, Va.; Fithian, 111 ;
Fyan, Mo; Gorman, Mich.; Grady, N.
Y.; Heard, Mo.; Henderson, N. C.;
Holman, Ind ; Hunter, 111., Hutcheson,
Tex ; Kirt, Ohio; Kilgore, Tex ; Kribbs,
Pa ; Kyle, Miss.; Lane, 111 ; Latimer,
S. C ; Lester, Ga , Maddox, Ga ; Mallo
ry, Fla ; Marshall, Va : McCullough,
Ark.; McDea r iroD, Tenn.; McKaig,
Md ; McLaurin, S C.; McMillin, Tenn.;
McNagny, Ind.: M< Rea, Ark ; Morgan,
Mo.; Moses, Ga.;ONeil, Mass ; Paschal,
Tex.; Pendleton, Tex.; Reyner, Md.;
Richardson, Tenn.; Sayers, Tex.; Shell,
S. C.; Springer, 111.; Stollings, Ala;
Straight, S. C.; Talbert, S. C ; Tate,
Ga.; Taylor, Ind.; Turner, Ga ; War
ner, N. Y.; Weadock, Mich.; Wells,
Wis ; Wheeler, Ala.; Williams, Miss ;
Woodward, N. C.—73.
Republicans—Adams, Ky.; Lacy,
Iowa; Bartholdt, Mo ; Lefever, N. Y.;
Powers, Vt ; Reed, Me ; Wanger, Pa ;
Wright, Mass —8.
Populists—Baker, Kan,; Boen, Minn.;
Davis, Kan; Harris, Kan.; Hudson,
Kan.; Simpson, Kan. —6.
The bill passed by a vote of 141 for
to 90 against it. The vote for it, as is
usual on occasions where there is boo
dle, was almost equally divided be
tween the Republicans and the Demo
crats. Twenty-five southern Demo
crats voted for the steal, among which
was our own cuckoo,'-Clifton Breckin-
THE PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER: ATLANTA, GEORGIA; FRIDAY, MARCH 1898.
ridge. In the senate Mr. Peffer offer
ed an amendment setting forth that
the law only provided for one annual
mileage. In supported his amendment
Senator Peffer said:
‘ Our mileage is twice as much as it
ought to be. The intection of the law,
doubtless, was that actual expenses,
and nothing else, should be al'owed.
The mileage that we are now •I 1 wed,
20 cents each way, is more than swice
enough to pay all the expenses which
the meat fastidious person ought to in
cur in traveling here ”
The amendment was defeated by the
following vote :
YEAS.
Democrats—Bate, Tenn.; Bery, Ark.:
Coke, Tex ; George, Miss.; Hill, N. Y.:
McPherson, N. J.; Lindsay, Ky ; Mills,
Tex.- 8.
Republicans—Chandler, N. II.; Platt.
Conn.- 2.
Populists—Peffer, Kan—l,
NAYS.
I emocrats —Butler, S. C., Brice, 0.
Cockrell, Mo., Call, Fla., Faulkner, W.
Va ; Gordon. Ga.; Gorman, Md,; Ha -
ris, Tenn : Hunton, Va ; Jones, Ark.;
Martin, Kan ; Mitchell, Wis.; Morgan
Ala.; Murphy, N. Y.: Pasco, Fla ; Pugh.
Ala ; Ransom, N. C.; Turpie, Ind ; Vor
hees, Ind ; White, La.- 20.
Republicans—Cullom, HL; Davis.
Minn.: Dolph, Oregon; Gallinger, N
H ; Hale, Maine; Hawley, Conn.; Hoar,
Mass ; Jones, Nevada; Lodge, Mass.?
Mitchell, Oregon, Proctor, Vt ; Perkins
Cal ; Sherman, Ohio; Stockbridge.
Mich.; Teller, Colo ; Washburn, Minn ;
Wilson, lowa.—l7.
Populists—Stewart, Mo.; Kyle, S
Dak.-2.
Thus we have twenty Democrats,
seventeen Republicans and two Popu
lists voting against Mr. Peffer’s amend
ment, which would have saved the peo
ple many thousands of dollars.
The law allows these men twenty
cents a mile each way. No railroad
company charges over three cents a
mile, which leaves them seventeen
cents —enough to carry them three or
four times to the capital and hack; yet
in the face of this fact they deliber
ately voted themselves another twenty
cents, each way, mileage.
On final passage in the house the ap
propriation was passed by a rising vote
of 139 to 48, the yeas and nays being
denied. Among the items of this steal
are the following:
“For s ationery for members of the
house of representatives and delegates
from territories for the first session of
the fifty-third congress, §45,000.
“For stationery for senators of the
fifty-third congress, §7,000.”
Holman, of Indiana, and Sayers, of
Texas, protested against the steal as
follows:
Mr. Holman said: “I wish at the
outset to enter my protest against the
discourtesy just shown to members of
the house by the gentlemen who occu
pied the chair a few moments ago, I
wish to enter my protest against it,
sir, as especially becoming when we
are legislating for ourselves, for the
benefit of our own pockets, legislating
in sharp antagonism with the prin
ciples which have controlled congress
for a century except on two occasions,
and the Democrats when in the control
of congress in all our history except in
one instance.
"Can we afford, gentlemen, in the
midst of such a tumult as this, to vote
to ourselves, out of the hard earnings
of our people, this extra mileage of
1130,000 and extra stationery to the
amount of §45,000 and arbitrarily limit
debate to thirty minutes? Will
our people tolerate such a raid on
their treasury by their representa
tives?
“I saw just such a scene as this as
far back as 1862, and again in 1873,
when the retro-active salary law
passed.
“Within two years we have provided
clerks for members, not chairmen of
committees, at a cost of about §360,000
a congress, and now extra mileage
$130,000, and extra stationery, §45 000,
as proposed by this amendment. See
gentlemen, what a record we are mak
ing.”
[Here the hammer fell. ]
Mr 1 Sayers, of Texas, said:
“It I have not been misinformed,
ever since the organization of this gov
ernment, since the meeting of the very
first congress, at no time and under no
circumstances did members of congress
receive mileage both for an extraordi
nary session and for the next succeed
ing. That is my understanding of the
history of this matter from the very
organization of the government. 1 do
not think that we should at this date
break the precedent so long and so uni
formly regarded.”
This is the kind of men we have in
congress, and is the way onr public
funds are being appropriated. As for
Stewart and Kyle, Populists, who
voted for this steal, we condemn them
In the early days
f of tire settlement of
S IvUV \ Dakotas, the
I'J I newspapers fre-
)l quently contained
r ' stories of the hard-
I D/f ships and sufferings
/ '-Kf / life- i an “ sometimes the
/ I / death of the new
*X *l J V)/ I settlers who were
y / ' ost ’ n fil’ zzar< l s -
J w I The man or woman
' "I who is frozen to
death in a winter’s
storm undergoes
great sufferings, but they are mild com
pared with those daily borne by thousands
of victims of that dread disease con
sumption.
For centuries this relentless disease was
considered incurable. It is now known to
be distinctly curable. Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery cures 98 per cent, of all
cases of consumption, bronchitis, asthma,
laryngitis and diseases of the air-passages.
It has stood the test for thirty years. It
acts directly on the blood, nourishing it
with the life-giving qualities of the food.
It tears down old, half-dead tissues and
builds up new ones in all parts of the body.
Through the blood it acts directly on the
lungs, driving out all impurities and dis
ease germs. It soothes the cough, but
facilitates expectoration. It deepens the
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giving oxygen. It stimulates the appetite,
facilitates the flow of digestive juices, in
vigorates the liver and tones and builds up
the nerves. It is the great blood-maker
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flesh like cod liver oil, but firm, muscular,
healthy tissues.
“I had been troubled with bronchitis for
several years,” writes Mrs. Orlin O'Hara, Box
114, Fergus Fails, Ottertail Co., Minn. “In the
first place I had sore throat. I doctored with
different doctors and took various medicines,
but got no relief. I raised from my throat a
sticky substance like the white of an egg. Could
not sleep, and had made up my mind that I
would not live through the winter. I took Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and 1 Favor
ite Prescription ' alternately, and in a few days
began to see that I was better. I took eight bot
tles. I have not felt as well in years.”
The quick constipation - cure Doctor
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. Never gripe.
Accept no substitutes or imitations.
A GENEROUS OFFER
the dreaded
CANEOMRED
Medical Council and Laboratory Department.
Q&-
Qfaa M rd 16, 1898.
To* the Editor of The P ople’s P. riy Paper,
A , !a nt ", Gu.
My dear Sir:-
In reply to your late advice, am pleased
to state that I have discovered a reliable
and absolute cure for the dreaded consump
tion; also for throat, bronchial and lung
troubles; coughs, catarrh, la grippe; scrof
ula, general decline or weakness, loss of
flesh and all wasting-away conditions.
By its timelyuse thousands of appar
ently hopeless eases have been permanently
cured.
There are, undoubtedly, many of your
friends and readers anxious regarding the
health of themselves or relatives, who would
be benefited or cured, if they would allow me
to advise them in the use of my new discoveries.
So proof-positive am I of their power
to cure, based upon actual experience, and
to better demonstrate their wonderful merits,
I will send Tr.ree Free Bottles (The Slocum
New System of Medicine) to any of your
readers who will write me at my Laboratory,
98 Pine Street, New York, giving name, post
office and express address.
Always sincerely yours,
Editor’s Note:— The above sac-simile letter is published for our readers’
benefit. It is a plain, honest, straightforward offer, and is made to introduce
the Merits of the Dr. Slocum New System of Medicine. Every sufferer should
take advantage of it at once, and we ask when writing Dr. Slocum, to kindly
mention the i-,
worse even then we do the Democrats
and Republicans from whom we could
have expected no better. Until the
people rise up against such outrages
we never will have retrenchment and
reform in the administration of govern
ment affairs.—Buzz Saw.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money If It falls to cure. 2f.0.
100
Emanuel County Populist.
The Peoples Party of Emanuel coun
ty met in mass meeting and organized
by calling W. R. Kemp to the chair and
electing Wm. Canedy as secretary.
Wm. Canedy, J. T. Coleman, A. C.
Flanders, L E. Sutton, N. N. Durden,
B. L. Brinson, J. R. Kitchens, J. A.
Kitchens, D. E. Gay and F. H. Saffold,
were selected as delegates to the state
convention.
J. T. Coleman, J. K. Lewis and Judge
D. H. Smith were selected to draft a set
of resolutions and report to the body.
Wm. Canedy was elected as perma
nent chairman and J. R. Thompson as
permanent secretary for the next two
years.
The following persons were elected
as the county executive committee for
the next two years.
G. G, W. Oglesbey, W. R Kemp, G.
W. Martin, J. H. Braswell, Wm. Cane
dy. J. L. Brown, J. M. Rountree, B. B.
Wilks, H. W. Hall, A L. Sutton, J. S.
Moore, D. E Gay, E S. Youmans.
Toe committee on resolutions report
ed as follows:
Resolved, That it is the sense of the
Peoples Party of Emanuel county that
Judge J. K. Hines is second choice for
governor.
That we heartily endorse the Nash
ville convention and the action taken
by the reorganization committee.
That we are middle of the road Pop
ulists and are unalterably opposed to
fusion or splitting of tickets.
That we believe in the office seeking
the man and are opposed to the strife
and discord engendered by men seek
ing the office. We believe in the sov
ereign power of the people.
That we condemn in the strongest
terms the fraud practiced by the Dem
ocratic party of this county in register
ing names illegally and contrary to
law and maintaining the same in the
last election. We favor an honest and
free ballot, a fair and just count.
We favor an early national nominat
ing convention July 4, 1898.
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HAVE YOU INDIGESTION?
Free Samples of a Valuable Remedy Will
be Sent any of Our Readers.
Indigestion is the starting-point of
nine-tenths of all diseases. In fact, it
is remarkable how many people suffer
from some form of it, the most com
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bad taste, foul breath, biliousness,
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to every one who will address Dyspep
tine Remedy Co., Atlanta, Ga.
The free-silver-or-bust Democratic
bosses think that the Democracy of the
south will be “stronger” without fusing
with the Populists in the southern
states; no doubt of it at all, it will
smell a heap stronger.
Milton County Acts.
At a meeting held March Ist, in Mil
ton county, the following resolutions
were adopted:
Ist. Resolved that the Populists of the
county of Milton reaffirm their allegi
ance to the original and first principles
of Populism as set out in the Omaha
and St. Louis platforms.
2nd. That they look upen fusion as
practiced in the last National campaign
as having done great damage to our
party and the cause of reform, and
condemns such management on the
part of our leaders as unwise unstates
manlike and unpatriotic.
3rd- That the purpose of a campaign
is to educate the people on the issues
involved and enable them to cast an
intelligent ballot and to this end we
favor an early beginning of the ap-'
proaching campaigns, both State and
National. Favoring July the 4th 1898,
for holding the National campaign.
4th. That we send as delegates to
represent us in the State Convention
to be held on March 16th inst, the fol
lowing :
D. B. Cunningham. J. B. Paris, J, W.
Rainwater, J. J. Griffin, A. S Norman,
L. L. Clement, W. A. Gunter, J. A.
Parsons, John Webb, W. S. Pace, J
P. Brooke and H. M. Taylor.
That we do not instruct our delegates
further than to remind them that we
confide implicitly in their good judg
ment to secure the very best men
available as Candidates on our state
ticket.
Habersham County Meets.
The Populists of Habersham met
March 9th, 1898, according to appoint
ment and pissed the following resolu
tions :
We adopt the referendum to nominate
senator and representative. The chair
man of each militia district shall call a
meeting, take a vote, and send it to one
of the following committee : J. L. B
Tench, J. J. Kimzy and John T. Carter.
Any Populist may send his vote to one
of said committee, should his district
not meet. The committee meets at
Clarksville, April 9th, and takes the
result.
We favor July 4th, 1898, as the date
for our national convention.
D. Jarkabd, Chm.
15. G. Mor his, Sec.
Who’s Shcllaberger ?
He’s the Wire Fence man, of Atlanta,
Ga., and sells the best and cheapest
fencing in existence for all purposes.
Freight paid. Catalogue free. Write
for it. K. L. Shellabbbgeb,
61 Forsyth St. Atlanta, Ga.
Bartow County Populists.
The Populists of Bartow county con
vened in mass meeting at court house
on sth inst., and took action looking to
the complete organization of the party
within the county.
The following named chairman of
the several militia districts are enjoin
ed to call meetings at an early date
and report proceedings to county chair
man : Euharlee, G A. Fink; Iron
Hill, W. W. Morris; Kingston, 11, Dar
den ; Cassville. 11. C. Bell; Pinelog
John L. Vaughn; Adairsville, L. V.
Wilson; 6th District, Bob llaiden ; Tay
lorsville, W. P. Whitesides; Allatoona,
J. H Lanham ; Emerson, P. 11. Larey ;
Stamp Creek, J C. Bell; Wolfpen, D
B. Chitwood ; Cartersville, C. N. Smith;
Calicoa, Squire Hubbard.
Delegates elected to the state con
vention of 16th inst., were : M. A Mc-
Coy, P. H. Larey, G. A. Fink, R. H
Dodd, J. L. Vaughn, J. S. Moore, Bob
Raiden, H. A. Johnsev, It. M. Dunn,
Dr. T. H. Baker, J A White, J. C.
Bell, G. M. Isbell, W. P Whitesides.
Meeting favored national convention,
July 4, 1898.
Several Farms Wanted. Address
with full description, A, _H. jßussell,
7 Akron, Ohio. ts
AN OPEN LETTER
To Rev. Sam P. Jones, Ex-Candid ate. Lim
ited. •
Dear Sir:
A glance at your political platform
and principles suggest a few thought
to which I wish to call your attention
You declare yourself in favor of “un
adulterated, unpurchasable, unbuldoz
able, imperious, royal manhood.” Si
far so good, I am with you heart an<
hand, now, ever forever.
You declare in vigorous languag.
against bossism, chicanery and polit
caPtrickery and cite, in illustratioi
the corrupt and infamous method o
1894, when the bosses and political
demagogues, the heelers and pothous
politicians ignored the wishes of th
people, manipulated the state conven
tion, defeating the nomination of ai
honest upright man for governor am
substituting a political mountebank,
and with unpre eedented election frauds
in illegal voting, stuffing ballot boxeo
c< unting in and counting out, as tin
exigencies of the case required, finall;
declaring a man, having, as is believed,
a minority of the legal votes cas l
elected to the first office in thq gift o
the people and seated him in the guher
natorial chair.
All this is a matter of history am
you do well to call the case to mim
and characterize the fraud in fitting
language. But then, with unaecount
able inconsistency you declare you
preference for a man who as secretary
of state during the memorable cam
paign of 1894 must have been convei
Santos the illegal and vile method
resorted to, to defeat the will of the
people and render possible the triumph
of the “men who control, and by his
silence become part’ceps crimlnis in
the outrage.
And yet you vouch for Allen D. Cand
ler as an “honorable man.”
In his letter announcing his candida
cy for governor, we find this languagi
“a venal vote is the destruction of e
republic. * * * Today we have a
federal administration that owes its
existence to the use of money and a
purchased vote. This evil constantly
grows in magnitude and it has reached
that point at which a goed man wh.
becomes a candidate for office, however
much he may abhor such methods, is
often, from necessity, driven to resort
to them or go down in ignominious de
feat ! ”
Citizens of a free (?) republic pause »
moment and contemplate the situation
Allen D. Candler, ex-legislator of Geor
gia, ex-member of congress, ex-secre
tary of state of the commonwealth of
Georgia, whem Sam P. Jones, the
great evangelist, and ex-candidate,
limited, for governor, vouches for as
an honest, honorable man, justifying
the purchasing of votes rather than
“going down in defeat! ”
What a spectacle for men and angels!
Is it any wonder that politics is at a
low ebb ? When men are held up as
models of political integrity, whose
henesty and honorable standing are
vouched for by the shining lights on
the towers of Zien, boldly declare that
dishonest methods are preferable to
defeat what are we to expect from the
Atkinsons and the Clays, the Gobers
and the Fites—the men who manipu
late the wires and run the machine !
When these things occur in the green
tree what will happen in the dry.
Further on you say “if I were to run
a thousand races, every sentence from
my lips as well as every inspiration of
my heart would furnish but a leverage
to lift humanity up and make men of
our boys and princely characters of
our men.” Very good; but how about
our girls and our women?
In the dark ages of the past woman,
has been the toy, the plaything of man!
Her grand, her angelic, divine woman
hood, never once recognized or ac
knowledged; and in the nineteen Chris
tian centuries has her inalienable
right seldom been conceded in church
or state, and so far as I am advised
that prince of evangelists and model
ex candidate, “limited” forms no ex
ception to the rule.
The politics of the state and nation
are confessedly in a bud way. The
traffic in intoxicating beverages that
lead to moral degradation and utter
ruin, is legalized and patron’ze.d by
our law makers. Gambling bolls and
brothels hold high carnival in our great
cities, and yet woman, with her high
moral and spiritual endowments is de
nied the franchise, to the end that hu
man deba’Jch’ry ar d spi-itnal depreda
tion ma v cm time to the end of time.
Why is it that in the closing hours of
the nineteenth century some moral,
high toned aspirant for political honors
has not the manliness and innate sense
of right to declare for impartial justice
as regards the finer and purer half of
the human racY?
As yet the darkness linsrers—the slow
dark hours of night enshroud the re
ligious and political horizon; and even
the self-eonstituted apostle of political
regeneration hath not the eyes tn see
or the moral courage to proclaim the
way out of the wilderness of political
corruption in which the race is wan
dering. It is amazing what blindness
overshadows the leading members of
church and state, while God’s provi
dence and the immutable laws of the
universe point a sure way to human
redemption, like bats and moles we
grope in darkness all unmindful of the
divine truth that in absolute and per
fect justice aud in that aloni lies the
cure for human ills.
D M. Allen.
Deafness Cannot be Cured.
by local applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
way to cure Deafness, aud that is by constitu
tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in
flamed condition of the mucous lining of the
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets in
flamed you have a rambling sound or imper
feet hearing, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness is the result, and unless the inllama
tion can be taken out and this tube restored to
its normal condition, hearing will be destroy
ed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by
catarrh, which is nothing'.but an an inflamed
condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
eaae of Deafness caused by catarrh that can
not be cured by Halls CatarrhJJure. Send for
circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
£<F“Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Wilkes County Meeting,
There will be a mass meeting of the
People’s Party of Wilkes county at the
court house in Washington, on the Ist
Tuesday in April. We expect to have
some one to address the meeting on
the issues of Vae day. The object of
the meeting is to elect executive com
mittee for the county and to attend to
any other business that may be nee
sary for the good of the party.
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If the kidneys are not in a perfectly
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Copyright, 1897—Dr. Kilmer & Co.
3