Newspaper Page Text
&
THE RECOKJ).
CKDAIITOWN, OA., OUT. ‘17, 1870.
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC TICKET,
ron mu&irkkt:
SAMUEL' J. TILDEN,
Of Now York,
ion vick-hikbidknt: *
THOMAS A. HENDRICKS,
For Congress, 71 li District,
lion. W. II. J<Vlton.
Tin* Unci* In (lie 7tli DiilrlcL
Mr. Duboy in not tbo choico of tbo
poo j >lo of tlio 7th tliiitiict. Ho win*
nominated by n few men at Dalton,
who pr< nt iml to (lu lhin work I n o year*
(iiju, Cherokee county, by an over
whelming vote refuted to Bond a del-
egnlo to volo for him. Cobb county
endowed Dr Felton in a maw* meeting
and denied him to run again, but a
little clique ut Marietta mot and sent
a little delegation to Dalton, and they
were of that particular slripo of dem
ocracy that carried on the mad attack
two years ago. Barlow county voted
cloud all nominations, but that little
mad clique met in a bar k room and
sent delegatee—-and to bolster up the
can80 put out Uio name of Captain
Woolley surreptitiously, and oven
published him an ucUng at Dalton,
when lie had no part or lot in it, and
was not in sympathy with it. Four
eouulitH were not represented at all.
Yet this litllo mad clique made a so-
called nomination and hope that the
party lash will be potent enough to
whip in every democrat to his support.
Dr. Felton reproBoutH the people
in tbo Htrugglo to get rid of this nest
of nominating tricks!eih. Tho poli
tics of thiu district need purifying, ii
liaH boon growing worse for years.
Holf-uppuintcd lenders have assumed
control of the country and refuso to
give it up. Dr. Felton made an un
precedented light two yon is aga. The
go>ei nor of the State left Ida execu
tive chair, and como to Marietta to
spook in tho intorbl of Trammell.
Dol. Hardeman and a United Staten
Senator made limiting speeches all
over the district. Macon, (Mr. Unvd-
tinnn failed to bo governor in spite of
it) Georgia, baa a net of inveterate
who pullers that absorb every availa
ble ofiloOi and when they are allowed
to do it easily, tho people are patted
on the back—when tho people com
plain they nro browbeat and called
Radical*. Well, thiH uni quid fight*
went on. Men perverted tbo truth,
mppviHHud appointments, hired negro
bands to follow Felton, and telegraph
all over the country that tho negroes
were applauding their candidate.
Willingham, editor of Dabney'a organ
at llomo, did this himself. Gon. Gor
don appeared at Calhoun and 8wore
tho democracy to volo for Dabney
ngaiuot Felton. Tho polls wore tam
pered with. While tho final vote hung
in tho balance for two or tlireo days,
tbo dispatches passed over tho wires
from ltoiuo,
"now M.*NV VOTIW WILL IT TAliH NOW
•10 I'J.lil'T D.U'.M V V"
Dr. Felton was abused and slun-
• derod} his domestic affairs- wero
vassed by men of all grades of society,
lie was not represented as a decant
citizen in tho upper part of tho dist
rict. Tho people of that country nru
willing now to believe ho 1ms a u1u[,
family.
Such wero tho moans taken, to de
feat him, yet
UY Till: WILL AND VOICE Ob' TUB 1 IXUT.i:
bo enmo through safely.
Now, in rovengo and imdieo this
mad clique are canvassing the district
in thu interest of Dabney, hut
in ronlity to Uul /W/«»n, because he
made tho race in rp\lc u/'them.
Col. Dabney is not their choice.
Ho accepted tho loudersliip *.f (ha;
forlorn hope in Homo two years ago,
and now they Imve to run him. Rut,
murk it) another man i-< laying pipe
for tho next trip. K was announced
in August that if Dr. VVUou did not
run,
"TilKY worm run tkammlm, tiiih timu.’
Don't bo deceived, friends! this
warfare is headed by tho most vin-
dietivo crowd of men that ev. 1 con
trolled tho politiss of a country. Gov.
Tildon made just such a fight as Dr.
Felton is luuking. lie fought old
Tweed and forced him into tho poni-
teutiury. Tweed bad managed Now
York city politics until it was a re
proach and a by-word. Tildon is u
reformer. Dr. Felton is a reformer.
Tildon boat tho ring in New York bv
tho help of Domuants and conserva
tive Republicans. Stand by your
Reformer, W. H. Felton.
If tho Dabnoy Club bo silly ecougli
to tbiuk that much tuoro than one
half their club litt will vote for Dab
ney, tho delusion will do Dr. 1<Y 1 ton
no harm. In tho incorporation Dr*.
I'M ton has a decided majority, and
counting nil, he will double D..bi.« v
oasilt. Yet if tho whole IRt i> f
Dabnoy, it shows a majority lor 1Y1-
tou.
Remember, the election comes
Tuesday, November 7th.
rillil
rile Rwent Hecrct HchmIoii of
(lie Kxeciitive Com in it tec*.
CaUTKIIH V11.t.K, (lA., Oct. 1, 1874.
Toths Boitor oe tiik News Theta
nro miro'y die day* of wondeni and reforms
I Impf oned lo bo in tbo town of Uortors-
vllle ycaiorday, and to jny great surprise
I henrd t Lnt tlio rxooullve com in lit oe of tho
dcmocralio parly of Ilia 7th con^rcnnlonal
(lislricl wen* lo Jmvo a nicotine hero on
(lint day. I natd MiIh mi nt bo merely n ru
mor, iih I aid 4 life-long doinocrnl and nev
er in my life Imvn I hoard of n democratic
Kxeculivo Conunltico of n oongniasionul
dintrlet being nnllod together without tin
open cal’, pul>li»lii 'l in one or more of tl o
li-rttliOff imp
* of tho dlMrlcl.
• the railroad iiml Ihoro I i
i old friend from ono of iho uppo
lien of tho iliniricl, who snld lomo after iho
iiHinl muI vl nt ion; there were only iwo men
Miid one woman in (he world who knew
where lie was, and they wero all. “Well,''
says I, “what of that; %% 1 • ai nro you hero
for 7 “Why,," ho nay**, “1 am a member of
ihi’i xi'ciilivo commlileo, and 1 was called
here by a let tor fiom J, W. Wofford mark
ed “jier<mniil mid private," to attend n
mooting of Iho Executive committee. Muro
enough If. was no, and limy wore going (hen
lo iho court hoimo to begin Uuiinrtt. After
awhile 1 concluded to go over and look on.
A« I walked up ihu step*, wan about to en
ter dm room a guntlomun said in mo, “you
cannot enter, dm door is locked." And,
nir, ho It wiih Tho dem ex. com. of (he
Till district was tdoselod in a Jury room,
and (he door ahnolud-ly locked. " *
Mr. Editor, I am tor dm nominee, hu(
i|r, my olmek hlunheil with hIiuiiiu when
I haw ilm executivecommittoo of dm proud
old domourncy of my unlive district hold
ing id iiieeliugH under hulls and bars, iih
did dmt dnmntildu Union Loaguo wlm.se
bulefiil inIIiii'iicti liiiM well nlgli ruined our
country. Rut wlint did that executive com-
Hill lee? Ii uppoinled a ooimiiilteo lo wail
on Ur. Foil mi and ask him to Hiibiulllllit
claim.* to llain Mil,ret n mmilleo under lock
and key. Wliai hud Ii to do with Felton ?
lie wiim not their ‘complimentary nominee.*
And all dm time of Iho session Mr. Train*
fuel 1 Hal in a room of tho snmo building,
wailing, | Hiipposo, fur iho commuiee to no
his bidding. Mir, in my opinion thin coji-
mill or was called hero lor TrummoU’N bun-
ellt Iin,| i,4ii in dm intercut of tho democrat
ic pmiy ii,, well know that Dr* Rollon
would not como down at liin nor dm com
inliice'H bidding, |tlit ho desired to make
cnpiinl l,y having dm ouiiimlKuo invito
Dr. i'elnm down, and (lion puldiHli Tram-
nmll’s pATnioTio It'll or with Felton i refu
sal. Thin oominillco hud nothing lo do
Willi Dr Felton nor ho with it* Rut it was
tho duly of I lint committee (o (nko out of
die held lids ciHhnimi'iiliir;/ caudidnto and
give the people ll candidate they (jOtlld Slip,
poll. This die people waul—nothing eh,,
will HuliHfy tliotti. ''Beautiful enndiduto !"
“llenuilful oominillco!" They uoiild not
huvo more etITuiuiilly damned tlioir candi
date limit by thin “Hcorot Blnr-Cliambor
iimi'dng." Who know of it 1 Nobody but
Mr. Trniuinoi). No oilier dcmocral of dm
district could gel u loiter before dial com
mittee hut Trninintll lie had dial
uiilioo ounvnHNod
suppose lie luid it
art, four good men
accident, who, 1
for their people a
tiimlul.tr hud llm
VIXKIl AT OALIIOtl.1
1
by loiter and I
IJourned. Sir, tliere
a dint oominittoo by
informod, demanded
iw candidate, but tho
injorily, for that was
(Tim Hinall caps hero
Tim ooumiiitoo cannot plead
of lime. Ton days before tho clou-
lion would bo millioienl to neiniuiitea prop
el candidal o for the democrat a of tho Till
district. They do not care about II can-
vithH, but they only ilcsiro to know thill
tliolr enndiduto is ono of pore and uiitiu-
peuidmblo clinrnutcr. H 1 Ah iho
limiter now stiilid.H limy will support Foltou
against TrauiuiHl).
Sir. ihis mooting of Trammell was to
holntcr Trammell, but it butt been llm straw
to break tho chihoI'm back—they have ru
ined him. I'areurtU TnunmtU, 1'oi.K.
Two yours ago tbo orgauizod got in
such u hlfuit that they wero iu this
despornlo fix. You know tho old
proverb, "whim thiovoa fall out,” oto.
lloro was a good oigtiuized Polk
iuaii, who now cries "Hurrah for thu
nominou 1”
Foltou is of pure and linin''
chanrtn ', ho is trm 1 1 «:achal>/c
iiiiBoiv*-’, . . ll “ i1 tn|u ; 1,111
i • •* ,Z01 ' brothor him olmugod
*' ,H tMUO i RMil ho kiiyH "down" with all
iH'l tl»> noiniiivc. Muy hn lio liolongs
Stab CiiAMiii:ii tliia timn.
U umki'u I, mi K liiy diil'umu'o whuj iL
0111111 ■' ll1 onpiiurtiiiK tlitVnn>nl fnllis.
•Mih Ijo Iho blinro of Dio lo„v,. a m„|
tiblics prou)ia„H bt.Uoi- tl,i„ t | m „
, | hu u,ho1 '- " lion mi,,.,,
then they follow- whim ho don't, thou
they nor.v,.
Don t l,o deceived, go,id UltM , „f
t it her party. Foltou
tmuugh for us in Co
pjci'i) of Hccrut history wub tho foi ling
of tin, inti nm:i,y organi/.oil two veins
they chnrgo all tho tiou-
blo anil disorgauizatiou to Dr. cltun
•‘"'I Iliafrit-mla. They blow not and
0,-ld out of tho HAtUU mouth.
" 11011 1,111,1 rviu.il, til, V mil t, 11
-V" 11 l “' " ll1 Lo n KU0 d demount!, „ s
11,1 - v tul '* y«« lust sprinj. wIumi lie
M.«Oo liruil). by ili,. riviutii ,.,„l l„.,
mtuiests, Doii'l ullow y,m.iself d 0
onv.,1 nor liiowlH'ul by u set of
" il0 11111 ll « ll li'iK now for ilmofllces of
tbo ooiiutry mid stm,.
K"od
This
nuiia-
\\ In n 1*. M. 1». Young
I.aled foe fiingrtsa somu y 0 «ra ..j,-,.,
fb'O. .N LoAlfl- of Cobb county bollo.i
Uk. uonmmtioii , Vunt ll01U8 #uJ
ttmupo,laud o,iuv.mA,,| Cobb couniv I
uuUoimu-.aiofE^m-yyi. (Vlo, dm
I.Aomul Iudupaudoifoi-Coimi-oss.
r. 1 ' ', ^ l | su ' ll ’ S e ill, u
‘ LUO mid made a. i,j,. coh for Colo.
Was l.o a Ami«vuv Ht
that tuno or a Ran': r li
1,0 CJul ' 1 ' |J bllc b favois at 'that umr,
"'by dot Otuioii 1, lion s feuaul, foe
BjxiBlmsiuUb imriivnhrlv
ao A-eUou is ,Mn(w St .d to bo i„o good
THE CANVAS S.l“'; d
‘ORGANIZED’ DEMOCRACY.
A BETTER OaN THE HIIIIJECT
FROM Dr. II. V. M.
MILDER.
Atlanta, Ga., Oct. 11, 187C.
Gentlemen:—I have tho honor to
acknowledge tho receipt of yours of
tho 10th instant, inviting ino to at
tend u mat,h meeting nt Marietta on
tho 28th of this month. You are
pleased to say, "Knowing tho deep
id tor oat you have ever felt in thu wel
fare, huccohh and triumph of llm or
ganized democracy over every other
competitor, wo earnestly lrquimt that
you will honor u» and tho people of
thiH county with your presetted on
that occasion.” I cannot accept so
fluttering an invitation without pre
mising a short explanation. It is im
possible to overestimate nty desiro for
lione t democratic government, nor
thu interest i fool for the triumph of
democratic principles; hut if you havo
been led to suppose that I um in fuvor
of thu creation or maintenance of an
"organization” unknown to tho law,
which is intoudod or calculated to
wrost from the peoplo tho power to
choose their own representatives, you
havo mistaken my position.
Tho rccomnioudntion, or nomina
tion, if you w ill, of any uunmnH ii can
didate for ofllco by ten or ten thous
and people, carries with it properly an
ii lltu-ice proportioned to the number
and character of thosi who muko it,
bill when under any name they as
sume to distate to, or dominate tho
cuiseicnccH and control tho votes of
others, their follow •citizens, their
equals in intelligence and integrity,
they impudently attempt an usurpa
tion of the rights of the people and
open wide tbo door to intrigue, to
fraud and to corrupt political traffic.
Tho peoplo uru tho dopositories of
political power. Our system of gov
ernment afcsumcB that tlmy have in
telligence and virtue adequado to the
trust, without tho instruction of a
body of bolf-appoiutcd guardians and
sonso-ltoepers. Experience has proven
that it is safer to trust hi the honest
instincts of the whole constituency
than to llm selfish ambition of a few.
Conventions or cuuoufccs may act
wisely and honestly, but tho only se
curity for their good behavior is to
reserve to the people the inulietmblo
right and duty of bolting. "Organi
sations" to establish party lyrntitiy or
perpetuate party slavery are odious,
seen become corrupt and intolerable,
and it it* always gratify ii g to patriot
ism when indignant public virtue re
pudiates aud overwhelms them.
Two years ago Gon. Benjamin F.
Butler was the candidate of the “or
ganization” for congress in hin diotrict
A wholo people was rejoiced when tho
nows canto ovor tho wires that there
woro independent voters enough in
tlmt district to defeat him and rebuke
tho organization of which lie was a fit
standard hearer. This year ho is
again a candidate for coiigross «' f "
"organization" in **•* ’’ -* vU0
u tii*' 5 " ....uiuor district, aud
...i of pleasure oveispread tho na
tion when it was announced that an
independent candidate would iu all
likelihood save tho next congress from
the disgrace and contamination of his
presence.
It is to bo hoped that an "organ
ized democracy ".will never descend so
loW"tin "organized republicanism," and
nominate lor a high place mi admitted
"Ud proven . owundivl; but il you de
sire lu dignify and enthrone over us a
system which nmy lead to such ro-
nuUs, you may count largely on my
patriotism, hut 1 desire you to draw
» pui’ilig/y ou my zeal for "organiza
tion."
1 havo written tho above without
leLTeuco to the pending eauvi.vs iu
the Till district. 1 havo no desiro to
meddiu in a question which does i.ot
personally interest me, but I will add
tha it 1 wero a citizen i*l t h-*t uistnct
Hie fuel that Dr Felton ia an inde
pendent candidate would uut of itself
decide me lo vote against him..
1 am old enough to retuetul mr that
Cu.ii. Jiicknuii was au indep undent
candidate for tho presidency, un.'l
none tho w orse democrat beeu uso no
ran uguidst the nominee of Ins party
amt broke up and utterly domuiisfied
m good mon sometimes leko
railing utiensation against a
neighbor. I remember to havo hoard
very naughty things charged against
Gen. Jackson himself when ho wus an
independent candidate.
But if, perchance, Dr. Felton in not
so good a man. so able a congressman,
so incomparable a democrat, as 1 have
thought him, there i9 no constituency
in this .State more ablo to discover
his weakness and detect his shortcom
ings than tho quick wilted people
of your district. No body i.f citizens
in this world havo less need of any
body to tell them whom to voto for.
I urn very respectfully .your fellow
citizen, H. V. M. Miller.
To P. McClalchy, chairman, and oth
ers, Marietta, Ga.
DABNEY!
The
He^o of Snake
Creek Gap !
Wlio in Gen. Win. T. Wofford l
Editor Rkcohd:—Omi. Win. Tatum
Woflord (not Col. Dr. n r I’.l-etor
John W. Woflord) and Dr. Felton Imd
a most glorious, enthusiastic muetii g
in Marietta on Saturday, 1 lib. Tho
crowd was largo and thoroughly
awake to the necessities of the time.
Gen. Wofford is weeding a wide row
in hcliulf of tho pooplo. 1 learn lie
will address the people of GVdartown
ou Saturday, tho 2Htli of October. It
is rumored that Polk county will give
him a glorious welcome and regular to advocate tlmi lino—if not, it was
We copy the following, chapter of
Dabney’s “war record” from the
Homo Bulletin:
In 18G0, when delegates were to b •
nominated and elect* <1 t th 1 eonv i -
lion which decluivd i r « p irate S ute
secession, W. H. Dalm.-v, R. M. Y.-ung 1
and James M. F..*-mau woro nunuu. I
ted os c<; -ojK.rative union e did it- . I
Dabney ■!. dared on i. stump m *1 '
htrfurn the pc >pi >l (juulni c <uut> j
that hn »can not /'<> ’ b r<-.<*•.a, and da- I
(jounced his oppr.imuDi in fai r, it-.r-t
of fnhehoods, n.'.Kerting that ll ? na> .
scent secessionist. It will b • n n;. m- i
bored by thu reader that the stt
out Union party in that cutup
chi iged W. II. Dibnov w
ing w til other icadiug Fi
Milledgoville. They were to go home
to their constituent*, and if on their
roturn they found their constituents
favurublu to secession, then they wore
I
! loin
Proven Beyond a Doubt
Editor Rnunn -The Dabnoycrais
having di-pind of defeating D.
Fi llup l>v fair moans, havo ud >pt»d
all kind* *>;' sutdi rfilges, mid do*hot \
I promulgate \
) the {ample and
Morfunae Slier iff Sale.
ILL bo sold before die court house
door in C'cdnrtoxvn, l’nlk oouwty, (Li
ccn the legal hourn ot sale, on tho
Fir»t Tuesday in November, tho following
properly, to-writ:
Lots of land No. 708, 7:1.1, and 780, nil
lying nnd being in the 'Jd district and
4th hccdon cf Polk county. (»a., as the
property of Lea Neal, Fried tipmi by iir-
favo
MiJ*
I .Mort
I 1 <
of M»
ho, wont halfuf lots of land
17th district nnd -ilh secti*
i W 1. McCaiilnrt
111 ‘il uio lo ) mill ii. Ii
*n G 1
ul th*
*ptr-
ruiiHi meeting.
I propose to say something about they Wore to i
j agreed by this crew of blood-drink-
this grand old Confederate, whos<-
name is a household word in the
When that convention assembled
Dabney sent to Freeman t > como to
homes of Southern soldiers nnd uroud • his room, nnd to m- *-t the Floyd
the fireside of lonely widows and or-1 county delegates. Fruumuo went
plmn children, whosenaturiil protector ll,, d was lol. by Duhin-y thut iiis crowd
and support fell by the side of Gen
Wofford in the battles of Virginia.
Ho was then their friend, their trusted
counsellor; to-day he is known
throughout this country as the cham
pion and defender of widows mid or
phan children.
Mr. Editor, it may not bo familiar
to you, but is to Bartow county, that
there was a time in our histo y, just
after thu war, when life was very
blank- times were exceedingly hard—
families whose head was spared wero
11' -oIvi d to vote for secession, and
desired him (Freeman) to do likewise.
Freeman replied "thut the conven
tion which nominated him mid the
voters who elected him were opposed
to such action—that ho could not nor
would not betray the confidence re
posed in him"
Dabney, unwilling thou as now, to
ullow thu people a wur.i in their own
political matters, voted fin secession
ordinance on tnu 1st ballot.
\Y<; see he w as faithless in the first
trust ever c iniided to him. It i> prob-
ihlo he will do butler tho next time we
l’ 11 - to U,, ' i1 ' “ lli,l “ 1 " S-'t ‘“'l 111111 ll.oi.ui' him will) our culi,|,
clothing. Many suflVml, after faith
ful struRgh
holplets ones. Good women, being
mothers, followed their milk cows in
the furrow of the field, "sowing in
tears to reap iu joy"—little children
•Since that time he hui
hr* ad for their J inside of KiugH up tu 1870. IK- was
nominated at Rome, because ho hud
advocated Trammel ou tho stump-
fur this mid nothing more. Trammell
demanded it, unit ii was done.
Tins man proposes t » had tin-
who had buou tenderly nurturod, wore ; Democracy, when he h< tia\. d the
barefoot aud in tatters, while the
struggling fathers and Inn-lmnds
ntidet
i of
... . . . , | ^..arils, mid ..
worked day and night to keep g>,uni ^ 0 uld wipe np
hunger from tho door. Jant then,’ ' *
when the poor widows mul orphans
wero holpU'Au and alone, with no de
fender nor protector Have the almighty
father above—when fdarvati.ui threat
ened, mid bleak poverty encircled
tlu .se families of bravo mon w ho died
lo save their cum tty, then, in this ex
tremity, God iuov» d iho heart of this
gland old chieftain to ho their bpeoiul
friend and defender.
Ho took his own moans, giviiRv dt* J
minibhod by onlniuitics of war, aud '
bought bread aud divided w "
MtlVering onus. Ho r* * lil theM-
neighbors; ho btr. , rp j,.* ,UJl ^ Mr '^ 1 *‘‘ s
ply ho had
untry which trusted
a company of Homo
lo his boast that ho
iih a hilk handker
chief all the. blood that would b-
spilt. That company was in the
neighborhood of .Snake Creek Gap,
when lie (thu loader) look uu nl*rm
ami ho led his conmiai d <d Homo
Guards ou Midi . "In ller sk« lief iik. e
dui id I 111 wail nuvvr L 1 Ml tvf,iv.
Inat uii/unr. d ei*»wd in ^ t e..ue* '
tra*t d agaii— ted pie i. ,«Uuv > ‘
hirunt'lf l i favored spoil* •>' tool
Was no blood to W" when thtr.
el lien
ni.pli«.-«! f
JOEl. DRLWEH, Oidiea y*
, , /'ir.OKOIA, POLK COUNT\ -L IMVal-
•anded I l 7 u.ml, Coanlin.) of tl. • minor Wa of
V )ltou, nod b ive t dk< ' ' • 4 ■
to Dr. Felt Ul m the whole proceed- ' J* 111
ings. Then why say that. *aid con- j i*
veiitiou eudorsed Felton. It must j P u
lmvo been done with tho liopo that ! -
tho truth would not he known before j ( j
the election. Kilm
In tho same paper in an editorial is j {")*
the following nssertion : j for
'•'Vo do noi holievo Ihert i- a candid '* 10
friend of Dr. Felton but wlmt will a*t mlt M*® ,
that Folk, ni too b.-t. will not ^ ive Dr. 1,1 •
Felton u majonly Hmh time, while many of j
them confoiti thut; Dabney s proq>.<- ^ are; 1
good for carrying tliw oounry'by IOC
Now, sir
friend of I
mul consulted much with Felton men, I ih**'jrrou:~. i'
and have never heard a candid friend , Thor* f r
of Dr. Felton put his majority below on*!ho'ni'
300. 1 would like for the Express t<» 1 tile them in
give Uio name of a candid frietul of
D. Felton who says lie will not carry
Polk. Tho editor of the Express
last Monday confossod to a candid ; 111
friend of Dr. F. that Polk would giv* '*
Folton a majority of 100. II.- will «n
publish to thu world that Felton men
admit that, ho cannot got a majority, Ri
nil nt tho same time admit privately ' ''
that the county will go for him by \
100. "Oh, c 'lisistohey, thou art a *
jewel" almost wholly unknown to
Dabney era U
Does any ono doubt tlmi .Sk 1 -.ith,
tho rovenue r.uli.iul, belongH to the
Dabney ring? and that tho Dubnsy
clubs are giving aid nod comfort to
tho said Shunts. Tho fnot that their
(J- d irtowu organ is giving publicity
to Shouts aud his meetings and nj' 1 '^
ing a notoriety for tho ttlre- * v
riotis Hlumts,
vni.l
lion will be I’iniit.-il. Kq.
J(M:i. HUB"'!:!!, Only
KDlUilA, FOLK CUl NTV. —NV.
i.ilraior ou tho estate of
, of i
oil all the land
Theveforo all
rill fit j them at
of Ordinary io.
ie lir.n Monday
Mon
• law. Oct.
, 187<
JOB I. HUE W Lit, Ordinary
licpiit\ -iMrill Sale.
ro the court house do*
county, (Ja., hot tree
lold b ■
f land No
, the fol
i tho firHt Tups la
Mici
W'.r,
•. (m. t, i«7»;.
I '>■!••... p
revenue urtlo.*-
rt .l, of'
id his clan t
irnst l hn*..,
thr
hull »).
old I
i the
)|H proveil I«V
i’ll. \V«,1|, nil
•log fiot- tu^l tuie*
; and pertain t*>
at Dalton, will i
prodigious fare
. . convince the peoplo of the 7th District
il tho little sup- ; that Da buoy, the hero of Snake Cr< ek
urivo away tho demon Gap, aud the turn-coat delegate in
uuugor that was ginring upon those ,‘ s ^ le ‘ r choice, a 1
widows and orph
supply was gone, entirely oxhnusted, ! tow ns
he left his homo, paid hip own ox pons- trict.
os to Washington city, laid tho case
of theso stifforors before a Republican
congress, and ue ntaoKO hiik.vi> for
the holplcss families of theso Confcd-
\\-i. || . | though ho is aided by a certain lot ot
11 1 filthy ink Klingers scattered about thu
i and out of our political dis-
IJuhney-SliL'ulH-.Ulller-llftllHoii.
On Monday night last at Rockmart,
W. II. Miller nnd parson liillsou, col-
oruto soldiers, who died on his right ! orotl, orated at length, ostensibly fo
hand and his left, and whose bones j Shouts and tlio color liuo, hut i
worn led bloudiing ou » Immlrod but- r0 ' ,lily llu “' t,llk 1Vil “ m^iuljr un "old
tletields in Virginia. Think *»fit, Mr.
Editor, this great soldier, and soldier
of high lank, whose face
Foltou." Occasionally there was men
tion in uio of "Col. Dabnoy,” and onco
two or three whiles of "Mr. Shoals"
the enemy; whsho youthful imtriotism i ^ fWl ^ ont>s » nt H* 0 request of a
Iwl him to tol'vo b» couutry ui Mexi-! 1,u “ bcr '" b’ 1008 . roplitU to llu
co; whoso imituror zoal luudo him ou-1 Il>-' uiguuieut wus strong
tor tho mill)’ ut llm begum mg of tho 1 (urcll| li . mul curriud ixmviotiou to the
war i 1 nd serve to its close; whose
cutcheon was bright to tho last
whoso courage never waned,
when ho came home, ho was we
hearers, lie showed the negro who
his real friends; didn’t ask them
j to voto for Felton, hut said thut he,
loomed should do s. ; told them to
by tho grateful tears and thu uudying
love of his countrymen. Yis! tiiih
hero, this grand oul stdilier, laid aside
his honoiable pride —he humbled him
11 ln<i bread for tho stat viug chil
dren of Ins dead soldiers. Talk ot j
heroism ! This was the ring of the j
true ;notul. Talk ot greatness ! Snail
wo oof honor this glorious warrier,
who, forgetting self, has again laid
j ,-oido tho comfort his charming home,
I UUl ' al the cull of iii > people, ho Ins
ui'guiiiz itimi which hud ralu.1 tbc COWo ‘ ' Ul l ' IU ' Ul ' U ' UU ' ‘ "''"' ll ''
-"'i i’.g,iUw„y for twmiti- I SaU ' 111,11 ° oou “ lr - v 111
■Thu owners, the stock- j
citizens.
exercise their own judgment aud not
| he led by the nose by tho Slicuts-Dab-
ney ring, or any *iber clique
! it> an orator ot tine ability, and his
I speech swept away completely the
] clutusey fabric built by the very nu
aUe colored hirelings. Everythiuj
passed oft* quietly and harmoniously,
aOotit fifty colored and twenty w hites
being present. All were amused as if
at u circus. Not a vote will Uu gained
for Dabney or Shouts.
count i y
four
hold*
US fie
>o found
putiiut-
a nHiuiocr
tO Ml j., Ml
Win u
X. L ■ y M
-'■ rm Cvi .srv.
of that "orgumza.iou,
course, made an uproar .md niu
j lustily, "greui is i). : ,uu of tuo i
I sinus, hut Uo One now
| to call iu questieu Jack
ism or democracy.
I ii.ivu known Dr. 1‘Vltoa from Lis
1;lr1 )’ manbooii, umi tn.it io..g no-
iiuninliinco iuduevs in m ihink tn.it
tK.it.ibh you nro misinkou 11 mppos-
illg tlmtlio is “(ho nvowril a. ,il.*;ig t.o
ns wo.l ns tho oauduliio of iho oigmi-
mc.l liuiionl party.* 1„ luuts u ,
poliln-al oxuitcuiout ohargos will ho
unulo on very quwtiouablo tcstmiony,
ami hum
Bartow.
! The people u. olu ^ "f ting lu.
ai.d because Dr. F. broke the liny
and is tho only man fan keep ii
down at this time. „ "key are going
tu elect him. They k. * M; wr they owe
him a debt of gratitude, o°*
» g to pay it. The coun ^.v JAt targe
will pay uo attention to l be town
r i ll o or Dubuey club. You’n e see,a a
wind dou.i with uo rain in it. Tea t’»
tm- way with the Dabuoyit w—a 11
puff and blow.
Voto for Dr. FcUon Nov. 7th.
Friend Wtlliugtiam, of the Carters-
vfile Express, has left L.r usuulcour.se
of criticism uiul meets all the argu
ments uf Dr. I - * lien s fru-uds aud sup
porters by the ciy of * Il idic.d." There
are some minds sj vtnal that it has
^j-ome see. ii.* ii.ui. _- to i seribev -
uulity lo J' t bers who are actuate! by
priucijde. lioC.'ivs “uoiuiuee, nomi
nee,” when wo all kafMY lie could not
stand Trammell as a Homme*., it
party aie u.;*
Siieatsjin the
If he and Li - c
ng Go
•cst af h:
Iwii
; to tin-
l-p-l >pl
St tbif
tnd it;
i Dab- 1
But l
MiHtiiin their
• further proof
n aid of Dabnt
, written by a
It*
out :
187
Hov w, Felton*,
Cartoravillc, lift.,
Mm : — Returning from ft
protracted northcrnjtour n few dnvHiinco, ■
1 mol Bcvcral of your CarUrsvillo trlcndi, i
from whom l learned much of the munner
iu which tho cftuvas* wus Iming cunduotod >
in your tlsHtric!. From Fa|*on to Atlanta
1 saw very clearly thut uu outrage wan 1
nought to be pcrprvtraied through Hheat-i i
of Rome; that lie ii running in the inter- .
.•■rot Dabney there, can tie no doubt. 1
judge from the following fact-: t < »f. Fain
came aboard the train ac Calhoun. 8ke.*itn
at Kingitou. IV-m the laner p!a *._• to A*
lui.tft they, with the ouitor of a I*. Ik county
paper,! which lxvi>ri Dabney' 1 ! election
For Vn-tauc*.
It. V. l.l'MFKIN, 8)-.,
Who cau now doubt that there is
uu nlhuuco between Sheats aud the
Dubuey riugV This alliauco was
hatched by some il.uk lantern com
mittee. FlXTOJt L LMoCILVT.
MARBLE WORKS,
1UI0AD STREEr,
liOiii; - - GEOKOI.A
MON UMENTS,
Tomb and Headstones, Vases
G lob*; a. folk i:m \
Smith hm apptiod Tor
pi-rinnully nti'I -i tting ap«rt
JOEL UKEWFR, Ur I.
Ayer’s Cathartic - Pills,
For nil tho purpoaea of a Family Phynic,
ami for curtni* CoaUrcnoan. Jaundice.
IndiKosMon, Foul Stomach. Iiroath,
lio oil ache, Eryaipolaa, Hhcumataani,
Eruptions and Skin DincaioN. Hil-
lousnoB*. Dropay, Tumors. Worm*,
Nouralgin. as a Dmnor 1'iU,
for FurifymK tlio Blood,
Arc the most cC-
•tivc an*I conge
nial purgative ever
iliscovered. They
are mild, but ef
fectual in their
operation, moving
tuc bowels surely
and without pain.
Although gentle
in their operation,
Jrwtm U&7\ thc r arc -till the
• jb-u uioit thorough and
-.-arching catllar-
tic medicine that can he employed: cleans
ing the stomach and bowels, and even the
blood. In small doses of one pill a day,
they stimulate the digestive organs and
promote vigorous health.
Avrn's Pills havo boon known for
more than a quarter of a century, and have
obtained a world-wide reputation for their
virtues. They correct diseased action in
the several assimilative organs of the
body, and arc so composed that obstruc
tions within their range can rarely with
stand or evade them. Not only do they
cure tho every-day complaints of every
body, but also formidable nnd dangerous,
diseases that have baffled the best of
human skill. While they produce power
ful effects, they arc, at the same time, tho
safest and best phy-ii,- tor children. By
their aperient action they gripe much less
than tne common purgative?
give pain whe
nd si
i the
gtlien
Adapted^!
ie bSod,’
id makes the
um their u«
Dr.J.C. AYER & CO., Lowell, Mass.,
wiu aud Shout-, but Lee..uvJ t.
was too weak to do them any i
i 1. V EH Y Wli LUC.
A. M. ALLi'AUUE i CO
F*r eale in Cedartown b/ ”
URBANE »** JONE8, Druggists