The weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1891-1921, September 13, 1892, Image 4

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    )1£S iiriissa SAS5XKS rUKSDAl MORNING. SEPTEMBER 13 139i -
ATHENS WEEKLY
j*ublUhodDaily, Weekly»n<l Sunday,by
(HR ATHRM8 PUBLISHING CO.
T. W, HERD
J H. STOKE & CO.,
.. Managing Editor.
Tbb Athens daily BAnu la delivered
by carriers in the city, or mailed, postagcftee,
to any Address At the followlnK rates: $8.00 per
»aarT*2.50for alx month*, »l.»lcrthreemontns.
The weekly orBnndAyBArasybiJOOjjr yeM,
l osnts for i months. InvArlAbly Cssh lnsd-
Altai.
Transient advertisements win bo inserted At
the rate o( 11.00 per square lor the first Insertion,
and bo cents tor each subsequent Insertion, ex-
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rates can be obtained.
Local notices will bo charged at the rate of 10
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tractedtor extended periods, when special rates
Will be made. _ _
All business communications should bo
dressed to the Business Manager. ,
THE STATE ELECTION-
The Slate Election is near at hand,
and the Democracy is getting in
shape to sweep things before them.
And why shouldn’t they?
What reason can be assigned for
overturning the Democracy in Geor
gia? Why should the Democratic
management of Georgia cflairs be
repudiated? There is not a solitary
reason why such a thing should be
done.
Democracy has governed ably and
well in Georgia since it drove the
carpet baggers from power. It bas
brought Georgia from a State
disolution and poverty to the present
high position she occupies among
the States of the Union.
With a carofalneas worthy of the
trust confided in them, the Demo
cratic governors, State house officers
and Legislators have conducted pub
lic affairs in such a statesmanlike
manner as to command the admira*
tion of the whole country.
Under tbeir guidance the financial
system of the State has been
strengthened and improved, and to
day her bonds are eagerly sought by
men in search of sound and safe
investments.
Tho State Constitution, framed by
the Democracy of Georgia, stands as
an everlasting monument to the
party, a bulwark between our peo
ple aud oppression from trust?
monopolies, or combinations, a safe
goard from oppression, a guarantee
of the rights of the people b.ing pro
tected whenever infringed upon.
The school system amounting to
nothing when Democracy returned
to power, now is marching lorward
in pr< sperity. The pledge of Demo
cratic loyalty to education is found
in the fact that for tho year 1892 the
appropriations for common school
amount to over oae million dollars.
The heroes of the war, the woun
ded confederates, the widows of con
federate soldiers who lost their lives
in defense of their county, or who
died from wounds received while in
her service, are pensioned as liberally
as the State can a fiord.
A thousand other acts, passed
with the sole idea of benefittiag the
whole people of the State, make np
the record of the Democracy of Geor
gia. And yet we are asked by the
Third party to tarn the agents of
the party out, to turn over the gov
ernment of onr State to the followers
of the new creed.
Governor Northern stands for re-
election. He has made an excellent
governor. It has been his pride to
foster ev< ry educational movement
of worth, and no higher praise need
be said of any man. He who seeks
and labors to place educational ad
vantages in the reach of the masses
of his people is a public benefactor
and deserves the support of his peo
ple, Gov. Northern is a Christian
gentleman. He is a man who re
flects in the highest degree the
characteristics of the Georgias. He
has conducted tho affairs of State
with a firm and skilled hand, and
Georgians should feel justly proud
of his administration. Those who
are running upon the State ticket
with him are known to the people
and their worth is appreciated.
Whatever may be the discussion
on National banks or free silver or
any other national issue, the De
mocracy of Geo-gia has always stood
sqnarely to the rack. Then why
attempt to pull down the State or
ganisation?
The Third party admits that it has
no fault to find with Southern De
mocracy. Then why is' it fighting
the administration of Gov. Northern
so fiercely? The reason is too plain.
Candidate Peek wants to be govern
nor, and on down the line until yon
strike '‘Mister” Mahaffey who is
speaking days and nights for the
attorney-generalship.
Is Georgia going to repudiate
Northern? About as much probA*
RANNFR wiity of ft »■ there iB of thi8 p® n I ment8 » hard timc8 » and other per_
DiimUm f&rmiQg ip favor D f Weaver, smsive reason?, turn their backs up-
thingno power this side of the on the old party and forsake her.
, ., . i, _ m1rm Take the common sense view of it,
throne of Almighty God could mtke , , „ .
, , ° J . friends, and come back. For the
us do, and we have no fears of inter- honest |ollowcr of TMrd part yiflm
ference from that source judging L he door i8 alwaJ8 opeD> There can
from some of Weaver’s utterances. be nothing but barm to result from
Democracy is going to carry the division. Two distinct political par-
day in Georgia. This grand [old I ties among the white people of Geor.
State, the mother of Statesman, and I gia cm bring nothing but evil to
warriors, and patriots; that gave,.to our people.
tbe nation Ben Hill and Toombs and And thebe can be bot one pariy
Sthepbens and Cobb; that fought fob white men in Georgia. That
back the encroachment of Federal' PABTy IS Democracy.
power in reconstruction day.* and
banish from her limits the bayonets
of Federal soldierly at tbe polls;
Georgia, the proud queen of the
South, who rules her . subjects with
wisdom, justice and moderation
ecorns the proffered friendship of the
men who would undermine her
throne, and repudiates the
THE MAN FOR GOVERNOR.
Governor Northern stamped him'
self as the man who ought to be
elected Governor of Georgia when he
said at Bishop that no power on
crats of the Tar Heel State declare
that the Third party will not be able
to tarn the State into tbe hands of
the Republicans, and that the De
mocracy will carry North Carolina
by ten thousand majority.
As an evidence of the truth of
their assertion, the Third party is
undoubtedly disintegrating rapidly
there, several of i’s leaders having
returned to the fold.
In Virginia, the Democrats are up
and at work. They declare that
Field, being bnt a coat-tail swinger
of Billy Mahone, will be unable to
lead any loyal Democrats away from
the party, and that the Old Domin<
ion will stand true to her country as
she always has done.
That the Third party is on the
run no discerniog man will deny,and
it is running pretty rapidly towards
the rigb‘, and pleads with the errin
brothers to return to their Father a
house. The memory of Aleck Ste
phens is working in the Tenth, and
along with it the matchless argu
ment and eloquence of the patriotic
Black.
And Democracy will not tail in its
work. It will mete out to Watson
the treatment due a man who has
tarnished his bright commission,and
when the Ides of November have
, will relegate him and the
earth could make him vote for Wea-
ver. His review of the character of j the shades of oblivion,
the candidate of the Third party was
party I thorough and complete, and several | history and traditions,
that would tarnish the record of the followers of the new creed were sha-
The South will remain true to her
Old Guard.
THE COMMON SENSE OF IT
The campaign between Third par*
tyism and Democracy in Georgia is
being waged with a determination
that has not been witnessed in poli
tics in this State for many years.
S ump speakers elncidate the prin
ciples of both parties, and frequently
make up great portions of the spee
ches with anecdotes and witticisms.
The press of the State, almost en>
tirely Democratic, fills its colnmnB
with records, speeches, editorials
)and the like and ever and anon
cracks jokes at the expense of the
opposition. In some sections of the
State feeling is becoming intense
and bitter between the two partier,
and the breach in the ranks of the
white people of Georgia is an il
omen for the future prosperity of
the State.
The time is ripe for the wLite men
of Georgia to call a halt in thi6 bu -
siness and take a common sense view
of it. We are fighting now for the
snccesB of certain measures and men.
ken in their blind faith to the party
that has for its chief exponent such
a man as Weaver.
Governor Northern is right when
he says that the platform, however
correct may be its principles, is a
small affair, indeed, if upon it ie
placed a man who ia base enough to
betray it, and that a party cannot
afford to place a corrupt man upon
i'.s platform if it wishes to succeed.
Weaver has said many barsb, vin
dictive, false things concerning the
people of the South, he has said then
and there is no denying it, and wher
he comes asking the votes of the
people whom he has villified, he will
find out that they are not such fools
as he takes them to be.
He may revel in the dream ot
The South must remain solid.
The Sooth will remain solid!
D-PRICE’S
fn Millions of Homes—40 Years the Stands
Thb papers are discussing Skab The Third party is condemning the
Wright, of Floyd, and his position in Democracy as to its financial policy
Omaha platform to the shades of I tegard to the (Ongres ional race in the and appealing to the records Let them
politic al obscurity. Seventh. Skab is a bi illiant fellow, but search the records for a vote in the pres-
™ — ' like Watson be isn’t in it. He is not a I ent house on the bill to remove the ten
Democrat, and deserves no aid or sym- per cent, tax from Btate banks, and they
patby from anyone who loves his party will find Messrs. Watson, Simpson &
Two months ag>, the Democratic j or his State, or his country. In these | Co., voting against it. To the records'.
-Editorial Comment
newspapers of North Caaolina were ap
parently ready to admit that the Third
paity was in the land; and it was pre
dicted that it would carry the State, or
so diviae the whites as to cause the re
publicans to win.
Within the past month, however, the
Democrats have perfected their org&r.-
days only th true and tried should be | to the records!
trusted with office.
The Third party leaders say they are
Watson’s record is one that won’t | as good Democrats as anybody. They
bear much airing. No wonder the are like the negro’s dog that was named
•‘jag” hunter from the Tenth ia in fa- Nicodemus. The owner of the dog w&s
vor of not going into the records of the asked why he named his dog Nicode-
_ candidates. On one side is a character, mus. “Well,” was the reply, “you see
ization and" sent r out their campaign I a reputation, and a record embodied in he’ll have to be born again before he'll
speakers, and it ia now evident that the | the life of J. C. C. Black, invulnera- | ever be of any account.”
“GIVE US BACK OUR FLAG
Major Black made a just demand
of Tom Watson when at Crawford-
ville, in behalf of a betrayed De
mocracy, he demanded of the deser
ter the return of the people’s ensign.
It was placed in the hands of a
man who ran in a Democratic pri
mary, waB elected as a Democrat,
went to Washington as a Democrat,
and before the House of Representa*.
ives was organized, trampled it un
der his unhallowed icet and deserted
his post before the battle was begun.
He admitted that he was elected
as a Democrat; he wrote it himselt
for the Congressional biographer
What answer has he to make to hi
new organization is rapidly meltiDg
away. The impression now prevails
that the noise made by tbe Thii d party
men caused their strength to be greatly
exaggerated from the first. They took
the field at a time when the D moorats
were inactive, and made such a racket
that many superficial observers oame to
tbe conclusion that they were literally
sweeping the field. A little later,when
noses were counted,the calamity shon -
era were found to be only a very small
minority.—Constitution.
ble and clean; on the other is a betray
ed trust, a demagogue, and an office
se-ker in th» ptrs *n of Thomas. E
Watson.
constituents who demand back the
Southern people coming on bended flag hg haa diahonored?
knees to ask the pardon of such mei That fae wafJ elected M aa 0cala
as he; but the dream will have 8 | Democrat? We say to him and hie
rude
8th.
awakening about November
Mb. Harrison’s allusion to tbe Ala
bama election shows that he does no;
confine his attention to national affairs,
and be accepts as true the unsupported
statements t f a bolting faction in tb<
Democratic party. Why should Mr
Habbisok cite this State election units-
he intends it as an argument in favor ot
his dearly desired Force bill. As a mat
ter of fact, that was his intention, fo>
be makes no secret of tbe fact that he
is still in favor of the national control of
elections. His vindictiveness again*
he South is still made manifest by hi
ad o iptandum reference to Alabama.—
A ppeal- Avalanche.
The Southern Ap„ t al, a colored news
paper published in Atlanta, says:
“Tom Watson told the negroes in his
-peech at Sparta, Ga., that “the colot
line had been wiped out in Georgia.”
One poor fellow walked into the whit»
people’s hotel after the speech andcall-
■ d for dinner. Of course he was re
fuse!, but he insisted on “his rights,”
»nd had to be put out Don’tbelievi
Tom Watson’s swtet talk, he is only
iiustlingfor the negio vote.”
The alliance of South Carolina
sweeps everything before it. Why? it
is inside the ranks of the Democracy.
How about the Georgia alliance? It ia
best answered by the familiar quota-
tion: “A house divided against itself
cannot stand.”
In Athens if people drink and live it
comes from the “dispensaryif they
die it comes from the reservoir.—Hust
ler of Rome.
Reasoning on this line, when we get
our new waterworks system, people
who live here need not die at all.
It begins to look like the Third party
in North Carolina will have to hold an
other convention. The nominee for
Associate Justice has already declined.
Sow Col. Harry . kinner, of Green
ville, one of the elictor \ for the State at
arge, has declined after accepting the
domination. He was first nominated
for Governor, then for Congress in the
(first District, and now refuses to be
inytning.
The Scripture says, “A tree.is known
by its fruit.” A quarter of a century or
more of republican rule has borne such
miserably bad fruit that it is time the
old republican tree was dug up by the
roots and destroyed “root and branch.”
—North Ga. Citizen.
MRS- MAYBRICK’S CASE.
Efforts are still being made to sc-
When the battle is over two months | CDre the P ardon and release of Mr8
from now, we will have to live to-
followers that Mr. Everett, Mr. Liv-
ingston and Mr. Moses were elected
as Ocala Democrats and are as hon
orable men as Georgia has in Con
gress. Did they desert their colors? |
For the sake of the principles o
gether just as we have done for yeais
past, regardless ofjjthe succtss of one
party or the other. The prime ob
ject of the Georgian’s ambition now
Florence Ethel Maybiick, who is I the Ocala platform ? • Then why doe
serving out a life sentence in Wokinp I he laugh at the Force bill question,
prisor, England, and although sh> I that piece of legislation so vigoroua-
has served out three years of he> I iy denounced at Ocala? Why doe*
imprisonment, her friends are stil’ I he support a platform that is as si
should be to keep Georgia all right. I exerting themselves in her behalf. lent as the grave upon the tariff rob
We cannot afford to be disrupted in In the September number of th- bery, that piece of iniquity denoun
order that any man or set of men North America Review, Gail Hamil ced by the Ocala platform? Why iB
may triumph. We cannot afford to 1011 addresses “ an 0 P« a letter to Her he opposed to the repeal of the ten
live in discord and division. Our| M "i eB, y» the Q ucen ” in which hf I P-'r cent tax on Stale banks, and
sets forth the reason why Mrs. May- why does he denounce them as wild-
brick should be granted a release. I cat banks, when the Ocala platform
The letter is certain’y a strong one, I demanded the repeal of that prohib-
and very clearly set* forth the true I it 0 ry tax? Can he hide behind thi
character of the case. It is an arti-1 pretext when he is in direct oppoai
cle that should be read by everyone. Lion to three of the main demands
It seems as if the English authori* I Q f the Ocala convention? Is WatsoD
ties, aa also the Queen, have been I ^ g rm an advocate of Ocalaism as
petitioned at different times, bn’ h e c i a | ms to be ?
without avail. Probably this open I Did he leave the party because i
letter may serve its purpose well. I did anything wrong or because it
Mrs. May brick’s case is a ven failed to do what it ought, to have
well known case, and the Young don e? He claims now that Un-
American woman bas many sympa I Democratic House has done nothing
thizers this side the waters who hope
she may yet be paidoned.
Congressman Livingston very ef
fectually answered a Third party ite th<
other day in a speech. The Thir<
party ite yelled from the crowd, “Ob
Colonel, you needn’t talk now, yor
are the daddy of the Third party i>
Georgia.” “All right,” replied Liv
ingston, “you’ll agree with me that th«
Bible speaks tbe truth won’t you?”
“Yes,” said the Third partyite. “Well
it save ‘children obey your parents,’an
if 1 am the daddy of the movement, 1
tell you now to get into Democratii
camps as fast as you can, and if you
follow Scriptural advice you’ll obey
me.”
Watson is a grand stand player, who
aakes some pretty catches occasionally
out always muffs the ball or strikes out
it critical points. He has now chal-
enged the different congressmen to |
jo nt debate, stipulating of course that
te shall have the advantage of opening
md closing in eath case. This is a |
great gran 1 stand play, but just watch
him saw out when be tries to get a con
gressional base hit.
The attention of the farmers of tbe
South is invited to President H arri
son’s letter of acceptance, in which he
says in effect that be proposes to ask
Congress to appoint another commission
to draft another force hill.
Cholera has at last invaded New
York City, and one death from that dis
ease has been reported. The sanitary
authorities of New York, however, are
working like beavers to prevent the
spreading of the disease.
neighbors may be discontented,quar
relsome and divided, but we cannot
afford to be. The North may be
torn with discord, bnt that is no
reason why Georgia should cast hero
aelf into the same stream. It is
poor consolation, indeed, to live in
discord in onr family, because onr
neighbors pcross the street are dis
cordant. We jnst can’t afford to
doit.
Onr Third party friends should
stop awhile and think what they are
doing when they charge upon tho
Democratic party that it has been
corrupt and unfaithful to its trusts
since 1865. If the Democratic party
has been a party of corrnption since
Senator Justin S. Morrill, a Re
publican, says in an article intheNortl
American Review that the tariff plant
of the Democratic platform of 1892 i
one of tbe principles of the dead Con
federaoy, and for this reason urge
Northern people to vote against it. 1
is but another evidence that the princi
ples underlying that structure whicl
Northeners are pleased to call the “dead
Confederacy” still lives and will ulti
mately triumph. And this tariff plant
is one that will float on the topmos*
wave.
A striking contiast indeed—At Ocala
1 condemnation of tbe tariff and thi
Force bill. At Omaha a strange silence
-n both subjects. Why the change
Have the principles changed or the
un^n? Evidently tbe latter. In one in-
.tance the South eliminated in favor of
in honest governn ent; in the other
Weaver, Donnelly & Co., patched up
the conglomerate mess known as the
O naha platform.
Watson was v<ry dramatic in his
speech at Crawfordville. He will do
r.he grand act on the 9th of November
vhen he will play in the role of chief
mourner for tbe dead Third party—if
be don’t suicide before that time.
“Mister” Mahaffey has tracked
the attorney-generalship as far as the
South Carolina line, and when last seen
was swimming the Savannah river with
his eyes set towards the land of Till
man.
A sample of ihe argument used by
the Third party men in Oconee is that
Mr. Cleveland is furnishing his follow
ers with white hats for the campaign.
I'his kind of argument (?) is deemed
very effective by those using it, but to
man with common sense it snows that
the Third party has about gone up the
week.
Black extended Watson’s time live
minutes aud Watson called Black down
in the middle of a sentence, refusing to
let him finish it. That’s a sample of
Third party fairness, you know.
If Black’s Bollock bond vote were
so corrupt, why do we fiud Watson
voting for him all along after that, and
now condemning him for the vote?
GEN STEVENSON.
The Republican national commit
then, they have been parties to this I tee have failed in a very dirty at-1 words » when be left the party, it was j
for the people, but when he bolted
out of the ranks of Democracy with
a sadden leap, the House had not
been organized for work. In other
Col W. J. Morton will defeat Mr
George P. Brightwell the Third party
nominee for representative by a goc d |
majority. The Democracy of Clark*
county is stronger to-day than it ha-
been in years. It is true that som
have withdrawn from the ranks, bu
they are very few. The number c
young Democrats who will cast thei
first ballots next month will over-bal
ance the number who left the party o'
their fathers to follow after strange I
We are carious 10 know what Wea-
or is going to say alout his utterances
u the Southern pe< pie when he ad-
'resses an Athens a. dience. It makes
little difference what be says, however*
fra tree is known by its fruits, and the
-uthor of the pension plank of the St.
Louis platform can’t come down here
nd soft-soap sensibb Georgians.
Livingston is going into the Tenth
district to meet W atson, if Watson w ill
j give him a chance. Now let’s wait and
see whether Watson is so everlastingly
anxious to meet Livingston.
corruption. If it acted in concer
with monopoly in the sixties and
early seventies ; if then its record
was in favor of National banks and
against the poor, the very men who
now support Third partyism aided
in putting this yoke npon their own
the same party he had praised so j
highly in 1888 while State elector
the same party with the record on-
I altered for better or worse.
Did he leave by instructions from
I the Alliance ? The records of tbe j
tempt to break down the popularity
>f General Stevenson with the peo'
pie ot Illinois. They sent out a
number of spies, says the New Or-
leans States, for the purpose of gath
ering the record of his life, from the I All Unce show that a reso- I ten 7oH^8
Mb. Cleveland never did deposi
with or loan to the National bank
sixty million dollars as Is claimed by th-
Third partyitea. The report of th-
treasurer of the United States show
that daring the four years of Cleve
land’s administration, only two mill-
were deposited in th*
It would indeed be a calamity for the
Little Tin God of the Third party to
ict rashly, as he intimated—but the
ountry could possilly survive the
hook. Very few pe<ple believe he
jeant it, however. Even his own fol-
owers know that he is a turn coat, and
•ould shrink from such an act, even
hough be said it himself.
Tom Watson found Major Black to
be made of the same Democratic ma
terial as Judge Lawson, and he re
ceived as severe a drubbing at Craw
fordville as he did at Bishop.
“Pick up thelightwood knots in your
path and buy less kerosene oil to start
your fire with. This iB the way to suc
ceed in haid times.”—Hon. James M.
dmith, at Watkinsville.
necks. It seems to have taken them I t * me B radua ** d fr° m college and I | a tion to this effect was lost, and the I National banks by the government
a long time to find out that they I commenced to earn his own living, J on iy thing Watson has to show on
were supporting a party that advoca- with tte feo P e of findiD S somethin'-1 g[ 0n nd ia a resolution passed
ted exactly what they didn’t want. I con ^ d uaed a g a ' n3 t hi* 11 1° I by an Indiana convention, a rssolu-
Now isn’t that the truth of the mat- the can, P M g n » but the emissaries ol I tlon -^hich flowed from his brain,
ter? I the Republican managers could And and w h| c h was introduced by Col.
This shows an error in Third party
arithmetic of 58 million dollars in one
calculation. That is about as near as
they oome to anything, however.
' First Alabama, and then Arkansas
_ . We are waiting for those wonderful
No, our Third party friends, you I nothing detrimental to his character, I Mel Branch, his lieutenant, who is | Third party majorities to turn up.
didn’t err then ; it is now that you I so they were forced to hatoh a lie to I reported to have advised the farmers
are in error. Search tbe records for the effect that he mistreated and *‘to raise less cotton and more hell.”
yourselves and you can come to no starved a number of miners employ-1 The facta are plain and unvar-
other conclusion than this, that the I ed j n bis mines upon whose homes I nished, and they make out a clear
Democracy has always fought y° nr j he held a mortgage. This lie was| ca8e against Tom Watson. He has
battles and that the party ot Thomas j gQ i nd j glian tiy denounced by promi-1 the fl *g ot Democracy on*
nent Republicans of Bloomington, I der hia feet > bat Democracy intends
Tom Watson’s defeat at Crawford-
rille Saturday is & sure index to the
esult of the election in the tenth. The
little demagogue will Lave to stay at
lome, and having sold bis library, it is
‘upposed that he will till the soil.
Watson will make a better farmer than
cingressman any how.
Peek said in his speech the other day
j that the United States borrowed money
in England to pay off its indebtedness.
Where did he get his information?
From Watson, doubtless.
Jefferson is still waging valiant wai>
fare in yonr bahalf.
Toe young man w'io grows up nn»
der the nurture and admonition of a
kind and loving mother acts badly
if in bis years of manhood he for
sakes hei and her teachings-
that orders were sent to the Repub-
ean papers to cease pnblishing it.
The Inter-Ocean has ceased to charge
that he was disloyal to the Union
The I dnr * n =’ war * ® en - Stevenson’s
to have it back.
“Give os back cob flag."
If there Is one thing that Geor- |
[gians will not support, it is atral w.
Be it said to her eredit that her peo-1
I pie have never yet endorsed a man 1
Mr. Watson says he never beught
my land when sold at a foreclosure by
| the Corbin Banking Company. The
Sokh of the Third party men at Wat
kinsville Thursday had the manliness
and grit to shake off their affiliations
with the new creed and come back to
where they rightfully belong.
If Watson is bo anxious to meet Liv-
ohttge that he did has bten made by why wouldn’t he meet him m
the Tenth ? Livingston has all along
„ Mr. L. B. Uamlen,
best thing ne can do is to reverse I * ire ha81)een 100 pcre for im t0 be who in her service proved recreant 01 Au « usta > Me -> not remember
hi. position and cm. lack to th. iojutod bp the '..goo of .Under L, hS tro«.
truest .nd best altar man hath yet I on THB rim. Andthepeople of the T«—*■-*- “e.»e.t.eOotp>odtnmyd«ti
known—bis mother’s knees. So) Democratic prospects are bright* I aP 5 ®°t going to do it.
I am «l Years
, . 2 months and 26 days old. and my health Is per-
withour Third party friends of Geor- ening in e”ery quarter and the out- that narrow cell at Crawfordville, ^‘yeood. 1 hare no aches or pains about me.
gia. They were, born Democrats, look for a sweeping Democratic vie- where alee P B the diminutive giantof HOOd’S SarSapaH l!a
(that is the most of them,) reared L^iy is becoming more and more 1 Georgia statesmanship, there comes ^ieV^w^ii 3 “ y ap § etits ’
Democrats, supported the institu- prom’sing. forth a solemn warning to the peo- I preparation ever was made so wAii^ISitlLPtS
tions of Democracy, and now under Especially is this the case in North I whom hff loved, whioh bids the
misleading utaUmests, false wgu- Carolina and Virginia. Tbs Demo* lo J al -Democracy stand firmly for
_ ever was made so well suited to
tno wants ol old people.** L, 13. Hamlev
Elm Street, Augusta, Me., Sept 20.189L^’
HOOD’8 Pills at* » mild, gsotu. pslaleu.
rate *ud #®ckol Mthupttc. Al**./, peUbtt*. ■
good Democrats, and even if he didn’t
he was the agent for the concern and
drew his fat commissions and succeeded
in putting tbe farmers on the road to
the Sheriff’s door.
been anxious to meet him there.
“One of us is going to bit the ground | ocratic ballots,
aud hit it hard.”—Tom Watson at
Sparta. Yes, that is one troth he told
if he never tells ano.:btr on.*. And it
d)esi’t require a prophet or a son of »
prophet to tell which one it will be
Watson migjt as well oommance tc
jad himself thoroughly for he is the
us who is going to hit the ground.
On the morning after the State elec
tion, Mb. W. L. Peek will have the
nightmare under an avalanche of Detn*
When we ask a Third party friend to
come back into the ranke of Democ
racy, we know the embarrassment under
which he labors. He has said so much
be is ashamed to recede. But, after aU,
when a man knows he has made a wrong
step, it is the part of manUness for him
to retrace it.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, [ s s .
Lucas County, )
Frank J Orkney makes oath tuat re
s the sen'or’partcer of the firm of r • •
'heney & Co., doing business in t
City of To.leJo, County and State afore
said, and that said firm will pay te
sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS
for each and every case of Latakkji
that caunot be cured by the use 01
Black’s vote on the Bullock bonds
is not the card Mr. Watson thought
it was when be started put.
cured by
Hall’s Catabrh Curb. ....
FRANK J. CHENE^-
Sworn to before me and
my presence this 6th day of Decenib *
A. D, 1886. A w gleaS oN.
Notary Publio.
•jsKAL. j-
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inteinafiy
and acts direotly-on the blood and m
cous surface of the system- Send f
"* U T“'<5B r gW A 0.., TOU* 0.
jtfr Sold by 1 ruggists, 75c.