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T3S JAM MIT
Official Organ Ordinary.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF WINDER.
FUBLISHED KVKIiY .THUKSIIAY KtKXIN* 1
'JKFFARSON OFFICE:
V/ith the Ordinary in the Court House
P. W. Quatt.lebaum will represent the
paper and take subscr. ptions.
Subscription Rates*
Year, - “ 11.00
A. G. LAMAR,
Editor and Publisher.
THURBDAZ. APRIL 19, 19 5.
POPULIBT STATE TICKET.
For Governor —J. H. TRAYLOR, o!
Troup.
For Secretary of State—Or. L. I*
CLEMENTS, of Milton.
For Attorney General—F. H. SAF
FOLD, of Emanuel.
For Comptroller General —*T. T . HOL
BROOK, of Franklin.
For State Treasurer —J. W. PARK,
of Meriwether.
For Commissioner of AgrLulture-r-A.
U. TALLY, of Cobb.
For State School Commissioner— W .
T. FLINT, ol Taliaferro.
For Prison Comissioners —T. J.
DiCKEY, of Upson, and S. C. AIcCAN
DLEoS, of Butts.
Watch the WHITE,?) Democraticpri
unary next mouth.
The Atlanta Journal has changed
hands.
The WHITER) Democratic primary 01
Jackson couuty comes off next mouth.
It is just three weeks until the na
tional Deopels Darty convention meets
at Cincinnati.
Some mou are born with iittio ideas
and small coucoptioua of what consti
tutes real monhood, and tho longer they
live and the more extensive taoir c 0..-
tuct and experience with the world tlio
smaller they seem to get.
Tho State executive committee of the
D muorutic party has ordered a white
primary lor Jackson couuty on May
15th, and the county executive commit
tee oi tho Democratic party of Jackson
will have a WlilTEt?) primary on that
day.
Senator Morgan, of Alabama, who
defeated governor Johns on last Satur
day in the democratic primaries of that
state, lias been in tho United States
senate for 24 yoais. If ho is elected by
the next assembly and serve through
bis term it will make 30 years for him
as senator.
A lot of fellows who have boen pa
tioutly waiting for offices promised
th -m if they would remain in the dem
ocratic party will be left out iu the cold
again for the next two years. Wanting
an office has keept a number of men in
the old party when they knew the in
terests of thejpeople demanded a change.
The democratic candidates ia this
county have their anouncemeuts ruu
uing in all the county papers except
Tue Economist. We would like to tell
oar rneuy democratic patrons who their
candidates are, but being opposed to
free advertising will have to defer this
pleasure with the promise that in Octo
ber we will inform them free of charge
of the number of votes theic candidates
lacked of being elected.
Our State ticket is composed of goed
men who are qualified in every respect
to fid the positions to which they ought
to be elected. There are certainly
enough men in Georgia, who have been
affiliating with the democratic party
heretofore, who have become disgusted
with that party of broken promises and
high taxes and who will support our
ticket this year and help us carry it to
victory. Let every man cheer up and
go to work to aooomplish this result.
Important Questions.
Do you realize tine meaning of the
rapid growth of cities, and the dangers
that are gathering about them?
Have you solved the monopoly prob
lem?
Do you knok how fast the movement
for public ownership of public utilities,
as water, gas and electric work*, street
railways, etc , is growing in this day,
and do you understand the reasons for
the movement?
Do you know what cities and towns
in the United States now operate
their own electric light plants, ga6
plants, water works, etc., and how
much they save thereb.v?
Do you know to what extent cities
aud towns are under bondage to state
legislatures? Do you know to what ex
tent the people in cities aud towns are
under bondage to city councils?*
Do you know the results of the use of
the iuitaiive aud referendum in the
United States aud in Switzerland?
Do you understand those methods and
the reasons of the growing demand for
the extension of iheir ust?
Do you know the best remedies for
corruption in elections? Do you know
England’s experience iu this respect?
Do you understand proportio lal repre
sentation?
Do you know what is being done with
the automatic ballot in some of our cit
ies?
Do you want the text of the most pro
gressive laws iu the various states con
cerning local government, home rule
charters for cities, direct legislation
amendments, public ownership laws,
etc.; also ideal forms for such laws?
Would you like 800 pages of facts and
arguments on some of the leading ques
tious of the day, thoroly indext so that
you can turn at once to any point you
wish—overoapita'iaztio:i of street rail
ways in New Broadway franchise
steal. Bay State ga3 frauds. Standard
oil atrocities, cost of electric light before
and after public ownership. Haverhill
gas case, sixteen reasons for tho econo
my of public ownership, savings of Fed
eral Government by putting in its own
telephones, proiits of street railways,
gas companies, etc , etc.?
Do you want a rich mine of facts aud
arguments relating to monopoly, public
ownership of public utilities, direct leg
islation, aud other vital questions of our
time?
Do you want these facts so airanged,
classified aud analytically indext, thftt
you cau get up a brilliant speech or ef
fective newspaper article iu half an
hour ou any phase of the chief munici
pal questions of the ag< ?
All these questions are answered aud
the outiro subject of local self-govern
ment is treated ‘ The City for tho Peo
ple,” prepared by a well-known author
ity on the principal subjects of the book.
Price ouly 50c. (should be double this
amount). Bound in cloth. sl. Address
“Equity S-'rios,” 1520 Chestnut street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
The Magic of
Self-Confidence.
Orison Swett Marden, iu the March
“Success.”
A man’s sucoess in life is usually in
proportion to his confidence in himself
and the energy and persistence with
which he pursues his aim. In this
competing age, there is little hope for
the nr au who does not thoroughly be
lieve iu himself. The maa who cau be
easily discou-aged or turned aside from
his purpose, the“tuau who has no iron in
his blood, will never win.
Half the giant’s strength is in the
conviction that he is a giant. The
strength of a muscle is enhanced a hun
dredfold by the will power. The same
muscle, when removed from the giant’s
arm, when divorced from the force of
the mighty will, can sustain but a frac
tion of the weight it did a moment be
fore it was disconnected.
Oh, what miracles confidence has
wrought! What impossible deeds it has
helped to perform! It took Napoleon
over the Alps in midwinter; it took Far
ragut and Dewey past the oanuon, tor
pedoes and mines of the enemy; it led
Nelson and Grant to victory; it has been
the great tonic in the world of discovery,
invention and art; it has helped to win
the thousand triumphs in war and
science which were deemed impossible.
The man without self confidence and
an iron will is the plaything of chance,
the puppet of his environment, the slave
of cironmstances. With these, he is
king, ever master of the situation.
The Merry Makers celebration at Au
gusta is from April 23rd to 28th, inclu
sive. Large crowds will be in Augusta
during the oeiebration.
The Democracy and
The Negro Vote.
The white vote of the southern-most
states is Populist. It is the negre vote,
or rather the counting of the negro vote,
often uncast, by the corrupt Democrat
ic machine, that makes them Demo
cratic. If tho elections of Georgia, Ala
bama, Mississippi, were decided by the
white vote tho3e states would swing out
of the Democratic column. Yet the
cor.upt Democratic oligarchy that
maintains its supremacy by manipuiat
ing the negro vote, counting negro
votes cast for the Republicans and Pop
ulists, counting negro votes uucast, for
Democratic candidates, has the braze
ness to raise tho cry of a negro domina
tion, claim to be Phe white man’s par
ty. As the carpet baggers rested their
supremacy upon the negro vote iu the
years following the war does the Demo
cratic oligarchy maintain its supremacy
to-day. Democrats who profit from
this debauchery, white men who rule
over the majority of their lellow white
men by shamefully manipulating the
negro vote, are fond of protesting that
the white race will not submit to negro
domination, that they believe in Cau
casian ru'e. But their protestations are
lank hypocrisy. Dora fact it is that a
majority of tho whi.e vote is not be
hind the Democracy.
Democrats are prone to make indig
nant denial of such as.-ertio:' But a
fact it it and a fact that has juSt had,
as to one congresoio lal district, an air
ing iu the House. For the third con
secutive time the House ha: been called
upon to pass upon a contested election
case coming up from the Fourth Con
gres3ioual D.strict of Alabama; for the
ihi-d consecutive time has it seated the
contestant. After :lia elections of No
vember, 1898, tho lace of the returns
showed, rr usual, a majority for the
Domocratic candidate, iu this case Gas
ton A. Robbins who wi’3 accredited
with 6,915 votes to 5.685 votes for bis
opponent, William F. Aldrich, a Popu
list. Now this district comprises six
counties. Five of them are w hite coun
ties, counties in which the whites out
number the negros more than twQ to
one; the sixth lies in the black belt, the
negro outnumbering the white popula
tion four to one. And it is this biask
belt county that Mr. Robbins his me jor
lty on the face of the returns, gave him
more votes than there were white votes
in the county. The other five counties
gave Aldrich 5,298 vote 3 , Robbins 4,477.
It was the black belt county and the
black vote that gave Mr. Robbins the
election. And what gave him this vote?
It was not given to him; it w;n counted
for him The evidence showed conclu
sively that hundreds of negros who
never voted at all were counted tor him,
that hundreds of others who voted for
Aldrich were counted likewise. In one
precinct, for example, 121 men testified
that they had voted for Aldrich and the
returns only gavo him 44 votes. And
simi’ar evidence was submitted us to
other prtcincts until Mr. Robbins’ ma
jority shrank away into a minority and
the House did the justice to the white
voters of the South of unseating, him
But nary a Democrat gave his vote to
uphold the will of the w hite voters oi
the district; all voted to perpetuate the
rule of the white oligarchy that rests its
supremacy ou the negro vote. —The
American.
“No family can afford to be without
One Miuuta Cough Cure. It will stop a
cough aud cure a cold quicker than any
other medicine,” writes C. W. Williams
Sterling Run, Pa. It cures croup, bion
chitis and all throat end lung troubles
<nd prevents consumption. Pleasant
and harmless.
CAPT. F. M. HAYNES
An Influential Citizen and R. R.
Man for a Number of Years.
Winder, Ga
This certifies that I took a short treat
ment from Dr. Banks for Dropsy and
desire to say to friends everywhere that
I was cured of same. Very truly,
F. M. Haynes*
A NIGHT OF TERROR.
“Awful anxiety was felt for the wid
ow of the brave General Burhain of
Marhias, Mo., when the* doctors said
she could not live till morning” writes
Mrs. S. H Lincoln, who attended her
that fearful night. “All thought she
mast soon die from Pneumonia, bat
she begged for Dr. King’s New Discov
ery, saying it had more than once saved
her ife, and had cured her of Consump
tion. After three small doses she slept
easily all night, and its further nse com
pletely cored her.” This marvelous
medicine is guaranteed to care all
Throat, Chest and Lang Diseases. Only
53 cents and SI.OO. Trial bottle free at
, Winder Drug Cos.
Some Facts
==OF==
INTERESTTO YOU
I sell the best Buggies on
the Market.
I sell them at theold prices
for Cash.
A good Note gets them at
the same Figure.
You Want to Know How I Can do This?
I ANSWER:
Because I buy them in Carload lots.
Because I pay the spot Cash for them.
Because I bought them before the Advance,
DO YOU WANT ONE?
IF YES, then why should you go where you can only see
two or three different styles, when you can come to my
place and see A HOUSE FULL, no two alike, and
take advantage of the above prices.
Tlios. A. Maynard,
The Largest Dealer in Vehicles in North East Ga.
-Winder, - - Georgia.
A. N. NOWELL
MANUFACTURER OF
Harness and Saddles.
DOES ALL KINDS OF
Repair Work and Class Shoe Making.
Pricos as low as the lowest. See me before you buy your Har
ness or have your Shoes Repaired, and I will save you money, AH
work First Class. Highest price paid for Hides, Next door to L. D,
Yearwood, Winder, Georgia.
SEVEN RUNNING SORES CURED
BY
Johnston’s Sarsaparilla
QUART BOTTLES.
THE GREAT SPRING MEDICINE.
JOHNSTON’S SARSAPARILLA as a Blood Food and Nerve Energizer, Is the
greatest SPRING MEDICINE ever discovered. It comes as a rich blessing from
heaven to the “worn out,” the run down, the overworked and debilitated. That
feeling,” those “sinkingspells,” the languor and despondency which arise from bad.y
ished nerves, from thin, vitiated blood and an underfed body, vanish as if by a IT:a &-
spell. The weariness, lassitude and nervous prostration which accompany the spring
time and the heat of summer, are conquered and banished at once. For every l° rrri °
neurasthenia, and all ailments of the brain and nerve, insomnia, hysteria and nervousness
generally, It Is almost a specific. It furnishes the very elements to rebuild worn-out
tissues. It feeds brain, nerve centers and nerves, calming and equalizing their action.
makes rich, red, honest blood. Newness of life, new hope, new strength follow its
ful use. It makes the weak strong, and the old young again.
It was the antiquated (but now happily exploded) method in the good o and
treat Salt Rheum, Scrofula, Cancer and other troublesome disorders arising. r
BLOOD TAINT with powerful alteratives, such as mercury, arsenic and other
•gents. It was expected by this treatment that the poison could be killed wh.le I 5
was left to coarse through its channels holding in its circulation the apeciftc germs
disease. But in this way, every part of the body became more or less disease
Ing can be more terrible than a horribly destructive blood taint. It not only attac '^v e d
tently the different structures of the body, but many times the bones are honey-oo
and destroyed. It often seeks out the nerves and spinal cord, and again It will j 1
cay and death to some vital organ, as the kidneys, liver or stomach. There Is on ‘
scientific method for the cure of blood taint. That is, PURIFICATION! Every
of the blood must be removed through the execretory channels, the lungs, kidneys,
liver and skin. “ First pure, then peaceable.” The great restorative, recons., aw■
vitallzer of the blood, JOHNSTON’S SARSAPARILLA, not only radically
haustlvely removes the taint, but also removes all mercury, calomel and Is
and fills the veins and arteries with the ruby, glowing current of vitality.
the life.” Good health means pure blood. The old and reliable remedy, JO *
SARSAPARILLA, is universally regarded as the greatest Blood Purifier ever
•red. This fact Is now established beyond question or cavil.
BLOOD POISON CTBXO BY JOHXSTOX’* IIBAPABIU<A-
Byron, Mick.. October 31.
Williams, Darte, Brooks k Cos.. Detroit ; nwvj poison,
Gentlemen. —In April last Ibe fan usine JOHNSTON’S SARSAPARILLA for B two
br aa amputation of one of my arms. I had SEVEN RUNNING SORES oo my ay. LUTH^
and waa entirely cured. I know it is what cured me. touts truly, ifl,
asxoaxGAir drug compawt, dbtroit,
G. W, DeLaPERRIERE, Winder, Georgia.