Newspaper Page Text
THE
REFORMER
Published Every Friday Evening at
FORT GAINES, OA.
\
PORT GAINES GA., OCT. 19,1894/ t ;
POPULIST TICKET.
For Representative of Second Congres¬
sional District:
W. K. SMITH.
Not Ashamed of It.
Tho democrats havo elected At¬
kinson and ought to l»o ashamed of
it. But they aro not
They denounced bonds and issued
$,'*0,000,000 worth of them, and
ought to bo ashamed of it, but they
*re not
They proclaimed tariff for rove*
>rno only, an passed a protective bill.
They Ought to be a • homed of it, hut
they aro not.
They declared themselves against
corporations and trusts, and then
sold out lo them. They ought to be
ashamed of it, lmt they are not.
They said that they favored tho
free coinage of silver, and when they
received control knocked it out at
one full stroke* They ought to be
ashamed of it, but they aro not.
They declared themselves to be
puro men and special proved investigating to be so cor¬
rupt that a
eommittoo had to be appointed to
whitewash tho entire sonato. They
ought to bo ashamed of it, but they
aro not. .
They drew their corporation andimpvis- reproson
o uosom,
«od tin- poor who came to them on
ho na mission. They #ught to
un d of it, hut they aro not.
ic} le and promised represented to represent the tho
exclusively. They ought money
power to
bo ashamed of it, but they aro not.
Tho populists' platform demands they
a graduated income tax, and
tackod it onto the tariff bill. Thu
democrats say the income tax was
their measuro. 'They havo lied, and
ought to bo ashamed of it, but they
are not.
They claim that they give us .fc free
bagging, when in fa,ct it«JKAR 1 > orv*r
ciyrnTtho* southern farnwr®. Tho
Semoerats say that UU’A iW ' j
„„1 ought to be ashamed of it, but
• h„v aro not.
•ntQv wl,cn
LniVdTt? ^ Sp ° n
mid ought to bo bni 1
thoy aro not. ’
Thoy denounced Rood IXS *1
0t h i? rulin f* and mado
1 t' » T'” , '’, at 5uoh
tyranm- ijrannj, m, and when they *«»
power the adopted Reedl gained Ruling
made a Czar of Crisp, who proved
ought equally as tyrannical as Read Thcv *
to bo ashamed of it but th ey
*ro not, u
•and They proclaimed States’ riirhts
then wiped them out, and ought
to bo ashamed of it, but they
^ are
They said that the republicans
«cro scoundrels and thieves and
botq Favored and practiced class
and proved ought IhcLoTvcs to bTthn ft r "" D d
they to bo ashamed of 1
are not. *
In fact they ought to be ashamed
fiimI aome CrV wholesale b th | np l the apologizing * V haVe (Jone » or
republicans.-Farmesr' Outlook. to the
The only thing tha tney ,nro trulv
0t 18 that tb< v' h «ve not
waded deeper iuto * rascality
Atktason’s I Boast.
Mr. Atkinson said i >n n speech in
IiO C <mpaigns just closed that
nominee not a
ngio on the populist ticket
m * i i La* rry his home county.
mi R t LAV m litter with Washington,
el, Jackson .xml Bartow couu
nd Hal] county, where both
the didates for secretary of state
l i:ore the democrats only* had
* majority . . of 38. * naa
igtton Every county surrounding \Yash
county, the old home of
Judge Hines, gave a populiftt major¬
ity except one, while every county
uhst •°^ C0VVeta * POP
majority exeqp m one. Judge *£
1 Mr. Atkic« n - S
grwa .OM d ,,tn8t; also hi 3 seoato
ot. ftiid made it decidedly
eeutleman eren
Now it the timeToTi ! fly for t your J
bscrptioa. s
The Atkinsen boodlers are
ing us down to a state of Anarchy.
They aie destroying law and order
they are murdering the principles of
popular society government;thev are disrupt¬
ing and are threatening
every institution reared upon the
'oundation of honest elections.
Let these reckless offict-seekers
Honest men of all parties are stir
they have never been before
the pnblio indignation is blazing
The Atkinson Anarchists.
Without fairness at the ballot box,
there is no use in voting. If law and
justice dio at the very place where
they are most needed, what becomes
of all the social, industrial and polit
cal institutions reared upon this
foundation ?
If we allow a lot of needy, greedy,
and unscrupulous adventurers to get
together in every city, and in every
town and hamlet,'|and to seize the
ballot box and to throw out just such
votes as are objectionable to them,
what have wo got but Anarchy?
Such a government is not a ‘rule
of the people.” Nor is it a “rule of
majorities.”
It is not the rule of aristocracy.
It is not the rule of a king.
A rule of the people nuans a gov¬
ernment of legal majorities under
obedience of the law of the land.
A rule of aristocracy is bad enough,
heaven knows—but such a govern¬
ment has always had its legal forms,
its checks, its responsibilities and its
duties.
A rule of tho king, however ob
jectionablo to our notions and prin¬
ciples. is yet a government based on
law, order, responsibility and duty:
therefore, ander any form of govern¬
ment whore law is respected, respon¬
sibility felt, and duty discharged,
there may be hope for “the peace,
good order, and dignity of society
Hut when the governing machinery
is seized at each county-site by a
gang ot swindlers—lawless, deprav¬
ed, unprincipled—and the will of the
people as expiessed at tho polls is
insolently and defiantly defeated, we
have no government at all.
Wo havo Anarchy and nothing
else. A government managed by ir¬
responsible vote-stealers is no gov
rnent at all.
They murder government us Mac¬
beth murdered sleep. They strike
down tho supports upon which our
Republic stands. They undermine
the foundation upon which our tem¬
pi o rests.
Tho result is a rule of a band of
conspirators in each locality—con¬
spirators who feel no responsibility,
discharge no duty, o ey no law, fear
no punishment!
Will honest democrats stand this ?
If so, let them dread the day when
the chickens como homo to roost.
In every city these greedy ndven
hirers will seize the power, take pos
session of the taxing machine, and
p.f>4 , ' v fiits1Ti^9S mnft’ evOt-y uuffar ue
Can yon throw off the tyranny
estn blished ?
WhWi 7ir 1 "' " Ul bo
ll
I Wb «t are we •- > v hen demo
Crat{ ° " afifi:crs ^row out returns
1 ^ a US j°,° th ” ,1em °eratic managers
rofus r , ed to sign them correctlv ?
are we to do when
cratic managers leave the polls, as in
Manon county, so as ef o invalidate
tho eloction which the populists had
won ?
What aro we to do when demo
emtio mnntgcr, as in Hancock coun¬
ty, refused to allow Negro voters to
the oath and vote the populist
but who allowed those same
to come back later and vote
democratic ticket!
What are we to do when
1 ike and Wilkinson countie<
° U ; ** 8uffic:ent ^ US bodi1 ber ^’ b of - v
num votes to
the Atkinson majority f
U ‘ t k6 hdd that Democrat ' c
!*T man
Can onnt some of ‘heir duties
ln up returns, and that those
omissions will only b • used to throw
out the precinct when the majority
against tho democrats, then the
reduces itself to this: > ill
people submit to rascality or will
reseut
The populists are as hillarious
an outfit of Utes at a white dog bake
Ihey are shooting all sorts of ar¬
rows in the air and promising
mgh fifty as
fourth as populists in the Fifty
may be congress. the But what the^e
even fifteen populists with thirty or
ofpowe, would hold the balance a * n< ^
ff Andthis conti
2 and Babcock s erowds. by both FaulkneFs
It is a condition not easily explain
ed, but
£• the narrow sort found iu this entire
seaboaid country would rather the
other would succeed than that the
populists should attain belligerent
and respectable stature as
Old toes like a dear*^ party.
old friends are
and both of the old parties almost
0 0Ve t h °l her in the iut ®"
0t ’ hatred
? , tdeir Times. for the popn-
Tho law says that no return shall
be thrown out ou account of these
technical points.
The law savs that no raauager
disfranch Uu ^ can
I * f ^ do , people - by his re
nis dut T*
The Ia * an °' vs no man, and
party, to take no
advantage of his own
wrong.
® ut tbe Atkinson democrats have
violated . the
law, disfranchising the
people, and revolutionize R our gov
eroment.
LOST !
A promissory note given by R. G.
abShe ks\°of NWmber PsS vS?
J ; alls 1ox tlie amount of el.750. All
arG warned ner
same. agaiDs ^ trading for
more fiercely every day against the
lawless methods which adopt Crime
as an honored ally to political am¬
bition.
THIS IS THE LAW THEY VIOLATE,
S -ction 1334 of the Code of Geor¬
gia reads as follows:
“No election shall be defeated for
non-compliance with the require¬
ments of the law, if held at the
.
proper time and place by persons
qualified to hold them if it is not
known that by that non-compliance
tho result is different from what it
would have been had there been
proper compliance.”
In piain violation of this statue
tho democratic managers at the
comity sites, have thrown out a suffi¬
cient number of election returns to
defeat the will of the people in more
than twenty counties.
Tho acts of “non-compliance with
the requirements of the law” were
committed by democratic managers
at the precincts.
Advantage of those defects was
taken by democratic managers at
tho county site.
Thus the democratic party, by
violating the plain letter of the law,
wins the election by having demo¬
cratic managers make errors in the
signing up of the returns.
In no solitary instance has the
democratic party been allowed to
suffer on account of democratic mis¬
takes.
In each and every instance it is
tho populist party which is made to
suffer for mistakes they could not
possibly help.
And in each case the law wo have
copied has been wilfully violated by
officers who swore to obey it.
What are we to do when our laws
aro trampled under foot in this man¬
ner by tho “Men Who Control ?”
If ever there was a time when
honest men of all parties should
unite to put down the Atkinson An¬
archists it is NOW !—Daily Press
The sentiment in favor ot fair
elections is steadily growing, and it
is a healthy symptom. The man who
tampers with the ball should be
made odious. If he bo an election
officer he is perjurer. If not, he is
an unworthy citizen.—Sunny South.
Georgia Amazes Them.
The result in Georgm engages
teniton. Both republicans and
ocrats attest alarm. It has
calculation and swept prophecy
its feet. If the same violent
of pomiiisun 8h0 * atmnvon, ^ f° ’X i- :T .........
fO” ’ a
there are reasons to belie, e the con
ditiotm exist, the -.publicans will be
smvered and analte n iu all their
. which
-eorgia, in enterprise and
f Mar-making the is the New England
south > looked on bv both
democrats and republicans ‘ as the
least likely of all the son if
1 OW*'
"•umtcttlius LO g lye way or even
waver before the third party. Ro
cent results, which leaves the demo¬
cratic majority not over 15,000
where 75,000 was expected, is there¬
fore m its sort a shock, and has left
the great mentalities in charge both
at Faulkner’s and Babcock's head
quarters in a state of
not for publication—declare generally—albeit
trouble Georgia, that tbe
m while in part tar¬
iff and in part finance, was mainly
Cleveland. The party everywhere is
sick and worn out with hisgoldisms,
his bondisms, and his Pharisaical
eastern
As a consequence of the result in
Georgia neither democrat nor repub¬
lican is able today to pierce the fu
turn a little bit. They havo awak
ened to the beauty of the injunction,
oufficient unto the day is the evil
thereof,” and cannot be lured into
Prognostications of any sort local ° ni r .
’
And MWu'JSSb.
other specialties
Gentlemen, Ladle*. Bor*
and Misses are the
! ’=s,
Best in the World.
t-1 See descript Ire advertise
tnent which appears In this
Paper.
Tax* >0 Sotetitnte.
Insist on having W. L.
| DOUGLAS’ SHOES.
with name and price
stamped on bottom. Bold by
A. M. WALLERSTELV.
Hon. W. E. Smith’s A ppointments. -
The following is the the appoint¬
ments of Hon. W. E. Smith, populist
nominee for tho 2nd Congressional Dis¬
trict:
Colquitt, Thursday, Oct. 18th.
Newton, Friday, 19th.
Arlington, Saturday, <1 20th.
Blakely, Tuesday, 23rd.
Fort Gaines, Wednesday, 24th.
Cnthbert, Thnrsday, «l 25th.
Georgetown, Friday, Nov. If 26th.
Camilla, Friday, 2nd
Thoraasville, Saturday, II 3rd.
I will be glad to divide time with Hon.
Ben £. Rnsseil. at any or all o! these
appointments. None other need apply.
W. E. Smith.
NOTICE !
The stockholders and Board of
tors of The Reformer are requested to
meet at this offiee on Wednesday 24.
The meeting is still in progress at the
Baptist church, and it is said that much
interest is manifest. May it continue !
Road Notice,
GEORGIA— Clay County:
Whereas certain petitioners have
made their application to this court,
praying an order granting the establish¬
ment. of a new road commencing at a
land line near Harrison’s Mill, and run¬
ning the land line directly north, be¬
tween J. M. Harrison and H. U. Harri¬
son and S. D. Colemau, Mrs. Milliner,
W. H. Jackson and W. T. Green, Robfc.
Brooks and W. T. Green to a point
about 400 yards north of Robt. Brooks.
Thence leaving said land line following
the old road bed in front of W. T.
Green’s dwelling, continuing said road¬
bed until striking original land line be¬
tween H. M. Green and Mess Horton
& Fuller’s, thence on said line between
Mrs. Anna McKimmies and Wllio
Kimmie, mtersectmg the Coleman and
I'ovt Gaines road at a point, near Willie
McKimmic’s house, and whereas Com.
missioners appointed for that purpose
have reviewed and marked out said con
templated that road and r; ported to me
said road would be one of much
pubHe utility and convenience—Now
sons l.nVVL that Clt L on and wi U after aL n the *h U1S otli o) a day i 1>ei of f
November 1893, said new road will be
granted if no good cause is shown to the
contrary. Given under my hand and
seal this October the 3rd,, 1894.
J. W. SUTLIVE,
Clerk Clay County Com. Court.
Notice, Notice I
The month of October, a. time and
season of the year when everybody is
expected to have make an effort to settle, is
upon us. I been very lenient to
my debtors and have asked them for
money as little as necessity would per¬
mit mo, and now that I have outstand¬
ing obligations that must be met, I re
spectfully urge all who are due me any
thing to call and settle. I need the
money—must lmvo it, nml I ask my
friends to come and settle with me.
Very Respectfully,
J. L. HURST.
LOOK AT THIS!
SINCE THE DEMOCRATS HATE
IiEEN IN FULI ’ F0 ' VEIt JUST « EE
™ VOTE SMbTAZr ?OU NOT
AT ALL, THAN W VOTE
THE DEMOCRATIC TICKET VOTE t’
"ITU THE PEOPLES' ’
p tT'TV * M .
THE
OLD RELIABLE
Market!
TO MY FRIENDS AND PATRONS.
I am still in the Ring, and
Pre vW tl)an am
you Nice before to servo
and Choice Line of
FRESH:MEATS
"ELF, PORK and SAUSAGE.
I buy the Best and Fattest Beef
cattle and can always give the
Choicest Meat you
on the Market
Thanking the Public for past patron¬
and asking a continuance of the,
I am i
i T ours Respectfully,
L A. Duke.
WILD-CAT CORN,
CHAMPAGNE RYE,
"WINES OF ALL KINDS,
ICE-COLD BEER,
TOBACCO A CIGARS.
His friends and patrons are
requested
«*> Call, aug 3
STATE PLATFORM \
Of the Peoples’ Party—Rend and
Reflect.
We hereby renew our unqualified
endorsement of the national platform
of the Peoples' party, and we favor
in the State of Georgia the following
reform:
, 1. 'pi the abolition i .... of - the present .
convict lease system which prosti
tutes to the greed of private avarice
the State’s sovereign right to punish
possession of her prisoners and should
employ them upon the u-JLi.fi,. public roads
an i not allow them brought m com
pet iron with honest free labor.
2. We favor the furnishing of pri
mary school books by the State to
a avoid } the burdens bin dens nut put unon upon our om neo peo
pie , by the freonent changes of text
books. We also favor the payment
of the teachers monthly.
t3. We f,i\oi the enactment of an
be unperverted framed Australian ballot law to
so as to allow illiterate or
blind voters to receive aid in the
preparation of their ballots, nnnLer* when
thev t ey so . o desire ties i ,, troua from the tho mauag.r. of ot
election.
4. \» emphatically . condemn the
e
practice, of late becoming so preva
lent, of public officers accepting free
passes nnsses from nom railroad railioaa corporations. oornomtinn*
We intend this condemnation to ap
ply to the executive, legislative and
judicial branches of our national and
state government. K
5. Be ieving, as we do, that these
eternal principles are necessary to
good government and to the preser
vation of our republican institutions:
and, „ i . believing t- that .
a suprotne neces
Slt >’ n ow exists for a determined and
organized . struggle against the con¬
rupt hereby despotism of centralized wealth,
this we pledge ourselver and anew to
sacred task, we invite the
tamest co-operation 1 of all good * citi
i zcni? _ irrespective • .. of c party; . and ,
1 * upon
th ese united efforts in behalf of the
cause of constitutional liberty we
reverently invoke the blessings of
Almighty God.
C. H. Ellington,
Chairman P.atform Committee.
THE ONLY
Billiard : : Parlor
IN TOWN 1
Mr. T. J. Smith
Coxdiahy invites his Friends and the Gen
era! Public to call on him iu the rear of J.
Hursts where he willusc every effort to
make them white ajaytt.em lei.ure tune,
V,r - v K <*P<*tfelly_, T. J. SMITH
NOTICE!
TcMy Many Friends and Customers:
^tol'erve von thSsL to R tlie Best T Giado^of
To whom have or
t? owe
on f r MS ™‘ke r4™“ demi
-' ou "‘thont delay. Respecting, this of
! “' e 24 L. a Cohen.
F. GUNN,
^Office. PRACTICING vr<u.i<?rstem’s. PnvfitmAn,
now.* *-
Saloon!
J- L. HURST,
Hancock St., POET GAINES, GA.
known and populai estab¬
lishment, has ordered,
and has on hand,
a large stock of
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE
Daily «r * ** Press,
PUBLISHED IN ATLANTA, GA.
>
BY HON, THOMAS E. Watson.
SUBSCRIPTION rates. * «r ONE T M< Ww * s *
•»
• tuPi.cS* rAitfY PLATFORM.
ADOPTED BY THE OMAHA CONFERENCE OF LABORING
PEOPLE, JULY 4, 1802.
A IBLED upon the one hundred and sixteenth anniversary of the declaration
of independence, the PeopUA party of America, in their first national cohven
tinn, *^ vok * n P u P°o their action the blessing of Almighty God, puts forth iu
raUon Tb. of condition's princiuSsf f ° f ^ peop,e of thls countr y> tho following preamble and decla
which surround .« best Justify our ec-operation. Wo meet in the
' n, ,“ ie ?! *. h ® b /' n ? h ; Hie people are demoralized. R^blhg ptacos Most of tho States have
kUMon ' to prevent universal lbtlm
or briberv r i newspapers are largely subsidized or miiszfad, public opinion
si.enced, business prostrated, our homes covered with mortgages, labor ImpeveiS
lsh ™, and the lands concentrating In the hands of the capitalists: Tho urban work*
|L n ® rQ denied the right of organization for self-protection; imported pauperized
iLeLhifjv! established> A 1 °, to v ' n snoot < them down, a hireling and they standing aro rapidly at my, degenerating unrecognized into by our European laws*
conditions The fruits of the toil of millions are boldly stolen to build up colossal
fortunes for a few. unprecedented in the history of mankind, and .ho possessors of
these, in turn, despise the republic and endanger liberty. From tho Same prolific
alrcs ° f fer ° vo,|,moutal in just ice wo breed tho two great classes—tramps and million-
4 ho national power to create money is appropriated to enrich £^ bondholders bearing A
vast bonds, public debt payable In legal tender currency has been funded gold g
THE thereby OLD adding millions to the burdens of tho people
PARTIES ARRAIGNED.—Silver, which has boen accepted as coin
“ a ' v h of hiet °ryt has Ijoen domonrti -ed to add to the purchasing power of
!$?. h J decreasing the value of all forms of property, as well as human labor, ahd
the supply of currency ispurposodly abridged to fatten usurers, bankrupt enterprises
and enslave industry. A vast conspiracy against mankind has boon organized o r two
continents and is rapidly taking possession of the world. If not met and overthrown
fore bodes terriblo social convulsions, the destruction of civilization, or the
° 6ta wf VV ,/ h ““‘“ V " itnessed “S”/ ^ or 1 ? 0 rao <“ !' S c P°. than U6 “’- a century the struggles or the two great polit
leal « i parties foi power and plunder, , while grievous wrongs havo been inflicted upon
the people. We charge that the controlling influences dominating both these par
ties have permitted the existing dreadful conditions to develop without serious offbrt
to prevent or restrain them. Neither do they now promise us any substantial re¬
0 n „ °- 2 mT h hcy «y propose huve a « to re drown ^ togethm tho outcries to ignore of in plundered the corning campaign every Issue but
sham , battlo over tho tariff, that capitalists, people with tho uproar of a
trusts, watered stock, the demonetization so corporations, national banks, rings,
of silver and the opjiro&sions of the usurers
may be all be lost sight of. They propose to saC Hico our home s, wives and childron
on the altar of Mammon; to destroy tho multitude in order to seeuro corruption funds
from the millionaires.
Assembled on tho anniversary of the birthday of tho nation, and filled with the
spirit of the grand generation who established our independence, we seek to restore
the government or the republic to the hands of “the plain people,” with which e’«3S
it originated.
' l liE w AR 18 OVER.—Wo assort
. our purposes to bo identical with the purposes
of the national f constitution—“To form perfect union,
domestic tranquility, a more establish justice, in¬
sure fare and provide for the common defense, promote the general wel¬
that this secure the blessings of liberty for ourselves and our posterity.” Wo declare
republic can only endure as a free government while built upon tho love of
tlie whole people for each other and for tho nation; that it cannot bo pinned together
by bayonets; that the civil war is over, and that every passion and resentment which
grow out of it must dio with it, and that wo must bo in fact, us ivc are in name one
united brotherhood of freemen.
Our country finds itself confronted by conditions for which there is no precedent ih
the history of the world—our annual agricultural productions amount to billions of
dollars in value, which must wit hin a few weeks or months be exchanged for billions
of dollars of commodities comsumedln their production; the existing currency sup¬
ply is wholly inadequate to make this exchange; the results are falling prices, the for¬
mation of combines and rings and the impoverishment of tho producing classes. We
pledge ourselves that if given power wo will labor to correct these evils by wise and
reasonable legislation in accordance with tho terms of our platform.
We believe that the powors of tho government—in other words, of tho people
should be expanded (as in the case of the postal service) as rapidly and as far as
the good sense of an intelligent people and tho teachings of experience shall justify,
to the end that oppression, injustice and poverty shall eventually cease in the land.
THREEFOLD DECLARATION.—While our sympathies as a party of reform
are naturally upon the side of every proposition which will tend to make men intelli¬
gent, virtuous and temperate, we nevertheless regard those questions, important as
they are, as secondary to tho great issues now picssing for solution, and upon which
not only our individual prosperity but the very existence of free institutions depond
and we ask all men first help us to determine whether we are to havo a republic to
administer before we differ as to tho conditions upon which it is to bo administered
believing that the forces of reform this day organized will never cease to move for¬
ward until every wrong is remedied and equal lights and equal privileges securely
established for all the men and women of the country. We declare therefore-
1. 'That the union of tho labor forces of the United States this day eonsumaterf,
shall be permanent and nernettjai. May its spirit enter into all hearts for tho salva¬
tion of the republic and the uplifting of mankind.
beliove^that J f Vobbe'rv° C1 L tcs ifc ’ and Gvcr ^^^r^ar^TdenlltfaL . v dol)ar *«kon from ™*
3. We
the own work the people of owning or the and people must own them* and^ r^n 6ho r u ^L d lr tho f °. ad 8° cor v «rnmcnt Poratlons will cither
33 contiolling anv bss or nil . W 5 enter upon
SLS s
*■ of ~ “ *»
uddi*
The Planks of the Platform.
gen
p
CD dis
payments n. Me in demand discharge free of and its unlimited ob 1 igat fotwfor P nid b H'L° l ira P r <>yements. f 8 ° rae , ae X c set
of i6 to 1. comage of silver and gold at the
b -n at the present 2
not less lha c $.<50 capita. amount of circulating medium bo
d £ew graduatod speedily increased to
d- We 8 income tax.
•a o Ul 8 ]?mited P d l Sand thaSl^tatf UCh
s jb P ll be to 1 ’ a “ ’* n ™ an(T nS p0fisfbIft ia
““TVff , po”°' vss,,onM °™ d *;
pmpo^ c s^: u 0t
«
c
or secret ballot
ssppssssr ” le ' 1?6
°“ r 8UPPOrt '° f “ r “ d libaral
I *" 6lo " a '» -V»ion
ST” co,,tr “ ,!t labOT ’ SSSkTSSE
eight-hour men to shorte^thJhoure'jfjaKS law on 1 ° e ^ orte »' “Wwliod working
said Jaw. government work,
natiee, ^ 1 llt known i and as theTPinkerton ndem^th ^ y vat ?eeSit *, mainnanc6 8 inv^ naCe of to a Jargo )ibe standi ng army of merce
th the ni«L on; wo Cf e , our n—” riies and we de mand
o f officials.° i ■ i f Wyotnin
v. Kesolved, That t we corumend^nTh * e0eraI 8
the F'
^
Ide
R a“,° pS^ at ™ «W» .»«yo,
tion ror natlona! aid to any private
corpora-.