Newspaper Page Text
TEH ENTERPRISE.
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Offlckl Organ of Franklin County,
PUBLISHED EVKUY FRIDAY.
E 1 F 0 EM PUBLISHING CO.
Fropnetor*.
K»tw#«l»t tlwr»rn«*vUk jh(H-o!!I«!« s Second
Mutter. .
«!■*■ Mail ——--I
___—-
tiitnitlis !
i ric* of SutwPripUoi: Oiw year, i?1; >*ix |
bat « nu; three months, lift rent.'; in «lul»s »»r 1"
, udvunrr-
or luore, 7& cent |kt annum. Ca*h in J
Terms of Adrmtlrlni; luruli-linl on a|il>llratl»n.
arresiMindmoe I* wdlcttest, Imt no win
Up clvrn l» (Viiinniuilaitiffliii unless ih;<shii|«i- I
niril L) lilt null Uttim- »t till- u filer.
JOB SCOTT, • Editor.
CariMvllir, lla., November 11 , 1802 .
Cioo<l or hid. our political desti*
nies are fixed for the next four year*.
Our creditors arc dunning us'
Can’t you help us a little just now?
♦ ♦
Borrowing money is not a very
pleasant road to prosperity.
Ju*t go ahead with your educa¬
te n hi the science of economical
government. In tour years wc win.
The man who turns back from a
worthy object, does not merit the
. fruits of success.
Our High school just moves right
along up the road to prosperity.
Ten new sc hollars last week.
Perfection is a rare trait, as we
will find when we liegin tc
►caicli for it.
Money and fraud rule now •
Two and four years from now. hon¬
or and justice will claim and take
their o wn.
If the members of tho Alliance
will do their duty, nine-tenths
the fariuers will vote for the icforin
can did ales lour ears liciice.
*
4
If the land owncrc could borrow
all the money they wauled, it would
not be ten years until three-fourths
of them would be tenant- or renters.
The principles of the Alliance arc
right aud pure and good. ' Let ns
caltixate them; teach them; i t reach
ibiui; practice aiul Mistaiu them.
It will take tile Farinee* Alliance
a long tkue to succeed iu accom-
^dulbag it. purj«i«es, if it continues
to feed and fatten its worst enemies,
Debt u the ruling curse of this
(MKtrjf. You v< te l xoiirseif into
debt, and now if ;. ou act m-ii»io1c.
you Mill vote xoiir.-e.t < ut.
Tlie man who believes tiiat the
Alliance w ill die out after tlie elec-
tkm, is tilling L».« mind with a d.-lu-
mkt a tli*t will prove u >i.her pleasant
vr profitsbie.
If wiling a fort ■•{ ycur .
grt ro* out of d< 4; >-<11 it. It 1 -
t>* k»» 5 • .:u- uiiei.vum-
bened, lima have 5*«» with a mort-
g*g* * B «.
• •
A man may make a living, but be
cannot become in.lepeo lmt and
prosperous t,y hard w.,.k until tin
buMimal lvw» wf tiiB count y are
«banged.
If it takes seven million farmers,
vorkmg twelve hour* a day to feed
aud dot be seventy million pe<q.!e;
taw mauy hours a day would the
farmers have to work just to feed
aud clothe them-el cs?
We consider a man very fooli-h,
who voluntarily commits a crime
that will put him in prison and cause
Id itself and family to s-.dT.r. Is a
loau any more sensible wlio will
voliiutaiily vote himself ami family
imo poverty, ignorance and slavcrv?
»'.« k„o«. po.iti-.lv,
observation inclines us to the belief
that if the farmers of Franklin
county were forced to setth up to-
day, that a majority of them would
ta homeless, yel many of them vote
for a continuation of present unjust
laws and tinancia! distress.
Messrs. Ernvst J, Sliced am.
Henry K. Ert/.targ ■r are very pr i-
grCssive aud business 1 ke teachers
l k T’liey have nice dincriptiv c eir ulars.
showing their capacity and intent i Oil
making first clti-s scliooB. \v,
diet for fa *rn smT"-. an
• V’ . •
Those who subscribed to the Stock
are invited to pay tip at
to A. YV. McConnell or T. A.|
ai land, who will receipt for same. I
.
We have waited with some of * von | I
a long time, Don’t wait for us to
y on.
The Alliance Store is anxious for
your trade. Call and see them.
Lavoma, ba,
Some of our citi/.ens have caught
the “Texas fever,” and “westward
the tide of immigration flows.
,,, v> need to pay our debts, , ,
e money
l ... t you ItC'lp . . US a tittle* .. ,
ail
The bitter school of experience
will have a largo number of pupils
lor the next Jew years—then will
couie a change.
The Alliance store is selling full
stock Gainesv lile siloes at bottom
figures. Lavoma, Ga.
It is strange that a business man
will so far forget liis own interest, as
to object to a newspaper being loca¬
ted in bis town.
The Enterprise has changed
now, and we must settle up to
ember the first. Come and pay us.
Wc would hate to beh»r;g to a
puity, without a virtue or redeeming
trait to recommend it.
Buy your flour at the ALLIACK
STORE. Every sack guaranteed.
Lavoma, Ga.
In 1888, Grover Cleveland ordered
out the supervisors and marshals
without any petition by tlie voters.
Tile Ai.:.:a• .••rou:; is headquar¬
ters for i nk Ki.oun and low prices.
New 1’ork Deiaoerats object to
federal supervisors and marshals. It
is “jes so’’ everywhere now. Fraud
is their only hope of success.
Buy the 'Gainesville hand made
shoe, at the ALLIANCE STORE.
Laconia Ga.
Protection is not a trump card,
Tariff reform and “wild cat” money
worn win. '1 he two old parties arc
oblige ! t 1 ) buy their way into power,
■ and the laboring people pay the bill.
: The ALLIANCE KTOKH is
ling a first cla-s patent flour at §1,25
per barrel. Try it. Liv-mia Ga.
The fo ir years work of the Ai. -
anCB 1,1 t;e,,r «‘ a has ll(lt be «» '»•
Kour >' e;lrK wore of per-wteut ai. 1
*let«-TM.i*io*I effort in educating t l, o
jH-c j.l.., nn.l tliu Alli.m-t. will ii..t
I- lio itlilo to mako ilomaml.-, Cat wiil
havo [in.vor onforoo . 1 , 0 ,„.
The vv-siid today crucifies its
| Cleists and ennobles its Barrahbus,
-purn•; its benefactors and embraces
, lice political hurl >ts whose bu-incss it
to deceive ami betray.—Laclede
! (Mo.) Sentinel.
. \Yl,v <b> the enemies of the j>eople,
tin cm- tusuf justice and equal
rights succeed in defrauding ihe la-
taring man t ‘f his rights and
ties? It is because tiicv never stop,
never grow v eary < r fan-t-hearted.
'1 ime, talent and money arc all win-
bined in an unceasing effort for suc-
eses*. The In' ring man mnst give a
t;ou of hi- time, some of his mon-
* .'• an 1 all of his talents it he would
v;, .tce<l in defeating the continued
re ‘Y !l oppression and corruption.
The New York Herald has erea-
lela poliliral uem-ation l>y its“( heap
labor” problem. If the present pro-
teetive tariff continues, the English
m.nmfactiires will be >o .h-pics-e-l,
ami w.tmm «i!l be m, rt-tiui-.-d that
tliw country will b« flooded wi ll
cheap laborers, accordingly! ami wages here will
be reduced Stop in.mi-
gration. Tlnee-fourths of *1 K . imnii-
grants coming to this country aie ;v
disadvantage to it. “America f (lr
Americans” sav wc. jf t i lt , present
stream of foreign sentiment, poverty
and crime continues to pour into tli’c
United States, it will not be fifty
years until the free institutions
mnlgated by our constitution w ill be
entirely destroyed.
___ —
We have received the new illtts-
(rated catal lyue recently issued by
| the People’s Reform BoJk and Nows
t o., 1MD C'l„.su.,N.
Mo. The catalogue B handsome!v
gotten up and contain* by f.,r the
largest and most complete H-t of rc
form literature, song books, etc
published, It contains line half tone
portraiUof leading authors of reform
works, and tiie best pict 111 c wc have
,ct set'll of Jerry semi' Simpson. The
Uoninanv will vou the e-it ‘ v
o^ac on itt opt ’>1 -c 11
e I'»(.v I— 1 tin" ,*>nl,.r»..,..,.tn ,.1
i“ii"s ■"«» on.i
movement.
N. B. By speei .1 arrangement
\Y !f» altove (' H an ■ , i ,}
The Fanners' Demands.
The l‘o"i)>l. , ’n party of America,
H d lo , e temporary defeat on the 8i.ii
,,f November will he more glonous
than the victory '.'li of the plutocratic
p.uts (, ;i . mi i win. , i 1..... - . i ii
gent of (1. voted adherents among the
wcki-v, ..f ........(ire land, who
will ».l » m railing for
the , raightv . , arinv of the ,, people iii which
will capture tlie country for liberty
i 1 J, • u t.i i in Is'"'
Willie , this ... the ii • -
11 true,
party of to-day , remaiua . essentially ,• n .
*
the , party ol .„ the term.
'Ibis is so because the farmer’s
grievances against the present pluto¬
cratic order can he put in political
propositions that arc at once re.is (li¬
able in their nature and practicable
to adjust.
The farmer start: out. by declaring
that he is robbed by a transportation
system which is in effect a new style
of pillage and utterly unknown to the
experience of his grandfather, Tll
robber baron of the feudal arcs sta-
tioned himself by the roadside and
compelled the traveling merchant to
y pj ;u .^ toil f,„. passn.g by his
ed . Rut this traflic taxer of the
hand has been .lead for many a
century, and the farmer of our
father's days knew him net.
The farmer of to-day, however, is
unhappily familiar with a politico-
economic mo.istrositv who is
strange and unnatural successor. It
is tlie railway oaron, whom a foolish
I'overinuent has endowed with r. I'uiic-
tum that of right should or.lv be
'
ted in itself. It allows the
over which the trade of the country
must go to pass into tilt hands ol
private individuals, who use them
pile up unholy billions of wealth.
This unjust franchise is peculiarly
oppressive to the farmer, whose
product is of small value in propor¬
tion to its hulk, and must find its
market at a distr.nc.- from where it is
raised.
For the farmer to ask that this
Clous system of private ownership t
railways be changed to ownership on
the part of the general government
violates no commercial trailit.ons ami
is in harmony with an cn
1 public policy.
P.ccisely the same is liis
I for a banking system which shall be
'»*e>l for the impartial advantage of
whole p-ople, and uot for the
jwhnieiit ot a favored e.asuoi mon-
| ‘T chaugeru.
'I— forum an- tho snlu-nt
i' :lrt v
.
£ «.
i (hat will »,vo dm ia„*
| every class and condition of toilers,
'i lie 1’cople’s party campaign of
1892 has been in the sti irtv .t sense
educational and preparatory. The
party is just eeming into the time
1 its active mission. The period of
schooling b is extended over more
than twenty years.
The preachers of the first green-
! back crusade were but as a handful.
vt .( never were propagandists of the
gospel of truth more resolute or sue-
ecs-ful. Inspiretl by a deathless faith,
they spread themselves abroad in tlie
butd, but they sought converts not
am >ng the rich nor tlu-se in liigh pla-
ees, but .searched out the humble to. 1
ers who live far away fr<»m the roar-
j mg hives of population, in the
!, v ' v A Vf ' where ,,H ‘" 1,:lve ’'uic to
.
:l1 "* to grow in soul.
Steadily their logic of political
'’ghteousness has made way in the
L5e conquests of these fervid
:, p ,,st * t * s t * K ‘ m * w dispensa'mn are
■ v-u-extrnsive with the republic. In
Hie remotest corner of the nation
:h, ‘- v 1,avo J? ai,u '' 1 disciple-’ who in
""" 1 ' iTa:ill ‘ evangelists of the
\ Ldrcr days to be.
^ followers <>f the People’* par-
l,ruuu ' r lm '° n,:li,1 v come from the
.
!’ oor :u "' lowl v of l,;uo
.
| scant means to support a press
Um1 to ,lh ' 1 '' 1 , » 1 ‘‘"' ; ‘ 1 talief, yet in
tta List three years I,.»90 ne ipapers
,mvi ‘ v-hampioned their high cause
| without fear or reservation. In
,rs w ho possess that lieai--stmitig
i ‘‘L.queiu-e w hu h a! once thrills and
| lAoplc’s party lias a
..... WHfo ‘“' ki '‘S “
tia * ,ni ' ch:UiU ' :U r,lwtwnc tl,:U ls t,!l '
» ,ri,lc of ,Uo convcntiona 1 dechumer,
lb ‘‘ s0 ‘"' alors art> lkh 1,1 that - iowm -
UclWn " 1,U ' h ^ •;“***f
fr “ ,M l ' an,ost sw,,ls C0,,HC,WUS ot
tru tLs Hiat tl is them solemn
to I’^Lnui to men.
l lic breadth, intensity
vi " ci "« success of the i'eople’s party
•inipaign of 1392 has established the
- . . ,
1,(11 ' '-"O' “ 1 i.i."
“■>
move incut of 1890. — i he \ unguard
'V,. * t '•*> n • U V
What A Suter Can Do.
Who can tell the thoughts that
cluster around the word sister.!
Sister, is a name we love to hear ;
anil m here is the person that has a
larger sphere to work in than a trite
«* "”' k ' » I' 1 ” 1 '
'•»l'l> i >;-»»; « pbr- °l co.,tc.,tment,
She can J mst make homo a wonder-
! In 1 source of eniovment. J
| How many of us feel , the , respon-
| Ability J that rests upon 1 us if we could.
list gtt our eyes open wide enough ,
•' i 1 ®
• -
i to see how close the world is watch-
ing %
us.
li we could realizes how close our
brothers are watching our footsteps
sim !y we would arotis" and go to
work. If we will watch, we
find plenty of work to do evv day.
We must not be looking for a place
to work in all the time. We must
work in our own sphere, in our own
way, let it bo ever so simple. If we
would accomplish great things, we
must Le willing to work in little ways.
H'we can make one home happier,
" e :ll 8 'i' ing a great work.
II(HV la:, ". v hrotlicrs are there
......... the changes of mature yeaas
},:lve «■»«»«"» l»ve, their ready
1 * 11 ^ adequate resource. A true sis-
tl ' r ^ t "' cr ready to forgive an
brother; she never deserts him in
adversisy; she clings cloudy to linn
“ I " i t!la »*our of trial she is ready
to cheer him when the bitter voice
oi ' reproach poured in his
h ears.
> '” l(i ,s ready to hush its hard tone
a » ,<l (un * ln ’ attention from its pam-
fnl Tht ‘ ooUl grave cannot
i crush her affection for him. It out-
ilv<?< llis ,ears and si K lls - Hotv
1 manv brothers are there who re-
i member look from
a reproving
, I
, iters that have long , been
M j eye-, • o
clo.ed iu death? How many
cheered by the remembrance of a
I smile Irom lias that will smile
never
j v '’ e nuist ever remember
)hat a smile at home is worth two
Sisters have much in this
P°wer in r*gard to their brothers.
^' s their power to make them
a » tl tnu ' r > tl >
«ivo them a liigho opinion of woman.
* '"''8 f -‘>'
(gi-. • your brothers close attention,
Th( ‘.v will remember your words
‘ w,,ul! >'«»«’ voice has long been
hushed in death. ’
Sue V —
OLIVE BRANCH circs
Complaint.-. Ton day..
Troaliaont -out Kivo for ‘1
^ ’ i/f’ ^ * ?' ’ ^ "
j The Saturday ElaJe
Is the greatest newspaper wonder c
the age. .It is four years old and
aeiroulatiou of over a quarter
Atopies a week. The latest
and the most marvelous events are
1 written up in ihe best style and fully
‘ illustrated. Subscriptions received
: at §2.09 §1.00 for six
per year,
months, or 50 cents for three months.
Special inducements to clubs. Send
for free specimen copies. Boys e Ver¬
ywhere are making big money sell-
ing the Bi.akk on the streets. Y. rite
lor p.uticiilars. Address tlie pnblish-
er, \Y. 1). Boyce, 113, 115 and 117
Fifth avenue, Chicago.
-----------——
The total number of immigrants
landed in American ports during the
year ended .line 30, 1892, was G19,
320, as against 555,4% in 1891, an
increase of 03,824. Of this tremen-
dous host 130,022 came from(ierma-
ny, 84,t>29 from Russia, 60,944 from
Italy, 57,!53 from Sweden and N'or-
way, 55,381 from Ireland, and 59,182
f.om England ami Wales. Theco.n-
(tinned arrival of impoverished and
ignbraut thonsaiul from Russia, II iin-
gary and Italy is n strong argument
j»» f-*' r>r of legislation which shall rc-
strict, immigration without keeping
' out deserving foreigners who
proiu-
isc to hecoine useiul citizens.
--------
Electric UittaM
; known This remedy is boeolnirg so well
and so popular as to need no
| g H;‘^d ITrW menUon. "TS All ‘llisZ who have used
exist'ami -
; not it is guarimtoed to do
j ;iil is ( .,mined. Kl^-tlie Bitters
:l “ ,iiseaw>s of tht '
| tmnscaull u ii^MhYtaui .IndloH fdood i-i
Malaria'from by imtmrc _
drive the system and
prevent as well as cure Htiadaehc, all .Malarial
fevers.—l'or cure of
j Buters and Entire Indigestion satis f a4tio:i try Electric
! feed, refunniil.--IVee gn.iran-
or inonev 00
, D. . 1 . 1,1 .= ] . I. j;i (...; = (■ ;-t
i | ■'...gg I: S.ioB.d i>■■„>;-:■■■• Be Vi E, i cry Ilotna.
A beautiful heal of hair is tiie
r» n. Af; Vi can
An Income Tax.
This income tax law passed Con-
gross duly 1, 1802. It did not go
into effect till 1803,
By its terms nit ,, incomes m excess
of §090 and under §11),000 were
l ““’ 51 - l« ov “ r «W» “
.. ,«• cm.
i his was surely very moderate,
i lie tax was collected , under i the i
internal . ,
revenue system.
1’rom this source the Government
collected „ §2,i41,So . in 1803.
i
For the fiscal year, ending June
BO, 1804, it collected §20,-204,788.
On the third day of March, 1805,
the act was amended so as to .iibsti-
' tut e 5 per cent for the "1 per cent on
the smaller incomes, and 10 per cent
j for the fi per cent upon the larger
ones, commencing with an income of
§u000.
l Uuder these acts the Government
, collected
In 1800 tilis tax yi-.lded §72,98*2,-
1895. In 1807-it yielded 8<iC,0i4,-
1 429.
: I» 1«57 the law was amended.
1 he tax was diminished m effect one-
half. The ainuidment a so provi h d
j that tlm ac' was to expire with the
year 1.Si 0.
’>■ DCS, §41,455,599 v,as tlie ^ sum
, collected. In 1870 it was §34,891,-
J 8->7. On July 14, 18iU, the tax was
j extended me vear. and reduced to
-4 per cent,
'rhi; WllS repealed by an act which
passed the .Senate January ’-0, 18< 1,
j and the House on March 3, 1871.
j T he years and nays were not taken
in Hm House.
Taxes already due before tbe re-
_ peal of the act continued to be col-
I, . , nr lo. 1 and 18.2 and lb. J.
i -i-i I he last i not till 18.7. ____
j i were m
1
i ire total amount collected under
I turn . very moderate , income tax was
§-’it'Do"’"38 ' ’
Does anyone doubt , , tnat , it would ,,
*
, be practical . to collect enough ,
now
this , . the r
revenue irom source to iun
Government.
fortunes have so amazingly _ m-
»n the hands of the
!>ro;.t« so stupendous have
cumulated m the hands of
j Ed magnates, coal barons, railroad
kings sugar trust operators, steel
iron combiners, that a good,
( ac on incomes above %* 1 (>, r
j fax growing heavier as the
was larger—would be phenomenal
its yield.
. I,' A. '. V 'l*?. ' ' '’I ^
'
. ... ..
f d <** »"■ «
”"
2. It would put the support of
adminBirution upon those who
j t!a ' greatest henefits under the
| ill! ?’ [t ,:l8s wonlJ iu tiie n,u " 1 '*’ st t5l of « lil0st P ,,w
11 l ‘ ca ; ii,i; ect
^ K ' 1; !1K ‘u get prrik uiar wiien
«»>wt foot the bills.
4 ' ^ w, ' ,!l<i iHlt thc f ,cn ' U,ri
<>« men who g 0 t rich off the
Buies of the soldiers,
5. It won id discomage the
ulation of cno:mous fortunes
houkI afford a legal method of
mg the growth of
wealth.
ti. It would ao disu tne
which, as a system of collecting
sthe most eo.-tly, one sided
monstrous the w.orhl ever saw.
7. It would supplant internal rev-
untie taxes upon whisxoy and
which subjects of taxation
be re! .-gated to the .States.
8. It would give to
people ail over the land a relief
I the crushing burden of indirect,
ardiy and illegal taxes which
wiling from them in the name of
law lor tne benefit of
classes.
The nations of Europe
the justice of the income tax.
In England it yields about
099,000 annually; in Austria, §12,-
900,009; in Italy, §19,990,009;
i russia, 839,990,900.
Tom ^Yatson.
♦ -* *
The democrats scratched Dr. Rob-
i ns name off of the republican ti-ke:
j aj|l , wrote Jut] tk ^ Lawsons name in-
to fool (u-gro,,.
'i he democrats had republican tick-
with Judge Lawson's name wrote
^ Ww "‘ ,Cr ,f lh ° sc tlvkbt *
1 by n quest.
| 1>r _ <«''» , * a-A the , repub-
j 1|C . ' ;UIS ’ to print liis name their tick-
on
ets.
, -)r. Kobms wouU have nearly
o-ot
... ropn!.li--ai) vi.tv in tli-- Di.ni.-t
m.w, , k ..
. (
\ he ibYei'eiv e Coriunitteo are re-
*» i
: U •
BLANK;'! BLANKS!! BLANKS!!!
4V e keep blank Notes; Summons;
Fi fas Ac. ( ome to our office and
get your official papers choii'ior than
you can write them, ami always in
correct legal form. Cotton bills,
Statements, Letter heads, Bill heads
Ac., all printed in neat style on the
I best reality of paner. Give us a
! trial order.
•*» • ♦
County P. P. Convention.
Tne Delegates of the People’s
party of Franklin county will meet
in convention at ALLEN’S CAMP-
GROUND on Tuesday November
loth next. Every club should bo
fully represented, and every deleg;.-
turn should have proper credentials,
The object of.the meeting is to m.m
in ate can li late; for co.tnty offi-
cers.
The Chicago Ledger
Is twenty years old and ha. a circu¬
lation of 140,000 copies a week. It
: ; a combined story and family pa¬
per, fully up to the times in every
particular, and handsomely ill nst-a-
tu ,p There is a Fashion Depart¬
inent, and also a Young People’s l)e-
parlment, cither of which aLme is
worl |, t j lc subscription price of §2.0(
per year, §l.oo six months, or 50
j ( . c „t. 3 f or three months. s ml f«.r
free specimen copies and inducements
for clubs. Boys and girls every-
M } <e) ... are making money scllimr the
Ledger to regular customers, \V rite
f >r particulars. Address the pub
li.-hcr, Vt'. !). Boyce, 11 ;, 115 and
117 Filth avenue, Chicago.
(nir thanks , an; due . tir.t veteran
reformer, political sage and tinancia. ,
philosopher, . . , “Brick ,> Pomeroy for t a
*
copy ot liis handsome new , book ,
'
‘ Perpetual , Money. ,, „ an-l , “..Ii-takes ,. ,
of Americans m Ftnancial matters.’
I his . book , contains a reasonable ,, and ,
i. logical argument, the
upon money
^ ^ description of
the various kinds of money used for
ot ^ h ^ ^
eause of our lh)anciill distress and
^ ou , y o rt . me .lv Send
J, *
j . f> only cents <>gt u ( ,. A <1-
^ ^ yL p olro; , n , Uoo:n 4tt
W orld Buildim* New York C'dy.
, I A Ticket To The
WOKLD’rf FAIR.
0 u Cl- 'J?. For particulars a!
| dress
ATLANTA JCURNAL,
At:an?a, Ga.
Dark, yellow, greasy skin is a
symptom of disordered Kisneys and
. Liver, and unless treated promptly
. may result in dangerous disease.
One bottle of Hugos’ Bi.ooii Fvi: -
fikk will entirely remove tire cause
an ,i j t . aV e the skin dear and traus-
j parant. Farmers Alliance Sold and warrented Toeeoa, Ga. by
store,
!
Money lenders m tho old countries
have bought from bankers and bro-
| = kei's in this country bonds issued by
thii United States Govtunment, and
j j 110w 0W ned by these bankers, who
j se |j tl»em to those wlio buy, at a
profit. Tins selling of such securi-
t ; es j s j, art their regular badness,
J • They se j), a .„i w ; t h the proceeds buy
nnirw, that 'they'sell.to others, Mon¬
ey iei .’ers in foreign countries have
thus bought notes and bonds and
mortgages from various persons in
country, and, as individuals, they
j collect the interest coming to them
^-hen it falls due. Being non-resi-
dents, they claim that the only stuff
t j„,y ( .are to receive as interest ami
principal shall be gold of a certain
Oneness, that all who have givui
notes or bonds issued in tins country
should make payments of both inter¬
est and principal in gold com or gold
bullion, when, in strict legal fact, a'l
is required under the law here
I in tins country, wh-. e such securities
, ..re issued, is that they shall be paid
iu whatever the supreme law
go vern ing in is con it try < le¬
t-tare s to be fit 111 ego 1 ten tier
for the paying of debts.— -'A-
vance Thought.
It SteM ft,la Every IW
J - U - ' Vi!son ’ : ' i7T ( ’ In .v St., Sharj X-
1 urg. !'a., says he will no* ne
?"* * A Z L ,Th >11
{ wife'
that it cured hi* who was
atoned with pneumonia after an at-
tack of “La Grippe,” when va ions i
. other remedies ami several physicians j
j i had her, done of Cooksport, her no good. Pa., eLiims Robert Bn--! Dr.'
I
. King’s New Di e >very has done him 1
more good than anything he ever
used for Lung Trouble. Nothing lile
' it. Try it. Free Trial Betties r.t
- Dr. J. R. Tucker’s Dreg t'tore. Large
J bottles f Oc. and §1.99. i
Wc ) s
Dadisj Are Duforiunate.
hecnu e the l.i. her they rise in society
tl.e weaker they lie ’ ,h !v(
C)ns , , (
I’Mlotoken control,
the norves* ai Is nature m hen various
functions, and thus combat* with tho
m..n\ iils ot womankind successfully
If your druirgest has not got it n G
wiil order it for yon for §1 a bottle,
from (’lias. V. Bisley, Wholesale
DntggBt, (;o Copland St., New
York. Send for a descriptive
pamphlet, with directions am]
certificates from tnany ladies who
have tt •"- 11 ' 1 can’t say enough in
favor of Risley’s I bilotkeu.
; fi EEC33 h (L 11 r-. h/i ’4 r> ora y OR NO
a REE
,A 48-page book free, Address
b. T. Fax («crahl, Aiterney at Law,
Corner 8th and F 8ti ets,
Waslirngton, J>. V.
P . TV
AS - y - s 4Y
KLAYD.h!- -1*?*?*\ j - >• '-..y ,J£
■............
iV -N. ■/
/ - r ■ s- -• .'-Ow--/
f j>;* rnr ~ T I-— Ws«i Trc« V r... iMim rt.4
a .1 n I • >ml mxd< money faster
tli vn I i St Clod t -. 1 be j* • a 1 li- to In v .in island and l ijilJ
r li ' hn- f k d»-n*t in ri'ci ce*l ] r.inde et thut. I r'll ;•»
ss n, tib* <icv.
H 1 t and » ; . hall work rv. i.it«n»rt and 8li.i t you’ readoff
tv . U'. j'u • ill in i.ito
: iv an is! md d Luil.l if ton wis?»
TS iMie- r r V* »<rk. Ml),
hu 1 h.M.O c •f with nf <-r v>l-j,
:r mrn Fr»l M;y r'.Q
.i. work h i. fnrui ;!«
onn tie." »»r fii.Q
t" t! h Till 8 f h f :) sac-
Ei fr i.zr, t >
•D J-.. r-.w lc , i >f. ioexpo-
rv-o. .. c* r •*. f *—tn-». r.by. ,t
V ' • his f Rl u nod hero is
wot •r. Cirt pains
w II row l, - -»-r*r y«<i srs, '
n«i4 xchu rli yrvu ’• • * C-1.'W Kbn«t lb; j
,-..ml.-f.||vr..-k ; h Hmu.‘T to
iron. Sum....... h . b’tt ii'T' U ite to U-.
wo wi'l make >! ”•*. i Ad«lrns*.
TKl'KA C ix-5-JF - tVr; p-VJfcti*.. M- li»4%
Q?.A60ABD !j Norfolk and A'R-lIsE. Old Point, SHORT Ya,, LISE T.)
and
Columbia, S. C. New Line to Char¬
leston, S. (
SCHEDULE O EFFECT J UXE 26,1802
xoitriunjiUNi). sot;fnBovxi>
No. s.'. No. :>». K .itui '! .11.I , -o. O'. N tl. I.
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5 4K> arl'UiM.-iii Ntv York iulv ...ill ...I l*Mfl
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1 1) tiy cx(..-»>t Saiitl.-v. J D.tiiy t-xtn-pt MumlivV.
* I)iii!y except Suturdi j..
Ci) Via AtliHibk? <Vnm! Uhc. (L) Via IH.y Oil?,
(ii) Via New York, Pliii.-ul-. tj liia ;oitl Xurloil-. rail
roRit. (w) Via Norioik and Wa. LiYigtcn SUkri-
lioat Company.
Ti’.iius -t»- r BBaiHl >Bc;irn’ thronj.-h car* la--
livcui APanta, (?a., \ ia r.'iutoii, nud
Sumtvr, S. ;tml < luirlcBton, S. (’.
Trains Nos. .’]$ siml »l run Folitl Yvith tI.rou; b
Pii'limm I ilHa r. Jby j-iu.^r cai’8 {xIhimi Atiaiit.b
<ia. ami i’ortMnouili, YAu Outgo! ug Atliiiu*
iu • ? (‘ii-fcrs take Kd^uYvood avt-mic tkctric lh.e
ilireu-t i’orlnm tn l*ark Nation, ?a t car lei viiig-
Fdlj£t.wot;<l ii - ime Kr.chauye jiIrvc 5:50 { .
HE ; Uiitl 7 :-0 ;t. ;n.; city t iuu*. blioiiUI
>»o rcinly to !<>;;ve Ktlp;\vo<»(f uventui jutt FUi^t r
statioii out-luiJf ho>:r l t-forc time ol tl*--—
}>;irtnrc oi tiAiim’ or IlowunlTr.iiusiVr roisi]»: i t .y
will check itt !*•*.-ifk ii'-e l y viiAjir oidcitj
with ff. i, MiHwlgc, ticket a^ent, J-hlgt wo< d :t.u--
iiue FUtim;. Puliuiun ::nd l .iUoAti tickets van
l)V stcurv'd ut !idi;u\vood. uvtuuc oi: lT rk
Btaticus.
o. V SMITH, JOHN \YINI»KK,
Tihuiio .\i;ffU“'( r. ticiu rul Maib.i't r.
H. W. ii. <:l.oYf.l!,
l>iv. r;D>:cir^t-T Agent, At’t.RtiU
The question of Iiccii.-r.ig tnt-niecrs
is being so agitatid in nuy state in
the Union that within n slant tune,
for the protection of human liv< s, it
will he impossible for anv one iriti lis¬
ted with steam to hold or secure a,
situation without, passing a rigid ex¬
amination and obtaining a license.
Stephenson's Iliustrntid Practical
Test lias been pnpiished to aid engin¬
eers preparing to pass such exan.m.B
tion, asked on the Boiler, Pump, En¬
gine, Dynamo, Corliss Engine, Ac., it.
has already met with su-.Ii a di .Kind
that it is now m its Fourth edition*
Tiiis \\ ork, w !u ii pnlv costs one dol¬
lar, can be ohtaindd of the publisher,
Walter G- Kraft, 79 JLu baiie, Street
Dili -ago.
00 & *Q T *JCf
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f.q psano
ssauasjeoq pue
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