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THE CARNESYILLE ■ J .
ESTABLI
C. W. BOND, PROPRIETOR.
Do you want anything m the line of vegetables, cand.es, fancy
groceries, cider, mi'* -hake, crockery, call on me. 1 keep con
•UnU, on band ererjrthing that „ kcptin a HtoAk ^
grocery *tora and will give bargainr.
C. W. BOND, Lavonia, Ga.
C U0CE33 CAN BE
In Ann Business by
Untiring Industry,
Caneful Economy,
-and
Judicious Advertising.
TIN ^oad to Opuleijoe ties ^ee-Deep Jf?rou^
priij^r ’5 Iipl^.
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sarvants. Tho table is supplied with tne lie?t that the maitaat*
of North Georgia affords. Daily mails from Royston. Every
ihing that can contribute to your comfort and p’easure at one of
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FRANKLIN SPRINGS,
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(3 READ B/fcKY VTEk IN
TnC DE$T nO/AES.IN Nj THIS
- You -RECrlON "
If wish
DVERTDE
5fig TN'^ nything
TIME
KEEP'THlS'RACPIN'JftIND.
'* 6A, WEDNESDAY, JULY U‘i )T
IN THE
RANKS
Shall The Farmers March
To Victory I
Says Honest Bob Taylor,
Governor of Tennessee.
CuATTiXvOOi., TliXX.,
June 1, 1891.
!!«.n. Jinx A, Tipton :
Mr Dkae Sik— 1 have the
to acknowledge the receipt of your
m«>t excellent letter, which I read
with unusual plea gw-. I u brim
full of good politics and good sense.
I liars giren a good deal of thought
to the political questions re fen el to
by you; aud although I am now onl\
an humble private c.tizeu of ?hs
commonwealth, at.d e in only speak
for myself, ve', I assure you, I have
never fesrsd to express my opinion
upon public qu stions, whether while
in pub ic life or private station.
The civilized world has never
witnessed sueh a general upheaval
in polities, in lir.oat every city,
town and hamlet in the Uni n there
are labor unions, trade unions, and
•v«iy conceivab'e suit of club and
lodge of working ni«n, who-held
their r guls? meetings for the dis¬
cussion of •conomic questions, and
public and soci *1 policies, and al¬
most every s hool in the laud close*,
it* do r* at stated period*, up n
:ne farmers and farm
hands, iccu ily and secretly thut
within its walls; and the:e the
knight# of the plow and the boe de¬
bate and plan, while the politicians
ami trust-" and monopolies are
trembling for their safety. AH this
rapid organization, all ef these labor
unions and farm- iV a!l a: ce, in my
: - We HrFam-M f *Wv are on
the advanced enlighten ment and ibe
■. reaped imelligc t»' t 'he great
mass of tho p«opl who • e the pro¬
ducers of wealth; and on ihe o her
hand, they are the dweot and logical
result a of Republican class iegisla
li n, which h * cursed this country
or more than a q rrter of a - cimiry.
i he wqrkiiigine* of the N ation
ought not to b< b'amed for orgmiz
ng, fer tbeii own mutual beaefit
and protection. The tillers ef the
■oil should not If <oi.dtmned for al
lying tbemselvis together for the
purpose of influencing public policy,
and forcing in:ter prices f«r tha
products * v fieir sweat and toil; be¬
cause the capital that buys thsir pro¬
ducts and hirss their lalwr is
tht.rougklj organized But all this
surabination and solidification of tha
producers will right no wrtng, nor
will it achieve ultimate success, uo
les* these movements are properly
be like an un¬
organized array, without sithei arms
or ainmuni ion, or plan of battle,
rushi: g blindly into the conflict,
without any possibility of triumph.
Thera is onty one banner under
which tba wo king msn can ever
hope to win slices**, in this great
struggle for their rights and liber
iie». Ii i» i Ue banner of Demo
craey. l’iK>n its ampla fold's are
written, in l< iter* which have only
grown brighter, in ibe struggles of a
hundred yea>s: ‘Equal rights to
all, special privilegss to none.”
The n.ht o' every citizen to trail#
any whsre in this wide world, and
under certain- just eondsii i s, t*»
have ihe privile-ea to sell where he
can sell for the bighio*t price, and
buy wheie h? can buy the ebexpest;
taxation to pay the expenses of ibe
government alone, and all its legiti¬
mate obligations, no more, it * less,
and the burdens of this taxation to
rest heaviest upon tii* rich and
lightest U|>ou the pooi , free evinage
of silver, the people's money, the
poor men's iriend , local *elf govern
mant of the States free fiom forec
bills end bayonet?, j>r< tection of la¬
bor and eaplid alike, t>c eiuvursga
ir-ent > f agriculture, not by tanffing
it to death, bat by tha reguiatiou of
traa*poitattoo by land, and «*j>aiting
tha blockades upon the high seas,
giving it .the light to exchange ia
products with every naiiou in the
world; the encouragement of all the
the iaduttnas, with p*' tialitv to
none, the enlightenment of the
people, end the distribution of the
blessings of liberty end good torero
ment for the happiness of all, and
making every home the castl e of a
priace, and every citizen a sovereign
this is the Democratic creed. Now.
what does the farmers Alliance pro¬
pose to do ? What art the labor
unions going to do ? What flag d«*
they propose to follow to reach the
end which they seem so determined
to achieve? Will they divide up
into factions, and each faction have
its owu separate party? Will the
farmers of America hoist a u«w fl.tg,
and can they hope to carry the
country with the sub-treasury bat
tie ?
Let hem remember th© history of
the pas*. They are not ai*er than
Jefferson. The grand principles
•aid down by him are the moat
practicable and the beat. The sub
treasury scheme is a serpent in the
basket of flowers, which will sling
tnd de-troy this «rest alliance move¬
ment. It is attia tive ami beauti¬
ful, but there is deadly poison lying
concealed and coiled within. It is
unwise. It is wrong—wrong in poli¬
cy and wrong in principle The
Government canuot be both mer¬
chant and banker for the people. It
can only protect them with whole¬
some law s. It ean only shield them
Lora over-taxation and tyranny.
But it can never go into partnership
with them, or become general mort¬
gagee of lands, tenements and
hereditament*.
Our Government has no money to
toAM it flight not to have a dollar
for that purpose, for every golden
eagle in its treasury which is a sur
pl«s, above the amount necessary to
expend in the payment ot its debts,
and to defray its expenses and reas¬
provide for coati lencies, re
pr»s ut that much of overtaxation
of the people.
Let the Solomons giro us a policy,
will ret the farmers out of debt,
instead of their, sub-treasury policy^
plunge them deeper in debt. Let
niriwart alliaiic* men end labor
men f*il int • ibe ranks of
snd help us cut the
tariff to a revenue bari*, and increase
volume of enr currency, and
free coinage of >i!ver, and enr
extravagant expenditures of the
money, and break the necks
hi 1 i. dollar congresses, snd dis¬
and destroy the Republican
foever. iiepub.iean repre
l»oth in the (J.ibinm snd
the Cong.ess be tataghl that this
a Democratic Republican (to» ei n
and not au aristocracy. Then
will hive better tunes.
I believe the fj. imr* themselves,
they understand ihe sab-treas¬
measure, will repudiate it.
Yours truly,
II.L. Tatlok.
Catholics vs. Barrooms.
The May number of the National
Temper anca Advocate publishes
several speeches delivered by var¬
ious parties at a reception tendered
Bishop Ireland, of Minnesota, in
th'j concert hall of the Metropoli¬
tan Ope:a Ueuse, New Yark, in all of
which the temperance cause was
the i heme. From one of tbe
•patches deliverel b? Fat her Elliott
we clip the following paragraph:
4 *The entire American hierachy
signed tha decree* tbe broad teal of
Rome was affiixaa without the alter
ut a i of a syllable, and when that is
said upon a question of morais what
r ver may be the effect u|K>n the no
Catho ic world, for Catholics it is
a. thorativc and rinding. Saloon¬
keepers have got to quit the busi
•ess oi quit the church, and ibat is
the end «-f it It may go slow.
Great movements go slow,—prohibi¬
tionists will tell you that,—but it
will go >ura. And the end will be
bat tl e finger of public morality
pointing with all the authority of
Rome in scorn and detestation at tbe
s*?o *n business, ui I drive out of it
any man who pretends to b? a
Catholic.”
While we do not p;op>*e to at¬
tempt to champion Catholicism,
yet the ab jyc paragraph meets wv h
our hearty approval. If wa remove
the stumbling blocks we will La bet¬
ter able to reach men’s heaits,—[
Banks County Gazette,
CATHOLICISM
As It Is Known In
J\'orth Georgia.
A Few Facts Briefly Told*
No student of history will deny
that the darkest crimes that stain the
pn«es of lustoiy have been dons in
the name of Christianity. But no
wiie holds the Christian religion res
ponsible for the crimes that are done
in its iirunc, an}.more than we hold
the ‘•.Mildiei’ lives that were a revielle
of freedom to a race in chains, blara
able for the vandal herds of the
north that swept down on southern
homes to pillage and desecrate them.
Cannon Farrar tells us that every
for every heathen our missionaries
to foreign lands convert, a thousand
drunkards are made; still no one
holds up any Christian church as a
body that end. avors to increase crime
and drunkenness.
It ha» been a pet idea and one
much paraded by Catholic haters,
that the reformed churches were
founded on liberty of conscience.
Even a superficial knowledge of
history is evidence that this is uu
irue.
Henry VII1 was the author
the Eng ish Reformation of
even a Protestant writer has
“It was a work begun in
sireuglhcn.nl by plunder and ce¬
mented with b nod.”
Was u for i lie sake *.*f liberty of
that ILnry V T 11I struck
conscience
at the time-honorea faith of a na¬
tion ?
\Yas it for liberty of conscience
that he sought to crush a faith that
he so zealously defended against the
doctrines of Luther in the earlier
part of his reign, that the title ot ‘De
fender of tho Faith,,’ was eonfeired
Did liberty of consefvitce leau
King Henry to cut himself off from
temporal ai d spiri'uil allegiance t*»
Papacy,and declare himself jSupfeme
Head of the C uirch in Rnglaml ?
l.ct us sec.
Ca hohcivo iind prcva lcd undis¬
turbed in England from ihe conver¬
sion of the English p?ople to Chris—
tin ry by St. Augustine until the
reign of Itcnry VIII, a period of
about a thousand yews.
During the first year of the reign
of Ilcnry Vi II he man led Cathar¬
of Arragon, who had beea pre¬
viously married to i.is brother Ar¬
thur, who died about six months af¬
ter the marriago. Seventeen yrara
after the marriage of King Henry to
the Spanish princess, he petitioned
Pope Clement VIi to ratify a di
vi r e from his *• ful wife iu order
thill lie might marry Anne 13 »!eyn,
a lady of tho queen’s household for
whom lie had conceived an attach
uient, maintaining that be felt soma
conscientious scruples about the law¬
fulness of his marriage because Cath¬
arine had been previously married to
bis brother* The Church has never
sanctioned divorces, and tbs Pope re
tused io ratify the separation. “Had
the Pope acquiesced m the repudia¬
tion of Catharine” says a distinguish¬
ed wnic-r, ‘‘and in the marriage of
Anne Boie> n, England would indeed
have been spared P) the Church, but
the Church herself would have sur¬
rendered her peerless title of Mis¬
tress of Trui*». ”
We hojie that we will uot be deem¬
ed partial if we pau«e, right here, to
note he zeal and fidelity with which
tii-> Catholic church has guarded the
-a ciiiy of marriage. The honored
place which the Christian wife fills
in The world to-day, the divine
aure *Ia that encircle* her brow*, con
*iinning hci nriqu*-tinned queen of
h«*r Ion vim d are especially due to
the effort- of ilia Catholic church at
pre*ei ving tl e eacrednes* of the
marriage relations.
When th© Pope refused to ratify
the separation from Catharine and
the . with • Anne *a ti Boleyn, *
marriage
Henry cut himself off fiom the
Poj*« in temporal and spiritual mat
ters, declaring ... , himself . Supreme »
Head of the Church m Etiglaial, and
he set up T. a spiritual r court, sp ) wa#
divorced from Catharine by Cran- „
mar the first Keformed Primate of
VOLUME 24 .
England.
The reign of Heory as Supreme
Head of the Church m England,
a period of persecution for conscience
sake that has rarely been equaled m
the history of the world. Thousands
of monasteries, colleges chapels and
hospitals were ransacked ar i de¬
stroyed. The broad abbey lands and
rich possessions winch bad been be¬
queathed to religious orders during
long ages, by English kings, were
seized upon by Henry and his nobles.
All who refused te acknowledge the
king as Supreme Head of the
Church, were subject to fine’, i im¬
prisonment and death, and t'Tronts
of blood were shed in the cause of
the royal Head of the English
Church. And ve are asked t» be¬
lieve that this was the work of a
Christian people reforming t’.e
Christian religion, and that it was
done for the sake of liberty of con¬
science.
It must be remembered ihit
Henry in the early part ot hi * reign
wa* obedient to the church, and a
defender of his faith? and it was only
when the church interfered with
his unrighteous ambition that he cut
himself off from its guidance.
The reign of Henry as Supreme
Head of the Church in England,
was the beginning of a season of
persecution against those who
denied the spiritual supremac}* of
ihe temporal sovereign, that la ted
for about three hundred years and
that for cruelty his scarcely a par¬
allel in the history of the world.
And still we are fold that the re¬
form -1 churches were fo wd-d on
liberty of conscience.
No t.ne denies that crimes have
been d me in the name of Catholi
cisin , and it is not sough: 6 to justify
*
one wrung by holding up a g»ea t r
one. Under the cloak of re igion
mati}’ crimes and wrongs have been
commit!ed that have been sincere : y
abhored by good Catholics. But
when our , people „ ., eatch ^ , , the ., generous ......
insniiation of this better day, and
are readv to weigh in the scale of
. lusuce.^ , . the .. - »id .
roe oi
nineteen CBTiwnci hi -“wr^-.r'y
charity, of education, of liber y in
i"s highest sense', of right against
a great ^ weight • i . of * odium . j
will be lifted from the nan.e of Ca-
AfKED TO FORM A MINISTRY.
Carevr »f Hon. J. J. C. Abbott, tbe Ca¬
nadian Ibtwman.
Ftenator J. J. C. Abbott, whom Lord
Staoley, porerrior general of Canada, re¬
cently called to form a new cabinet, has
been tn p«W1c life nearly forty years,
lie was leader of tbe govmvm?nt in the
Dotniorim acaate, and enjoys the fall
eon#dcnre an<l respect cf tlie Conserv¬
ative party. In hts ymith he was rathei
radical i* h+s idrsw, and favored political
rnrimi with the United States. He was
one of tbe pqgis’rs of fha famous mani¬
festo of Iwhich dectarM in favor of
aunemtiesi caoeetla flatter ef excite¬
ment in (*re*t Britain. His views on
this snb^ t. however, changed in later
years, and today there is no more earnest
npbo!/W of ties policy of Sir John A
Macdonald than Senator Abbott in the
whole Dominion.
Mr. Ablwtt is a little ever seventy years
old, haring been bom in St. Andrews,
Quebec, in March, 1821. His early studies
were superintended by his father, the
Rev. Jueeph Abbott, rector of St. An¬
drews. After graduating from McGill
college,Montreal, 3
be studied law
and was admitted
te the birr ©flower
Canada in 1847. i
In 1909 he entered V
political life as
represeata
tlYe from Argun
twuil, his native
corraty, in the a. a. c. xnnorr.
Canadian assem- »
My. He became member of the Do¬
minion parliament from the con
•Utoeney after the confederation ip 1887.
Daring the Sand field Macdonald-Sicotte
regioM lit 1862 he was solicitor general
for a brief period.
Mr. Abbott was in tore*ted in the great
Pacific railway deal as legal adviser of
the late Sir Hugh Allan. It was largely
owing te aeveiations made by his confi¬
dential clerk, George Norris, that 8ir
Jobs A. Maokmald was ou ste d from
power. Mr. Abbo tt to ok no partin tbe
exciting debates of HU3, but as the result
of his connection with the scandal be
was kept in private life s ev en years. He
re e nt er ed parliament again, for Affigen
teuil, in 1880. A year later be was ap¬
pointed te tbe senate and given the lead¬
ership of the gowenuneot tat Chat body.
In 1887 Sir John Macdonald invited him
to join the cabinet as a minister without
* porttfjfto, and be kept his seat in tha
cguimxi irtsd wffid forth,
Senator Abbott fo looked as tea
aMsat eupetaent of oommer tew is
Domiad©n. Of late yean be has net
taken a very active p«T in politics, bet
OM &T Jokm Kaedonal^s most
trusted adv ise rs. He is a good debater.
vscaad . te , _ tbs subtleties ,, of practical M ,
)politic
Atf Indian* Wo mu it Official. .
Mrs. Ida May Davis, who school wad .recently
elected a member of the board
of Terre Haute,
Ind., is the first fm
woman to serve
in this capacity
in the state. Her ►.^5*
maiden name was
tie Puy, and she
was born in La¬
fayette in 1858.
£L C. Davis, her
husband, is en- - y -g * j?
in the real£> l
estate business. ' A
Mrs. Davis, who UU MAY DAVIS.
worked as a school
tea years, is a member of tee
Western Association of Writers. She
written conwderablo poetry ana
sketches for western newspapers.
is an unassuming woman of inode*:.
demeanor. She was made secre¬
of the school board.
THE JACKSON MONUMENT.
Thf»n«*m.1 Pfrcirn* Witnmud It*
Recent Unveiling.
The unveiling at Jackson, Miss., of the
to the Confederate de?-i ef
was witnessed by 20,000 par¬
The erection of this beautiful fcrih
is the work of the ladies of the state.
£
aasfw -m§. f A
•l .iJS|
W ^ea
m.
r- - - L I . j -3
Tsmkutii'
jacxson (miss.) co:;.t-cu ratr Mo amgs T.
who began coll<v:ting money for the
P 08 * 3 ® ve T***™ s^o. One of t:»u inecrip
tions sets forth fact ;s* follows: “Ihe
noble women <>f Mis*moved ly
grateful hearts an l loving z al, organ¬
ized Jnno 15, A. p. lSd3. the Confederate
Monument assoriition. Their efforts,
aided by an appropriation from tl>e state
of Mississippi, were crowned with sr.c
cess in the erection of this monument to
the Confederate dead of Mis.is . opi in the
year 1891.” A i attractive feature of the
exercises wac. a procession of Confeder
a to soldiers, civic dieuiiHri*-, and promi
nent citizens of the south. An immense
floa t, dra wn by gayiv d,-qoga ted korsos,
seeedin# states.
The monument, which is sixty feet
high, stands in the southern portion of
the capital Indomro. the groAd having
been donated >>y the legislature for this
purpose. The tite is a bei.ntifol ono and
in fall view of the principal street of tho
city. In the vaulted chamber at t ha
base am broad marble stabs with in¬
scriptions to the Cun federate dead, and
a liferizo statue of Jcffer.-ou Davis will
be erected therein. This work has been
intrusted to s:i endnect Italian artist,
and represents Mr. Divis rt-mdili" with
left hand extended in the attitude of de¬
livering speech. In his right hand he
has a roll of manuscript and fst his fef-t
lies a pile of books.
Upon the terp of tho shaft is the statue
of a Confederate foldfoi*. bis feet and the
butt of his gun Ijoins In the position of
parade rest. ’Us h-a«I i* doprevspd and
his left arm r*t.< e.xv.ly r.nd gracefully
an tba muzzle of the »:*tn. Tirta- Rtutno
was seulpfcnrr l hr J. T. ‘A-litehsad. of
Ten:»., from a U»v:k of IUl*an
marble while Iic-w.js bup’-i-int.’ndinjr ( iie
of the monument.
Among the iuseripcioa.*: i:: the vanlterl
is tin * following: “The men to
whose memory i x iis monument is iledi
were the martyrs of their cree<l:
tlieir justification i< ?r» flie holy ki*<*ping
the God of hi -.tory.'
—
x
m
W r
THlilf «
Ik Is Hard to Waste It.
Soma advertisers have an idea that
only copies going to paid op subscribers
are useful to them. This is not quite so.
Fear example, suppose a journal has 26,
M0 actual subscribers to whom tha
paper 6jX)0 goes regularly. Suppose R prints
extra copies a week, which are seat
as to ood parties, whose ed
ted by its aganf ? and
vsudara, and mails 5,000 one w eak to
sot of jsweuiMi, tee next week to anuteer
set of 4,000 and so on. In this way 280,-
8CO extra persons are reached during the
year, white if tee extra 5,004 were sent
every Weak to 6,000 paying subsc ribers
tedy-that number could be reacbc l. In
tea former case 285,000 persona are
aaediad In tea latt e r case only 30,000
•Btoftd. A person r ece i v i ng a coi f of •
joQrnol which he has not U*for«,
trite a request io examine it, will usually
leek ab through It, odvertteement j snd
$XL yearly Suehafouna advertiser is if his as card nsefol to sent the
as were
to tee whole 285,000 persons, or even
more so, for his singte loose card receive*
far leas attention than would be found
te tea columns of a reputable journal
—Okar^a Jni* Farmer,