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About Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1892)
The Democrat. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY T W.NEAIjON, Proprietor. J M. NBA LON, Editor. CM A WFORDVTLLE, GEORGIA, •aland at the preloAc* (t Or* wfot drill*, •ewgtt, u weoirt-tl*** mail Bailor. FRIDAY,SEPt’EMHEtt 9, IB»2. ^DEMOCRATIC TlOlT^ y<jr AiRuVKH XEVELANl*, Of New York, For Vk't:-Tr(-*idf-nl, HON. Alri.Al K. KTEVEXSON, Of Illinois, For Representative, HON. 3, J. C. BLACK. STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Governor, II . WILLIAM J. NORTHER. For .secretary of State, (,LX PHIL.COOK. For ( oniplroller-Ueneral, IloN.-WILLIAM A. WRIGHT. For Treasurer, ROBERT U. HARDEMAN. For Attorney-General, JOSEPH M TERRELL. For Commissioner of Agriculture, U. T. NE8BIT. F -i Representative in Legislature, O. D. MOORE. For *11 other Office*, DEMOCRATS. IN THE LACT DITCH. in hi* speech liere la*t Saturday Mr, Wntaon beoame quite theatrical in nutrner at one point, jumped upon the table and extending hi* hand front of him, and assuming a defiant attitude said that whoever said lie was a traitor was a wilful and deliberate Han and that whoever the people's party movement tended hoip llanisou ws* a liar. Mr. did not try to disprove either one ft i i• I 2 df and il« the work would not be well done then. lie said that he and hi* friends had stood abuse a* long as they wer« going to stand it. Mr. Watson know* a* well a* lie know* any thing that the rank aud file of the third party lunteml of re¬ ceiving abuse are the recipient* of pity. When hr speaks of notstawUug abuse, lie mean* that he if can help It he will keep the democratic orators aud the democratic newspaper* from telling the truth about him. But Mr. Watson can't help himself. The newspaper* of this state are uot to be nut tiled, am! we are glad to believe that there are men to Georgia who arc bold euough to tell the truth even though Mr. Wal¬ nut aud Ids followers are not pleased at them iu doing so. A> to his so boldly denouncing dem iwtsae liars, that statement will hurt no one but himself. Ife has not > ti<Rl 1,1 *0 *”' M«»» mnl Jirwof i* what Uie iKHijdc want, lu his effort* at ini*rcprc»cnt»uon k« ha- been ex t-a-d by dcuuKtato speskers iiewsq>aj«MK, and to tree Wstaonian M)k* he must let lured flame* of an. g<i flash from lit* sparkling eyes hp must prance around on «u iunuccnt pi**ee of furniture, and denounce hi* opponents a* liars, while hi* opponeta calmly watch his gymnastic eff and laugh at hls authw. T«a did a«t prove that thus* whuiu h, denouncisl sore li»n>. He dApvn,). ed upon his bare won! to can tit H« . to^hat ' point, little game of m . bout jdayed out. Thi* ahttsc uu. Hu|uiuieu bv j - a . men t which Watson i* Rtovew tt.at he i« in the l«-t ditcl. lie »e« lb«t the day of hi* dt-f, ; ,t is ‘ HE 18 MISTAKEN Mr. Watson, iu hi> r< Rat .s.ouutav al one time when if ' n« mdse, said tliai they -(**»• ,. al p„ ccurse hi* oppouentiy could tig enough jssojilv from Allan to 1 from being heard Mr. Wat at the democrat s 1 a iv ' *” Mr. M at* i , s . toui^ . heard. lO ktrt*J» Via* W, It k u*>* to l* OfOBrd of T,0 um |kh>{j1< , it t a* quiet ax * in tiurvh. There iu such Tto W3kB a dt*} li Will » nd M Bl* .V e. Mat *01 i j -er. aud bud tto when 1 hr fc.ll ow that a great pmt of the ,-,-nfuri.m w,- due to tto fort that lag on daring Majar Black’s speech, yet Major Black did not apply oppro¬ brious epithet* to those who interrupted him. The democrats of Taliaferro brought no one from Augusta or Atlanta to in¬ terrupt Mr Watson. No people came from either of those place* for that purpose. They came hear to listen to j tite speaking, and in doing this they! were exercising their rights a* citi sen*. They came here to see Major Black annihilate Torn Watson, and in doing thS* they proved their patriotism and love of country. They want to «i,-e Mr. Watson defeated and a better man j t in hi* place, but they are not afraid of hearing Watson's side. If Mr. Watson think* that we are afraid to hear what be lias to say he Is mistaken. • ■ A THRILLING SCENE. The Atlanta Constitution give* the following account of the effect Major Black’s apjiearance had upon the audl ance when he arose to answer Mr Wat¬ son: As Major Black arose and mounted the table, which was all thatremained for a platform, the applause which had been going on almost uninterrupted since Watson was called down, became wild and tumultuous. Men shouted till they were red in the face Juts flew in Ml air and the old grove fairly rang to the democratic muetc. It was such a scene of old Georgia times as might have raised the shade of Aleck Stephen* from the little grave In which he lay al¬ most in the outskirts of the crowd, a* the sound of battle, with which was so fanlliar, r*ng above blm. We went to see every office from president down to bailiff filled by a democrat. Mr Watson wld that Major Black is leader be would have been glad to low. That Is the way we feel about Tom Wstson says that if be read bills lie manages to know what pi them. We wonder why he did know what was In the wool bill. Tun Atlanta Constitution deserves, praise for the excellent report It of Uie Joint debate here. The illustra¬ tions were sp eciall y g ood. Ir there was sverauy as doubt whether or not Major Black was brainier msn than Ton Watson doubt was dispelled last The neoeeslty of registering should strongly Impressed upon the minds you “ v ri eg i«rs ) of Tellafetto county. a, .... v -■ •«>•«- * iLgislratton books dose soon. W« heard much*.Apathy exprn ed for Tom Watson last Haturday When Major Black had gotten well started lu his speecli Tom was a tit ob ject from •vmi>athy. W atson is now another word for Inconsistency. Tommie said in 1889 that Cleveland waa a good man and a bold man, and waa striking at every abuse. Yet today Watson ts denouncing Cleveland, but Cleveland’s record had been made Watson praised him. Watson said In 1889 that lha darao craticpuray had a leader aud an iasue, Today wu have the same leader hmi Uie same issue drawn between us and the republicans, yet Thomas says that the two parties are practically tti e same. This proves that Tom is not Infallible, as some ot his admirers seem j to think. Hewas cither mistaken then | *r he is mistaken now. We tbiuk bis ! 1 judgment was better Liar ye.r* *r» than it Is now. Livingston and in In* speech at Uon >' or * that there was not a leader in the people’s party who had sense enough i to ci ossa branch and come back tos I same way.—Alliance Farmer. We nolle* no comment on Ltving •ton’aaMartiap. The Alliance Farmer insst believe it is true.—Athens Bin mr. Candidate A. K. Stovsmon says that the luagnltudo of the foroa bill ia-ue cannot tie overesUmsted. It can be underestimated, however, and up to a ' week waa ago thaw had been a ditposi Hon iu certalu quarters to underesti lb Tliethlrd party orators in the south, taking the tip from the rapnhll cans, declar e the fores MR to be a dead tame. But since loidiag republican newspapers hava come out **** * importance is notao rampant.—Sevan nah MamtofwNews. - tt ___ The third pony «* eondenming democracy m to its financial M a ainmaHnr to Un- reoonD. Let them search the re*-ordstor a vote in ti* l>ocscm liouse on tlic -bill to remove theten pen cent, tax from state honks, and they will find Miswra. Watson T^ bunpWCo.v-Hfogagmnstto the records! to the r»<oords!—Athens Iwinoin*. Tlw third jiarty leaders say that the* areas good democrat* a- anybody. They are like the negro's'dog that wiw named NKaaiemtu TI»o ewwer of Urn dog wa* asked why to relied it Xioo demos. “ WcU” was the reply, “voe «.-<!. hell have . to , be . bore again , , betor* . he* user to of any arewuni .-Athens IWer, IN JOINT DEBATE. The Incomparable “Private” Meets the “Jag Hunter." COm*Xvm> ram face. dwnocrml t j,en. Now what ate you? j gu[) po«e you ar» a Weaver democrat -You say we were Greeley democrats, jjgea true man after the war Greeley forgot his enmity, and went on the bond of Jefferson Davis. Horace Greeley ran upon a platform that demanded amnesty and the pardon of your fathers. At tte same time old Weaver was denouncing our leaders, and saying that they ought to lie a million miles deep in hell. You take your choice, and If you want old Weaver take trim to your heart’s morsel con- j tent and roll him as a sweet under your tongue*. t.„. ow Weaver with bin record of bate and hi* bill in three con greases to appropriate $300,900,000 for federal pension* in the north. You criticise Cleveland, you denounce him for his pension record, and you take to your bosoms this Insensible old wretch who has hated us all his life. “I am not going to go through any dramatic scenes here today and say that 1 am ready to die. (Laughter.) I want to live as long as l eari, and a little while longer anyhow to serve my country and to serve it In this cause. I don’t thing there is any danger of anybody dying, I don’t think anybody Is going to get hurt, If it was necessary I think I would as soon die in this cause as any other, hut I do not think I would be standing arouud here so much if I was going to get killed. (Laughter and applause.) Hut there will be somebody hurt in November when the great democratic majority comes down. I think even now that l can hear a voice in the distance, growing weaker and weaker a* the shout of victory grows louder, but still distinct enough to he heard as it cries in feeble tones. ‘W here am 1 »tV’ “You say the democracy has repudi¬ ated the alliance. It has not. You had the democratic party. Too have It now, you say. Oh no, you haven’t. You have thrown down the flag, and have taken the flag of the enemy ln your hand. We might as well draw the issue here and now. You are a democrat, sir. You are a people’s parly man, and your leaders end teachers and your shakers have ^ %UR tea their vocabulary of abuse ou th# democratic party. Four years *.* * ••'»-* * ;* of Grover Cleveland. \ i our distinguished young leader went eut of this district with the dem -cratm flag hi hls hand. [Iw comes back to you lo'-d*? Bnd '*- CB " “P 011 l,lra ,,8r ® aud now lo t,,,, nRme the democratic party of the tenth con¬ gressional district. We want our flag? What have you done with it? ‘•I will toll you what be ought to have done with It, fellow citizens. Ho ought to have defended it and held it tll| the) last, But before congress had organized and he oould tell what it was going to do. Instead of holding aloft our flag lie threw it down and trampled It under his unhallowed seet. And comes back to us, not with the flag, but with a a sword that is crimson to the very hilt wllh the blood of the party that trusted him, “Fellow citizens, even the dead have not been spared. He has gone into the grave of Samuel J. Tllden so Intense snd virulent is his hatred. Hi sajs that Samuel J, Tilde,, amass¬ ed a fortune by piratical methods, and did not have sense enough to make his own will. (Orleeof “Shame.”) f ■ 4 ] . S f 'I 1 . r ,. . ■ - — m " J “ji-st ritou oi stt." “Now lie say. he stood on the Ocala Xow «tiers has ha baar 1 a voioe In the alliance calling him out of the d*-ioo cralic party (“Here,” allWce? cried a voice ‘Am you tU Well, have been bearing for the last two mouth* that my brother, Watson, had about klUed Urn alliance, and if you are the ah lance. I think It is true. (Uuid laughter and cries of “Goodby Jimmie" 1 lik ^ 'Tooly mie is cot going that way yet. I W ji| tell w>u one thing. IfJimmle go down he will go down with the flag 1 to his hands that his party gave him. Hs wilt never go down with the red dag of the enemy in bit hands. JAp P 1 * 8 * I “Here are the proceedtogs of toe Georci* state alliance, and here is a that they offered to that bod) It Is a resolution that al! alii members of egress to instruct ed to vote for no man for speaker of national boas* oi phwentatlvea d-h alliance is not in fall aec< l stand and who not on the Oca iatform. It was moved and ear that it be indefinitely postpon^ 'bat resola tlon was voted down, our own al llanee voted It do* „ They would not go into a caucus elect a speak* er or anybody else. gfjcvman in “You had other sS con grass. You had S;w*. You bad other honorable nm ||my ' iTbey have not deserted. They ate ranks and that is an evidence' ||gp F ! ' e>r h0De8t ? Perhaps if they be»5 vij «F u J"‘ c '“ 11 abou “ there might r J||f 0 them. They were . * isnee the party. The . toted down a reHfc* 0tt ln * 0 that end. But an met in Indiaii apyfl ^#* 1 *' resolution that iRKKf 1,1 men should has the go IiflKpt 1 nnTvTnti nT to right from the tenth no’dMl .. to watson did 1 »i eongre*. as an all,ancem*a. Mto>«*dg| ft ; ««• bat now now. he Poor, despis¬ ed sect mm. a.itfsK# kJl7 the r ^ door Y ° In U . . * 0 ‘ W them wanted their faces, . and W**" |H. ^ oks to get in be dowtfjf bad# and throw ^P «Wlution has “Now this T ‘ iB r a curious story. *4T 1 U WM attributed auU to one else, ru ° * or »u» ! ^ v dcf **• 1f U,e ootwaattourf wrotnfttbe man whom ° you man who m3* crsU,ry °j U going to f ‘° are I-uapect. Mr. M. treasury some dal- which he L. Branch, concoctJ writ! a latter resolut.on lu before says he bome.P’ how f. l l be left “ ° watson and wa&n proved of it ( and advised him t# in lt ' Tlien they showed it ® m »“ n and asked him F introduce it, but he couldn’t, berofthecanvJH- beoaukb* Wa8 So “°' Mr. “f Branch introduced » Dd U *“ P 8C8 ' ed. This is M* y Mr ' watson called by tbs aP 110 * away from the democracy. f| his convictions and “If he felt Jj be should his duty led h elsewhere have come UatL... Hike » man and laid down bis U ut tber V 8 no voice ab >v< the voice of . the district that sent a t, No prelate, no ec clesiastio or |*diana _ caucus could call me abave t!n1 Vulce of my own l** 0 l'le. “It has be* thrown In my face that I am a foreigj ir, Shall I tell you how I came here^ I came when every foot of the way 1 ks lined with federal bayonets. iJ Ba by way of Camp MorJjj "Vi’s island ■ I am a f0 . , , | 1 Kentu i fJLidnced S mac i 1 , S ® f ; f | 1 I than state which was the mother of a rpan wno, when told bv ! bis Mexican captors to beud on bis knees to be executed, proudly replied: ‘A Ken tuck ha bow* las knees to none but his G Apjilause.) “I am folr > man or class of men. The man wib’j stirs up strife between any classes, Ifelween the towns and the country, between the laborer and the capitalist is un-American and un¬ christian. I heard something about this trouble a few weeks ago down in the wire-grass. There are some fel¬ lows down there who think that they owe all their trouble to what they call the pewter cats of Walnut street. That’s what they call them. You have some set phrases like per capita and pewter eats, aud that is about til you know aliout it. You think that you . are going to get the govermnen tto loan you money at 2 per rent. My friends, you will never get it as long as you live. And you ought not to get it. It is unconstitutional and undemocratic. You will never have a perfect party. There is no such thing. But you will come a great deal nearer getting What you want through the demncnitic party thau you will ever do in the people’s p» “It r ‘v- is time that o«e*was . Jiggifl some speak¬ ing out this truth. For twenty years our public men have hciflS running after the fanner s vote, and when they found out what they wanted, instead °f telling them they were wrong to their views, they have bees frytof to sec how quh k they ran get ou the pbA. form. They ^have been yielding to their demand* instead of stamfilng up for what is right. You cry for relief, 1 am for reii.f, but I want relief with some common sense along with it am * democrat. 1 stand upon a ** * “ ,u °crat. . « r pra-ju.lic-ri «t»I»® «° down with < lt 1 wvuM mth !‘ r ***** * nd now noum '* • v * r ? P*dith-al hope for the fu-1 turp lhm ' *‘‘ l “ 1,1 ,h< ‘ om 'T b v dt " j . c * ,v,, « - vou ' an ’ 1 ,f 1 eTer do T rov ‘‘ I to my trust I hop* that a lash , be juit in the hands of every honest! a«B to whip me cat of the state. “(Wild j "‘ftn Mr. Btack hml fished tojt the applause was loud and pro For several minutes the dem ocra ’* cheerwl with all their might, and »>«fore they had finished Mr. Watson jumped up to begin his speech, and then complained because he couhl't be heaol. Whch the cheering ceased he j began: “While I ws- to Nfiarta there was a j crowd of men who came from Milledge -1 v i!ic todisturh the meeting and aucmpJl tren ! me fromtotog hrenl. deoo^cod The* f to cn me down. I it m \ uogentlemanly conduct, and I said the man who would interrupts gentleman ^ not a gentleman but an infernal coward. The phrase about Major Black I used in that con¬ nection. I said it was an outrage that a man ln Mt i ve gtate CO uldn’t be heard when a man from another was given attention. “Air. Black’s speech here to-day was not a discussion of great issues—was it? Did he meet a single point I made in argument? (Cries of‘No’and‘Yes.’) He stood here an hour and a half abusing Watson. Hydrophobia seems to be a bad disease but Wataon-phobia seems to be worse. “I asked him what other tax he would put in place of tariff. Did he tell you? When I asked him if he be lleved , , the K people . suffering _ . . he were said, ‘Yes,’ but that suffering had been exaggerated.” At this point the crowd became very noisy. A burly third partyite standing beside Watson shook his fist at the yelling crowd and cried, “If you don’t listen I’ll whip even- damn one of you.” “Kept quiet,” cried Watson, “I’ll control this crowd as sure as I live. I’ll control my friends with one hand and my enemies with the other. “I don’t have to inquire where I am at. I know drunken democrats have to inquire, but I didn’t think it of sober ones. Major Black says that the dis¬ tress of the people is exaggerated. He has never read the democratic platform, because that platform says real estate mortgages alone amount to 12,500,000, 000 and yet he says the distress is ex¬ aggerated. If so they exeraggerate as well as we. They don’t read their own platform. Mr. Black has forgot¬ ten that he fought the alliance just as bitterly two years ago as he is fighting me now and his fight on me now is be¬ cause I would not bow to the city pol¬ iticians. “Major Black is afraid to fight the alliance, but he wants to offer me up as a dislike to those principles. Ten years ago I stood side by side with Major Black in his race for the senate against Colquitt At that time he was fighting the Atlanta and Augusta rings, and I stood by him as he described himself as David going to battle with the enemies of the people. What am I fighting now? The same ring. I am standing bykhe people. But where is MaiorBWk’ J f He is the servant of thoserip, tr . t0 )ut down tha >"’S I peojdMlmd A#y R is the the leaders easiest of thing the people. the l in to tear his speech to pieces. If I had time there would not be enough of j him left to get home. ‘ “If there is anything Major Black denounces more bitterly than another it is where we say ‘the laud belongs to all the people.’ •‘Thomas Jefferson wrote the same thing. “He says I claim to be a good demo¬ crat. I am glad I do say it. I expect to live and die a Jeffersonian democrat. don’t want any miserable Wall street and Tammany hall liog-wash put off me as good old brand of Jeffer¬ sonian democracy. Jefferson was for free silver. Where are the democrats? I)lvij|ed-half and half. Free silver is onr platform. Land for all people. Antagonism to bounties and subsides. lake $10,000,000 of your money pay it as a bounty to the Louisiana £ ar ki “«* Why don’t they declare it? Been use faueners on thr r bounties have too much power tho democratic party, “Major Black says the ‘iepnbUefins liutlfmfti Iwtiks on iri. Then! wliy > the democratic platform declare j .Jefferson did it. He raid ; destroyed your liberties and the , of the constitution. Why don't democratic party lift its hand national banks? Because the bunkers tire riding the parly. “No wonder Major Black didn’t dare these issues ou principle. No ho don’t toil you how the dem ara.'guimr to relieve you. He hav#to Ue took his time in tie Watson and .Terry Hthipson I didn't tell you the ditooerstic par- j in Kansas endorswl Simpson. , At this point Mr. Watson's time ex- ! and he w o. cMb d down. IU friends. Major BhukaUo Mired | the Hall, and shook hands with of his admirera. tliat many could uot hear the whole of the speaking, and a large were iRsappidnted. Mr. Black left for Augusta on the train, aud received an ova Mr. on Watson hi- arrival at that the city. fast train, | left on The immense crowd of people here were weU-l>ehaved, and but little trouble was experience d to keeping the l have given the subject of the gov ommeut ownership of railroads and j tdegrapli lines a great deal ot thought, and I have determined to use every bit of influence which I have against the adoption of any such plank in the j Omaha i>lalforra. lam pretty ror *, t hat I will be able tosucceed in the .tremni T Tfut !»»-> ftnl 7 r r Po'k m ra M ™ * ,, , ' tmt-wmt or casooc • tmw sx w< _ BETWEEN THE MUD AND WA¬ TER ACT. Ed. Democrat.— Not long ego the writer beard two WeaversWatsonites trying to make prohibition an issue in the congressional race in this district, and they condemned Hon, J. C, C. Black, one of the purest of American men, for the manly way in wtiicb be j openly deposited bis ballot in the recent Augusta contest,. The Taliaferro accusers were strong prohibitionists ■ and they were yet so anxious for the peopleto know“How Black stood.” Mr. Black is not ashamtd of any- j thing he does hut the world is ash am- t ed ea of oi Watson’g nr arson a actions actions. Getting the following facts from a McDuffie county man, and one who j ha8 heretofore been „ supporter of Thos. E. Watson, I thought it would j be rich reading for some of Taliaferro’s! ardent supporters of Watson, some of them who a few years ago covered Watson with fl iwers, glory a:.d their hard earned cash for a little milk and cider speech be made at Crawfordville in a contest of a prohibition election. I However, here are the facts as stat- j ed: “Mr. Watson Las placed himself, or permitted himself to be placed, in a false light before the public in refer¬ ence to h : s record as a prohibitionist. In a recent interview with a newspa¬ : per reporter be is represented as hav- I ing been an open, avowed and aggres- j sive prohibitionist, and as having been j elected to the legislature as such. * * - ; , * In another race for representative ' Judge Howard, Roney was opposed by Mr. I j Willis an antiprobibitlonist. This was the first time the issue was made in McDuffie county, and our im¬ pulsion is that Mr. Watson, if he vot ed at all, voted for Mr. Howard. He j certainly did not take an active part in favor of Judge Roney, the prohibition candidate. * * * “In the Hawes Stovall campaign the prohibition issue was squarely made, Dr. Hawes run¬ ning as the prohibition candidate and Mr. Stovall as the candidate of the antis- In this race Mr. Watson again refused to take any active position for either party, but Mr. Stovall told the writer that Mr. Watson would vote j for him (Stovall).” It will be seen that Mr. Watson kept ver y <l uiet about 1,ow 1,6 was » oi "S t0 vote, and it seems that he has played l !‘ e “ mud and water act M tbe way hr0Ugh /, The Sarae t'nues, “we, of , course, do not know how Mr. Watson voteJ, nor does any one else know, except Mr. Watson himself ” h oW does this sound to the Talia f Prro Watson-Weaverites who wanted to 8lr) k Hon. J. L. U. Black because tlliiflfilii -1 These clinching facts wind up as fol¬ lows: “This much is certainly true Mr, Watson has never canvassed nor s been elected to the legislature, or any other office, in this county as a prohi¬ bitionist. He has never delivered a I prohibition address in the county, nor publicly and aggressively advocated that doctrine before the people. On the contrary if we have stated hi 8 position in the different elections cor¬ rectly, he has generally thrown his vote or influence to antiprohibition- 1st. The writer always understood Mr. Watson to be a Prohibitionist in principle, but it is not fair nor is it right for people at. a distance, who are unacquainted witli his record on that subject to be impressed with the idea ! that he has always been a bold and I advocate of prohibition and j was elected to office as a prohibition ist.” j Your correspondent was orearrnnsr “duped” in the Watson prohibition at the contest, in 1987, and he t one of the voters who voted for | \ V »tso:i In 1890, but if toe Lard wilt him he will never vote for him in 1802. NO NEVER! ** uaniett, Ga., (sept. 5th, 1993. T editress min Watson'S sxvccjuig to several * democratic nominees was probably for the purpose of creating much lie of doubt a sensation realizes the! as J no sc t that, lacking a sensation, he would., nk at onoc i„ t0 obsertritr, and has j >ken 3 t hnnsedudkod about. eaeh one of thc «„.H “ challenged shooW acee.d, at the exj^n-e of slhmnng U at — m to name his terms. It is due to « mails wt an 1 i be folly exposed and there is way bettor to do it than to have, of sound •democratic principles. J versed to the tenets ot' the faith meet him on the stump. If there beany haggling over the term woud at once claim that the dem- ! were afraid to meet turn. Let arrange d.tos snd time to suit ^ ^veUim pienty of *‘ e wul ocrtomly i.ing b.inself be ore , eamprign is over.—Savannah News. ‘ I don’t give rebels in the south j I would ratherfntnUh ropesj S every d—m «ie of the James li. 41 " 1 .'' °* udidate fjUM Clara, t*j^ Tl.c is vs , w fm M *>• ' I: Hr. Chas. N. Hauer 0f Frederick. Md., suffered terribly for over tea yea " wllh absaes3es and ruu ' ta E sores on hls le!t !e „ He wa3te <i aw;iy , grew weak and thin, and was obliged to ass a cane and crutch. Hood’s Sarsaparilla !*amfteJtVte^.'Ftiii parUcuto ot liii case will sent .all who address C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. 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AUGUM A- ° \TU*U 1 Dal [ tTT\'|ipr U it Ulil . • • .. -Mare Orrci ajro Wosxs—■ * 12 J aokson St., Augusta, Ga. First Class WorK Gaamte*t Wars turned ever to the Dsuocnir wff * rent down. Tor further Imforaimiica *• Editor tprlHl ilurf* ^? g 3 BP - , Fraeifee. In •*h»r evortSs. w* J ertll te#e«| yea w IKK, euA start /M yrs !• i-uere*.*, atwMrkyM-'a ft* *»!-••?!y gather V •*» d- itoto. e jwN ijN I VL i •** aid «*<•! ** t i to* * 111 to tie* an*» atom. at 7 // fcrte mm y* m ID ^ / «.! *pre 1 * aft? 2 £PR€ACa ^|b:n| ail } - '••VCU