Newspaper Page Text
come into
Stand t.'p and Answer ''Hnrrykaln'*” In
dietment of fioth Old I'artlen.
Hurrykain, Chicago: The defen¬
dants have destroyed two billion dol¬
lars of the people's money to accom
inodate U.e few who control the gold
of the world.
They have builded the great high
ways of the nation at the expense of
tlu* people, and then give them to a
favored few, together with 212 , 000,000
acres of the public domain
They have caused 13,000 annual
bankruptcies, made 2,000,000 paupers,
*,000,000 and 00,000,090 slaves
They have subsidised the press, the
pulpit, the courts and the executive
and legislative branches of govern
ment, state and nation.
They have united church and state
under the Indian policy laws by ped
dling out the agencies to the priest
hood who by their robbery of the In
dians have brought the vengeance of
the redman upon the frontier settler
ity class laws they have made labor
dishonorable, and have driven 4,non,
IKK) into secret political organizations
all over the land.
They have sent armies to overawe
the people of State and nave de
tied the courts to punish cattle baron
murderers by using the federal court
at Dinahs to spirit away witnesses
They have decern d the people in
every platform'since lovi, and after
promismg better laws to protect the
ballot have shamefully bought and
sold office.
They have brought pauper labor
from Europe to 1 crowd out starving
workmen and hired Pinkerton thugs
t„ shoot down those who clamor for
brea * hiie \V hitclaw Reid’s Tribune
recommended “grape and canister" as
food for the hungry.
They ms* largo salaries from the
people while wasting their time at
partiaan conventions and in drunken
brawls.
They have fraudulently naturalized
250,000 men who bud not been fifteen
diyN in the i nited Staten, in order to
elect Cleveland in 1HH4, liarriiion in
iHNHam) to carry the election in
in the Intercut of tho Hbylockn.
'1 hey have created trusts on every
article from, that Brel need by the mid
wife, to th# marble column in the
eetnetery, and are collecting their tolls
from the cradle to the grave
They have used our navy in distant
■rsv ' protect that thieving Califor
nlacorpo.atlon, having the cxelualyo
right to take seal under an act of con¬
gress secured by fraud and bribery;
and that same navy lias destroyed
twenty-five small American vessels
that were fiahiug on the high seas,
and all done to enable a millionaire
corporation to control tho teal fish
cries
Thev have rooijffiftthose dlsjaeed the old soldier
uiske who laughed
/ #••»« i *, *14 '■ • oM*<**»
aj'drl^^^reciallng h s mottev.
By threats of discharge, they havu
forced labor to vote for it* own pov
erty; and they sre now arming and
drilling their hirelings in all the large
rlll’es. mid are taxing the people to
support a militia whom they expect
to turn to overawe labor.
In t**9 they withhold *17,000, 'MS»,000
worth of property from tho asaesaor,
leaving labor to make up the dell
Honey; while, in order to secure the
aid Of the pulpit, they have exempted
116 , 0011 . 000 ,ms) worth of church prop
erty from tuna lion and lmv« HHoil the
land with infidels bv exacting large
tolls from all who enter the carpeted
aiklet at............. pews of the so
called bouses of God.
They have fixed the price* on air.
light and water, while their trust*
control the infant’* milk and the dead
man s coffin.
They have driven commerce away
from our ships, and so arranged tho
laws that debt* contracted on an in
Hated basis must now b* paid in *
contracted currency with money com
mandlng u premium, while the power
to make money under the constitution
has l-cen farmed out to 3 ,IV national
hanks.
They have induced foreigner to
buy up onr mills, factories and lauds,
and to establish a landlordism like
Ireland and a slavery little better than
that of 1W0.
They have nominated for office the
agents of Wall street and the Both*
vlitld*
Out of the mouths of Blaine and
Sherman. Voorhee* and Holman, they
admit the fraudulent demonetization
of silver and then refuse to right the
wroug.
They have allowed our flag to be in¬
sulted by every nation, except a little
precinct in South America, and are
now kissing the great toeof John Bull
on the silver and Behring *ea ques¬
tions for fear of offending Shy lock
1 uder an net of congress of June
25. IsTs, the lumber trust iteas all the
timber in Ualifornia. uregon. Wash
ington, Idaho, t tab. Arizona. And
under its terms, the settler on the
public domain pay* tribute
They have given two-thirds of all
the coal land* in the west to the rail
WAVs, and ihe».e corponuou* now
claim the mincra I lands of Montana,
Idaho atu) 'N anhini*U
\\ k e pre t AJ 1*1; to exclude the
leprous Chine*© they have legislated
for the ai* compauioa; &d while
To increase your business Adver
tise your goods. Try it and see.
in California by false surveys, to ena
ble politisians to secure farms of ‘.’00,
000 acres each.
They have lied and deceived the
voter by a sham battle over the tariff,
and then imporU , d cbeap labor from
the 0 id world.
They passed the inter-state corn
rnerce law in order to deceive the
f armer8 aD d then appointed corpr ra
t j on p, construe it
Between 1365 and 1«75 they sold
government gold to the amount of
g 5 jr,,u#o,eoo instead of paying off our
national debt, and then by the act of
July, 1 *T0, sold bonds for *100,000,000
() f ,£„]<] on which they tax the people
to psy interest,
’1 hey lie to the people daily about
tb e gold reserve, when they know
that there is not now and never was
an y j aw requiring a gold reserve to
]*. kep t j n the treasury,
Their masters, the bankers, forced
t he panic of 1K‘.>3 as a means of secur¬
in(f t), e j M ue of bonds to prolong the
life of said banka
They are now carrying on a sham
battle about the Carlisle bonds, well
know ing that the Harrison adminis
tralion prepared for the issue and sc
cured the plates etc, and all Mr
( arlisle had to do was the printing.
They are in partnership and have
been for years each aiding the other to
deceive th* voter.
Mich d - d frauds a* the Inter Ocean
( hicago and New York Tribunes, a.
well as great democratic dallies, are
owned, or subsidized, by these party
i ca ,| e r* and used to hoodwink the
s„ c ker voter t.y first telling him that
, )U woes are due to overproduction
second, to the bherman law; third, to
t be threat against the tariff; and
lastly, they ask the voter to believe
t j,et the 3ff0 pounds of drunken hog
n lt . a t In tho white house causes pov
erty, crime, starvation, death and
hell; and that if granddad’s hat was
warming the chair of alate ail would
be icrene.
They are now preparing a nham bat
t) 4 * for JHtil, in irbidi they will lie to
^). e T0 ter to induce him to oonMQt to
a further rule by the same political
highwaymen in order that they may,
under the forms of law, rob labor of
what little it h»s loft,
Tliey are anarchists and revolu¬
tionists, unworthy the support of a
( ieo people.
------
JHES£ ARE IAC1S, NOT A THEORY,
In these days of trusts and consoli
datlons. strikes and cut-downs be¬
tween labor and railroads, it may be
Interesting to note what has been and
can be done to remedy these evils.
"'e never hear of any strikes or labor
tronble * on 11,8 ra| lroads of Australia,
and wl, y ? Because the government
<' wna and '-pc^w* Gi«m in the \nVer
.** 1 h w h h**'*"" '*
In Australis yff9 dan ride a distance
of M )' 1 ' 1 miles across the country l° r
fkl.59. first class, too, while working
men can ride six miles for 3 cents,
twelve miles for 4 cents, thirty miles
f,)r 10 conU < • te * and r “ i,road men J®'
calve 25 to »o per cent more wages for
eight hours of labor than they ® r *’
paid in this country for tcu hours of
tell
In Victoria, where the above rates
prevail, the net Income from
the roads last year was sumuent
to pay all the federal taxes.
H» Hungary wlu*ro ii»o loads are
state owned, you can ride six miles
for I rent ami since the government
bought the road, w.ges have doubled,
amt freight rates cut dow n one-half
and w age* doubled,
Yet the road* pay a yearly revenue
to the government 01 * 1 . 000 , 001 '.
In Germany yon can ride four miles
fof 1 cent on the government owned
Hues Yet wages are over 120 per
cent higher (ban they were when the
private corporation* owned them, and
during the last ten years the net prof
its have increased 41 per cent. East
year tho road* paid tho German gov
eminent a net profit of *'15,000,000.
Workingmen and farmers If you like
such rates as these, vole the People’s
P»rty ticket
If our government owned the rail
road* w e could go to San Francisco
I from Boston for *10, Look at the
proof:
Uncle Sam pays the railroads not
quite *275 to transport a loaded postal
ear from Boston to 8an Francisco. V
passenger car will carry fifty pas
*-'e* *»- wbi '"’ •»» 8 » bh ’ WOuld **
I&00, or a oletr profit of $$'JS a car, and
this, too, afier paying 5 ! , per cent on
watered stock which is fully ltxt per
cent on the cost of the roads.
To show how our railroads have
watered their stock I point to the
New York Central A Hudson River
railroad which, when the Vanderbilts
obtained control in lstUi, was capital
j ;t , d at * 19 . 000 . 000 . They at unco
watered it up to Stki, 000 , 000 , more
wa(CI hss i>eeii a ided until the present
capital stock i» S. 4 i'x 000 ,<*> 0 —all but
*15.093 Odd t»eing water.
Government ownership would save
tlie people the gigantic sum of *1,000,
00O.000 a year and bring shorter hours
and better jvav to the 700,068 railroad
eiuplov e: The riturian.
Thirty years of repubiiean rule: 30»*
otlO milliouairei and ,\OO0,0tXi tramjka
honest money
IS GOOD MONEY.
The people's Firtr Plan, or loo Cents
L to lh« Dollar, K««tor«« Proi|MrItf,
gn*»t r oj« I'sory—it A l*o I>«*troy*
Money Panic*.
In Colorado the average cost to the
roine own(jrs i# n cenU for „ dollar’s
worth of gold and about 40 cents for
the amount of silver there is in a silver
dollar, hence, if intrinsic value is to
neither . . gold ,. silver . is
govern, ? nor
honest because , it .. does , not . cost .
money,
100 cents to mine the metal they con
tain, on the other hand the govern
ments .. greenback . . na^r dollar i. an
honest dollar. because it takes
100 cents in service, supplies or prop
erty to get. a greenback dollar. CZ3
The People's party plan is to have
money that costs 100 cents to get it,
anil tiiat always has 1,10 cents value to
it and is backed by the entire wealth
of the nation: treating all classes alike:
“Equal rights to all and special priv
Hedges to none.’*
Jt >* a »toni*hing how little ma
chinwy is necessary to put into opera
tion the I’opulist money plan, (on
gress to authorize the issue of *4,000,
000 ,000 for the purpose of establishing
* monetary system for the use of the
people, authorizing loans, discounts
and exchanges to be made through
the money order system, or any prop
erty that is good security at the rate
of 4 per cent for loans of less time
than one year and 3 pur cent rate for
one year and over. Appoint three
citizens at each money order offlee as
a credit discount and loan board, to
meet at country offices monthly and
under proper rules pass upon all up
plications for loans and discount. In
larger towns it might be necessary to
meet every two weeks, and in the
large cities it might take several
boards and daily meetings. But the
boards would not have any personal
interest in the loans, all element of
personal profit being eliminated. The
postmaster would be cashier or pay¬
master of the government, and when
he did not have the money on hand,
would check on some designated sub
treasury or postoffico, as the pension
agents do now, making a record of
all transactions, 11 s ho does of money
orders now; and also abstracting the
property pledged in books for that
pu rpose. The result of these arrahge
inentu would lie the utter destruction
of usury and the impossibility of
money panics, because the government
that can not fail or suspend, and
would always bo ready to assist the
people, by supplying them with money
upon thoir property at any time they
need it.
ror inKtancei A desires to borrow
g |(K) for 0Ter une T8ar an d to secure it
ju forty Kr „ |lf | and . He makes Me
appllcat iWiri£l , on ^ Title. lh2 boar ,l. Jurnisb.^ stakes
of He then
lrttab d oed and note to the United
drawing interest at tho rate of
j p( , r cenb p er annum, tho V- M. act
j ttK trustee.
p wan ts *100 for six months on per
Mlntt i property anil offers his note with
j n| , orsera as additional security. The
board upproves the loan. Me makes
tri)#l doo d to P. M. and receives tho
monev .
r wants to digcolltlt a note ho holds
f<)r #ft0 , whloh ]* wo n secured. The
boar( , examines and approves of the
discount, and he receives S4A
^ W anU exchange on It os ton for
^ N j. M *500 and *1*5
^er f , .ulton and receives money
on U M for n»o.
^ ^ , |o pav# the U- M. *1,000 and
§5 jf„ r exchange, and iceeives money
order on J.ondon 1*. O. as is the esse
with smaller orders now.
K wants *25 on cotton, corn or
wheat. lie brings warehouse receipt
and endorses it to 1‘- M. a* trustee for
United Stales and receives tho money,
E deposits gi.OOo and receives cheek
book with stub cheeks for that
amount
lty examlng the report of the comp
troller of currency for United States
for 1*93 1 find there were 3,758 ns
tional and 5,oa5 private banks, with
capital stock of *l,087,sirt,0ix Tho
record does not show bow much was
paid up They had «515,706,*94 profits
passed to tho surplus fund and the
private banks had *7S,fi20,45t un
divided pronto. Their buainess
through the clearing-house amounted
to *5*. 880,(482,455,
It is safe to estimate business for the
„ firbt , year.
BXCS1CTS
l-oftti* on r«U stale, H'. 0)0 00 .too at
S jHir wil 1 e 0 .OM .000
1 ALttiM on personal property iuui dis
eountiL fat 4 r uent 00,000,00
Kxchan. on 4N.tUU*XUM) ftl a U i*r
rrage o( ^ o( I per cent 10,000,000
T.U»t venue
SNUENSKS
For the service of Sft.00- 1 t»en at JO.*
090 county nnd umn jxMitoff 'S AS
memt»er# of tx^rtts at Hi* per
an m H,7W,«X
Fo the serviors of S*000 mon aa
•rA of tH)ardA In of tics at
X) per annum 4,ja),i»
i«a, bead, of depart u. *i
S.IXX) rk» st ft seh f *ooo)
so roi ners at v, ..
inert* la of W r
tiooksate
Iwtdenlai M
;
Pvott to the & lltVVtXV tt
I’nder this system no money pace
could ever ir, because the people
could always $ut money in reasonable
amounts u eir property. There
wonld be no suspensions, no breaking,
no lock ups, there is now when
money is wai d worse. Thousands
of humble h re would be saved to
their owners j m by our present bar
barous sys'e>j rill go into the hands
of usurers, , ;
It would b" tbe best money the |
world ever i w. Absolute money j
created by la’ Our courts have de
,neV is in the law and i
eided that the & j
not in the ma^ris! the has Jaw is the stamped
on, ana , that . egress powei
to create ___ mo
The profits!#' national banks from
8151,694.6(1. **%■ ‘ TiJ^ate if the private banks^c Danas we
haven „ r i)Ht an estimate of
tm<Hto>000 W J, 4 * )o w. Here we
not L than jj 5 1,000,000 as
profiu on ba ing . a l one . National
bankg do no t ;%a money on real es
taU . an{| ; Ta , banks and trust com
panies oniy J port *201,000,000 as
loans secured i realty, showing that
^ indebtedness of
farm properta held in individual
names, comm through firms or
agencies. K, sive interest con
sumeg nationsMThe greatlife insur
ance compan, jffle*t Jfcaleulate large 4 enough per cent
asarateof i to
ln ,. c t their Iai*» and pay their ex
pcnaes . The immediate result of the
ad option of tlX) .%tc*.ion 1’eople's party plan
would be the of interest by
all money loaff* to the government
maximum rateftf uh~j*e 4 paid percent. off Mort-j
Rat ,,, s WO or rc
newcd at j he I gladly per take cent
rato
1 per cent ah tbe government rate
rather than Wild off and have idle
raoney on t gfl hands. The reduc
tion of interes Bn the *30,000,000,000
of debt in this Kuatry now averaging
3 per cent rJld save to the people
who work and cuate wealth the im
mense sum of «$j 00 , 000 , 0 o 0 annual y . I
Our was made for the 1
gevernmen
greatest good tathe greatest number,
The old partiesiave made it a money
machine for ’thl 30,000 bankers and
money loaners.^Neither proposes to
stop their pin iug of the laborers.
farmers, mechfics reSt and producers of |
wealth, and every effort made |
for the relief dpbo people. I
By this yearly]» Iilaafic profits would in¬
crease JfId in a few years the
government tMfuiaillng be the banker of
the people, the desire
ol Jefferson,' pun and Calhoun. 1
Is there iAn who can give a
good reasoni ] I V this should not be
done’/
Tins won I* y out the doctrine
of equal rij» ) all and exclusive
prlvilegeas tc, and those that
oppose It/ n favor of equal
rights to* gl
Tlie 0 ^
tere<l f a
father i s, "- and of a kind
banker* 8 L -1 4 tie
an rus s
Unit plunder assisftig^o jople at will, and
they are do so by the gov
ernmsnt- s hai
Americans, sc you who by your
daily toil create^vftalth, sowing for
others to gather, *n you in justice to
your families, mi iy of you in want
of the necessaries that family should
l* ava and th a * 7>u are deprived of.
cau Y° u longer support political
parties whom at acknowledge are
corrupt, and who Administer the gov
eminent as a ma*h„e to gather riches
,<,r the »lrosdy ri- l? WU1 you longer
he party Slav's am wear the yoke of
oppression and d;g ra <i a tion? If
liberty is lost ami p0 u are only fit for
1««*y. I «h »•< believe you a-e.
P ar ly that is tr Iy democratic, the
only party that is really republican,
and assist it ink efforts to redeem
our common cotuOy from the rule of
plutocracy and ) power of money to
oppress. Help make the govern
ment the servat f the people,instead
of their master.
II Cabu Secretary.
It is not tin i olation of any law
which has put ley I and his friends
prison , but the fact that
they represent g luoverocnt which, if
successful, meat I death to interest
bearing bond* -SR hw Republic, Akron,
Ohio. I
Cats are reouj tx> get their eyes
open nine da, * r birth. We know
men right here in this county w ho
were born as tnuel as 40 years ago and
they haven't got Heir Neb.' eyes open yet.
—l’onlard, suln %
A man that boosts that he keeps
out of politics she jid go to Russia and
live, where the co ubined church and
State m&sst's. do —Omaha all t 1 mmon thinking’ wealth. for
The democratic ^>arty has been
('levelaudized and Cleveland has been
Shcruianized and the people are be
cominff populist\ is©. — young* l*opu
list* Varis, Texas.
Of all the doVnright, deceptive,
scheming tricksters in Kansas, the
so-called republican free silver organs
aro tlu ‘ mosl me insistent- —Journal,
l.ebanon, Kan
Once again we Sesire to sav: “Gold
costs less than . : on the dollar
to protluee.” Keep tills ring-in^ in
the ears of the iMrinalc value” idiot,
— Koad.
POLITICAL HASH.
S«rrcd Hot and Cold to Suit Out
Header*.
Our hired men at Washington will
not be able to escape the responsibil¬
ity of the outrage committed against
Coxey, Browne and Jones,and through
them against every liberty loving
American citizen. I’ndcr a foolish
law, which of itself is unconstitn
tional, these men have been placed in
jail. It is worthy of notice that this
is the first instance where anybody
hag bcen p]aced ] n j ai i under that
i aw Other men and bodies of men
have violated it, but have not been
rao)ested , The sentence against
Co ‘7 and hiS is to Ameri
can liberty t now what the Dred Scott
dec sion was before the war. It is an
outrage against every American citi .
zeu. As the national congress is re¬
sponsible for the government of the
District of Columbia, it is guilty of
this infamous outrage. Let the peo
pie place tne responsibility where it
belongs.
Congressman Bryan of Nebraska
has declined to accept the nomination
for re-election to congress. Mr. Bryan
evidently begins to realize that there
Is not much hope for reform through
the d mocratic party s nee it has
ceased to be democratic. In his letter
Vo the congressional committee of his
district he says:
“If the 1’rcBidenfs financial policy
becomes the policy of the party, Ido
not see any reason for the continued
existence of the party, beciuse the re¬
publicans, liavirig followed that policy
longer, and are better prepared than
»e to support it. On the other hand,
if the party repudiates Mr. Cleveland's
financial policy and renews its de
votion to the common p;eople, it may
yet become an effective instrument in
the securing of good government.”
Mr. Bryan is one of the brightest
young men in the nation, and wo
should regret to see him throw away
his life in a fruitless effort to reform
a party that seems to be hopelessly
lost in the quagmire of corruption.
■»
There is one phase of the Coxey mat¬
ter that the old party papers don’t
harp on much, that is the fact that he
was uselessly hindcuffed and scut to
jail as though lie hail committed a
great crime. "Whatever position may
he assumed in the matter, it can not
bc deniei1 that ho has bl ' e “ osclessly
and shamefully treated in being re¬
garded as a common culprit In a
leUer to a fr!end w'otten m prison he
savs:
“I ain now considered by the
money power a criminal, Have felt
the cold steel on my wrists, a ride in
the prison van and heard the iron door
Hang back,shutting me from freedom.
Of what? That word seems dead. A
petition with boots on from the com
mon peo l dt ' ' v,li not bc be!lrd - ,l
interview w 11 be granted and acted
upon quickly. I have not broken any
law. 1 am only persecuted for my
convictions and for trying to obtain
work for millions of my countrymen
who are suffering the pangs of hunger.
I am content to suffer my sentence
believing that it will hasten tho
needed relief.” (Signed:) J. 8. c oxey,
Washington jail, May 21. •
Jt is said “whom the gods wou d
Kt lh first maUe a .ad,” and it
would b eem from this incident that
pluU)Craoy had gone stark mad and
COMrtei , iu osvu destruction.
* * #
'] he tariff discussion in the senate is
L growing very interesting. Tho Wil
bill has been managed so that
Senator Mills says he is “between tho
devil and the deep sea” with the “sea
room” growing less every day. In a
recent speech he says;
“I find that the bill pending before
us ] s , )0 t the Wilson bi 1, but a bill
which, . perhaps, 11 ought a to bear the
honored name of the senior senator
from Maryland (Mr. Gorman) or the
name of the senator from Ohio (Mr.
Brice). No man can torture me into
the admission that the bill pending
before this body is in any respect a
response to the pledges made by the
democratic convention to the demo¬
cratic people of the United States. *
* * l am humiliated enough, sir, to
havc'to be drawn nearer and nearer to
the McKinley law in the rates of duty
and the amounts of robbery inttiet
ed on the p or working people of this
country, who are being starved to
death under this system of taxation,
without being compelled to bow down
j n humiliation and take even the
badges of protection. Running along
through the bill we have had to sur
rt nder at discretion at every point
until it is a question now between the
McKinley protective tariff law and the
present tariff bill, with a very little
margin of difference between the
two,*'
We could nots*atethe situation any
plainer ourselves. '] he Wilson bill has
become a measure of protection, and
that in a democratic senate. As Mr.
Mi Is emphatically declares, theie is
but little difference between that and
the McKinley tariff law. Thus the
only remainingdifferencebetween the
republican policy and the democratic
policy is broken down. The two parties
are almost identical y the aarne. and
as Mr. Bryan of Nebraska truthfully
says, there is “no reason for the eon
tinued existence of the democratic
party.”
GEORGIA RAILROAD SCHEDULES.
OFFICE GENERAL MANAGER.
Commencing April 29th, 1894, the following schedules will be operated. All
trains run by 90th Meridian Time. The schedules are subject to change
without notice to the public.
READ DOWN. READ UP.
Train night dat Train Train ! day night Train
No. 11 ezpb’s! mail. No. 27 STATIONS. No. 28 MAIL. Ezra's No. 12
15p 11 mm 58a: 8 00a Lv Augusta Ar 9 25p 1 2Op 5 15a 7 45a
45p 11 1 Relair .....12 5.3 P 4 50a 7 10a
58p 11 8 32a Orovetown 8 53p 12 43] > 4 88a 6 59a
2 12p Ip 11 11 1 OOp 8 49a Berzelia Harlem ..... 8 34p 12 12 31pj 24p! 1 4 2Ga 16a 6 6 37a 46a
30p 47p 12 12 III 1 1 09p 27p 8 9 56a 11a Thomson Hearing 8 8 25pjl2 OSpjll 59a 15p | 3 4 49a 07a 6 6 28a 12a
58p 12 1 39p...... Mesena .....Ill 48a! 3 36a 6 Ola
06p 12 1 47p 9 27a Camak 7 50p 11 40a j 3 28a 5 54a
14p 12 i 1 55p 9 34a Norwood 7 43p 11 33a 3 20a 5 48a
29,, 1 s 2 lip 9 46a Barnett 7 29pHl 19a' 3 02a! 5 34a
40p 1 i 2 25p 9 58a Crawford ville 7 18,. 11 06p 2 48a 5 22a
00 ]) 1 M 3 >—» t—X o o 30a 17a Union Greensboro Point 6 7 31p OOp 10 10 43a 30a ' 2 2 22a 06a 5 ..... 00a
iSMiMMii 3 *—* o 52a Buekhead 6 07p 10 04a 1 40a .
.
3 47p 11 06a Madison 5 52p 9 49a 1 23a .
4 06p 11 22a Rutledge 5 34p 9 30a! 1 03a ..
4 22p 11 35a Social Circle 5 20p 9 15a 12 48a ..
4 45p 11 54a Covington 4 59p 8 52a 12 23a 1
..
5 5 08p12 20p 12 13p 24p Lithonia Conyers 4 40p 8 308,120001'.. 11
4 29p 8 17a 47p ..
5 37p 12 40p Stone Mountain 4 13p 7 58a 11 28p! .
5 47p 12 50p Clarkston 4 04p 7 48a 11 17p ..
5 57pll2 58p Decatur 3 56p 7 38a 11 07p ..
6 15p 1 15p At Atlanta Lv 3 lOp 7 20a 10 45p ..
2 00a 52p' Lv Camak Ar ......Ill 38a 12 40a
2 10a Warrenton ......Ill 29a|l2 30a
2 48a Mayfield ......Ill 08a 12 Ola
3 14a Culverton ...... 10 54a 11 45p
3 36a Sparta ...... 10 43a11 28p
4 10a Devereuz ...... 10 29a 11 04p
4 28a Carrs ...... 10 20a|l0 50p
5 10a Milledgeville ...... 10 00a 10 lOp
5 40a Browns ...... 9 37a; 9 55p
5 6 54a 14a 08p| Haddocks James ...... 9 9 24a' 10a 9 9 38p 20]>
......
7 00a Ar Macon Lv ...... 8 32a! 8 30p
-J 30p 11 25a Cl 15p Lv Barnett Ar 2 OOp 0500 9 6 55p
<1 42p 11 37a| 50a 27p Hillmair Sharon 1 34p 45p 9 6 6 40p 29p
<1 55p 11 40p 1 9
00 ok„ho on- cc lOp Ar Washington Lv 1 05p 00 9 6 OOp
OOOOODCDQDOD® 2 Lv Union Point Ar 10 05 a ciwwwooooiCJ 4 Op
3 ^ Wood ville 9 54 a 29p
3 ^ Bairdstown 9 50a 23p
>p 3 16p Mazeys 9 38a lOp
’p 3 22p Stephens 9 31 a 02 p
ip 3 34]> Crawford 9 18u 47p
Ip 3 50p 54p| Dunlap 9 02 a 29])
Ip 3 Winters 8 55a 24p
4 lOp 1 Ar Athens Lv 8 40 a lOp
10 48a ...... Lv Union Point Ar 2 Oop
11 41a ...... Siloam 1 42 ]»
12 Olp ...... Ar White Plains Lv 1 20 p
All abovn trains ran daily, except 11 and 12 which dr not run on .Sunday, bleeping Cars be¬
tween Atlanta and Charleston, Augusta and Atlanta. Augusta anti Micon, on night express.
T1I0S. K. SCOTT, JOE W. WHITE, A. 0. JACKSON,
General Manager. Traveling Passenzer Age.it. General Freight and Pass Agent
AcnUBTA. Ga.
Orders for Plain and Fancy Job Priufc
ing receive prompt attention at this office.
IT RESTORES HAIR.
A New Drug With Some Remarkeble
Prooortie*.
Some recent research^ made by |
to tho pharmacopoeia for hut a few
years, are of unusual interest to the
layman. This substance isextracted
from the leaves of a, medium-sized
shrub, common in Eastern Brazil,
there known as “jaborandi.” also
From these leaves there are ex
traded an essential oil, without
. n , u0 an( , j aborine . Both pilocar
p [JIIIU ; ne aim an d jaborine JttDDXlUG are amber-colored ------------- "
and and possessed possessed of of the the same same chemical chemical
constituents, yet their physiological
action is diametrically opposite.
There arc three prime physiologi
cal actions produced by the use of
pilocarpine, and each of these is pro
riaced to an extent not possible Asasudor- >\ ith
any other knowndrug.
fic - ° r s weat ^^LTlinarisoftibiSv producer, Dr. Iren is
fou ’> d
Jit h difficulty kept out of the perfectly eyes
The patient’s hair, at first
dry, was in five minutes saturated
and thereafter could not be kept dry.
As the profuse sweat was offensive in
odor the use of the drug in cleansing
the system of impurities was evident,
Not only the sweat glands, but those
of the mouth, eyes and nose were
awakened into activity. In this way,
it was estimated, no less than 14
pints of fluid matter with the ac
oompanying impurities were dis
charged as a result of one cent i-
vramme of pilocarpine needle. Other
wit h the hypodermic marvelous
characteristics of its ac
tion were immediate flushing of the
face, dimness of vision, excessive
nausea and palpitation of the heart
tosuch adegreo that its “thumping”
could be heard at a distance of six
feet, with the rate as high as 136
beats. Further than this, it was
found to be of great value in certain
diseases of the eye, as a stimulant to
the nerve of the ear, as an antidote
in certain cases of snake bite, as dis
covered by Professor Yarrow of the
United States National Museum, and
as an effective and prompt antidote
for poisoning from belladonna, stra
monium and allied poisons.
Not the least interesting effect of
the continued use of this powerful
drug is the startling change that it
will produce in the human hair. An
entirely bald patient, aged sixty, used for on
whom pilocarpine had been
defective sight, was soon in posses
sion of a full head of brown hair. A
woman suffering from Bright’s di
sease, aged seventy-two. whose hair
and eyebrows had been snow white
for twenty years, grew before her
death an undercovering of black hair.
which began to show itself in patches
throughout the white hair. A d'tph
theria patient, a flaxen-haired chtld.
---- . the
had its hair come out brown from
use of this drug, and in other cases
pilocarpine has thus held out hope to
blondes, the bald-headed and those
to whom the gray hairs of age are not
an acceptable crown.—{St. Louis Re
oublic.
EXPECTATION SURPASSED.
Parker—1 have received very grati
fying news of my son, who recently
went to college.
Barke Yes? What news?
Park ac —He’a alive.—T Puck.
The Columbian postage stamps may
pot be the greatest works of art, but
they are pretty bard to lick,
AN OLD PRESCRIPTION.
On This Particular Occasion it Faile
to Work.
The crowd had gathered about, a
1 *“
“Tie a string around lus ® a L
said one of the bystanders,
gives him soinet ung e se o n
I never knew 1 u' 1,1 ■■ und
A string was produced the and animal WO won no
tightly round one of s
ears.
It had no effect, suggested
“Blindfold him,”
another. eyes
A bandage was tied over ms
and an e ffort made to start lnm.
Same result.
“ Back him.”
“He won’t back,” said theexasper*
ated owner. “ I tried that.”
him with of corn. „
“ Try an ear
The ear of corn failed to move tho
obstinate horse. .
“I’ll see if I can’t persuade him
somo other way,” said the exasper
ated owner of tho animal.
He took a whip and belabored the
beast with it until somebody threat¬
ened to have him arrested.
Then he kicked him awhile.
All in vain. .
Finally a forced his through '
gentleman way
the crowd and said:
“ I have seen a great many ballsy
horses started by building a fire under
them. Can you get some straw or
shavings?” sent to neighboring . , .
A boy was a
furniture store for some excelsior,
He came hack presently with a huge
armful. It was placed on the ground
un der the horse and a lighted match
touched to it. flame from
As the first feeble rose
it and the smoke began to curl about
his legs the horse unbent a little,
He turned his head, took a calm sur
vey 0 f the situation, and when tho
combustible stuff burst into a big
flame he moved about six feet, in fuJI
possession of his faculties, and with
oub any unnecessary haste, and step
pe d again. elegant buggy was dam
And the
R g e d $25 worth by the flames before
it occurred to anybody to scatter the
blazing stuff.
And then an old colored man m a
faded suit of second-hand clothes and
a hat with half the brim gone went
ou t and spoke kindly to the high
spirited animal, rubbed his nose,
patted him on the neck climbed mto
the damaged buggy, and said, “Git
along, sonny.” moved off at brisk
And the horse a
; trot, with head high in the air.—
[Chicago Tribune,
; i; RAM A TIC ALLY CORRECT.
I Teacher—Give me an example of a
: noun.
common
teacher—-Now. give ine an example
. of coUective noun
| # .
Scholar _ Tax man _ [Brooklyn
1 ^ - '
j fraxk.
j YYifey—Do you love me better than
any woman you have ever met?
I Hubby—1 love you better than any
| woman I could ever get.—[Detroit
j Free Press,
nr bostox.
“When Lot’s wife looked back.”
said the Sunday school teacher,
“what happened to her?”
“She was transmuted into chloride
of sodium.” answered the class, with
! me voice.—{Chicago Tribune.