Newspaper Page Text
WEEKLY **» TIMES.]
]tY FOUL'HE ,t JO US SOX.
,J. A. FOUCHK, Editor.
Entered at the postofliee at McDonough
Ga., as second-class mail matter.
McDonough. Ga., A cost 7, 1891.
A handsome monument was unveil
ed to the memory of Stonewall .lack
son at Lexington, Va , on the 21st.
inst.
The Athens Banner says: “The
Georgia Alliance is an Alliance of
Democrats, an Alliance of Statesmen,
an Alliance of patriots.” The Banner
is right.
The Democratic leaders will surely
not lie so inhuman as to not listen to
the wants of the farmers. The masses
are oppressed and will he heard in some
way.
Over 4,000 widows have applied for
pensions, and 3,500 have fieeu audited.
They should pay the if 100 pension
without auy murmur from lho voters
of the state.
Local legislation is the bane of the
Georgia legislature. This can he rem
edied by giving the counties power to
manage their own affairs—says the
Houston Home Jouriia'.
The only salvation of this country
just now is the sticking together of the
Alliance and the Democrats. Separa
tion will be destruction to both sides
and a triumph of the identical party*
and principle that we are all fighting.
Allen Grady, an old negro living
five miles from town is in the lead with
cotton in this county. He commenced
picking a little on the first of the
month.—Cuthbert Liberal Enterprise.
Samuel Sands, the oldest printer in
the world, died in Baltimore this week,
lie was 82 years old and has been a
printer from boy hood. He set in type
from original manuscript the “Star
Spangled Banner” over halt a century
ago. He was not only a typo but edi
tor of several different papers during
his life.
The public spirited citizens of our
sister city, Conyers, realizing the ad
vantage and benefits to be derived
from a first class school in their midst,
have subscribed the handsome sum of
$5,000 for the erection of a now school
building. She already has two fairly
good school buildings, but is not satis
fied with them.
The Chicago Herald says “the
Americau hog is not grunting with
satisfaction over the action of the
French assembly. In spite of Minister
Reid’s whole diplaraacy in the matter
excites the most extravagant admira
tion of the republican papers, the
Frenchmen have imposed a McKinley
duty ou American pork, which is about
equivalent to prohibition.”
Those who are inclined to believe
the farmers have no reason for com
plaint of their treatment by the gov
ernment should (Kinder over these fig
ures. The assessed property of the
country is estimated at $43,500,000,-
000,000. Of this only $17,500,000,-
000 is taxed, and of that amount $14,-
000,000,000, is the property of far
mers. In other words the farmers of
this country pay over 80 per cent, of
the taxes, and own less than one
third of the assessed property. Sure
ly there is room for reform along this
line and it must speedily come.
In Kentucky the whiskey men are
troubled about the over production of
liquor. It is estimated that there is a
surplus af 40,000,000 gallons on hand.
It is probable that Congress will lie
asked to relieve the market by extend
ing the three years’ bonded period
now allowed for the payment ef taxes
ou liquor. It will take about $lB,-
000,000, to pay the taxes this fall un
less this is done.
When the farmers ask a similar in
dulgence on their grain before it is
made into liquor, the howl ghes up
from politicians that the farmers are
crazy.—Atlanta Herald.
IMlck! lMlcn ! lo liinj; I’il.o.
Symptoms —Moisture; intense itcliing
and stinging; most at night; worse by
scratching. If allowed to continue tumors
form, which often bleed and ulcerate, lie
coming very sore. Swaynk’s Oimmkxt
stops the itching and bleeding, heals ulcer
ation, and in most cases removes the tu
mor At dtuggists, or by mail for 50 cents.
l)r. Swayne A Son, Philadelphia.
English spavin Liniment removes
all hard, soft or calloused lumps and
blemishes from horses, blood spavins,
curbs, splints, sweeney, ring bone, sti
fles, sprains, all swollen throats, coughs
etc. Slave SSO by use of one bottle.
Warranted the most wonderful lllem
ish Cure ever known. Sold by V. D.
McDonald.
Hunt’s Cure rapidly destroys
Itch, Ringworm, Eczema, Tetter, and
like troubles. Under its influence the
diseased cuticle scales off, leaving a
smooth, white, healthy skin in its
jdace. A wonderful remedy and only
50 cents per box.
I’leafe Z3F’ u$ that S l . O.
A HUDDLE OF JI'GS.
Or How the Officers Hrokc t'ji the
“Evening Club.”
In one corner of Solicitor hrank
O’Brien’s office at the court house is a
little huddle of jugs and bottles, the
result of a raid ou a blind tiger operated
by a colored citizen who was convicted
a few days ago in the city court. '1 he
culprit was Nathan Howell. There is
oue big jug and two funny looking lit
tle chunky jugs and two bottles, a
glass and a little fuunel. In the raid
several beer kegs were also captured.
It appears that when the officers made
the raid they broke up a flourishing so
cial club which, according to the Con
stitution, which was also captured, is
known as “the Evening City club No.
1155.” The rules declares that the
meetings are to be held every Sunday
and Monday evenings and that no per
sons is “arloud in the club “unlest” he
is a member or lias met the club on
Monday, and no member is “arloud”
to bring more than oue friend with him
to the meetings. There is an express
provision of the club that no swearing
loud enough to be heard by the police
shall be “arloud" in the rooms of the
club, which are at the residence of N.
!!■ lloward, corner Houston and Fort
streets. Howard, who signs the min
utes as “proprietor,” has been sen
tenced to (lay a fine of fifty dollars or
serve six months. It is understood
that the members of the club are rais
ing the money to pay the fine.—Atlan
ta Herald.
Judge (toiler’s Decision.
This record discloses a great many
things which aro always on the pro
gramme in a case like this, a few par
ties have sworn often and sworn much.
A court cannot, ought not, to shut its
eyes to the evidence all taken together.
Measured by the rule, this is a plaiu
case. There is not, amid all this waste
of fact and figures, a single act on the
part of the respondent which shows
that it was born of an impulse to treat
all of his creditors fairly. The time
has come when he must do right. I
find and adjudge that the respondent,
Stephen A. Kyau, is in contempt; that
he has failed to obey the order of this
court to turn over his assets in money
to the receiver, Charles A. Kingsberrv,
when said receiver made demand on
him for it. I find and adjudge that
the amount of said money, which he so
withholds and which was in his hands
at the time of said demand was $120,-
490,79. The said Stephen A. Byan is
hereby committed to the common jail
of Fulton county ur.til he purges him
self of this contempt, and it is ordered
that he there remain until he complies
with said former order of this court for
the delivery of his assets to said re
ceiver, the amount of said assets being
expressed in this order.
George F. Goiier.
Judge Superior Court Blue Ridge
Circuit, presiding.
Why a Loan Was Itcfused.
There was a rather queer and sig
nificant coincidence at Americus when
the alliance had ire great rally. The
story is told this way by the Times
liecorder :
“On Tuesday at the big alliance ral
ly the speakers scored national banks
generally, loan companies likewise, and
the Georgia Loan and Trust Company
in particular, holding this institution
up by name to the detestation of all
good alliancemen. At the very hour
that this was going on, the Georgia
Loan and Trust Company had before
it an application for a loan of $5,000
from the most noted allianceman in
Georgia, who asked an answer by wire
that day.
The Georgia Loan and Trust Com
pany sent tie following telegram:
“Owing to hostile legislation in
Georgia, and the fact that Jerry Simp
son is at this veiy moment eugaged
here in ‘knocking the socks’ off this
institution, we will call in all loans as
they mature, and will have to refuse
your application.”
A Beautiful Rx tract.
The following is from the pen of
George D. Prentice:
‘•lt cannot be that earth is man’s
abiding place. It caunot be that our
life is a mere bubble, cast up by eter
nity to float a moment on its waves
and then sink into nothingness. Else
why is it that the glorious aspiratious
which leap like angels from the temple
of one's heart are ever wandering uu
satisfied ? Why is it that the stars
which hold their festiyal around the
midnight throne are set above the
grasp of our limited faculties, forever
mocking us with their unapproachable
glory? And, dually, why is it that
bright foims of human beauty present
ed to our view are taken from us, leav
ing the thotisaud streams of affectiou
to flow back in Alpine torrents upon
our hearts. There is a realm where
the rainbow never fades; where the
stars will be spread out before us like
the islands that slumber in the ocean ;
and where the beautiful beings which
pass before us like shadows will stay
in our presence forever.”
THE FARMERS’ ALLIANCE.
Third I’arty Talk.
Hon. Jerry Simpson, who first ob
tained fame under the derisive soubri
quet of “the Sockless Statesman of
medicine Lodge,” but who has now
come lo be regarded as one of the
■shrewdest and most careful leaders of
the Farmeis’ Alliance movement, has
returned to Washington, after his ex
tended trip through Georgia and the
South.
11 - talks enthusiastically of the pro
gress the movement is making in the
South ; says it is sweeping everything
before it, and the old-time politicians
are panic stricken.
THE BIMHIT IS AIIROAI).
“The spirit of reform is among the
masses,” he said to your correspondent,
“and alleged leaders who try to ma
nipulate them are unceremonious! v
shoved aside or trampled under foot.
Those persons who imagined the Far
mers’ Alliance movement was the out
growth of a passing or whimsical dis
content, due to poor crops, which
would disappear with the advent of
spring peas and new potatoes, now be
gin to see their mistake. It is based
on intelligence and investigation. The
conditions which have brought about
this revolt are three fold: the oppres
sive use of their money power, the ma
nipulation of the railroads to absorb
the profits of the farmer, and the pres
ent tariff system, which reduces the
price of what he has to sell by restrict
ing the market and raising the price of
what he has to buy by monopolizing
j the market.
THE TARIFF ISSUE.
“How is it that the question of tariff
taxation has not received more promi
tience in the alliance platform ?”
“Because of the tiinid : ty of some of
the leaders,” replied Mr. Simpson.
“The alliance strength is drawn from
both the old parties, which are divided
mainly upon this question. It was
not, therefore, deemed wise to align the
new’ party on the democratic side of
this great question, for fear of shoving
out republicans who would be made to
believe that the alliance was a demo
cratic side show. But the alliance peo
ple understood this question. They
will go even farther than the demo
crats. They will, I predict, in their
platform next January, pronounce for
absolute free trade.
“That will place the farmer and the
manufacturer alike on an equal tooting.
It will give us access to the markets of
the world. Then we want a cheapen
ing of the instruments of trade and the
means of transportation.”
TO STRIKE THE RF.IM IILICANs.
Mr. Simpson expects the alliance to
give the republican party a death-blow
this fall.
“The republican party,” said he,
“stakes its all in Ohio this fall. Sher
man represents its theory of finance,
and McKinley the tariff. Those two,
with the bloody shirt represented by
Ingalls, give the party its only excuse
for existence. The issues of the war
were forever buried with Ingalls in
Kansas last year, and when the cam
paign this fall is open, McKinley and
Sherman, like Ingalls, will be states
men out of a job. We are preparing
to send our best speakers to Ohio, and
there will be a big surprise in store for
somebody.”
THERE Wll.l. BE A TICKET.
“Then will the alliance put a ticket
in the field next year ?”
“'Yes, the alliance is up to its neck
in politics. lam satisfied from what
I saw in the soutd, that we can easily
carry several states upon which the
democrats fancy they have a first mort
gage. The southern people are as
much iu earnest as the people were in
Kansas and the northwest last year.
Our battle next year will lie the south
and west against the east. We will
turu Mason and Dixon’s line around.
We may not win next year. If we
don’t, we will keep up the agitation
until we do. We may have to divide
our enemies and whip them separate-
)’•
If we don’t win ourselves next year,
we will at least break up the republi
can party. Then we can turn our at
tention to the democratic. It is tougher
and harder to kill, but when the alli
ance lion and the democratic lamb do
lie down together, the lamb will be on
the inside of the lien. Don’t make
any mistake about that. This is a po
litical revolution which is going on.
The people don’t appreciate it new.
A few years hence, when somebody
looks carefully over the recent alma
nacs. he will make the discovery.”
The Itight Move.
The County Alliance of Oglethorpe
county passed a resolution two weeks
ago to urge upon the farmers to plant
oulv oue ha'f the usual amount of cot
tou next year, and also to sign a pledge
to do that.
If the Alliancetneii throughout the
South will carry out this resolution
such questions as silver, sub treasury,
high corn, low cotton and striugeut
money market will all dwindle into
nothing. This is the root of all this
evil of today, which is entailing upon
the planters of the South so many
hardships. The farmers do it by pla
cing themselves at the mercy of ethers
who are always willing to take advau
tage of the situation.
By thus plantin'; the farmers can
and would riise their home supplies,
while the cotton, say 4,000,000 bales,
would bring equally as much as the
present enormous crop, while they
would have to purchase no supplies —
will not have to pay out the worth of
the crop to cultivate so much land—
and would thus have a healthy bank
account instead of as now a healthy
mortgage for supplies uncalcelled.
Almost every evil that now tortures
the Southern [planter will have been
removed by this one radical change in
planting. We can trace them all to
cotton planting in excess—for this [tuts
the plauter at the mercy of others, the
farmer having to sell all he makes and
buy all he uses—while human nature
has not reached that stage of perfection
where there is no inhumanity to man.
Then all these minor questions above
mentioned will remedy themselves or
will not be in existence at all. Then
our Southern people will only have to
join with the Western Democrats and
make a long pull, a strong pull ami a
pull all together to wipe from the face
of the earth the robber, tariff, with its
attendant barnacles, such as pensions,
when we will be moving in quick and
solemn tread to the glorious millennial
dawn. —O o lethorpe Echo.
The Galveston (Tex ) News says :
“It is refreshing to note from time to
time in the utterances of the labor
organizations or of their recognized
representatives a dawning sense that
the true remedy for the economic evils
of which they complain is to be found
in the widest economic liberty equally
for them and for all otlie- classes and
conditions of society. Light lias long
been shining in the miilst of a sort of
systematic and incorporated darkness
impenetrable to its rays and intolerant
of its intrusion. At last, however, it
may be hoped that this darkness will
be dispersed or will cease to be follow
ed by millions as a misleading pillar of
cloud floating over mirages and moras
ses of essential fallacy and fatal imprac
ticability. Let sincere, capable and
studious leaders of labor, organized for
political action, manfully marshall their
followers for final departure from every
rut and every trend of protection and
prohibitory paternalism and stiike out
in a campaign for the accomplishment
of economic liberty.”
The National Economist says :
“The order need have no concern
about tlie recent anti-sub treasury meet
ing held in Fort Worth. Texas. The
papers that are trying to produce dis
cord in the Alliance made a great fuss
over it. They inaugurated it for that
very purpose, and therefore had to
make a fuss over it, but it was a great
failure. It has, however, demonstrated
one thing that wili delight all true A 1
liancemen, and that is that they might
rake Texas with a line tooth comb and
they could not find one hundred Alii
aucemeti in good standing who would
be willing to go back on their obliga
tion and light the Ocala demands.
When such are found they are general
ly renegades, who, claiming member
ship, are using that claim to help the
enemy produce discord in the or
der.”
A QL’KKK UKSUI.T.
An Odd Fact About the Numerals
Three and Seven.
Mr. John W. Kirk, the white-haired
veteran who was with Morse when the
first working telegraph was stretched
and who stood beside the great inveu
tor when the lirst message was trans
mitted from Annapolis Junction to
Washington, has made during his life
a great many interesting calculations
in numbers. The two most remarka
ble number in the world are 3 and
7 .
“The number seven," says Mr. Kirk,
“the Arabians got from India, and all
following have taken it from the Ara
bians. It is conspiciotis in Biblical
lore, being mentioned over 300 times
in the Scriptures, eitiier alone or com
pounded with other words. It seems a
favorite numerfl with the Divine
mind, outside as well as inside the
Bible, as nature demonstrates in] many
ways, and all the other numerils how
to it. There is also another divine fa
vorite, the number three, the trinity,
this is brought out by a combination of
figures that is somewhat remarka
ble.
It is the six litres 1 42,857.
Multiply this by 2, the answer is
285,714.
Multiply this by 3, the answer is
428,571.
Multiply this by 4, the answer is
571,428.
Multiply this by 5, the answer is
714,285.
Multiply this by f>, the answer is
857,142.
Each answer contains the same fig
ures as the original sum. and no oth
ers. and three of the figures of the
slim remain together in eaclt answer,
thus showing that figures preserve the
trinity.
Thus 285 appe.rsin ih« first and
secoud numbers, or 1 in the second and
third, 428 in the third and fourth, and
142 in the fourth and fifth.
It is also interesting to note that ta
king out of any two of these sums the
group of three, read in the usual or
der, fiom left to right, will also he in
the same order in both sums.
lake the first and second sums, for
example. The group of 285 is com
mon to both. Having read 285 out of
second sum, read right along and bring
in the first figure of the thousands last.
It wdl read 714. All the others will
read in the same way.
Again, note that the two groups of
three in the first sum are the same as
the two groups of three in the femrth
reversed in order, and that the same
thing is true of the second and third.
The last multiplication has its groups
of threes the same as tho.se ot the orw
inal number, reversed.
Examine these results again, and
you will see that in these calculations
all the numerals have appi ared save
the 9. Now multiply the original sum
by the mighty 7—the divine favorites
of the Bible and of creation—and be
hold the answer ! The last of the nu
merals, and that only in groups ot
three—again the trinity !
142,837
7
999.999
No other combination of numbers
produce the same results. Does not
this show the imperial mulipotent nu
raeral 7 and its divinity?”
The Substitute Swindle.
Mr. A. Frank Richardson of New
York has done the public good service
by calling attention in his recent ad
dr as before the Nationol Editorial
Association at St. Paul to the petty
but extensive frauds praticed upon
customers through what is known as
the substitute swindle. The modus
operandi of these dishonest deals may
be briefly explained. Tliete are
many standard articles, such, for in
stance, as Pear-.’ Soap, Srott’s Emul
sion, Carter’s Little Liver Pills, Hood’s
Sarsaparlla, Morgan’s Supolio, Wolf’s
Acme Blacking, St. Jacob’s Oil, Pond’s
Extract, Syrup of Figs, and others
which have attained to a large sale
and widespread reputation by their
legitimate merits and the liberal ad
vertising of tin ir proprietors. Certain
unprincipled drugui.'ts and sina'l deal
ers have taken advantage of tlese
ciri umstances to counterfeit these
goods by imitating them just closely
enough to k.-ep themselves out of the
law At Detroit and in other cities
there ir< lr-ii-.es whose entire business
consists in in.'iiiufacturiiig imitations ol
these at tides or “substitutes ” which
are made so as to closely resemble the
originals in materials u.sed, in the
name, at d in the general appearance of
the boxes, bottles, or wrappers As
an inducement to these small dealt rs
and the better to enable them to earn
out the swindle, their names are fre
quently printed on the packages h_\
the manufacturers, and the false cap
tion “our own make” is often added.
It is easy to see how the swindle is
worked. A customer goes into a store
and asks foi Scott's Emulsion, for in
stance. The dealer says that he has
it, which is probably a lie, hut recom
minds the customer to buy a prepara
tion put up by himself, which he claims
to be equally good, and which, he says,
he can recommend because, lie pretends,
he has “compounded it himself” and
it is his “own make,” anil besides,
while Scott’s Emulsion may he 50
cents a bottle, he can sell his own prep
aration at 25 cents. Nine times out of
ten the customer, relying on the state
ment of the druggists, will be induced
by motives of economy to take tire sub
stitute, which, of course, is worthless
aud may be dangerous. The dealer is
enable to do this, because he buys very
cheaply from the manufacturer, and
thus the two get the beuefit of the ad
vertising ot the genuine material aud
divide large profits. Thus an unsus
pecting public is swind ed.
It ts needless to say that the drug
itist or dealer who will desceud to this
o
contemptible business merely because
he can make a larger profit upon the
substitute than he can upon the gen
nine article is a common swindler aud
none the less a swindler because the
trick is devised so cunningly as to save
him from prosecution and deserved
punishmeut. It is a fraud upon manu
facturers who are making a legitimate
article and who have spent thousands
of dollars to bring it before the public,
and a fraud upou customers who a-e
tricked into buying a bogus article
which is worthless, if not something
worse. It is time that this contempt
ible business was stopped, aud" it can
be if the press of the country w ill ven
tilate and expose it and if the public
will refuse to patronize druggist who
palm off these nostrums upon it. Cus
tomers should demand the article they
have every reason to believe is the
best, and if a dealer begins the old
story recommending a preparation he
lias made bimselt, which he. knows to
be pure because he made it, which has
his name on the wrapper, etc., it should
he sufficient cause to refuse it prompt
ly and go elsewhere for their goods.
It is the lowest and meanest form ot
common thieverv, and if the public
will join hands with the press it can
he broken up. It is certaii ly for the
interest of the former to do so, as it is
the principal sufferer.—Chicago Trib
une.
Jagson says that some of his friends
are such wretched correspondents that
they wouldn’t drop him a line if lie
was drowning.
Would it be proper to call a place a
summer resort simply because it was
the annual resort of the hottest Sum
raer wuther ?
i oitNimi|>fion ( iired.
An nlil iihvsit-inn, retired from pt-m-lice
having hail p.-tct-tl in his hands In an Knsl
India mi ssionarv tin- formula of u simple
vegetable remedy for the speedv anil per
mam nt cure til t'onrumption, Itmnchitis.
Gnlatrli, Asthma and all throat anil l.un; i
Afi'eetioiis. also a p.isilit,- mil iWicnl enn
lor Ni-ivims l i-l.ili.v and nlLm-rwius tom
plaints, alter hn.ing tested its wonderful
curative power* in thousands ol eases, has
tell it his duty to make it known to his
suitering tcllows. Actuated liv this iiiolin
and a desire to relieve human sufi'-viiig, 1
will send free of charge, to all who desirt
it, this recipe, in German, French or En
glish, with lull directions for preparing and
using. Sent by mail by addressing with
stamp, miming this paper, W. A. Noyes
8:10 Powers’ Block, Rochester, S'. A'.
PARKER’S
„ HAIR BALSAM
Cleanse, arid beautifies the hair.
Pruinotei a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Curts scalp diwa*c* & hair lulling.
-V'c.and ll.uoat Druggists
mSISEODEH
T se Parker’3 Ginger Tonic. It cures the worst Cough,
Weak Lungs, Debility, Indigestion, Puin, Take in time. 50eta.
JMNDERCORNS. The onlv sure cure for Corns.
Stops ad pain. 15c. at Druggists, or IllStuX & CO., N. Y.
The Leibig Company’s
EXTRACT OF BEEF
For Delicious For lmprov-ti and
Beef Tea. Economic Cookery.
One pound of Extract of Beef t quill to
forty pounds of lean tret. Genuine onlv
with signature of •). vox Liebig in blue.
Up Ijj K glg| anti Whiskey Habit*
ibjt) i-3 Ai 3 SI if y tieitiars sent FKi.E.
Wflt'-r' ■ , — ’ 1 ■" a M.W IIOU KV.M |>
▼WAtlaiita <;■!, tmice *trt',. Whitehall
JOB * WORK
N EATLY Ex ECUTEI)
AT
THE WEEKLY
JOB OFFICE
H
VVTj! : ',E
PATENTS
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, *nd all Pat
ent business conducted for Moderate Fees.
Our Office is Opposite U. S. Patent Office
and we can secure patent in less time tliau those
remote from Washington.
t?eud model, drawing or photo., with descrip
tion. We advise, if patentable or not. free of
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured.
A Pamphlet, “How to Obtain Patents,” with
names of actual clients in your State, county, or
town, sent free. Address,
C. A.SNOW & CO.
Opp. Patent Office, Washington, D. C.
Advice to the Aged.
AsebrliißSinfirmities. surl, as slits
wish bowels, weak kidneys and blad
der and torpid liver.
Tuffs Pills
have n specific effect on the*»oorgans,
*1 • >ii i? lu t ing the bowels, giv in* natur
al <lischa» K «** without *»t ruining or
griping, ami
IMPARTING VIGOR
to the kiitneys, bladder and li*cr.
They ere adapted lo old or young.
S1)I.I> EVEHYWUEIJK.
MONEY
TO LOANT.
We are now prepared to procure loans ot
money oi* short notice at low rates, and tfp
re4B liable terms. Come quickly, before
the money is all taken up.
BKYAN \ DICK EN .
A NEW OOK
FSOM COVSr A COVER.
J'uUy Abreast \v»tl Times.
/ WEBSTER’S ]
l INT F RNXTIONAL j
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