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S. BARRETT
U TO FARMERS.
ire of Politics, Says Presi¬
lt of Farmers’ Union, in
His Address to the
Brethren.
■j ware of the politicians.
It is the keynote of an ad
> [delivered through the
press
: I Farmers’ Union by Charles
rrett, the national President,
pent Barrett is doing all with
power to steer his organiza
ff the political breakers. He
^ n organizations of this feind
smash before, through drift
to politics and the the hands
iticians. His address is as
vs :
I the Members of the Farmers’
in in the Several States,
lends and Brethren : We have
posed Ing at Memphis the greatest
the tarraeis of this country
[ever ['.lumbers, held.
in enthusiasm and
[■operative L all the fellowship it sur
meetings that have
pone before and furnishes the
I gratifying and conclusive ev
l'i that the Farmers’ Union is
| | r at the a standstill nor a slug
:n progress march of the
B.
■ r 't to last the same liar
al led that lias always
l ‘ nzed the organization, and
■ for the ensuing year were
i u pon without dissent or di¬
In.
li en we look backward and con¬
nate the steady and stately
Foments of the past three
r all that our great organiza
[ Mid has done, and ail that its
powers make possible for
future— we may well rejoice,
f be spirit of amazement at tbe
] 1 may give place to thankful
j f or the grace that has guided
( “ rts and the helpful harmo
has made them win.
/ / ere absolutely no reason
r known to men why the Far
ion should not become—
ii it is not already sc—the greatest
business organization in the world.
We are marching now hopefully
and steadily toward the goal.
We must inevitably mould the
South, the West and the North in¬
to an irresistible and beneficient
compact that will sway the nation
for the nation’s good. In a great
cause that is neither selfish or un¬
profitable we must help ourselves,
and in so doing help our country
to a huger and nobler plane of
happiness and prosperity.
Who is there among us that
doubts our capacity to serve this
noble purpose in the history of our
times?
The things that we fight for are
laudable things and logical things.
The claims that we make are reas¬
onable and righteous claims. The
betterment that wo seek must and
surely will include the betterment
of our country and of all the peo¬
ple of every class. God helps
those who help themselves and we
are best invoking the divine bles¬
sing when we stand sturdy and
steadfast for the measures and the
party which increases our charac¬
ter and enlarges our prosperity.
Let me congratulate you once ,
more that in the face of panics and
amid prices falling everywhere we
held steadfast the values of our
farm products and sustained cotton
at the rim of what we ask,
though the bottom dropped froi
stocks and bad securities,
the banded strength of g.u >0 000
farmers cotton would have fallen
from its high estate to a five cent
value. The world knows this and
the world respects its own.
Two little words of counsel will
suffice for this message of today.
It is better to single-shot one good
idea than to scatter birdshot sug
rations over a aideareaof
First, let us make our farms ev¬
erywhere self-supporting and we
can smile into the face of every
panic which gamblers are able to
manipulate. Let us sow and reap
from the soil that is ours the nec¬
essaries of life, and we can then in
any possible emergency forget the
THE ENTERPRISE COVINGTON GA
luxuries and defy the conspirators
who would starve us into Indus-!
trial submission to their plan s.
Tickle the soil with muscle and
touch it with brain and it will fur- j I
nish everything we need, and build
the best rampart against our etie
mies.
And once more be wary of the j
politicians As the organization j
and .
grows greater more powerful j
the scheming politician with his ,
skilled lieutenants becomes more
and more solicitous of onr happi¬
ness and success, and more and
more determined to use it as the
stepping stone to bis personal
profit or his political preferment.
Watch this fellow and avoid him
to the end. By this man the Far¬
mers’ Alliance fell, but by this
man let us never fall. Give ev¬
ery man thine ear, but few thy
tongue. Weigh counsel carefully
and with keen eyes consider the
man who gives it.
And may the God of our fathers
guide us m continual discretion to
the welfare of our families, our
country and the right.
CHARLES S. BARRETT.
Dr. Coggins Leaves
Will Reside at Athens.
I
Dr. Wm. T. Coggins and family J
i
have moved from Attalla to
Athens, Ga., where they will re
side in the future. This annouuce
nt, ivill be received : ..I. : a
spread regret in the county for
the family was well known here.
Dr. Coggins has been a practicing
physician in Etowah for fifteen
years and has been prominently
successful throughout, He was !
recognized as one of the leading
physicians of this section
of the state as the result of
»'Wch be enjoyed a very lucrative
practice. He was also prominent
in politics, being a republican
leader in both county and state.
Mrs. Coggins was a prominent
church worker in Attalla and she
will be greatly missed In social
circles,—Gadsden Daily Times
News.
The Instinct of Design.
Wben a Ja P auese caDu 0t lllold tbe
shape of an object, when I 1 he cannot re
deem it by a design, when, In fact, he
has no control over its creation at all,
b,lt * ! s P laced in his hands as it is.
finished, says M the author of Kaice
mono,” he will still contrive to add
beauty to it merely by arrangement.
"I first noticed this on board
steamer going out,” says Mr. Edwards,
“where the Japanese boy arranged the
extra blanket on the berth in a new- de¬
sign each day. lie folded it into lotus
leaves and chrysanthemums, into half
opened fans and half shut buds. He
had one wonderful arrangement which,
being patriotic, was more often repeat¬
ed than the rest. The blankets of the
steamship company had at top and hot
tom two wavy red lines on a white
ground. By some wonderful twist of
his fingers the boy would fold that
blanket into the rising sun, with the
four ved lines coming out of it like
blood red rays. He did it so perfectly
that I recognized the flag of Japan the
moment I saw it.”—Youth's Compan
ion.
Resigned Too Soon.
One Missouri lieutenant governor
missed the governorship because he
resigned too soon. When Frederick
Bates was elected governor, there was
chosen for lieutenant governor on the
same ticket Benjamin II. Hives .of
Howard county. Mr. Rives held office
a (few months and resigned. Shortly
after his resignation Governor Bates
died, and there being no lieutenant gov¬
ernor tiie succession fell to the presi¬
dent of the state senate, Abraham J.
Williams of Boone county, who served
for some six months as governor of
Missouri. Governor Williams was a
preacher, a shoemaker and had one
w ’on leg.—Kansas City Star.
Isolated C
ISC ...
a
, A Kf
uiary, and, being cut off from the ;
re -t of Europe by the mountains of
T urkish Macedonia on the north, all
commerce is by sea. The principal :
ports are Piraeus (the port for Athens),
I'atras and Volo on the mainland and
die island ports of Syra and Corfu,
The Greeks probably number all told
8.000,000, of whom about 4,000,000
in Turkey.
Well Tested.
“It seems to me that I have heard
most of the ideas advanced in your
speech before.”
“That,” said Senator Sorghum, “mere
Iy goes to show that they are good
ideas, which w ill stand wear and tear."
Washington Star.
Remember, Saturday is the last
of th
! ! Five Hundred Dollars For One Word.
;
j I his is what the Semi-Weekly Journal proposes to
j give. Send in the missing word and take the prize.
With every yearly subscription to the Semi-Weekly
Journal, you are entitled to two trials at the missing
word. A sentence has been selected from a well
known and widely read work of fiction. From this
'sentence a word has been dropped, leaving a gap.
This word is English and not a proper name, and can
be found in any ordinary dictionary. Here is the
sentence:
“THEY CAN’T GET ANYTHING BUT_1..... ...NOW SIR t
EVERYTHING ELSE IS GONE.”
What Is The Word?
For full particulars of the Contest write the
SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL,
Atlanta, Ga.
*
©9990999 999900090
FARMERS UNION WAREHOUSE ®
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9 0
0 The Farmers general Union Warehouse and Supply
0 C < i , is doing a Ware ouse and Storage
0 usiness the old I ..«. iiance Warehouse,
0 n :ar the it joro'H D t • 0
The company offers its services in Weighing
kb
and Storing Cotton for the public at the customary
rates. It also proposes to sell Cotton for all its
© customers direct to the manufacturer, thereby 0
eliminating the middle man’s profit.
© Carrv your Cotton direct to the ©
0 0
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i 0 offering it for sale. 0
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AN ENTERPRISE “AD" BRINGS RESULTS