The Waycross herald. (Waycross, Ga.) 18??-1893, September 10, 1892, Image 1

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FOR NEHT dob-fPninting crll XT * THE HEFJRUD OFFICE. CITY PRICES. vol. xm. WAYCROSS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1892. NO. 41. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. |)ll. JAM. I'. IllI't'Altll. Physician and Surgeon, . W..k,ii|.MalrK i »!«»>> lx- fot \ WALLACE MATHEWS, M. D„ PHYSICIAN ANI> SIRl.KnS. WAYCROSS, : : : : GEORGIA. OFFICERS OF WARE COUNTY. Warren !/ut—Ordinary. XV. ii. Wtf^m-fUrk Superior form. S. V. Milter—Sheri IT and Jail..r. K. II. <'rawlry—Treasurer. rid l».J. Mai-klm J^R. II. K. MeMAHTKK. Physician and Surgoon, WAYCItOSK, - - ii’hoikiia. |Mr AII < »IK |.r..i.i|.ll>- alt. 1... -p-f D H. r. I'OI.KM, lliyjUiai. and Stir- . C'-xh. ''Mrn. 1 . ^ HOARD OV EDtTATIO*. oanow. ui£T/ ,};'*!JvJfSv,';* H. W- Tfred. Pn-aident; J. M.« Mardiall, w. j, ,‘umhI, L. JnlmMh, K. I .1 iTnuivai’k 'n\Jnn! 'wlnn <j!!'l.r..r.^" I | il,l | . II. I', lin-w. r. J. I- Walk.r. ■ i..ni.il) • ngag.-.l. J>'»t aS'p.'Su.t HixhlirivwibSli'i«r! DR. J. E. W. SMITH, »m..at it j.pmitii s introKiollK. I!.»i.l. nc- Hick. Steel. WAYCROSS, - GKORGIA. | fit. A. I*. KV1I.I.I1, Physician and Surgeon, WAYCROSS - - GKOIIGM. W All call. |in.iu|.lly altcii.U.l, "tba DR. RICHARD B. NEW. I'll YHIl IA N AM' SI * lt<*» >N. Office at MIm RenndiurtV, WAYCROSS, : GEORGIA. !-■■■-»» - .. - Dr. J. P. PRESCOTT, Practicing Physician iioiiok i;n, i;koiima. S. L. DRAWDY, ATTORNKY AT I..WV. IIO.MF.RVILLK, : : GKOKG1/ drTj.h. redding, IIKKII'K. folk8 IJI.IM K. CITY OFFICERS. WAYCROSS, la. Arthur M. Kniidit, Mayor. Aldermei V. A. MeXiel. W. W. Shan*. J. II. IV. y. I’m tier. I 'it J A use* Warrrn Ix»tt. dty Treaamvr. J. L. 8treat, City Attorney. John I*. Cason. City Marshal. XV. if. Somerville, Hiy Engineer. The \Vajrrwa Herald, Offielal Organ. HOARD OV KDVCATIOM. M. Alltertso. W. A: Cason W. !». II:. VATKKWOIIKH Ii, W. M. Wilson, Ijem Johnson, POWDER Absolutely Pure. A (ream of tarter baking powder. Hfjrhest of all In leavening strength.— I/tteM I r . fi. QtmmntaU fhrnt Report. Roym. IUkixu PotonTo., lor. Wall St. N.Y. WE can IHOCK... SPEAKER CRISP I* Given a Great Reception by the Democrats of Flajd. HE HUES 1 RINGING SPEECH, Making a Splendid Presentation of the Claim* of Drmoerary. TARIFF AXD SILVER QUESTIONS Wajms. OhIge. No « K. an«l A. M.. Odlaj-x nt ”:‘*9 M.; K. II. Reed. up. W. W. Sharpe, II. I*.; Ut Kx IjOwther.K. It. and : IIItOTII KldlOOO UHOMOTIVK UINKKKS. Division4JD. J. J. Widenum, Chief Ei Dodgers Circulars Note Heads Envel opes Slateiiienls and all kind* of Comutcrrial Printing. GILL IT THE HER1LD OFFICE AND GET ESTIMATES. 8T. i llmtli* rh.HHl hull, Ito HITCH & MYERS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, J H. WILLIAMS, Attorney at Law. WAYCROSS. - - - V UKOlUllA. JOHN V. MrllONAI.il* Attorney and Counselor a Lnw, W A Yt’UOSS, CEOUGI Ornea upniaim in Wibon Muck. Folk-. i.Yguhn Cltoss HMM1K % AM^Xti Till! rilCRfHKS. imu-xiiytkhian ciiritcu. Wiliiani&:n ahhal ol 7:»i p. .%• WILSON* Attorney at Law, WAYCROSS. • GEORGIA ! JJ « CANNON, Attorney at Law, WAYCROSS, - - - GKOIIGIA. | nrm r. up Muirs in Wib.ni l’.Ufc. Will pruetlee In the Rrunsttiek fin-nit am' I *'k*v‘l" ,, W ly-'** ; J. la. CRAWLEY, ATTORNEY I.ANV. WAYCROSS, : ; GEORGIA. Illllcc in tile Wilson lluilding. DR. t7 A. BAILEY, DENTIST, Office over Rank, On Plant Avenue, WAYCROSS, : GEORGIA. ■«» •?. »> J ii. iiKiHii:, DENTIST, WAYCROSS, - - - GEORGIA Orrieg up .-lain* In the Folk- lHoek. WARREN L.OTT, Firo, Life and Accident In surance Agent, | \V.,lnc-..la: ST. SI.HOVS. IJKOIIIJIA. Everything First-class. Satisfaction Guaranteed. STECIAI. K lTHN-.X.iO from Hal- iirdny Night till Moudny Morning, in cluding Two Lodging* mid Three Menl*. I». W. PRATT. Propkietor. SAVAXNAH A1 >VERTISKMENTS. EDWARD LOVELL’S SONS, SAVAXXAII, CiEOR(!IA. Hardware, Tinware, Plows, Turpentine Manufuiiurers’ SupplieH, liar, Itaiidjnnd Hoop IRON. W heels, Axles and Wagon Material, (inn*. Pistols and Ammunition. dIO-ly MV.TIIOIMST « Lloyd & Adams. DEALERS IX I Paints, Oils, Doors, Sash and Blinds, Terra Cotta and Sewer Pipes, BUILDERS HARDWARE, . Lime, Planter and, llnir and Cement. Savannah, id Whitaker Sts.. : : Georgia. Iam.*mt Plaster, l^si Rome, Ga., August SO. Speaker Chasten P. Crhip delhrred great denmemtie xpeech here to-day. People came from all the surrounding counties. There were more than theusand j*eople to hear him. It w great day for the democracy of Floyd. He taught them demoeracy as they had never heard it, and he demonstrated eon- ilusivelv the fallacy of the third party doctrines at the same time *1 sowing the »er» of the new party why it was to interest to return to the democratic party. He *|Mtke in IfowoRs wareltocew. Mr. Halstead Smith introduced him a brief speech. AX APPEAL TO JI IMJMEXT. Speaker Crisp ojKaied by stating that lie had not conic to indulge in any (lights of fancy, hut to talk plainly and counsel with the peojde. If there was any one tfie audience who desired to ask any questions, he would be glad to answer them. He wanted to apjieal to the judg- i*nt of the jKHYjde, and to uothing else. “Thirty yearn after the war,” he said, “the farmer* of Georgia find themselves er tliaa they have ever been. They have labored hard, practiced economy and industry, and yet at the end o£ the year they find themselves in debt. Nat urally, they ask why it is that men in other lines of business prosper while they grow poorer every year. It is a natural question for them to ask. “So tar as our condition is attribut able to;lmd legislation, it is due to the're publican party. So far as it is to tli results of the war, we must bear it. lb I believe it is attributable to bad law 99 per cent of the duty they have paid upon this tin. “Take the fisherman who catches fish along the coast of Maine. He imports bis salt, pays the duty on it, then puts it on fish, and, under the McKinley law, the government refunds his duty. Rut when the Georgia farmer import* salt and puts it on his meat, he gets nothing refunded. “These are some of the inequalities of the tariff. “The democratic party Wlieves in the government treating all citizens alike. In my judgment, the McKinley bill baa done as much to bring about the presett condition of affairs in Georgia aa anything else. “Rut there are other laws that depress us. Xook at the pension law. We pay out *1.'HI,000,000 annually. I believe the brave union soldier should l>e |ien» sioned, but I do not lielicve that the camp followers and bummeia should be pensioned. We hear the third party people *ay the democrats are as had pension* as the republicans, fu the fiftieth congress the de|K*ndent pen- don bill passed liotli house*. The presi dent retoed it. Rut the lb*cd congress passed this bill. Mr. Harrison signed it. What wa* the result? We had propriatc $48,000,000 more this vi this bill than they had to appropriate, and yet the third party people say there is no difference between the two parties. the poor people suffer. “The McKinley biLl puts the highest rate of duty ujx*n common goods and the lowest ti|K>n fine goods, Thus the poorer people l*ear more than their share of the burden. 'When you lniy $20 worth of goods Ctou a store, you pay alsmt eleven dollars for the goods and $0 tariff tax to the government or the manufacturer. “It is said the south pays one-third of the taxes of the government. Thus we pay about fifty million dollars annually Ewx pensions. None of that ever cornea back. Then the money we pay in tariff taxes largely goes north. Tlu constant How of money from the south, and but little return. “The only remedy is to reheat the un just laws. Suppose we reduce our tariff i one-half. That will reduce our taxes I one-half and leave in Georgia $.'» of the mation of the third party in Kansas and other western states. The people there ? anxious to get out of the republi- partv. They did not want to go into the democratic party because they do not like the name. They, therefore, formed the people’s 'party and called upon our farmers down here to go with them. % They raised the cry that the war was over and nominated an ex-union and ex-confederate soldier on their tick et, but no one has an idea that it is more than an empty compliment. “The democratic party likewise >avs the war is over. As an instance a ma jority of the democrats of the last bouse were northern men, and yet they elected an ex-confederate soldier speaker of the house. (Great applause.) THE THIRD I*ARTY IT.ATFORM. Speaker Crisp then took up the third party platform. The railroad plank pro viding for government ownership of rail roads, he said, was aVunl. It would cost the government $9,000,000,000 to buy them. Where i* that money to come from ? There is not enough in the country. But suppose wc had them. It would take 1,500,000 people to operate them. We have now. 100,000 office bid ders, and 180 of them were in the con vention which nominated Harrison. If we ha«l a million and a half of federal office holders when would the people nominate anybody again. Of the third party he said : “Our third party friend* are demanding that $50 per capita be issued by the government directly to the people. If they mean that there is any plan by which they can give $50 per capita to the people that is absurd. If one of you should give mo $5o out of your pocket it would be all right, but the government cannot give away money. It has no money but that which is gets from vou. If you tax Orleans, should np|>oint managers who would certify to the election of congress men here. You know what hi* right to certify would mean with the average re publican whether he had the j*nt*or not. They certified a president into office in 1874k It means that the force bill would be fastened uj»on u*. With that power the iniquitous tax laws would be jwrpe- trated.” Of the farmer lie said all he needed wa* to 1m» let alone and allowed to keep what he made. • “The third party people say the demo crats have done nothing to relieve the farmer. The house passed a bill to re duce the tax on woolen good* from 88 to 35 per cent. Had that bill become a law it would have saved (5<» per cent, to the people in purchasing woolen good*. They attempted to give you free bagging and free cotton tie*. Rut the senate had determined that not a line of the McKin ley bill should l»e changed. The bill undo in the interest of the mmtopo- Thc monopolist* control and own the republican party, and you cannot get ii of the one until you rout the other* at the polls. The republicans always d the tariff ought to W reformed, blit cqUii 1 this $50 pet equally, what itizen pays annually. In ten That we have not hail better laws is not I * t|M v the. fault of tbr ilrmMntic part,, “ ««"* * *“ of the farmer* pro|mse a new party, but ! I say to you no new party can remedy J the condition. It must be through the j democratic party. They say we want more- money. We do. Rut do you j know that we have more money than we ! have ever had before. There may Ik* a j large amount of money in circulation in I , ,,, the country, hut a un.il amount in some ! " f wl, “ h " ,w1,1 ,,,m ' l * eu lo ,le,lrov tllc Of the states. It has heen state,1 that b " t H m “ , ' t , ’ cco '"- 11 J law. rresiilent Hayes vetoeil it. There | has never lieeu a financial measure bc- j fore congress that the democrat* did not ent, or an increase of our currency of $50 per capita. That’s what our third party friends are calling for. “Since the war there ha* been lmt one democratic congress—the forty- sixth—but we were swindled out of the presidency. What did that congress do? j They passed a bill, the practical! effect capita ami distribute does any man gain? If you tax equally to raise this amount and gi to only a part of the people that w Ik* wrong ; that would not lw equal r to all and sjweial privileges to i You had l»e.*t go back to the old di cratic idea of letting the money stay with the man who made it. I want to see the time when the far mers of Georgia, instead of straining s point to borrow money, will have it t< lend, ljet us be lenders awhile instead of borrowCi*; The farmers, before the war, loaned money to the Wie.hs, and the | banks in turn to the merchants. That was in the time of a low tariff ami a democratic tariff, Let ns get back to that time.For the present evils let us try the old remedies, which experience has proven effectual. The people’* party id let When the invited all fifty-first congress met tl nonopolists to conic down, but the farmer, the merchant and the mechanic not there. When the monopolist* >, Mr. McKinley asked them what they would have. They asked for high- tariff duties on various articles and t it. In a large measure the maim- •turers of the country made the bill. iese people had contributed for the republican party to get into j*mver and the party had to return it. The third pa r people h carry Georgia, v arc on this *t; aid tha >ffer SimcKUND • House, N*8 Itl.tM'K, WAYt’lUKS, GA. One .Minute Walk Trom Union Depot. J. IV. Strickland, A „ T , SAVE voni iini'sK. A CUT OH RATES. From June to October $1.50 PER DAY, The Old Reliable HARNETT HOUSE, SAVANNAH, GA. cine. Let us prefer the remedy of jierittnce instead of theory.” 4 )f the necessity of democratic org zations he said : “There are two kinds of democrats—a de niocrnt from principle and n comlitional democrat. One. after the -Qomination is fairly made, will shut his eyes and vote the ticket, whether he there is not enough money in Georgia. I will show yon why. You can’t keeji enough numcv in Georgia., under out . present system ot taxation. The chief! Vote ' vi ‘ h ihe J,nj for ih * cause of onr trouble is the high protect- 1 <>st 0 1 u l^P e * ive tariff law*. The tariff is a tax; more I Tl,r - 8il.VF.it QVFJvnox. than a nullum dollars is collected under • Of the silver question, he said: it daily. It all comes from the jmekets 1 “l T p to 1873 the government had free of the people.” j coinage of gold and silver. In 1878 a striking ILLUSTRATION. j silver was demonetized. That was one of Speaker Crisp explained the acts of j the greatest legislative wrongs over put the tariff by citing the case of ^a Floyd upon a people. It was au outrage that county farmer who might take IrtO bales can never Ik* atoned for. Still, the dem- of cotton to Liverpool. He traded his | ocratic party was not responsible for it. cotton with a Liverpool merchant for; That was a republican congress. In ! good*, getting for his c<4tou 10 cents a j 1878 .the democratic Iiousq passed a free j jiouml. He got $5,000 worth of goods | coinage bill. The senate rejected it, but in exchange for his cotton. Then he 1 put an amendment on it providing for down in his district are standin; brings h» good* back to Savannah, j the coinage of $2,000,000 a month. The ! the democratic party. They had found There he- h met by a collector of cus- j president vetoed it, hut it wa* passed ! that their interest was the same a* that want the jtcoplc of Georgia to elect the distinguished gentleman, who i* now our My section of the state will do its pari. AU our counties will give Inin a good majority. If we will roll up a large one we will show the country that tin* -tale is safe. 1 want Georgia to send eleven demo crats to the next congress, and I want eleven democrats to be there when it ad journs, Georgia sent ten deims-ratsto the last congress. None resigned, none died, but only eight t.f are left. (Laughter and npplar.>e.) Two of them deserted. Applause.) I do not question the right f any man to change from one party 4« Mother, but when elected to office by me party and he executes his conuuis- or another, his act can never meet the approbation of the honest pimple of eorgia. (A voice—“Where was Watson?") He ought to Ik- lighting the battle* of Kin*, Idfe and Aqpident Insurance Com- |aui(N, ami REAL ESTATE OFFICE. ANIGHT A ALLEN, mris* lv , Waycroas, (ia. ifas? 1 " 5 ' snill-m light \n. 15 IIn>M S bla S.VVANNAH, : iurU»-«»m TIh-x- an- uImUiole pri»e*. Addns-all onb r- lo S. GRIFFIN. Manager. (.’RIFFIX P.tl.vr (XL JarkoMTlII*. rta. GEORGIA. Reduced lo $ix>c Per Year. W. A. WRIGHT. J. P., "THE NEW NATION, And A sent 1-Vr National Guarantee Co 1 A Weekly P«i>or, Sn nritic* ot.uimsl on easy terms. Sp.s ial IVvoted to t!w inten-'ts of Nation: attention Kiven to the odleetion of claims. ».» IN*! Office Ruildimr. Wayrnes, 4ia. Tfc* 0*ljr One Kerr Pilalnl—(, M Ya fr*tn4 (Ur Wsnli " j Xkw N Tlwre i* a Much display advcvtlsnnerit in ! n, * n > - tliis papt-r. this week. whi. Ii " words alike exeeiU one true «*Teach nevr one apiK-ari hum the l>r. llarter Mali lesise pla«-es a “tVewoif' on everything 1 they make and pnldi-h. G-.L fc.r it. aen.1 • tItem the name of tlw* word, uml they will | return you Hook. lVantlftil 1 Jthosratdi* or ’ Samphk Five. jan_".-ly KIMVAKI) BELLAMY, Aulltor of ‘*l4*>kinx ltackwanl.” il*.. print* the Peoples The A YF.A1S. a CENTS A COPY. THE NEAV NATION. 18 Winter *4.. H-eU.n. Mass. Jersey Cow For Sale. 11 ' ■ j . ,haxe an opportunity to boy a 1,000 Circular* tlargr), for 91.75, i l'«w J«-r*ey («w, ot tlte Wt strain, young. 3,OOU„.»o, .1 it, HERALD dir.. | a LIVER PILLS jaaas52& ML HAITt* KQIcrnE CO.. SL Lank. Mat Ladies arc Vnfortnnate. ? in society the b»r yon ft»r $1 a bottle, frwn tlias. F. Risley, Wholesale I>rngst*t. ft* Cortland $t. ' — c criptive pan., , — tificates fnuu many ladies vrbo have used it ami can't say euoush in favor of Hi*ley’s Philotoken. mrl2-ly tickiit if it suits him. The latter democraC on condition that you tiomi the man he wants. If you don’t li fi»r the otlaer fellow. That kind of mocmcy levs* done more harm than i thing else. STICKING WITH THE DEMOCRATS Judge Crisp said that the negroes toms, who forces him to pay 50 per cent. I over his veto. Since, then we have been duty on the goods. To bring them in : endeavoring to pass a free coinage bilL he must pay $2,5000 of duty. : We have passed it through the house “The republicans say the foreigner j several times, but were never able to pays the duty, but fyou see lie does not. ! have it beconie a law. The present law pay it. Half of your product taken every year in that way. You may say that you do not b foreign goods, but this tax is put foreign goods to protect the manufactur er here, good*, passed during the Reed congress. It provides for the purchase by the govern ment of four million, Ove hundred thou sand dollars’ woKh of silver a month. That is stored in the treasury and notes do not buy the foreign • issued upon it. The silver question was pay the tax just the same. ■ one of the issues of the speakership con- You pay the same price, and the differ- . test. I announced that I ence goes into the pockets of the protec- coinage. Because I did tltis t ted manufacturer. “The people of Georgia pay about e million, eight hundred thousand dolUn annually a* a tariff tax. Thus the Georgia people pay about ten dollars each annually. This money either goes to the government a* custom duties, or it goes into the pockets of the protected manufacturer*. It goes out of Georgia, and drains you of what you have. Is it a wonder that you have any money at all, after this has been going on for years? Hour THE TIN DUTY ACTS. “This system of taxation ha* friends to reward and enemies to punish. Take the tin industry. We make no tin in this country, still the McKinley bill put* 2 cents a pound duty on tin. The fanner and the citizens of Georgia have to pay this duty. But the Standard Oil Com pany imparts millions of pounds of tin. They pay the duty on it, but when they make it into cans and ship it out, filled with nil, the government pays them hack for free crab* from Massachusetts declined to vote for me even after I was nominated. “When the silver hill came up iu this congress Mr. Burrows, a republican, moved to lay it on the table. The vote stood 148 to 147, when I, a* speaker, cast my vote against the motion, making it a tie and saving the bill from defeat. Now you say, but all the democrat* did not vote for free coinage. No. This is a great country and there are diversified interests, but a majority of the demo crat* voted for the bill. “Then came the Stewart silver bill. It passed the senate by the votes of a ma jority of the democrat* and a minority of the republicans. In the house it was defeated by a combination of a majority of the republicans and a minority of the democrats. It was not the democratic party that defeated the silver bill, but a few democrats with a large number of republicans.” Speaker Crisp then described the for- tbc deiiK C his of the whites. They had learned that they never had free schools until the democrats came into power. It is t that the republican* in 1868 had p vided for free schools and had appro priated for them ; they were great promises lmt they stole the money—i appropriated it, qs they said. Since democrats came into power all the money collected for free schools has gone to the schools. “For the first time in twenty there is division among the white peo ple. Some of our own people are trying to create division, discord and strife. They will not succeed. The people of Georgia are too intelligent to allow them to destroy their civilization and prosperi ty which lias been built up after twenty years of h ud struggle. “The movement,” he said, “could not amount to anything in the way of relief to our people. If successful it would only injure the democratic party and place the republicans in power, have how the i<roteciive taritT upon and.this movement could only result putting the force hill upon us. The force bill would aaeau troups around poll*, bayonets at every ballot l»ox. In this district they could appoint five thous and deputy marshals to be paid $5 day for eight day*, ostensibly to preserve the peace, lmt really to elect the candi dates of the party in power. It means that supervisors should he appointed by ^ the republican l'nite.1 Stales circuit j uTwtereTbj'uii Repub- judges; Judge Jfardee, who lives in New ■ licau party.—Burlington (la.) Gazette. nmission to divide the white jK*ople 1 divide the |>cnple of Georgia that the republican parly shall have |*ower d bind us band and foot, that they >y tax us more. When you find that the democratu* party has had an op|*ortunity mid has ilnted in the interest of the |k-o- ple, then it is time to complain. Hut hi will find when the democratic- party the jK-ople.” (Great applause.) When Speaker Crisp concluded hun dreds of the great audience flocked upon the stand to meet him and shake his hand. There Are No Federal Election*. There is no such thing ns a federal election. Some of our Republican friends will look upon this statement as audacious. After they have had time to recover from the swoon into which it has undoubtedly thrown them we may give elucidation to the proposition in detail. For the present it is sufficient to say that the people of a state choose presidential electors and represeutatives in congress iu their capacity as citizens of the state. They are not creatures of federal authority. They create and limit the federal power.—Cincinnati En quirer. The DIacaated Gmmg. One of the most remarkable features of the approaching campaign will l*c* the efforts which Harrison will make to catch the independent vote. It is re ported that Quay, Dudley, Platt and the whole tribe of working politicians have already taken additional offense from the part which the president has al ready undertaken to play with a view to diverting thfa vote from Cleveland in the November election. Mr. Clarkson has openly criticised the president and condemned him for the misapprehension under which he is Laboring.—Richmond Times. UIeeding (he People. Where is there ono industry in Iowa that is protected if we except our linseed oil mill, and this pays a dividend upon a capital just three times as large as every plant in the United States cost? Yet Iowa pays out r^.WO.OOO per an num, or nearly twenty dollars per an num for every man, woman and child in the state, to “protect” a lot of monop olies and trusts whose owners are be coming multimillionaires by bleeding the people under a process that was dis-