Newspaper Page Text
THE MESSENGER.
A. Mcllan, Editor.
K. A. Mcllan, Pul), mill Pro.
LAFAYETTE GA„ Sep 23. 1880.
»■■■*— 111 IOTI
FOR PRESIDENT:
WnFIKIill VIIA A COCK
Os Pennsylvania.
FOR VK E-PUESIDENT!
WILLIAM El. L\(iiLl*ll,
Os Indiana
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS.
For the Stile at large—C. C.
Black ami R. K. Kennon. Alter
nates A. I*. Adams ami I, S. Glenn.
First district—S. I>. Braswell, ol
Liberty. Alternate Josephus
Camp of Emanuel.
Second district —VV. <f. Ham
tumid, of Thomas. Alternate— W in
Harrison, of Quitman.
Third district!-- ('. C. Built). of I
Telfair. Alternate—James Bishop,
Jr., i f Dodge.
Fourth district—l/. 11. Hay, of
Coweta. Alternate —11. C. Camer
on, of Harris.
Kiflh districhf —John L. ILdl, of!
Spalding,. Alternate —D. I\ lliil.ul t
Fulton.
c district—R. N. NisLit, of
futnaw. Aliematc— F. F. Dubig
nou, of Baldwin.
Seventh district —T. \V. Akin, ol :
Bartow. Alternate—P. \V. Al>x- [
•tide#, of Cohli.
Eiglh ilistriet —Seaborn Reese, of
Hancock. Alternate—James K. i
Hines, of Washington.
Ninth district—W. E. Simmons. I
of Gwinnett. Alternate— M. G
Boyd, of White.
FOR CONGRESS 7th DISTRICT:
Judson C. Clements.
Os Walker County.
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET:
fob oovkhnur:
ALFRED H. COLQUITT.
•FOU SBC BETA IIY OS STATE:
». C. BARNETT, of Baldwin.
FOB COMPTROLLER GENERAL:
WK. A. WItIGH T, of Richmond.
for theaseßen:
D. N. SPEER, of Troup.
FUlt ATTORNEY GENERAL. *
CLIFFORD ANDERSON. <>f Bihh.
BL me msmmmm
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
Tor Sonator 44th Dißtriot:
Kl.vacoU), Ga., July 24, ISSO.
1 nnnemnee myself a eamliilnle In
represent tin* -11 1 1 1 Senatorial District
1u the next General .Assembly afGeor- I
gia. A. T. HACK KIT.
I—
For Representative)
I hereby announce mysilfn can- j
didate Ini Representative of Walk- I
er county, at the election to lie held
on Wednesday, tin' 6th dnv of Oc- !
tnher. 11. P. LUMPKIN.
Gen. Walker pronounces thecen- j
sus in the S'.nth nhnut perfect.
Sam Hill is at large, with little j
pmepect that lie will he captured. j
Senator Brown, it is stated, will |
leave in a few days for Indiana, to J
stump that state fur Hancock and ;
English.
Since the Maine election Boh
Ingersoll has changed his opinion.
He thinks hell is now located in
the Tine Tree State.
•
■—
An American traveler saw on
a London hotel register these j
words, "Sir A. T. Gall and fifteen
children.’’ The latter were ushered I
into the dining room by their gov- ,
erticss, and were mostly girls, fine ;
looking and ive'd behaved.
Hancock anil English stand to
day on substantially the same plat,.; ’
lorm Lincoln was elected open in 1
1860. The republicans of to day
repudiate almost every idea the
founders of their party cherished
and contended for. In fact, they
have virtually reused to lie republi
cans and have become cousolida- j
tionists. —New York Express, dan.
Gen. Toombs’ Kimbal house
speech had a double-back-action- i
warranted-to-cut in - the-eye-wisli
we-had-not-calied-hinr-out effect oi.
the Norwood crowd. Instead of
denouncing Colquitt, the general
took up the charges one by one
and either denounced them ns false
or approved til's governor’s action
in everything except the appoint
ment of ex-Gov. Brown. — Gaincs
title Eagle.
George Mitchell, i n Ohio wife
murderer, declaim that his condem
nation to death wus just, arid that
he would not have it changed if he
could. He spent the night before
the day appointed for the hanging
in loud rejoicings that he was
about to go to heaven, but when a
reprieve come, lie shouted ; "Bles
sed be God; didn’t I always' tell
you that the Lord was on the side .
trf a Christian urau I”
To lire Voters of Walker County.
Fellow- Citizen* ;
The time for the ehclion of a
1 congressman is rapidly approach
ing. lion. J. C. Clements and Dr.
Win. II Felton nre candidates for
the position. It is evident I lint
one of these gentlemen will repre
sent us in the nex' Congress.
A- voters let us reason together.
I and conclude for whom our Votes
• should be Ca»t liext November
' Both candidates ate pronounced
Democrat-; only, Dr. Felton claims
that lie is a better Democrat than
his opponent, At anv rate they
lire of the fame political faith; and
will act With the Democratic party
on ail question of National import. j
Both are Christian gentlemen,
and statesmen of ability. Dr. Fel
ton is a minister of the gospel; Mr.
Clements is a prominent lav-man j
of a Christian church. Dr. Felton
I Ims represented us six years in j
.'Congress; Mr. Clements, -ix years
in the Stale Legislature. Dr. Fel
ton has a good record ; Mr. Clem
ents' record is faultless. Dr. Felton
luis occupied the same position for
six years; Mr. Clements has been
! promoted from one position of Iron*
t or to another, rind now aspires to
| represent us in Congress. Dr. Fel
; ton is a resident of 15 >rtow county; |
j Mr. Clements is a citizen of Walker j
i county. Bartow has been horu ied
j by Bending up a congressman for
] the hist twenty years ; Walker asks i
i for the first time, to lie thus honor- !
| ed. Bartow is proud of her repre
sentative men ; so was Athens, i
Sparta and Rome of old ; and so
should Walker he to-day.
Rome had her Catos and Ciceros;
j Athens, her Demostheneses anil '
! Holrins; Sprrta, her Leonidases and
j I.veurguses. These cities, immortal
in the world’s history, were proud ;
of their great men, and rewarded |
I them for their fidelity to the pub-
I lie.
Dr. Felton has made‘‘his record”;
he is proud of it, and Bartow is
proud of him. Mr. Clements, a
young man in the vigor of man
hood, possessing all the elements of
true nobility, rind imbued with a
holy ambition to he the pier of *sy j
tuan, asks the people of the Fv- j
entli Congressional Distncd tuwast !<
their votes for him next Ifovoifher. |
Mr. Clements will he elected ; Wal- I
tier county will be honored, and |
every citizen within her borders j
will lie proud of J. C Clements, the !
rising young man of North Geor- j
gia.
A word to our Republican friends; j
many of you have supported Mr. i
Clements in the past, and you can |
support him in this race with as j
much propriety and consistency as
vou can Dr Felton. A vote for '
Mr. Clements, is a vote for Democ
| racy ; a vote for Dr. Felton is a
! vote for Democracy. It matters not, j
■ whether a man be an independent ;
. Democrat, or an organized Demo- j
crat, in the language of John Chi- j
i i anian. he i« a Democrat •‘alle the j
samee.” Mr. Clements does iv.it ask i
you for your votes, because he is j
an organized Democrat ; hut for
the better and innr sensible reason, [
that lie desires to represent this dis- j
trict in Congress 11 is policy is
that of the Democratic party ; so j
is Dr. Felton’s. Nmv, my Repuhli- j
can friends of Walker, will you sup j
port a Democrat of Bartow, ir will
you support a Democrat of your j
mvn county ? I believe you will I
support Mr. Clements.
A word with those who have |
supported Dr. Felton in the past : j
Does it follow, because you have i
supported him in the past, that you j
should continue to support him ? i
Dr. Felton has made an ellicient
representative; hut does it follow •
that you must continue to return 1 1
hint to Congress ? For the same j
reason you might he asked to elect
bint for life, or during good heha
: vior. Why should we incur the
expense of holding an election ev- i
ery two years ? Wl.y not elect ev- I
erv officer Irotii constable to the
United States for life, or during
good behavior? You perceive the'
argument reduces itself to aa ab
surdity. Conceded, that Dr. Fel
ton is without blemish, does it fol
low that we shall support him, in
preference to Mr. Clements? Not at i
all. Mr. Clements, as a citizen ol
Georgia, has the same right to ask
j for vour votes, that Dr. Feilon has.
And 1 insist a better light for Mi
Clements is not endeavoring to mo
nopolize one ofliee for Hie term of:
his natural life? You have trusted
him in the past. Did he prove 1
recreant ? or rather has he not
honored you arid his county ?
As citizens of Walker county,
proud of her representative men,
proud of her growing wealth, proud
of her standing among the best law
, abiding counties of the Union, let
i us ail, Democrats, Republicans and '
Grcenluckcri', turn out "cu mawe"
1 mi the Gtli of November, uud vote
for J. C. Clenieiite, the next repre
sentative of the Seventh Congres
sional district of Georgia.
Liiikhal.
Tie- I'rotperoiH Hon Hi.
Wherever we turn, in Texas,
Arkare<iiß, Georgia, nod even in
Virginia, we read only of rapidly in
j Creasing prosperity and of general
well-doing. It wiil not do lor
, Southern men, after such an oflieial
allowing, to complain of the pover
ty of their region. The sent ern
! atatea are prosperous. It would
not he extra'H'.'nnt In any llml
their people are on the wholi more
prosperous than those ol most parts
of the north. Uudouhtedlv the con
j di lions of living are easier in the
| south than in the north. Hut the
| change for the better in the last
four years is very remarkable.—
Everywhere we read of new indus
tries starting in life; manufactories
of various kinds are rapidly in
creasing and t iving employment to
increasing numbers of poor whites, 1
to whom factory life is a distinct
advance in the scale of property.—
The business of market gardening
for northern consumption has been i
found so profitable that vegeta
ble and small fruit-gardens are
found in all the states from \
Virginia to Louisiana. It is absurd :
to charge that a region thus health
| fully prosperous is lawless or idle, j
The south produced last year the !
largest cotton crop in its history, j
; and this year’s crop is even greater.
I lint over and above the cotton.it is
j producing a multitude of other
things which were totally unknown
in the southern states before the |
j war. With a more healthful politi- j
! cal life such as wou'il follow from u |
I “divided” south, this prosperity I
would he still more rapidly in- 1
creased.— New York Herald.
—» .
All Infamous Charge.
“If we can get a fair vote in .the
upper counties this time, it will j
cunt largely you may he s'-rn.
j We will not have stuffed blillot j
| boxes, nor bulldozing of the colored j
people like it was in
"We heard a story from Walker
county a few weeks ago. Just be
«fore the last election two honest col
ored men, who lived in the lower
edge of the county and who had
1 bought small farina by their indus
[ try and energy, were visited bv I
j masked horsemen After night, on
] the eve of the election and asked I
who they intended to vote fir. j
"Felton," said they. “All right,” I
said the maskers, if yon do. pre-
I pare to die, because if you arc found j
j outside vour houses to-morrow he- I
I tween sunrise and sundown we j
j shall kill you and hum you un in
| your houses” Os course they j
i stayed at home. That was one
dodge to keep off a vote or two.”
j We clip the above from nil edi- j
' tonal in the Cartersville Free Press, j
We have no comment to make. If |
; this don't insult the intelligence of
j every Democrat and Republican in
Walk' r count - , whether he lie white
j or black, then we don’t know what
| would. There never has been any |
; such conduct in Walker county, as j
every citizen knows.
—i ♦ -
Col. Forney estimates that in
Philadelphia tip to this time 7 599 1
Reputilicans have signified their
purpose to vote for Hancock. lie
says the number will tie increased j
by the day * f election.
——♦ «■» -
MAYS IN GENERAL.
Clipped With a Sharp Pair of Scissors.
Albany has received 3,000 bales !
of new cotton.
The recent heavy rains have d im
aged the cotton crop considerably.
One hundred and sixty-nine
thousand, three hundred seventy
cross ties have been laid during tl e
|iast year.
Cheese exports in June of this
veer from the United States wele
“22121.000 lbs., heine about 50 per
eent. greater than those of Inst year
for the same month.
I lie Telegraph and Messenger pays
that a hawk entered tlie room of a
lady in \ mcville and made an at
tack upon tier The h .vk was so
: large that Id? wings lunched either
side of Jhe door in making its es
i cape.
Monroe Adrerliser says: Clayton I
Hillsninn. the colored buy who si."
brutallv killed the three year old
boy of Mr. 0. G. IliMstnan, in Cullo
den, was tried for the crime of iinir- :
I der itnd found guilty. Notwith
standing his youth, eleven years,
the crime fiendish in con
ception, so brutalVn ex-cut on and
so utterly unprovoked that the jur
ors found no mercy in their fearl
for the murdevi r. Jud e Laws,,
passed seritem • on las' Smurd.iv
afternoon, that Clayton Hiilsma.i
be hanged on Frid n j.Octolur 25.1-,
next. a
At the Balloon! At the Balloon!
X M BUTTEMCK'B 'll
P P l»a|H“r Patl<-rn« I n
La l(V< Superior to all others (£
W cntnlogiie, Q
ft I
L cjßpL L
0 0
S * N
FOR. X-.O“W
CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST.
Uvcrydiiiig guapniilccil ax rciircvcnled or money rc
ref tmded.
Since we have decided cot to wII out, our New Yt-ik buyer lias been piling in
the good a by the car load, until every corner i- full and running over
WITH BARGAINS ALL OVER THE HOUSE.
SSressi Gootfx, IVolioii*, fi'asicy Ciooila, Millinery tiootfs,
t'a rim s Blip re s, .1 cans,
i i’olloiiadi's, i'riuls, ilotsicslics, Latlirs 8-iiirii Musts.
THE .»cr. COUNTER lb FULL OF NEW AND USEFUL ARTICLES
at a much less price than you can get them elsewhere.
THE S»CT. COUNTER HAS MANY ARTICLES THAT WOULD,
cost you 25 to 50cent at other places you will save money by making your pur
chases at the balloon.
THE BEWING MACHINE DEPARTMENT.
The largest variety of first class Machines in the State, such as,
The Eldridge, Whi e, Royal, St John. Weed,
Victor, Remington Domestic, Ameri
can, Davis, Singer, and Wanzer.
The Wr rzur and Singer are our cheapest machines. Persons wishing j’hcap 2nd
Hand machines, can always find a good assortment. Exchange new mu*
chine.- foi old ones. lor cash an on monthly payments.
Don’t fall to call at the Balloon be/iirc buying anything in our line.
H. H. SOUDER,
Chattanooga, Tennessee.
I; KJtt' Jj fi4 me. ftJS •& -.i 1
yVEGETABLE
I mm mi isl! I
Mczti A PURELY VEBETA2LE SEfAEBY
El;! weln, Internal am! External Use,
'..nis-’i;'V Is a ttiSS CURE for r.H fto Diseases for which It is reoramreded.
yff. . V; - a.-.; Is ALWAYS PERFECTLY SAFE la the hands of
: - evea tha most Ino.pocsaced persons.
f .*>- - It is <i snr- r.:c»"n-k ■/riar.iy tr cncans, SOII2
r L P, :/: TllM-AV. Ir.uIMSL r„.v
P’J\ i ‘ 'C\' 1 . ' h ii i■r' d : ’(■' ' J • Os ItLlß.si R2:l Clio lien
i it .. and KBUBALhIA.
Jaf WIDELY KKOYdti
m p.; : j FAMILY THS WCHID,
i •i ’i ’ 7t Tins t mi ÜB(*«t svl..i nic!i v.v.in’.prftil nnccesa in all
• DIAI ItnCEA,
. { \\3A j-. ils; ~ i; .i co.:iplaAi;sts» tju» a u
■jl?| t:\{ HAS ?T3Gr C?4O YEARS’cohstabt
;1) 'J USE 18 ALL COUNTRIES Aria CLIMATES.
:]Eg.( d':"| It Is Ki:ca3X3»ril.r'l» »•>- V: - V-VlaiM, SnariecswlM. I
' -If
*i] 'iv'j'/s'i ' 3 Inof ovies, Nni’srs l?i Ilov-vßala—ia short, by jLVfrybouy
'•■'"'•j j ISr /S V;> d evt-rytvfcr.ro Who ever biu-:i it a tj^'A
t vjj |T 13 \YiTHBBT AJUYAL AS A UKIAISMT. i
yi It vhouU aV eys b-s umsd lot l'ala in Iho Fs-vs n»»»J
Ml 1 1 * ij ,•••. / r ;.n,r- •; i 1 c! ih’oiw'H
\\sftV L. -d i Cutij* a-iirninv* .Yovero Ilafnv, Scald*, *rtc,
•j v " -• A; :.:i 's . . V WITHOUT IT. Ilnra
rf&rTTT ‘ ——T-rr.\ j'.r. iMi.tly s:i»u t'ror* its in bUis, and i.d \ : -.v
f Tt in r :.utSsc.soc.fiadgl.oo
uvr*v jr a bcilio, an:l can La i Matucd from all druggteh!.
PERRY DAVIS & SOW, Providence, R. L
Proprietors
NEW
SHUTTLE SEWING MACHINE
THE BEST j
SEWING MACHINE SHtl wM I
WORLD. |
SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED CATA- fitV ><JL \\ 7*
LOGUE No. 230. |®“AN AGENT i Rl
WILL DELIVER A MACHINE AT YOUR j Jj
RESIDENCE, FREE OF CHARGE,
SUBJECT TO APPROVAL. ,fe —Jl ' 6 CLOSED-
Address WILSON SEWING MACHINE CO.
129 & 131 State St., Chicago, Illinois, U. S. A.
tor Sale Si j J. A. Kecd A to., Rome, €<<a. *
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