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About The Solid South. (Conyers, Ga.) 1883-1892 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 14, 1891)
the FIELD. am the whole ■ C 0UNT' !V - the lu-forra press. Urf: its Daily _indorsing Wve indorsed and - for the Alliance for ail ’ added “Solidity and nOVf ^ ;L line.” The great a dopted the following ornta the Farmers' Affi , 1 ell ‘ 4he ^X without the subtreasury reserve, es L'' Tint State President Caa ' U te d to telegraph tins action 4 ;,ovations of order our c fiorida, Colorado and # * * ' state Alliance was in !ke C i .. a! 0 the California ton at same time " indorsing the Alliance de Ranee was Secretarj' Starr reports y 3 , State :i0 n4lademands were unanimous iTV.A iU' ' \ body decided to estab /fSe , ffha exchange, and the matter ' referred to the executive committee, 1“ W as empowered to arrange order all has the ’ growth of the ails. The western part of In re rT rapid in the I state. ' In some of the western coun¬ L fjift people’s - movement ha3 driven r wo oid parties together. Six county Lees Lized and seventy 1891. subs Our have agricul- been dming scattered, and y population is badly - gye to ten subs is about all that be organized in a county. Colorado „ iaV in 1892, and if both U ije fight silver question I - parties ignore the ^ Jieve carried for the People’s it can be W" The Empire State Alliance was or pized in May, 1891, and is not six jDths old, yet Mr. George A. Scott, ; r e tary of the New York state Alli¬ ce says: state 354 sub-Alli¬ “Yve have in the ces, and after the election we will tve more active work for the order. some of the counties a people’s ticket s been put into the field, and the face men are going to stand by it Bost to a man.” * la Louisiana Alliance men are stand jig shoulder to shoulder. State Secre¬ cy McFarland says forty new Alliances ave been organized since the last state Meeting, and the order is growing more ipidly now than at any other time, [he growth in unity of purpose is more joticeable the growth and apparent, perhaps, than i of membership. * * # * # ' * The Lone Star State marches on apace, he official organ of the Texas Alliance ay.:: ■ “The state secretary issued fifty-two ■barters for new sub- Alliances in Texas, Between the 1st and 15th of October, ■et the plutocratic papers tell the peo¬ ple ‘the Alliance is dying out in Texas.’ I “The facts are, however, that the aaraers’ Alliance in Texas was never ■tronger in membership, never so united, ■ever so determined, and never had so ■xny Iknor initiations, and never was such a I to partisan bosses as at present. The Alliance in Texas is getting there, l!16 pite of traitors, bosses and the populations I 5 * of the plutes.” * * * * I The initial number of the Johnson Pranty Union (Warrensburg, Mo.) is at pal forty-eight columns, and devoted P° tae cause. I The Alliance Standard is a new paper Polished at Willmar, Minn. It is a h-?“«pauy paper also, and starts out Fite ^ Irishman looking for fight. L ^ a L, " ,T !' ;l bmg, of Sumner county! '; b00 S ht <*»t the Caldwell Jour Naud transforms it from a Republican po a People’s paper. 01 T L of the Ocala Demand, u »h S C01 UUin bly 'Ch V ‘r , r^T wee published at iWbT 3 reCe iVed £t is L - / A A ‘ J fl3 ' lor w!l , ° presents the Oc-’h , and ’ ^ ayhtfor E-lihi—. J ^ le ? of s ° nth Brother Da - staiw?^Mi! to?" n ’ one 6 men of wh0 Pott er county’s liucdly S ' ’ “Po Pe: ? ;, : 1 f :ipe r wiU sing with the s h-f . ° ns i<: iuks present t- 86 st to its Wa Withhi ^ interest server wilt CorrffXf^ U0T l char a ^pahlican S es -.’” The Ob The Roister, paper, I "cunty g.._‘" u Wa,cb ', ^ of Republic been a stal L:; :1 pap^r, has come out uias. s F.-e; : -h,' ’* e come to the front ia »- , «it*i-wn PP0Ptoftbat P art y that tif ^S.'SL.S*" “ *“• Can ^F'per, aad as a Republi - u* caose JlT P^ple- forward to ^o battle ^Wn-rVo^ ««>ttle b iL^- 11 J , 13 jQst the uame Published of a D ew in v nox. C2? paper is s °° n to J it started i hallto,ni 13 a ’ la - >^SillU at I new Itwirffiy paper inar ’ aa ^ ieaato ^ the cause. Alliance from South Dakota, has purchased the Aberdeen Republican, formerly a Demo¬ cratic paper, and it will come to the front for the people. The Plainville (Kan.) Times has an¬ nounced its abandonment of the Repub¬ lican party, and will henceforth be de¬ voted to the interests of the People’s party. Mapleville, N. C., At a new Alliance paper i3 soon to be started with a strong corps of writers. #*#*** And so the enlistment grows and the ranks thicken. But tins is not all. Old party papers that will not turn from their evil ways are iau^tm ■ o it/i' port. In Kansas the li utohinscti News and Fort Scott Monitor, two of the load ing Republican dailies of the state, have recently been sola out by the sheriff. * * * *- * * Many other papers, large and small, all through the country, which do not profess to be Alliance or reform papers, are in sympathy with the people’s move¬ ment. For instance the Alliance organ of South Carolina says: “The Sparta Record and the Dechard Headlight deserve the support of the brotherhood. Their editors are not mem¬ bers of the organization, but they talk with a fearlessness that challenges ad¬ miration. We want such men to help us fight onr battles.” * * * * * Do you know how much this means? It means that the voice of the people can and now will be heard. The organs of monopoly and plutocracy are now pow¬ erless to deceive the masses. This has been their favorite work, and their posi¬ tive subservience to the money mammon is well presented by United States Sen¬ ator Stewart, who says: “The New York newspapers are the abject slaves and creatures of the money power which is exercised through the bankers who control gold. There are a dozen banks in New York which shape the politics of the New York newspa¬ pers, and which have heretofore domi¬ nated the finances of the country. These banks have European partners, whose interest it is that all debts contracted with these banks should be paid in the dearest possible money. When the big bankers yell for gold the little banks yell for gold. Word is passed to their customers, the merchants, to yell for gold, and they respond. If the news¬ papers fail to join in the chorus the merchant shuts off his advertising, and the newspaper is done for. There never was more abject slavery, although it is indirect and imperceptible.” H. W. Ayer. THE PEOPLE ARE HONEST. They Havo Becu Lethargic, However, While Knaves Worked. JU r. 11. E. Cole, president of 1 the Mich¬ igan Alliance, delivered aa address full of rock ribbed truth and inspiriting :id vice at the recent state meeting. Here is au extract: 1 believe we are in the midst of a rev¬ olution that is to save this country from plutocratic and corporate rule. This great farmer movement is as Indicative of its coming as is the roll of distant thunder of the coming storm. Let each do his duty in every particular. Will there be traitors? I presume so; there was one among the twelve. But when we remember Judas, let us not forget the eleven who were true to their m*ster. The great struggle for independence had its Benedict Arnold, but let us not forget the patriots who, footsore and bleeding, were with Washington at Princeton and Valley Forge. While we have great reason to complain of the venal legislation of a congress composed main¬ ly of bankers and lawyers who, it is be¬ lieved, have been in many instances the base tools of corporations, let us not be discouraged, but remember that the peo¬ ple on whom we must always depend for liberty (said Jefferson) are honest, and are only responsible for the present condition of things, inasmuch as they have been indulging in a lethargic sleep and have allowed the barnacles to fasten themselves on the ship of state. Let the patriotic, liberty loving, God fearing, common people, the great mid-. die classes, rise op and take the helm, relegate to the rear the plutocracy of every form, return the old ship to her moorings, scrape off the barnacles, clear the decks of rubbish, reman her with nonest yeomanry of the laud, and as she is borne, along on the great ocean of time may the breezes which fill her sails in the future resound the anthem,“Equal rights to all, special privileges to none.” Tlie Golden Gate People. The whole country has heard of the grand and glorious meeting which was held in Los Angeles, Cal., and which culminated in the organization of the People’s party. There were more than 5,000 people present, and a breaking away from old parties and old preju¬ dices was accomplished with boundless enthusiasm. A private telegram to Washington from a prominent gentleman of the Pa¬ cific slope said: “The People’s convention today com¬ pleted an organization and adopted a platform, first forever renouncing the former parties. Then the whole Ocala platform was indorsed and adopted with¬ out a dissenting voice. Entire harmony prevailed throughout. There is an im¬ mense ratification celebration in progress tonight. “The baby is bora, and the mother is happy.” LIFE IN MINING CAMPS. Less Banger an<l Less Noise In Them Than in Aliy of the Barge Cities. There is a fascination about raining life which, once having possessed a man, cannot easily be shaken off. A miner who has made a good stake by selling his locations at first proposes to himself to travel, then to settle down in his own original home; hat after a little while he discovers that he him¬ self has changed, that old ties have been broken and that he is disappoint¬ ed in his former associations. Things at home seem to have inexplicably dwindled. An almost irresistible im¬ pulse, a transferred nostalgia, a long¬ ing for the clear, bracing mountain air and the liberal ways of the mines then seizes him. It is difficult to content one’s self with the monotonous life of the staider communities after having tasted a more exhilarating one. The attraction of the mines is not all in the hope of gain, though that of course has much to do with it. The friendships formed, the freedom of thought and custom, the spirit of camaraderie, and the en¬ tire absence of commercial competition have their influence as well. So num¬ bers of men, having acquired a com¬ petence in mining, make their head¬ quarters still in the mining country as a matter of preference, not necessity. Such men are much in the habit of taking short trips away, and are to be met with all through the highways and byways of travel. To be able to lead this pleasant, independent life is the dream of the less fortunate ones. Min¬ ers are very apt to disparage their call¬ ing while they are actively engaged in it; they may term it “a dog's life,” but let them once be freed, mark how they hanker after it! Some people suppose that a mining camp is an unusually dangerous sort of place, full of desperadoes and “hold ups,” where every man carries his life in his hand. The misconception lias been handed down from rougher, wild¬ er times, and has been kept alive by the romancing of tenderfoot newspa¬ per correspondents. A man is far safer in a mining camp than on Cherry Hill, New York; Tar Flat, San Francisco, or large areas in any of our cities; much more indeed than in parts of London or Paris. So far as robbery is con¬ cerned one is not safe anywhere, in the mountains or in the towns. As to affrays of other kinds, a man who is sober, minds his own business and does not set up as a fighter would always be let alone. If he does not carry a “gun” so much the better for him, for there is among the roughest characters a certain sense of chivalry, which they would call “squareness,” that prevents attack upon an unarmed man. The practice of carrying arms is not at all universal in the mountains. When pistols are worn they are kept out of sight. Indeed, there is not much use to a peaceful man in carrying arms at ail. If he is “held up” by the “road agents” he is always at a disadvantage, being taken unexpectedly, and when they have the drop on him a motion toward the hip pocket would be to take large chances. If the custom, so far as it goes, of carrying weapons may some¬ times lead to unpremeditated fatal en¬ counters, ft also has the effect of mak¬ ing men quiet and cautious about giving offense.—Albert Williams in Engineer¬ ing. Millet In. India. One of the leading authorities on the subject states that the millets consti¬ tute “a more important crop” in India “than either rice or wheat, and are grown more extensively, being raised from Madras,in the south,to Ilajpntana, in the north. They occupy about 83 per cent, of the food grain area in Punjab", Bombay and Sinde, 41 per cent, in the, 39 per cent in the central provinces, in all about 80,000,000 acres.”—Popular Science Monthly. What Briiijjs Gold Rack. The gold coining back from Europe, over which the Republicans axe cackling so, is brought back by western farm products dug out of the ground by un¬ protected western work and sold under free trade. The products of the highly protected machines of the McKinley cor¬ porations are uot bringing it ouek. The nlstocratic * liuwhiue owaers UO not troame . , themselves , t to go abroad alter c . gold. . - f,-.. d. COUtGllt , , tllSHiStil <r | V0S %%ltlx -.7 I-..IHnrr uUnBg it It after ar tor it it wts fetl/S hero ueix>, U If the Ult farm- ULTUX er v whose orod^ets broajrht it, de* mauds his share, they call rma a 4 ‘ersuik Hon to Gain Fame. If nnv member of the Allianc© in South Carolina has aa itching for note riety; if he wants to be lauded and 4<**i titl'd °p« b coddled h fj h ? r^ by rc the : at Xl&TtV daiiie f’" UOSSCS, «* r<r c S A U we can give biia an infallible recipe. Just let him oppose/ some one of the Alliance demands, or suffer himself to be interviewed against the leaders of the Alliance,, or deliver a lecture oil “The Alliance Gone Astray.” Such a course is a direct route to the heart of the anti-Alliance people. It don’t lead to the heart of the Alliance however.—Cotton Plant. 3 ! ! It PREMIUM) OFFER _A. S3ST OF THE! h owe ^zum-ssrstzf aascsrS T |Q09S9eeBSai3d| *»v: m fi mm •I i JLi Mil i f ./Mi mimk III 'f. mswSlaBmBr ^'Wpsl ;if CHAnl.ES) DICKERS. premium to onr subscribers is handsomely printed from entirely each new plates, wi which ll new type. pub¬ Tho twelve volumes contain the following world-famous works, ono of is lished e m.nie.V, uuc : t.a<iged , and absoitk'd y unabridged; DAVID COPPERF6ELD, CHUZ.TLEWIT, Ml THOLAS mCKSLBY, BOM BEY AMD S©N, BLEAK HOUSE, LITTLE DQRRST, OUR MUTUAL FR1EMD, PICKWICK PAPERS, The above are without question the most famous novels Unit were ever v ri'ton. JYr* quarter ef a century ttiey have been celebrated in every nook and corner of tin- rmuii'-d world. Yet there are thousands of homes in America not yet supplied with a. set > f Dickens, this the usual high But cost of the owing books preventing people in moderate circiuijsiancee -Mtug iroja sntciimjf enjoying luxury. tbe extremely now, to the use white" of modem improved printing, c»inp<-«.iu«>u l and in book machinery, enabled offer low prico of paper, and the great of Dickens’ tin*, trade, wo are to to o«r subscribers and readers a set works at a price which all author’s can afford to pay. Every home in the bind may now lie supplied with a set of the great works. We will give Dickens’ Works complete in 12 volumns and THIS PAPER S 12 MONTHS FOR ONE DOLLAR and FIFTY CENTS This is the best offer ever ma de by a paper in Georgia Dickens’ works alone cost from eight to twelve dollars and ow you have an opportunity to get them for a trifle. Your Iso get the best country weekly in Georgia Hfii! m rosam .raw® %IU li ■j&f. b h 111 f Fora volDKES - M 9 v: *$§ V:ytTftll V. Tx 1 . 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Tin Tjennrfov.t >T*.* ^ompleto ntni exlmcsfire, and r* |U* »• «‘rh •*f \ rHOflowImw* to litrmern nudMockroeu. Vt : .i li't'ViCViSl r.fhw l» glrm »he most useful hint* ••4'/cr«*.<r*«*r*il of and fruits, u* gaibured jfrc-t '4 Ot! cxvfi .fuT of tiff Tit/iit jucowiful horticulturist*, A RCBITbV ’Tt UK* DW*n« nndplan*for houftes.cottage*, y, (< rh< ntn-i vUi'-r uaib u diugs, with valuable 6ugge*ti<jua to th fy< iaff adlug t«» hr.lid. Jf!t’.l'Y*!?’'£!( This ern-k , tried , . *n<l tested recipes . (■ vj «-ry itMHgi.re ld-dish for t>reakfafit, autiier and tea. ; %)'.i heiJig worth n»ore than niue wutlii of j tue vk tevik-s ►old; ulm-;sr, initumcrnhle It ltd*, help* and *itg- I • i/wa*> , Ye*p. r«; dewjpisand ►uggestiMis f‘ ,r maV.iug j attiful iL’i ff. fi-i riic wlemmeut of home, in needle- j wgtr, onliv.i i *ery. <■<«.; 1i vat* Oft ttoriculture, telling howto he i *u<r%* *••»{. >1 with si.ll *t»e i - arious|dtuttH: toilet hiutr, tell ling how /o ji;w«. vj ui.4 lintviifj' tit# complexion, Lands, lee tit, hair, J vtc. i h.'.2i',- »Khr»»«h Mil* w'll he sared : i. ; u.« | -rs***’••»» »*vr« vt *'*s .It ^-il-how I* curt- hr Mmple t*‘..»>as Y»*iiixD-i. . nv4»vnb<i; in every household.«-vcry j thst.U««xuU'.v. forming r /ai» ' w w.dif.tl the rafcu* <*t wiwch lu wit bftuie can IVTIAYMV AMI M^'OVEUr. R*m«r!c«Mr inter- ( , ff <**.*.(■;.,MW.-. <,< great i.itr.iiioMs in-duMit-f! tho. S iwm -tvr >;<<■ » i:\oerr,*i I.Ujm. * be TeViA'»i«-, U«c 7r|* Writrr, tb« Type ' y -l* w. Ynibx . .V .-writ, %;«•* «’ari..v* " r Cnr*. Kafor.nl -.-..I..:... ih« iriiu. M'>nuu,iiw, rle..«v.. Tmve : ... ■■ r-ofi'-Hr ion-.rH.-a <t ...o I3f». ’• » r *' f «*• T.rXL’lT^1’.^*.^ V “* a*;<£ v - i'« : si ;.r,“;: R AkT^ , U* Ft T* t. r-’V vo-k t•» )>**!• v**ry«lar With »«srar<l t rarionn s »» r 4 th*4rdGJyU«iet*ilvl pursuit., asrf r ‘ “ -• •> ™t.cn. by tb-farm-r •».} ImnwwiJoU . c uu * >vA Gauer««i4ertiuair/S07iDsuveUra. These han {some ami unsut Looks and T ! itS PAPER ©n<e year ior only One Dollar and filfy cents. nowr. or if you are arleady taking it renew In Twelve Large ¥ete&e& Which we Offer with a Year’s Sub ccr'-prion to this Paper for a Trifle More than Our Regular Subscription. Price. Wishing daring to largely the lucres six bo months, the circulation have of tifc paper next we ut&dtt arrangements with a. New York publishes; house whereby we are enabled to offer as » premium (/* oar subscribers a Set of tfee Works of diaries Dlefc enr>, in Twelve Laige iui<l Hamtiwcrea Volumes, with trifle a year’s than subscription regular to thia paper, for a more our sub¬ scription price. Our great offer to subscr ibers eclipses any ever heretofore made. Oiartee Dickens was the greatest novelist who ever, lived. No author before or since his time ha®, won the fame that he achieved, and his work* HIP are even more popular to-day than during his lifetime. They abound in wit, humor, Up? ' " ' pathos, vivid descriptions masterly delineation^ oi places and of character, incidents, thrilling and skillfully wrought No homeehonld; plots. Each book is intensely interesting. he withont a set of these great and remark¬ able works. Not to have read them is to bo., far behind tho age in which wo live. 1 Tho¬ se t of Dickons’ works which we offer aa a, BARMABY RtJDCE AMO CHRISTMAS STORIES OLIVER TWIST AMD GREAT EXPEC¬ TATIONS, CURIOSITY . THE OLD ©HOP AM» THE UWCOfWWlERCJAL TRVP.R.E51, A TALE OF TWO CSTIE;.-, HARO TIMES AMD THE MYSTERY OF EDWIN DROOO. A Croat Mi Wonderfgsl Werir, CdN-filKIKO 2,176 Pago, 620 BfMftTlflasIratiBtsI In every and cecnpnlS.m pmniml or utility walk in f twenty life. Yii.i uolimnr «t> «t»ncu < volumes ar« the oomprised work with in knowledge tlieee of *mA m» replete In every ©„.»>*. t..wg.ru.-dt.e»virt..insoM_ only hrtelly For want, of »,mce wo can thecoatcntscC eoiumeP iz I (.1 .mil portion of tfeje enaC Chives*, Jap*n«*«*, the people or TttAU, Africa. Vtirnhy Iceland. !l«n..*o, Rurmah, lltf Swiflw i K iflmria, Turtarr, Cashnw-ro himI Tunis Turn*, MexicuuK.fouih AinenfiMifi. /nieriew iiiiiva.t;»,fc?>y titni*. Kinimw. AbvnKttnuus, Norv;trnittf«, 8pa«i«*fO. /tali.ms Greeks, RuwiMii', Sllierhuik, AfichatiH. t cnni’ut« MorIo»p, Au»*rnli«ns, liulgarian*, Sicilian*, etc ,«rc. .V ANUPAffl'ITlfKSw In th’n great work I* vto*<k au*l iUum rated tho art* u»<! i*<N***t* of t*iunnt t It«okhlii4ift«r t woo*I engraving, I|fli»jfr.»phv, |.bt>^i/Ap . a**** pfioiiff, |*iano ntnUJug, watch making. chm.v |i*p*r rfuiw-fy. •»«*>«*• Urn n«fHifacfurc of irJIk. iron, p* leather. «t«reh, wall V uper. tnrpemin^ car**, t****** «»tW mnmri*. *avvlt>t*s I**'*, wiil bo peum'*, found peculiarly wwd**<, fctpl «a>*»? au4 tlilnifx, all of whicU la<trscfire. FOKKIGN 1‘ROHCCTP* rntcnwtfm?de Marketer vrlpti«tn«, C‘*Wjv tra‘C'1, of til* culture amt hemp, preparation f«dr rftv. t r* % ct<»Y«r chocolate, cotton, fl -x. sugar, iiunutff*, w ginger, CMiuamon, ftlUpicp. pepper, aocnanttfa. ptueavp^w, ha« atme, prune*, dines, raisin*, fl««, rdire*. fudf- •ra^ber, gc/ta, p<*rcha, cork, camphor, castor o»I, tapioca, etc., cf«. NATI’KAIi HOT^RV. Illustration*,of IntcreatSug au«l dejcripiion^, ucconiptuiled by much ottrtoua lukKanttiok. rcgacti birtift. Ashes and insect*. tritU ing their life and habits. F.Afr. Th» Mimmotii rrcir>TMr>ix H »Lo a complat* Inw boak.teJIlugcrertr man how he maybe ItU <»»« I aver, aai^L comfi!ntng full and con©!*© explanation* <»f the rene/ul law* afK j the l» w* of the aercral State* n;*m» ad matters which «(«• 8U hjecttolitigaiiou, * with uumerous forntaefiegai daourmubh. MININCr. Description* . , nrvt , flhiawattona of the taftdvit , <»f _ gold,silver dimiuoutis, ooat t salt, copper, Lad, xinc, Uft u&aC quicksilver 'n r ONI 1 Mb2tS OF THE SEA* Ueteln aredrt'fettV'd wwt; illustrated tlie many wonderful and heantifrl tL-tigat >it» bottom of the ocean, the plant*. Rower*, tbetia, e*/s.. t We** wtoe pearl diving, coral Rahlng, etc., etc. statistioi. ax» w~*». gI ,K, ttMt of um-MI *trt£ Iwr+ctluv, tn&<rmarlMr^ #OTJte0 f udiich f*rh*» tKipuiarion iWeSlaw* af Anwrics>n c>th*. Vvrrr ori^ 9r*-u •*« ™»puintionofthPC<<«fiuc!<t*. of and «r tlia nrlncioal onuoiri<** **f (hi* wwH.ffni'flipf the frirclfal river*. Presidential Y«i«* for year*, IVe^idfmud ('in'- si***., a««aand d«p<hof ##*»*, MUt** andonw*»s livigh* «f «***»*, lnc<«notf(f« of animal* and. r*J«x'f»y of h-i-.n t ,>i N>w cuivorM York, an<l to important *frfiC«nr#‘*, pointJr Rmjft yv.-Vw hi r<*r» « o * f ... ^run- and pof*** 1 *^ «r iwnw X". ^ “Lfir f.W.s, fowlltar ,ir.r ft.-,-:..- A fam „ ns B -, no .i On- J. -Ur*. itu glal-tj, ioaiiag socttMUcnM of the w- toi. no.,