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Slate of Dade-News.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
BEN T. BROCK. Publisher
Terms SI.OO per v< wv
EntUred at the postoftiee in Trenton, Ga., a.
second class mail matter.
FRIDAY, SEPT, lltb, 1891
WELL SAID!
Alliancemen Outof the
Ring,
The following resolutioi e passed
by the anti-sub-treasury conven
tion which met at Ft. Worth, Tex.,
is refreshing, coming as it does
from men who have held high of
fices in the alliance and who went
€>
into the organization in good faith
and with the belief that the origi
nal purposes as declared in the al
liance constitution would never be
departed from.
These gentlemen speak like hon
est alliancemen, and we are with
them. . hey are on our line ex
actly, and we will fight it out if it
takes all summer:
RESOLUTIONS.
We, the sub-treasury members
of the National Farmers’ Alliance
and Industrial Union, recognizing
the grave and responsible duties
resting upon us as farmers and cit
izens and members of our beloved
order, the Farmers Alliance, here
by present for the careful consid
eration of our brother alliance far
mers the following preamble and
resolutions.
Whereas, the Farmers Alliance
has been organized to the end that
its members might become educa
ted in the science of economical
government, and that we might be
come more united in our action,
having been divided through th|*
influences of the war, while we
have ever been united in in
est: and
Wheren.fi, our beloved order, the
Farmers alliance was founded for
the express purpose to set forth in.
our constitution to bring about
above most important results, and
that this education and union
should be brought about in a
strictly non-partisan sense and
manner; and
Whereas, we declare to the
world in our constitution that the
alliance would ever advocate
“equal rights to all and special fa
vors to none; and
Whereas, we declared to the
world through the alliance that we
would make no war upon auv of
the legitimate interested' our coun
try ; and
Whereas, we were assured when
wo entered the organization that
no one should be ostracised for op
inion’s sake, and refused admit
tance into or turned out of the or
der on account of any belief he
might hold on political questions;
and
Whereas, we felt assured that
this organizat ion would be direct
ed and controlled bv farmers, who
were honest men and who would
labor to unite the farmers of our
common countr • who wore divided
by the war; and .. v *
Whereas we 'how ft rid that
purposes and >hj -rrs of' the ouder*
have been and -Outed and' the organ*
ization deflected and turned fjorr*
its original purpos" ai'll* iiiteu.tiod
in the following lna.iywr and wavs :
1. By violating tin plainest
* t
principles and declavafio s (V of u
constitution, By ' npyrv‘;t \ :o i
declaration in fa vim- of }.
tivasury and land" 'hviu schemes
and the govcrnnien; .ownership 61
railroads.
2. By debarring persons from
*- and .
m *mbership and offiw. for opinioqs
sake.
3. By pujjitrg, in-n i;)\- irnpori
ant offices and .•■•ping them
who are known an 1 have prytiffcj
themselves I'o hear dk-h“:,< >t, merely
nary and corrupt, and have con
tinued them in such offices.
4. By fa’siy and maliciouslv
denoauci.ig theju, and hones! : v
tidicfscir : Tr- . 'Sfcfrtfttivee-ot 'um i>.<•-
; ple ; who h aye. been elected 1< s<-rve
in public trust;'although tin 1 hou->
, -ty and fidelity of such public
j servants have proved bv long
! and fntftful service.
h t Bv trying to direct and turn
organizations ot the farmers
and labors of our land from one of
the greatest curses of the age—the
protective tariff system—and to
commit them to the national curse
of class legislation.
6. By placing in the highest of
ficial positions of our National and
State orders men who are not far
mers, nor have any interest in far
ming, but whose only interest and
ambition is to keep the farmers in
the depressed condition they are
now, to the end they may draw
their salaries from them, knowing
that the depression of the farming
ciass is necessary to keep up an
organization of this character.
7. By private individuals in
the alliance through corrupt and
mercenary motives, buying up the
state and national official organs
of our order, thereby contralizing
the power of this organization and
that of the millions of farmers in
it for tne purpose of the personal
aggrandizement and political am
bition and corrupt ends of these
men. *
8. By changing our order from
its non partisan character into a
partisan body, by applying parti
san politioal tests to membership
and office holding in our orde.u
Resolved, That we denounce the
sub-treasury and land-loan scheme
and government ownership of rail
roads as violations of the first prin
ciples ®f good government, as pa
ternal in their character, as cen
tralizing in their tendencies, and
if cracted into law would create
such a horde of national office hol
ders as would; fasten the clutches
of the party in power upon the
throats of the people so strongly
that the voices of honest, patriotic
citizens would no longer be heard
,in the control pi governmental af
fairs.
W denounce C. W. Ma
cVidfeamf hie'corrupt methods, to-
the acts of his tools and
henchmen, as being a disgrace to
brder and stench in the nos
trills of all honest meli who know i
of their corruption and villainly
and thu Doint out to the order bv
' a T / „ : y
continuing such men as this in
power they are enabled, by betray
ing us and our interests, to most
effectually chain us to the jugger
naut cars of monopoly.
We further demand that those
men who are not farmers be remov
ed from the national and state of
fices of our order, and that none
but those who have their interest
in farming be allowed to fill such :
places, to the end that the legisla-'
ture of our government may know
that when the alliance speaks it is
the voice of the tarmers and labor
ers of our country, instead of the
wish of some paid tool of monopo
ly and corruption. We now ap-!
peal to all honest members of the j
alliance throughout the United i
States in behalf of the poor and
oppressed ot our land whom these
base men have betrayed, in the
name of our wives and children
who must be relieved* if at all, by
the united action of the farmers of
this country, in the name of good,
government, to uhite J wi f h us in
puttingjdQh this common enemy
and disgrace of our order—to this
end we most earnestly recommend
(hat 'the brother alliancemeu of
r he United fHates would ineet in
auonal convention at St. Louis
on the third Tuesday of Septem
ber, 1891.
- Dr. \V. B Morrow,
R. C. Bragg,
David Bouist,
T. M. Smith,
C. C. Bell, ’ •
R. N. Weister,
M. D. Bumey,
D. McCcnuingham,
Will L. Sargent,
J. C. Easterling,
A. F. Landen,
I.S. H ,k
W. S. McAiii. it r,
Committee.
f liow many Alliance statesmen
i Jirc who can run u turrovv . —-
I Atlanta Herald.
Don't know; Putt if .here is a
! vacant office they ftfi wan; to ‘run
| frjivher.
v- - N
tcl low up ins
| mind to seek popularity with the
party of the third part, he should
look for a good place upon which
to alight when the great fall
comes.
When we say “sub-treasury or
som tiling belter” do we mean
b' it r for the country or bettei
for at- of citizens of the coun
try.
The following suggestive little
paragraph is hand ad us from an
old “vet”: “Why all this silly
talk about a soldiers’ home since
our gallant Gordan has been pro
vided for all the while.”
It is an avowed principal of the
alliance to educate its members in
the principles of economistic gov
ernment, but. educate does not
mean for the honest and unsus
pecting allianceman to op.-n his
mouth and swallow every false
doctiine taught by false leaders.
If every member of the alliance
would think for himself and act
accordingly the Farmers alliance
would he a power for good in (lie
land.
A New Law-
Hon. G. W. M. Tatum pas ed a
billet the winter session f the
legislature to require the s'at" b
pay the expense of the court f<>i
the lime consumed in the
convicts for crimes c n, ni n.
whil-- confined in the p. n:'< nil u
Last week he oollecte r and turned
over to R. I\ Majors, county treas
urer, $99.50 for the expense of
trying a convict in two cases at the
March term of thacourt befo-e the
bill was passed. The county had
been paying the expense of the
court, and the state received all of
the hire of the convicts.
Come Out.
Last nightie Debating Society
passed resolutions ineviting the
public to attei and the debate next
Thursday night. An interesting
debate is promis'd. Come out, an and
brii# your girl.
MEND YOUR OWW HOSE.
HUDSON’S
Hose Mender
MAY T t 1889.
jj Qljl THE ONLY
PRACTICAL
feS MS& * DEVICE
I
K 0 -ron
mm REPAIRING
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I mm* Just how the thing
if of/ J " -A geos and winter
msi[J . Y 7% saves its cost
Hn - y 1 over and over
'ttt again, mak
m PRICE ONLY SI.OO B.
One box containing 653 mmamm
V menders, 20 Bands, and ev
w l Plier sent pripaid to V
any address on receipt of price.
Ctr Uimci'ii WTHCTWL BI’IUNJW,
. E. HUDSON, boston, mass.
* iw’
W A pamphlet of Information
M stract of the laws,(bowing How to/tts
rfjSEL, Obtain Patents, CaTeats, Traofe i/Sffin.
Marks, Copyrights, sent free. AIMW
MUNN X CO .MT*
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J war t*aiou,
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largest
■ ica that will
• make touu
eye* snap and
*>-. ' KEEP YOU
r guessing how
'V - r can^afford
* your DEALER
- does not keep
: t ours, anxious to please, our goods sand
I Ed, L. Huntley. to us and we
-i TM. infnr-rai...uJ WILL furnish
you a Suit or Overcoat, express or mail paid,
on receipt of price. Wo will win and hold
your patronage if you try ue with an order 1
We have built up thin Immense business by
our painstaking methods, and by doing by
others as we would bo done by.
Ed. L. Huntley & 00., Style Originators.
jiyj’-Iu ordering Suits or Overcoats observe
' r strictly following rules for Eneasure
ixncnt: Breast measure, over vest, close up
under arms. Waist mcasuro. over pants. In
j side left measure, from crotch to hueL
PRICE-LIST.
HBAVY-WEIGHT CLOTHING—SPITS.
' Men’s Brown All-Wool Double and Twist
Oassimere Back or Frock Suit $9 OO
Mcu ei Fancy Black or Blue English Worst
ed Ail-Wool Sack or Frock Suits j 4 OO
Men’s Brown or Gray Velvet Finish, All-
Wool, Tricot Weave, Fine Oassimere
Back or Froek Buit 17 OO
Men’s Black or Blue English. Ail-Woo.
Corkscrew, fine worsted. Sack or Froek
j Suits 19 00
| Men's Black, Blue, Plum, Lavender or
Slate-color English Wide Wale Diagonal 1
Worsted Back or Froek Suits 24 > I
i References— First National Bank, of!
Chicago, capital 13.000.000; Continental Na- 1
j tioual Bank, of Chicago, capital £3,300,000. 1
Ed L. Huntley at Cos., Manufacturers and !
Vho.eeele Dealers in Clothing for Men. Boys I
and Children, 133 nd T-4 Market SL, Ctues<o, 1
> T li. Pest Office Box, 867.
——3 pn ' ~ZT ~
l.vj L.JS pi? •■-ft 4- r : j&s W —-=L
“ft La 1.. u &i' & :i*%# -
—SJiADB FROM FLOWERS IN THE
LAi*3 Or FLOWERS I
DCUSSAN’S
fniith
6 ‘j is? d %sl lli
In 1 os.. Sprinkler-Top Lottie.,
EACH 65 CENTS.
ALSO OUR EXTRA FIXE SPECIALTIES:
LYS EES INGAS ! SPRiHS SiSl .
LUKEAS I OABA I
IMPERIAL PIKK !
nCUSSEL iIGSE
ED£U BOUQUET!
LILY OF THE VALLEY!
All &G cents per bottle. FICCIOLA !
The most delicate and most lasting odors made.
Our trade-mark patented on every label
“ Delicate as a cobweb.
Lasting m the hills.”
DTlfyonr drirglllHt don't keep them .end
•mount to us nuil we will forward prepaid.
DOUSSAN FRENCH PERFUMERY CO* ,
4B Chartre. St., New Orlenn*. Ls.
You Must
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of using injurious paints.
U.S. GuftaPercha Paint
IS ABSOLUTELY BEST.
Afl ELASTIC
PRESERVATIVE.
Contnlng GCTI’A PERCHA and
other valuable gums com
bined with I'OUE LINSEED
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Pigments, l'eere Lead,
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anel absolutely reliable paint.
It expands and contracts with
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The best, hence cheapest for both
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Tf your dealer it unable or un
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U. S. Gutta Percha Paint Go.,
PNOVIDKNCI, H. I.
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SASH, DOORS AND BUNDS, COFFINS, FURNITURE PICKETS
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—ROUGH AND—
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We Discount Chattanooga
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\V. H. 1 o \ man, Mng’r.
Trenton, Georgia
THE NEW MODEL ,1-lALL TYPEWRITER
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DUBEOMTI 61
Fqr farming purposes the garden spot
4 ~i L* ii!].’-* !i
of north Georgia; in her mineraf resources
.' ,v. t *•;> >: i *./ ? •
unequaled by ai y section within ihe south-
ft .J* ft .?.) I m
ern mineral belt. With an abundant supply
of timber and copious streams of purest wa
ter on every hand, Dade county throw s wide
her gates and bids competition against the
world. Puzzling geologists by exposing to
view coal and iron in abundance within a
$
stones throw r of each other truly she is the
/
mineral Queen: traversed by a grand trunk
railroad and with tennessee river within easy
, j in.vj ui(j assured,
for iui tiler ina rm mon address,
c- - TrIEtNEWS,
\ ' m’YJ'ON GEORGIA
NEW f V :.'ANCE,
• •• i.rpvoSß,
HIGH SHELFJRiaiv ftR-MUL
Car. heat yov?? •
|g|i !y, HE A L’> H fcilk*., ' Ks.'T^v/
***# NOHSiCALieY! v# r' " J £X .
•ot P >!■. -... .. ..... if
•A opacity and prices 1
m| y -> _ * •>.>
** —W* Ww.j .Sansmtvij 1 K]