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C 0 ERESP 0 N 3 CTCE.
IT m:ST HAVE fiTinTIS HIM
Mu. Knnvu:— It i» remarkable L«w
mooli a little thing can annoy a big one
#nd. the more nervous ami seneiti to
big thing h? the more tlie little thing may
annoy, ft's the em«* with all liig things
.and little rates that fret them. A st-nsi
tien horse wall stamp and switch and
-bake about & very small 11 V . They touch
him in the tendercsl points. A man will
light and slap at. a mosquito vigorously ’
but why? Just because they sting so
•harpiy aud it very frequently occurs and
almost universally that little things make
tug things Writhe w ith dtseoiTjCoru
1 wrote you some time ago giving vent
to my great joy at the defeat of
and it deems that t must have stung him
<Col. Brock) considerably, for he jumped
on me and stamped and «lapod
snorted all over a place as big as the con
tinent. of Europe (one whole page of the
i'i* vxmi-M ess jinoek) all to kill our.
me. ” It seems to this court to hoar
Col. Brock in a reply by tongue or pen
that in his estimation he is the bigos?
thing known, and hie political .party ie
lit* St. Evciy tiftre that 1 have written
anything for your paper, on a political
line. Col. Brock has come out in a
article in reply an<l each time be has made
lavish use of belittleing tones with ref
•erence tome. If the old Colonel consul
ore the author of my letters so iusiguiii
v antlv small, 1 ask why does ho stamp
SO?
The two political parties are before the
whole country, and may be judged by the
people, and luy “little Bantam squeals*’
nor Col. Brock’s big stamping will not
effect the judgement very much. I
reaffirm all ,, that ,, _ 1 have , written ... . ,
* ham , it .. until 1 ,
end will stand , to am Con
vlnced , , of , error. I _ don't , want . a man, men
<n- party to enact law's , for , me who .
their place , m . office _ , by the corrupt use
and , who , will feed , ., mo from , an snap
monev
tv with . , hand ... and rob me oi ■
spoon one
niy hm-d earnings with the other, and
xkat ," is . tho „ kind , ", of a man Col. „ . Brock _ s,
politically. . „ . I that ,, , _ anti .
pai'tv is propose l
toiL submit resnectivc . to , the
our par ties
unbnbed . , judgement . , ox , the people , m .
1892., without the ot „ Dudleyism. „ . , 1
use
can’t vote with a party that , hugs to its
■
breast such , doings , . tnose . So or ,
as in
blacks of line loudly.
.Sanctum Cojutde.
A WON i! U K F I T, €A1IK£U.
Mb. Edixob:—S ome great men have,
from egotism oi other motives, written a
biographical sketch of themselves, and .1
thought a sketch of my coming about
might be not uninteresting to your nu
merous and intelligent readers.
Well, to begin I was born unto the face
of tho earth in a mountain region some¬
where between the war of 1812 and Atlan¬
ta; and i grew up in unlearned ignorance
to the advanced age of seven years, when
I was sent to school at Piuoy woods school
house just a little off the road leading
from the 4th of July to the falls of Ca
hawly. There I. made rapid advance¬
ments in education and learned to spell
nnariftibilitudiui tatilnisquey. Had the
good fortune also to get some information
ns to the switch and its virtues in moral
suasion; and one day while going there
between the spring and two o'clock I
gave a boy striped jacket, with a swamp
dug wood switch. J did that accident¬
ally, afterward I was playing on a straw
pile at a gin house between the oaney
branch and the surrender at Appomattox
aud fell off and broke my neck, and then
between the election for President and
i (re head of the creek one Sunday I and
some more boys were playing about aud
•by mistake we got to playing on a stack
,<>f fodder mul we wore it out to the binds.
J was imug for that, and a few years af¬
ter that I was going to school at fork of
the road leading from 1867 to
vilie and a rake came by oue day and
hallowed school butter and I took after
him and hurried him so that he left his
mute to escape mo aud I took his mule
and rode it back. 1. was put to death for
that. I have always been of very promi¬
nent obscurity aud very notably un¬
known. More anon.
RoA.UJ-N’b Kaljpji.
BUflH'sS MILL.
Ba S.VK.IS-M M.sWiM Tbo mea.-io s
***** struck Waco aolM. 7 'j• «*y lmw laid
their little speckled hands on L)r, Price
A - 1 .Belton, J. ,Vf. Johnson and oth
ere.
\V< had our Alliance quarterly
* ,, < f appointment but owing to the gen
cmI l>w*» for work with the farmers wo
hiw5 » v «'\v poor turnout; but. w « had a
£^0(1 time all the same. Bro. A alton
livened the best speech it lifts been our
pleasure t:o (tear in a long tints.
fftinmie Flielnutt who moved to Virni
ingham before Christmas was burn cl at
\Vaco last Thursday.
Jlro. A. I. Rush tried bis nx on bis
font some two weeks ago. He can hop
around.
The fanners have had a novo on them
solves for the past two weeks.
have beeu^lowiug every hortie and mule
in ®b® c*.»uulry and some oi them big
awkward horses that wear bonis and
around at the end like a gate.
Com is one dollar cash at Waco.
not raise some of that vegetable in
a’son, Vt e could eat it if we could
sod ik and we can r eat cotton.
There has been some corn planted
this country and some guano, but it
**<*!• come up yet 'the com I mean,
Bro. Mix. some of your
vrite long jitters and some write
onos, but Col. Brock writes the
letters in school. Begets there only
length
Ex,t.
'WwiU.e AJlLtnce N«.)«».
whereas. There was a secret cations
held at the Governors Mansion,
by AHiancemeu (so called) and
uou-Ailiancemeu; some of whom are in
engtblc . to membership in the oi-der.
uu
der pretence that it was necessarv to the
good of the order that matters be looked
into , reports investigated, etc. And,
^
Whereas, it appears to us that said eau
cus was , :iekl as a consultation occasion
to perfect _ a low laid scheme to dethrone
and destroy our noble, interesting, iu
structive and , efficient „ . State organ, The
Southern Alliance .Farmer, and to place
stigma . the life and officifcl character
a on
of our beloved, tried, true and
President, L. F. Livingston, for purposes
of their own glory. And, Whereas, we
feel that our worst enemies and most
dangerous foes have crept into our order
for political purposes. Therefore be it
resol tied:
1st. That we heartily and
ly condemn said caucus and recommend
that every officer present in said caucus
be removed from his office and (if possi
ble) every Allianceman that participated
in said caucus be expelled from the order
as a vile enemy, and that we recommend
every Allianceman in Georgia to take,
read and adhere to the doctrine
in said Southern Alliance Farmer, and
sustain President Livingston regardless
of reports, until lie goes back wi the or
der.
2nd. That those resolutions he publish
ed in Southern Alliance Farmer and Has
weh-Messengek. „
R. D. Cuandlek, Vice President.
T. A. Hctchksox, Secretary.
Viclr.’,* Floral RuWe for IKOJ.
No lover of a fine planter garden
afford to be without a copy. It is an ole
gant book of 100 pages 81-4x101-2 inches,
beautiful colored illustrations of Sunrise
Amaranth ns, Hydrangea and
Instructions for planting, cultivating-,
eic. roll lisi ot everything that can he
desired, in the way of Vegetable and
Flower Seeds, Plants, Blubs, etc. Also
full particulars regarding the cash prizes
of 61,000 and $200. The novelties have
been tested aud found worthy of eultiva
tion. We hope it will be our good luck
to see the Nellie Lewis (,’aniation and
taste the Grand Rapids Lettuce,
costs nothing because tho 10 cents you
send for it can be deducted from the
first order forwarded. We advise our
friends to secure a copy of James Tick,
headsman, Kochcster, NT. Y.
NO NEWS FROM THE WAR
r<T AtVH.'STA WKBSTKIL
I .—AT LUK I
sliu sitting in rhe meadow,
Where lhe brook leaps to the mill,
Leaning low against a poplar
Drensuingly and .still? ■
Mow with Join bauds, grave, now smiling,
Gathering now and then
ll,;1 ,a I> bor woodland dAt lmgs,
fitting as she sui 1 hat evening.
Trying to feel tl:;rf sweet same
AY ho was waiting me and knew u u,
Feel as w hen i came.
Fee! again the strange shy newness,
The betrothing one first, kiss?
Ob, iny own, you are remembering
In an hour like this!
II.—IN TUN MEAlMtW.
Here, here it wae be made nw promise
him.
He stood beneath that branch; hove was
bis scat.
Just where tho bole's shade makes the
sunlights dim.
Beside me, at my fact.
Ab< sin(;( , ^ many times v’c ; l!V yo rkt
here’:
And who can iell when tbai shall be
again? >
love* my love.—Hut wlmt have i to
fear?
Could prayers like mine be vain?
He will not fall mj hero: he will come
Bringing ripe honors more to honor me:
j j 0 will come scatheless back, and tell
bis home _
He helped to keep it free.
O love, I was ko proud of you before!
How can I be so much, much
now?
a nd how can l grow prouder more and
more?
Ah, but my heart knows how
n.—Fttost a svkcial u»aBK8i'..«sw«K T ! s -
LETTBK.
*>
And still uo nows to matter. Fights
each day,
Hundreds of killed and wounded;
we wait
This great iiupeudiug battle, winch they
say,
will be more terrible even than the late,
It must come soon; to-morrow it
be.
.Vow. since 1 can toll nothing, let me
give
'^ n incident, merely to make y ou see
How near to death all of us here
live.
This morning, on my chosen -lope, from
whence
My watch, i thought, was safe, 1 shape.
ed to see '
A young and stalwart captain leap a
fence
To pluck a cyclamen, not-far from me;
Which made me note his face; this
noon
On that same slope l saw his body lie
Among a dozen. Well, you may look
soon
For tidings of some moment..
good-bye.
.
Wo publish the above poetry by re¬
quest.—[.E i>.
OF INTEREST to wbjituics.
A i.»i>c>v saving investment ?nJt*pen<ml>le
to all who Write,
Of the many valuable improvements
which h:iv ‘ ! been n " vJe 1,1
pens « great part are due to the skill and
persistence of Mr. f.. E. Dunlap, of
ton. who, as a pit neer in tins business,
has spent the lasi decade iu perfecting
the fountain pen that beats his
The latest perfected i.nvenfton is the Dun
lap Double-feed Pen, and in thin very
double-feed lies the secret of its success.
tiSwUl not
si ble, but a joy and blessing as long as
lifo lasts. It is guaranteed to write in-
8taDt *. r * an ^ under all eircomstanees. To
introduce i! among the readers of this pa
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time only, to send it by return ‘mafl
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By posting a letter inctoeiag »two-e§ut
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Washington street, Boston, Mass., you
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list and oirculer. tailing you how to make
$ > P wr
*
Am 'POCStoCF AURA STAC
Co Tublttui \MOtia
anff MRJSOB BOOK
advertising BJW> WS'S WtOlff BITTER#
the ixset Tonic, glv*n away at L‘mg and
general stores. Appty at once*
WHEN YOU LAY
This paper down please place it with mj advertisement on top.
Y.m sw» I always expect to be at- rbe top. and trust \.yu will nutdw me I hi*.
sligtn favor. T
IN ANY CASE
yon want to bny
SUGAR. COFFEE,
MEAT. FLOUR.
SHOES. IIATS.
Groceries o a nd Dry Goods
Call orL
... ■ H. N. STEWART,
BUCHANAN, GA.
r*
«
MILLINERY!
I wish to call the attention of my lady friends to the fnc
that! have just received a nice line of
# HAT » TRIMMING, ^ RIBBONS, ! LACES ? ETC.. «
1 have hats worth from. 25 cents to $3.00. Call in and see
me before buying elsewhere.
Mrs. L. P. M’Kissack.
BUCHANAN. GEORGIA.
„
CAMPBELL’S
HARDWARE! m
Cedartown, Georgia.
POCKET ill COMPELTE
AND Stock of Stoves
TABLE and
CUTLERY TINWARE.
•~5
wm •L- .. mi ■I'
guns a y o amsu. at in on at lowest rmcEs.
Z$~Wi‘. would call your special attention to our lino of Cooking Stoves its b«t»g
heid in theniaike*. Also, Polo and It'ood Heaters.
TIN SHOP.
2;.^ Spouting. Booling and ali kinds of Repariug, CHEAT'’!
> .
.■•* MTM am
1 V,.
i> ■ !•:
K
> I
• , »■ . ,
- thsbist
Vl fPlfli DiHQ L WlCflif llfi|lUll# SttSSfltf V
9 it
A 580 g'
-• - A
"F? O »■*■! A T*^ __ In •' lT^ A ’PJ'TPPl V Mb V • *
'< :;.V
.
l
ITr JjBjg-jjjg ^kH FARMWAGON
7MK MARKET
Send for Catalogue and Price List.
'w \ .
■. ■»:- T Wagos Co.,
— - ' X* .. y* .. . , .BACINE. WIB.