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PUBLISHED WEEKLY,
A. R. DODSON, Editor.
Entered nt the Buchanan l ontofflcft aa second
class mail matter.
Buchanan, Ga., May 13, 1898.
THERE’S THE DEVIL
TODAYS .
in our printing office, and we waut
to make him earn it by plenty oi
work, you see we believesn givl
ing the devil his due. Bring us all
your printing and you will help us.
We will in return help you iolhe
best and (ruickest printing at the
lowest prices.
THE TRIBUNE JOB OFFICE,
Monopoly means obey for you,
rule by the few.
The annual expense of England
for support ox the Army and navy
is $186,000,000.
Hon. A D. Hogg was elected or¬
dinary of Polk county at a special
election held for that purpose on
Wednesday of last week.
The Lord has not forgotten us
altogether. In olden times he
gave men manna; in these times
he gives us Hanna—great globe of
IT l
It is predicted by some that the
“powers that be” will not allow
Spain whipped until the bond is¬
sue is sufficient for their greedy
maw.
Old party leaders claim that
until after the primaries that a
sufficient army cannot be raised,
as all the fighting democrats are
candidates for office.
A son of the confederate gener¬
al, J. B. Hood, who was one of the
most reckless fighters in the Amer¬
ican war, has been commissioned
by the governor of Louisiana to
raise a regiment.
We have noticed it for years
that when anything arises to me-
BH 1 Q 0 the peace of the upper classes
as far as the security of their pos¬
sessions is concerned, they gener¬
ally do not hesitate to invite a
war.
We admire the man, be he dem¬
ocrat, republican or populist, that
will stand by what he believes, yea
knows to be right in the face of
all opposition. Christian (?) peo¬
ple may try to ostrazize him from
society, but he is a man all the
same-.
It is admitted by all that times
are- becoming troublous to the
upper classes. Unrest is in the
air, and is constantly acquiring
added force. What is the cause
of all this? Why, we can answer
it in a very few words. The peo¬
ple are beginning to think for them
selves.
All these*hirelkigGwh.©'are abus¬
ing the leaders of the reform
movement will learr. bofo.-e their
carcasses goes under ground to
sicked decent worms, that they
all the while being misled by
who control, and before the
comes will call on their poster¬
to vote the shackles from their
FOR .REPRESENTATIVE.
In some respects the populists
are the slowest people in the world,
They seem to want to wait too
long at every election to get their
candidates in the field.
One reason for this is that the
party is not filled up with greedy,
hungry office seekers like some
other party we have in onr mind
at this time.
It is timo the populists of Har¬
alson were casting about for a suit¬
able and proper man to represent
tfie people of the county in the
next general assembly—and we
have that man in the person of
Cul. W. R, Hutcheson, of this place.
It requires a bold, aggressive
man, full of energy and pluck, and
Col. Hutcheson fills the bill in that
respect in every particular. He is
a prominent young lawyer and a
thorough man of the people, being
born on a farm near Draketown,
in Paulding county. He is a pop¬
ulist from principle, not policy, as
populist lawyers like populist ed¬
itors have a hard pull. To make
a long story short Col, Hutcheson
is an up-to-date man on all polit¬
ical questions.
The Tribune, without the knowl¬
edge or consent of Col. Hutcheson,
presents his name to the people of
Haralson county as a suitable man
for representative, and when the
convention meets wo hope he will
receive the unanimous nomination
of our party. 8
We know the timber in this
county, and no better man can be
found. He is being urged by his
friends to enter the race for repre¬
sentative, and should he consent
to do 60 there’ll be hot times in
Haralson politics, with the final
triumph of the entire populist
ticket.
TILLMAN AND HANNA.
The lamb and the lion have lain
down together, it seems.
Just read this telegram sent out
from Washington last Saturday:
It would seem that an era of
good feeling was already upon this
country.
When the last telegram from
Dewey was read there were a num¬
ber of senators and representatives
and correspondents presont. As a
shout went up for our hero, Till¬
man and Mark Hanna who were
standing Deor clasped hands and
then embraced one another m their
excitement.
Judge Spencer R. Atkinson spoke
at the court house here last Tues-
day. He is after Allen D Candler,
because Candler says taxes cannot
be reduced without a reduction in
the school fund or pension funds,
which Candler says must not bp
touched. We think that Candler
or any other man is correct when
he says the school or pension ap¬
propriations must not be interfer¬
ed with. Judge Atkinson says
there are millions of dollars, worth
of bonds and other invisible prop¬
erty that should be taxed, and we
think he is correct, but he failed
to show any method by which this
property could be made to appear
on the tax books. The judge may
be elected governor on this scheme,
but we have no idea that he will
lower taxes a thouseuth part of a
eent r if he is elec ted.-
WAR LESSON.
In this war taxes will be raised,
bonds issued, blood flow and wid¬
ows and orphans be made by the
thousands.
It will be worth all this if the
mudsillers in the United States
have their ey9s opened by it to
the need of reform at home to pre¬
vent a revolution. It must teach
them how easy a handful of poli¬
ticians can bring blood and plun¬
der on a people when the people
themselves have no direct vote.
The power of the people as now
exercised is not worth a pinch of
snuff. If we be freemen let’s as¬
sert our rights I These politicians
as a rale will keep out of the war
and when the war is over they will
own both the United States and
Cuban bonds.
They will run for office on the
strength of party collars and drive
the members of the office rings to
repudiate them. If they are de¬
feated they will laugh at the fool
voters aud go to New York, Wash¬
ington city or Europe to spend the
proceeds of their Wall street po¬
litical speculations, and of their
Cuban and United States bonds.
War may cause the common
people to rise up against this class
of politicians, and against a gov¬
ernment or an oligarchy.
It may force the people to a hog.
hominy and home industry basis.
It may force the people in their
homes and in their shops to a dis¬
cussion of the sham politics and
government put off on them.
In Toxas it will teach the pec -
pie to get down to a cash basis
and stay there, and to let these
eastern insurance agents and light¬
ning rod and patent right agents
pass by on the other side.
It may put the farmer where he
cannot buy new farm implements
every year, and this will teach
him the importance of taking care
of his farm tools aud machinery
and painting what he has on hand.
It may force the farmer to learn
to do without the country mer¬
chant’s credit.
If the war should last four or
five years the farmer who comes
out of it alive will know a whole
lot and have more nerve to rise up
against dude politicians who want
to run the country on a party ba¬
sis of irresponsibility.
As matters now stand no one can
blame the little university politi¬
cians for having a very poor opin¬
ion of the average farmer or labor¬
er who votes as he is told.
As matters stand today he is the
tool of the politicians and is voted
by the county ring or railroad
campaign fund.—Texas Mercury.
If the referendum were in force
the jingo politicians and newspa¬
pers could not have declared war
without a vote of the people who
have to do the fighting and foot
the bills for carrying it out. This
vote could have been ordered and
the election held thirty days ago.
Now there is to be a bond issue of
six hundred millions of dollars
without allowing the people to
have any say in it. The congress¬
men who have precipitated this
trouble were not elected either to
declare war or issue bonds. If
there is any one thing tke average
Allgood
Temple, Georgia.
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democrat hates, it is any real pow¬
er in the people, or any real prac¬
tical relief for the people from cor¬
porate power. Every democratic
politician wants to be a czar.—
Mercury.
Facts
made from
Fiction
Here’s a story of the day—of the hour
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entertaining, gloomy paragraph in to all. finis
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THE
CO-OPOLITAN
A Story of the Co-operative
Commonwealth of
Idaho
BY zebina forbusu
Charles H. Chicago Kerr Be Company
1898
FAC-aiMILC OF TITLE PAG*
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PROFESSIONAL.
W R HUTCHESON
Attor ney-at-Law,
Buchanan, - Georgia
Will practice :in all the State Courts.
Collections a specialty Office in 0r-,<
dinary’s room in CGUit house.
J. S. ItIDGDILL,
Attorney-at>Law,
BUCHANAN, .• - GA .
AVill practice In all Slate .Courts.
All iMiNincsK entrusted to leiiu will
receive prompt and careful atten¬
tion. Wfflcc in Court House.
Felix N. Cobb,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
Carrollton, Ga.
Practice in Superior Court of Har¬
alson county, and U. S. district
and circuit courts, Atlanta, Ga
JOE LASSITER,
THE BARBER,
First Hoorn, Up Stairs Over
imUti STORK.
Work .Wally and Promptly Done.
C. It. & S It. It,
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S O. Addison, Agent,
Buchanan, Ga,
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