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THE TRIBUNE ’
.«• — .
PUBLISIIED WEEKLY
A. li. DODSON, Editor.
Filtered at Die Knclianan l’ostofllce a* second
class mall matter.
Buchanan, Oa., June 3, 1898.
iTHEKE'S the devil
TO PAY«®
in our printing office, and we want
to make him earn it by plenty o'
work. You see we believe in giv! ai!
ing the devil bis due. Bring us
your printing and you will help us.
We will in return help you to ihe
best and quickest printing at the
lowest prices.
THE TRIBUNE JOB OFFICE,)
ANNOUNCUMENT.
In resiiouse to tlio icejnests of my friends 1
Will make the race for tlic State Senate from
this the instil Senatorial district. I ask the sup¬
port of the voters of Polk. Paulding and Haral¬
son, and pledge myself, if elected, to render the
)*uup!e, of this district and state, the beat ser¬
vice in my power. .John 1. Fcllwooii.
Relegate the traitors to the rear,
The populists of Gordon county
are getting in line for the coming
fight.
It is Tiot so much the language
we use that the hireling object to
as it is the application. It makes
’em twist their tails like fly time
and no mistake,
The populists of Arkansas held
their state convention in Little
Rock last Tuesday and nominated
a middle of the road ticket, head-
ed by W. S. Morgan, one of the
brainiest men in the party.
The Tiiibuxe insists that the
honest people of Georgia should,
not allow the excitement about
the war with Spain to draw their
attention away from the organized
plunderers here at home. We
should allow nothing to abate our
ardor in the fight we are making
against iniquitous legislation.
Strange as it may appear, nine
out of ten of the men now rusli-
kig.to the front to defend the hon¬
or of the American flag, have not
a foot of land they can call their
own, and many of them not a
month’s rations ahead for those
dependent upon them It is a
rich man’s w ar and a poor man’s
fight, just as it always has been.
Will laboring men never learn their
duty?
Populists should* not permit
their minds to grow torpid in old
ago. Bright, clear intellects and
firm hearts were never more need¬
ed than now. They should not
permit the war spirit to divert
them in the slightest from the
plain duties which lje before them.
We have dangers at home to fight
far more threatening in character
than any that at present beset us
abroad.
-The Gordon Bounty populists
met in convention at Colhounlast
Saturday and nominated a full
county ticket, as follows: For the
legislature, J. J, Griffin ; sheriff,
C. L. Bums; clerk superior court,
II, P, Barrett; tax collector, J.II.
Barton ; tax receiver, J II Austin;
coroner, R. B. Bray; surveyor, T;
P. Smith; county commissioners,
E. C. Anderson and J. C. ITutV-
sti-tler. j
Cl The two FoIIowinjiliaiis Contains the Most Horse Sense?
THK “FOOL” PWOPLK’s PLAN.
Issue $500,000,000 of non-inter¬
est bearing treasury notes—green¬
backs—based on the ^flff^faith of
the United States, In denomina¬
tions of $i, $2, $5, 810 and $20, a
full legal tender in the payment
of all debts, the same as gold, to
lie put in circulation by paying
them to all the employes of the
government for services and for
materials, and redeem them in
payment of all taxes due the gov¬
ernment.
SPIRIT OF REFORM.
Is the laborer worthy of his hire?
Has ho a right to the wealth pro¬
duced by Ins physical exertion?
If he has such a right and it is de¬
nied him, where shall ho look for
the remedy? The greatest good
the greatest number is as perfect
precept today as when first
ed forth on the banners of a
democracy, which planted
standard on Bunker Ilill a
ry ago. We are told that it is
perative if we desire to enjoy
full blessings of life, that
accumulation and the power
e.ul of aggrevated wealth shall be
prevented. The demand is evi¬
dence sufficient that the power of
appropriation is an ever present
evil with us, and en joyed by others
than ourselves,
It was the hope of the fathers.
when framing the constitution,
that they had built upon a sure
foundation. Have the results
justified their expectations? Can
it be said that the men who P ro *
duce the wealth, which others, and
not they, enjoy, are really free men?
Or is political freedom compatible
with industrial slavery? To secure
the workers the full enjoyment of
the wealth they create, is a noble
work, and populist papers should
have the support instead of the
ridicule, of all ministers of the
gospel in securing this end.
To enable men to share equally
and according to their merits in
the gains and honors of advancing
civilization, lias been the hope of
every age.
“Knowledge is power,” but that
depends. Certainly that the knowl¬
edge that labor is the creator of all
wealth has not enabled the slave
of toil to lift himself above the
difficulties which threaten to en¬
gulf him; and metaphysics is a
poor thing for mutton. Long-
winded disquisitions on the law of
rent, wages and interest are not
calculated to solve any near prob¬
lems for the workers, And, as lias
been very aptly said, taking the
social machine apart, simply to
name its component parts were
much like finalizing the apple, that
the schoolboy may know what lie
is eating. What the toiler wants
to know, is the way to the orchard,
so that he may fill his “pod” with
full ripe fruit. The toiler asks for
dumplings and is given an essay
on digestion, the eosayists, the
while, taking not into account the
fact that it takes dumplings to
move the digestive organs.
Then what aro we to gather from
this? Simply that as practical,
thinking men, we must meet the
first problems nearest us, and leave
tlvwy to the special ists, while we
THK “\VI 8 JC” BAXKEh’s PLAN.
issue $ 500 , 000,000 of interest
bearing treasury notes—gold bonds
—based on the /fJ9**faith of the
United States, in denominations of
$500 and upward, to he absorbed
by the bankers, placed in their
iron safes, and quarterly (in ad¬
vance) draw from the people of
the United States millions of dol-
lars’ worth of the products of their
labor to purchase gold coin from
the bankers to pay interest to the
i bankers on the bonds.
succor ourselves with fact alone
Along this line lies safety and the
solution of many perplexing ques-
1 tions pending a settlement. The
Omaha platform offers a practical
remedy for every ill from which
the body politic suffers. It stands
as a beacon light to the storm-
tossed mariner to steer the ship of
state clear of the shoals and into
the port of safety, and points the
way to a new and brighter day.
Its principles are as lofty as the
ijftars and as lasting as time.
NOTICE, POPULISTS!
I request that every chairman
in each militia disti’ct in the
county call a meeting of their dis¬
tricts on the second Saturday in
June, or as soon thereafter as pos¬
sible, and report, the same to me.
J. H. Mizk, Chairman.
A REFORMER’S REWARD
The following from the New
York Journal is strongly sugges¬
tive of the character of reward
that awaits the labors of the true
reformer. His end in all cases
may not be death by suicide, but
m all probability will be death
through the slow process of starva¬
tion. For a prophet even in these
times is never known in liis own
country. ‘There is pathos,” says
the paper, “and a warning in the
fate of the man William Hanson,
who met a self-inliicted death last
Monday. He was not old, as the
generation goes. At sixty-five
men rule great nations, accomp¬
lish great things in literature,
in science or art, many make fort¬
unes, do almost anything .that is
done in the lives ot middle-aged
men. He was poor, yes; but he
had brains and a trade. Ills vo¬
cation was that of a skilled watch¬
maker; his avocation that of a
student of the industrial and so¬ j
cial conditions of his fellow-be- |
i
mgs.
“The'latter phase of his energy
round manifestation . addresses
m
before thoughtful and respectable
societies. ... 7 Living . . godly, ,, right- . .,
a
eons and sober life, giving thought
to his neighbor as himself, ponder-
mg over the problems of poverty
and of wealth, this old man seems J
tc have found his heart and mind
diverted from selfish interests, and
yet to have dropped lower and
lower m the social scale—asmoas-
ured by income—until with sud-
den despair he took himself out of'
the world altogether.
“What is the moral? Is the |
;
1
selfish, unthinking ° man onlv, * 7 to
live and thrive? . And if so, ini
what respect ivill the civilized i
world differ from the jungle?”
i
I
The way to secure reform is to
co-operate with that party which
is pledged te reform.
MANLY VIGOR
RESTORED in young, old or mitfclle-ag-ed men. Night
| osses an£ j drains cease at once. Lost manhood atro=
phy, undevelopment and weaknesses of man cured
privately, quickly and permanently by
DR. ORTON’S VITALIZERS.
successfully used for fifty years.
prfee $t, with directions and valuable instructions
on diet, drink, sleep, &c. By mail, close sealed, plain,
6 for $ 5 , with written guarantee of complete cure,
No free prescriptions, fre cures or C. O. D. fakes, io
sincere seekers w r e send our book of advice and other
valuable information free. Caton Medical Co,,
Boston, Mass. Sold by druggists throughout the
world.
—
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I EM illustrated,—not Monthly, too large dull line pages, in ♦
,8, a
! " *** ‘A _ V _Y> £=; it it. deserves One It is dollar fighting your a support. year, your io fight;— cents 1
* New Time 1 ‘ Let me take those loadsfrom your backs' a copy; sample number mailed ♦ ©
for six cents.
% T HE MEW T8SMIE, 56 Fifth Ave. 9 CHICAGO I
o ' ❖
If the present war shall involve
other nations, which will they be?
If England engages France, (as is
predicted, and we become Eng¬
land's alley, would not Russia join
France? Would not Austria and
Italy do the same? Would Ger¬
many and Japan not take* sides as
it promised to be the most advant¬
ageous to them? And would Ire¬
land enter the sisterhood of inde¬
pendent nations as Cuba has done?
Will the close of the 19th century,
like the close of the 18th, find the
whole world arrayed in two hostile
camps?—Daily Tribune.
Mr. Editor:—Please tell your
readers that the Quaker Willey
Manufacturing Co., 319 and 321
South Canal Street, Chicago, sell a
full line of high-grade household
furniture direct from the factory
at 20 to 50 per cent, lower than re-
rail prices, and wi 1 send any one a
copy of their catalogue free.
-----O- oft- - ---
TAX NOTICE.
I will bo at the following places
named below for the purpose of
receiving tax returns for the year
1898. Those failing to give in
their tax at ibis time will be sub¬
ject to double taxes:
Tallapoosa, June 6 <fc 10.
Buchanan, June 7.
Abernathy’s Mill, June 8, in the
morning.
Felton, in the evening June 8.
Stednian, June 9, morning.
XT. G. Robinson, IL T. It.
1 iirniturc from (o Fire-
Being the only extensive nianu-
facturer of furniture in the world
selling direct froni niaker to user,
we save our customers the on or-
expenses and profits of the
jobbers and retailers. Send for
catalogue A, showing our full line
homehold furniture, at 20 to 50
per cent, under retail value.
Quaker Valley Manufacturing Co., ^
3J9 and 321 S. Canal St., Chicago.
-------
(5
“ y SEGUREO 1
S i Write for our interesting books “ Invent-
S Send or’sHclp” ro',;p;li and ‘‘How sUotoU you are swindled.”
S us a or model of your
invention or improvement and we will toil
? >’ probably 0,1 f f® e patentable. °? r opinion as-1° whether it is
p U We make a specially
JiyS«y5ftSS»!S.**“ MARION & MARION “**
PATENT SOLICITORS & EXPERTS
J \ Civil Poly technic & Mechanical School of Engineers, Engineering. Graduates Bacheloift of the in
S Applied Sciences, Laval Universiiy, Members
\ Patent Law Association, American Water Works
Association, Q. Surveyors New Association, England Water Works Assoc.
P. Assoc. Member Can,
Society of Civil Engineers.
Offices : ( Montkkal, Wasiuxoton. D. C. )
( Can.
PROFESSIONAL.
W R HUTCHESON
Altorney=at= Law,
Buchanan, Georgia
Will practice in ail the State Courts.
Collections a specialty Office in Or¬
dinary’s room in courthouse.
J. S. MDGtDILL,
Attorney=at=Law,
BUCHANAN, UA
W1H pj'si<•<!«•«' in all Nlsif*- Coiu-fs.
Ill Iminsiiosn i*vist < k <2 Lriii ^v£il
vtiroi ul uUou-
'ItiJin. in ( «nrf IKoeiso.
S. P. SHEPARD,
/TTniiNHV- at-i.avv And Heal Kst'. ti' Afront.
Hill i>i actin' ill the n lilts of the staff;
will negnti ite land sales, make abstracts, ex¬
amine titles, St:.
Felix N. Cobb,
ATTORXEY-A I-LAW,
Carrollton, Ga.
|® l “l > ra<!ti«:e in Superior Court, of Haralson
county, and U. S. district and circuit courts,
A iantiuOa.
JOE LASSITER,
THE BARBER,
Firtil l{oi)iii. I |> ISkiirsOrcr
DICI U STORM:.
Work Xcr.llj unci Promptly Done.
C. It. & 8 !?. It.
(Soutn Bound) I
Lv. Chattanooga 8 : 10 , a. in,
Chicamauga. 8:44, a. m.
LaFayette, 9:12, a. in.
Irion, 9:39, a. m.
Summerville, 9:48, a. m
Rome 11 : 00 a. in.
,
Cedartown, 11:44, a. m.
Buchanan, 1 2 ;27, p. m.
Ar. Carrollton, 1 :10 p. m.
(North Bound.)
j Lv Buchanan, Carrollton, 2:24 1:40, p. m.
“
Cedartown, 3:07
Rome, 3:50
Summerville, 5:03 “
Trion, 5:1-2 a
LaFayette, 5:39
Chicamauga, (>:07
0 :-!0 “
S °- Addison, Agent,
Buchanan, Ga,
PATENTS
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and all Cat-
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POun Office isoppogite U.s. Patent office**
Jand 4remote Wc from can secure Washington. patent in less time than those t J
Seild model, drawing or photo., with descrip-,
, tion. We advise, if patentable
( .charge. Our fee or not, free of
not duo till patent is secured. !
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# sent
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> 0 ?P. Patfwt Office, Washington, D. C.