Newspaper Page Text
splits (Jo. journal •
---■ "*
Oilci–l Pipci Of ill Officers Of Piki County
Subscription: 1 Year, $1.00; 6 Months. $ .50
OturnU ST ib» poMofficH 111 Zehttlop a- second
i-.lMHimil matter.
ZfiBifbON, (is. May 30 , 1902.
-.....—
SIDNEY k. GREEN, Editor,
.........—
OUR Si ATE TICKET
For Governor,
■ , J, M. TERRELL, of Meriwether.
For Secretary of Slate,
PHJLlP COOK, of Lee.
For Comptrolle-.G'.'tterai,
W. A. YVKIGIIT. -if ltiebmond.
For Treasurer,
It. R. FA HA', of Bibb.
For Cominissiiei of Agriculture,
O. IT 8 IK YENS, of Spalding.
For School Uomtnisrlmier,
VV. it. MEKrtl fT, of/.owurles.
For Congiessinaii,
V. h. BARTLETT, of Uibb.
♦ A
A PEACH IN THE LEGISLATURE.
Editor Stov-ill docs not let fit®
fact lhat be is a ciinilidu e lor the leg
Mature in CJtMhuni rliiepi his mind
Jroiii more pleasant ionics. But may
be he bud iu mind, us wo certainly
have, wlm; a |ieu:h du re will be in
the Georgia H.-sembiv when t o gd»
there, at the time he wrote this
editnral:
“The Gciwiri |ipseh 1 ms f.r.ived.
Something ivsembnug do E lierta
has reached '"’aViinnah. Hi is tnenns
that summer is near Whatever else
may happen, no one accepts the ad
vance 1)1 I lie season noli) tile pearl)
comes in unit take- its place among
the string Mans and early potatoes,
Strawberries suggest early epiiig.
They are the red flags of the advance
truiu to led that there are others be
hind. The watermelon is the pro
duct of an »{>ulent ne«*t)n, ii is reck
ing with succulence end holds in 1 Im
generous spin-re 1 lie supreme rich
ness of the jour
“But the pencil, which conn s all
robed in buff and crimson, the royal
colors of ttie fruitful year, menne
that summer has (T ne its beet; HM
there can tie no improvement under
the sun and sia»; tin greater prize
infield or orchard and that no otf r
lug for lunch or larder ran overtop
it, Georgia ts a pcmchtnukuig .State,
Nowhere else on this earth can it b •
produced hi such excellence or vari
ety. ‘‘The old red hills,“ furrowed
with ravines and (ringed with pine
and sedge,wire now rich with cohorts
ot tho peach king, nod ‘in the lealy
month ot June* they scatter with
royal haud the ripe souvenirs ot the
summer’s coronation.
“The peach is here in spile d all
predictions to the contrary . The ice
fiend drew Ins,glacier blade and
threatened to a l ike her down. The
lait trust planted his late stilettoes
in the ground and tried to pierce her
to the heart even alter sue had huug
out her pink dominoes to let the
world know that she was n:i the way
rejoicing. Iu spite of spring ruins
aud coll spells, Hie Eiberta has
Come to stay until late autumn, and
then when she hutea with the other
bright aud endowments ot summer
she will be embalmed and preserved
ift memory and spirit, so that ever
iu midwinter she may spread the
gentle fragranee of n kindlier day .* 1
WILL IT BE EFFECTIVE.
From the Macon TeU'craph.
Should tlm present agitation iu fav. 1
of following tlie example of Maine and
Kansas in enacting a s rte prohibition
law against traffic in spit it' o is liquors
succeed would the law tie • It etive is a
question to be asked and ausw, rwt. VV It
t ie law, in these days . f rapid transit and
isi’roads everywhere, be able to keep
liquor out of tbe state?
Tlie supreme court r»f Iowa has r<-n e -
ed a decision, in tbe case of HanapHy vs.
the s ate, which trears caret tiy on tin
question, and which is salt pin lieall
to nullify the prohibitory laa Iu tbe six
ty counties in which it is in force in
that state, Hanaphy was the agent of an
Illinois liquor c mipsuy ami to >k or era
for the slupmem oi Itquois to cin.,in
parts of tin- state. Trie tr al coriri hetri
that ttiis vr*n« a violation < f t o Ihqn 1
law. The supreme vi u t ot the state,
with seeming reiuctan e f It consirnived
to bold that under the dectss ons i f tlie
supr me court of the TJoUt d States the
transaction came w ttdu tha definition of
interstate commerce, and lhat as such i'
could not be niaffe ponlslmb'e un 1« r the
}«w« of line, sta e. •
v-w
}o? Terrell is an easy winner.
THEY NEVER HAD A CHANCE.
Probably nine out often men post
middle Die, if aused bow" it happens
|f, B i they ura today only barely
earning their living, would tell you
thai the ‘‘never had it chance “ that
they were kepi hack, that circum
ranees tvere^gainat them, that they
had no npportuuitues, hucIi uh oilier
boys around them had, or that they
did not have the proper schooling, or
plead some similar excuse.
The probabilities are that opportu
nity did not visit e^ery one ot these
men more limn once in ibeir y ou It
or manhood, but that they did not
see that' all good chances consisted
in doing everything they undertook
cheerfully, promptly and just as
well as it could be done.
As boys they did not for k upon
every errsiid ft* a chance to ho po
lite, proiup 1 , energetic ; on every les
son in school asu foundation atone
in iheir success-elruciure . They did
not* think that the demoralizing
hours of indolence and shilileasnes#
which they were weaving into the
web of their lives would mar ttie
Mine lorever and icproaeh them
through all lime. They did not re
a'ize that tire impudent reply to
tiieir employer, the carelessness and
indifference which they slipped into
their tasks, wntt d come out as ghosts
to toe fume, to mar their happiness
and.success The; looked upon every
duty shirked, the minutes they cut
off from earh end of » day, as so
much gam. They did not realize
that these things, seemed mi inno
cent, would grow into giant defects
which would mar their future suc~
CCHS.
Tiny did rot think dial their slijw
-hod method*, their cureless attire,
and tiieir aggressive rnminers, would
lie a* great burs across the path of
■ heir future success, and keep them
brick trout the goal id their ntnbi
t iuriH.
They do not think that all these
things were the real cause ol their
lieing fixu ores nl salaries irt ten nr
fifteen dollars a week.
They did nut think that then! seem
ing trifles in y.>u 1 h would doom
them tw tie perpetual janitors, clerks,
or farm hands, and that tt w mid be
airuast impossible to maturity to out
grow the detects ot their youth.—
Selected
► « e * ..........
BRIGHT SIDE OF DISASTER.
“The Bright Side cf the Martini
que ,Disaster,“ was the subject ot *
ilisi'iuiiso delivered by the Rev. Dr.
Louis A I-lien Banks before i her con
greipttimi of the Grace M . E. church
in New York Haturdoy night.
“ Terrible a- hits been the destruc
tion and desolation In ’.Its West iu
des,’* he stud, “the mutt terrible dis
aster of its kind ever known on earth
it still has its bright side. We nave
in what Inis foilowed one of the must
delightful illustrations of the growth
ot human .sympathy and Christian
charity among men that the world
lias ever seen
“As soon as the disaster was
known streams of chanty burst forth
with a* much explosive promptness
us tins volcano upon the island of
Martinique From all civilized lands
these streams are flowing. Russia,
Germany, France,.Italy, England,
join with America in sending ship
loads of medicines and food and phy
sicians and muses to help their suf
fering fellow men.
“The beautiful thing about it all
is Dial it is done simply because
they are, human beings. Nobody asks
whether they are Catholic or Pro tee
tirnt, whether they are black or
while. They are meu and women
atm children, and they are in trouble
in danger ot starvation; that is all
we want to know. 1 *
Tire A tilin’a J urnalbas announced
it-pu p >'«• to tic .'in - n iune 1 the publi
cation . f a Sunday mornu g editi.-u. Th s
announcement entries with it the assur
ance ill it The Snndav J> urnal will iie
one of the mast complete, c 'mprehensive
and hi ra live pare-- iMiblishe 1 in Gie
• ntite eonn r- —'or it i- 11 known 1 at
w!,ate\er this ereat Soalbern ne.wsnaper
undi riakes it execu es perfedlv.
---♦ ..------
Tbe 17 -year locust has made its
appearance in Northeast Georgia,
and its shrill notes can be heard
throughotH tlie woods.
Some of the inost liberal contribu
lors to the Atlanta Journal's monkey
acd parrot page are showing signs
of paresis.—Macon Telegraph.
FALSE PRETENSES EXPOSED.
From tbe Atlanta Journal.
The country would liavo mom
for the packers who have arbitrarily
mined the pr.ee of c till-, hogs and - lump
if they had been convicted ■ f so
barefaced tnisreprosen ations of ih« latds
to put it mildly.
Their emphatic denials tliat there is
ever has been any agreement among them
t > lix the ifrietjs msko remarkable read
ing in the light ©f the recent testimony in
the United States circuit co ir! of Chita
KeputaMc men who have been in the
employ of meat packers for yeers and
are thoroughly posted as to tiieir opr-ra
tinns have made affidavits that icpre
tatives nf tire combine meet frequently
an i make prices which are wired in
cipher to tiieir agents all over the
try and are putintj effect at the
agreed upoi.
These witnesses go into
and anew that ibe prices of meat have
been raised without regard to the c-nidi
lions of the market. ud no attempt lias
been- made to refute their testimony
The pretense that the re cut
prices of meat have been due to a ah«.-r:
age in tiie supply of rattle lias been 00111 '
pletely exploded
The receipts for last week show as
compared with those of the
week, an increase of 12,900 cattle, 10,300
bogs and 1,300 sheep. As compared with
iire corresponding period , last , year there
an UiOie«iM't-f 10,100 l»ogd an«J a de
creasri of 7.000 cattle and 5.000 sheep.
The decrease in the receipts ol cattle it rid
sheep do not by any meins account for
thu gr--a' rise in prices of beef and unit
ton, and tlierc tins been a heavy Increase
in the price* of hog products in spite of
the decided iuciease of the number
hogs.
The figure.- for the y ear tip to last Sat
urday show an wieriase of 358,!!78 iu the
receipts ot hogs, as Compared with the
same period last year. Tito decrease in
tho receipts ofeatile for die same period
was only 15,929 and the decrease in the
number 01 sheep only 3,090.
The {nr kora’ combination lias attempt
ed a bold bluff which lias been duly ctdl
id and Iran put them in a worse position
than they occupied before.
GREAT CAMPAIGN ORATORS.
The Washington Fo-t make* a verj
timely remark when ii say»:
‘■The m ist effective Democratic rain
paign speeches being delivered at [in sent,
are the remarks the retail meat dealers
of tlie country are compelled to make
th ir rust aims.”
Nothing in recent were has brought
Inane to the masse* of the people the
practical effect an i possibilities of the
protective tariff as have the operations
of the la of tiu.-t.
The noting ous pi ices charged tor meal
during the last two hnou'hs have nauir
ii.ly am! justly provoked the indignation
ot ihe public and the phials of this wrath
have been poured out to a great extent
upon the batchers who do not deserve
such trentimm.
In order to protect theunsehen the
biitchois have explain, d to tiieir irate
customers that they are not responsible
for (lie.raise in the price , f heel, pork
ami meat of all kit tle. They arc well
posted on the subject a id in etc oupiiug
themselves make the beef tiiist hateful
to i|ie p -ople. The latter Inquire into lb
mat er furthei and b a n that the beef
trust gets its power from the tariff system
which excludes foreign beef by means of
a practically prohibitive >ariff. It becom
es comparatively easy then ior tlie tattle
kings and Ihe great packers of this coun
try to combine to control the home mark*
eu and run up prices to suit themselvr g.
The butchers are. Indeed, great cam
paign speakers rind the effect of tiieir re
cent efforts will be leltin tlie congres
sional election next November,
Rack For Plates and Cups.
An effective rack for use iu the
summer cottage and i designed , ■ i pr ■ n
mpally ns n Background ‘or delft
pletes and cups is made of a fire
piece oi ash treated choirieally
l! it takes a soft gray tone, ihe
decoration consists of a water color
design suggesting the sea with some
gracefully outlined fishes swimming
in tlie blue water amid the stems of
’he water lilies which appear at tha
top. The deep tint of the delftware
show* to excellent advantage against
this seascane. *-
To Clean Flannel Bl.-nkete.
Fiannel blankets- may be success
Lilly cleaned by using borax and
soft soup. Put two tablespoonfuls
of borax and a pint of soft soap
into cold water enough to cover the
blankets. When the borax and soap
have become dissolved, put in the
blankets and let them stand over
night. The next day rub them out,
rinse them in two waiters and hang
them '
to dry. J Never wrin K 1 them.
Cook Cornstarch Enouqb.
C irnstarch is a valuable food, but
it rnr iy cookin'? enough to
tike rtwav tha raw taste and flavor
that arc natural to it in the uncook
ed state. Cornstarch pudding or the
blancmange made from it is object
e ,j ; 0 \ >y mu n v persons and partic
ularly by children. *0 whom it would
he. if Duiaiab.’e, a nourighisir food.
HILL'S BOAST OF
OOPONT GUERRY
la the Hottest Card cf the
Campaign.
tVARM REPLY TO GUERRY’8 CARD.
Terrell's Campaign Manager Compares
Guerry’s Present Attitudo With His
Record on Matters at Issue.
To the Public: Every man who
fers himself to the people as a leader
and an exemplar must be willing to
p ( , ar tlie reasonable discovery and dis
ECC tioa of his retord. The people have
tUe right to investigate his sincerity
as revealed by the concord between
theories and his practices. It
thus alone that men can judge cor
j-ectly '.vhetr.er a candidate is honest,
capable and worthy.
Hr. -Dupont Guerry must stand such
scrutiny whether he likes it or not
regardless of whether he rants
over it as abuse or slander or badger
big. Ho has Invltf d it by his eandi
daey. He must, submit to the- disaec
tlori of hie record, or retire with it to
P riv f° llte as a tflins to ° 8acre<1 for
public l ( Insi-ect.on. 4
Mr ’ Quorry entered ,he K" bprnat ‘>
rial race from ‘ high moral consider*
UoM .. Evt . rythiag jn the state’s pub
c con iuct had become corrupt and
^graded and he folt that he was the
proper moral exemplar to take hold
(J f the case, to reform the body politic,
to rescue tho good name of the state
and drive off from the people a swarm
of Egyptian locusts. He came forth
to furnish a pattern executive whose
moral courage, whose public consist
eney and whose superior wisdom
would give character and glory to the
commonwealth.
Really, many people were disposed
to think at first that this good man
had actually found the rotten spots in
our Denmark and would be a proper
.Hercules to cleanse our Augean sta
ble*! But no sooner had he gotten
well into the glare of a public lime
light than It began to appear that he
was another of those composite idois
oi brass and clay so disappointing to
human hopes.
What has his candidacy revealed?
What are the evidences that speak
against him?
The Question of Lobbying.
First. He stands forth as the ene
niy of legislative lobby,ug and makes
It a prime plank In his platform. And
“ 1,as ^eady been proved abso
lutely that a member of his owu law
firm; Guerry – Hall, presents the only
Instance on record in Georgia of a rail
road attorney pointed out at his work
on the floor of the house aud driven
therefrom in broad open daylight!
Who drove him out? It was the man
ager of Mr. Terrell's campaign who,
for the first and only time in our post
war legislative history, invoked the
rules of tha house and applied them
to the man who. was then and is now
a member of Mr. Guerry’s law firm!
Does Mr. Guerry deny the instance?
Can he defend Jt? And in the face of
it and his studious refusal to con
demn it, can he yet have'the hardi
hood to ask the people of Georgia to
believe that he 1* thotr chiefest hope
for defense against the crime of lob
byism? Oh. physician, heal thyself!
Second. Mr. Guerry presents the
only Instance on record that l know of,
In Georgia or elsewhere, of a mem
ber of a law firm filing a petition tn
open court, asking fees for having
passed a private measure for a rail
road company to condemn and appro
priate public property through the leg
islature. He does not now deny this.
He gets up a definition and then makes
a defense to fit It. He says that he
did not employ In the job "any cor
rupting meffiis,” appealed only to the
judgment of the legislators! But when
in the history of the state has any
lobbyist confessed that he used “cor
ru ^' m * mean ! ? " 13 u not re “ < T bl0
to believe r > rnit. every one of theta, ,j
when wl(h thla wl
gwear black and b!u „ that he .. only
appea i ed t0 the reaaon aud judgment
of the legislators?” To claim anything
raor p would !«• to confess the crime!
Atld so tv* fact remains as firmly
fixed and Ineffaceable as Stone Memo
tefn that Mr. Guerry’s firm Us the only
oco—verily the only one—in Georgia
that ever had one of its partners hus
tied out of the house or serrate for in
triterance of this nature and tlie only
one that ever boldly asked a court to
pR y j t a j e<J j or of such labor!
Here, indeed, is cleanness and eon
(latency with a double vengeance!
Prohibition Question,
Third, htr. Guerry offi-rs himself
as the special champion of enforced
etate llrohl .... H mn * Ed h * s essa ved t0
-
P atcb and fctutt his record t0 provo
that he has always favored that policy,
But what is the Uuth?
Pushing, aside all his turning and
\ vlst * s 08 llie 3 f jject ! ’” or 0 1
Is shown , ia a letter signed oy his
own hand that he was then, and claim
ed to have always bean, a staunch ad
vocate and dafender of local option
He denounced the efforts of prohibl
tionlsts to engraft the principle of
state prohibition upon our state poli
tics. But new he is the leader of the
movement to do that which he then
said, was wring, Impolitic and destruc
itve ot true temperance methods! Oh,
consistency, what a rare gem you are
fn the Guwrry philoxophy and prac
tice!
Fourth. Mr. Guerry advocates,befora
the people the necessity and duty of
domesticating foreign corporations. He
wants, he says, to force railway com
panies and the like to take out Georgia
charters so as to prevent them from
transferring cases brought by Geor
gians for damages, etc., from the state
to the federal courts. That sounds
well, but It shows that Mr. Guerry is
either ignorant of tho fact or willful
ly conceals It that the supreme court
of the United States in a Carolina test
case has decided that fdheign corpora
t-lons cannot be thus domesticated by
state laws - aa mu< *h as that power Is
to be desired. But that Is the falsa
hope that Mr. Guerry is using as a
bait to catch the votes of the people
who object to federal interference In
suits between* Georgians and corpora
tIonB operating in Georgia. Yet, how
doeg Mr Guerry’s practice measure
wlth his camp aign theory? The firm
0 f Q uerr y # Hall represents the great
Western Union Telegraph company,
almost as large in capital and power
*„ all the railroads In Georgia, but the
rec0 rd 3 show that as attorneys for the
\y os t ern Union and other corporations
jj r Guerry has frequently been a par
ty t0 the ren)ova i 0 f oages f r0 m the
B t a t e to the federal courts.
In this connection it is worth while
to again call attention to the remark
ably contradictory conduct of Mr.
Guerry, as illustrated in the difference action
between his theory and his in
the Rochelle-Abbeville county Eite
case. A hill was introduced In the
general assembly of Georgia in the
year 1S98 by jbe representative from
Wilcox county to remove the court
house from Abbeville, in said county,
to Rochelle. Mr. Guerry was employ
ed and paid a fee to help defeat the
passage of that bill before the Georgia
legislature, He appeared several
times before the legislature and made
at least one speech before the com
mittee of the house against the pa*
sage of the bill. Mr. Hall, of the firm
of Guerry – HaJl. was at that time a
member of the house from Bibb coun
ty, and by a strange coincidence Mr.
Hail agreed with the contention of Mr.
Guerry and voted agatnst the passage
ot the bill. The bhl was defeated.
In tho face ot these rawbone facts,
not dented by Mr. Guerry and unex
plained by him in harmony with his
theory in thia campaign, how can tho
people believe him gtneore and clear
minded In this issue, which, like a
Frankenstein, he has created to be
come Us own victim.
Fifth. .Mr. Gurry knows that he can
not atone enact prohibition. He knows
that the legislature must pass the bill,
and he elatrns that he wants legislators
elected who will do Dial. Yet he sup
ports his law partner. Hon. Joe Hall,
as a legislative candidate from his
own home county of Bibb, in the face
of Mr. Hall's bold declarations that he
is an anti-prohibitionist aud in favor of
the local option law which is favored
by Mr. Terrell! Here is where his
theory and his practice have another
head-on collision.
1 mercifully omit extending this re
view to the 12 per cent interest law
that Mr. Guerry wanted to impose on
the farmers and tho bill he favoned to
allow the railroads to charge them as
mat h for short haults of freight as for
long hauls. But they, also, are fatal
instances of his inability to practice
what he preaches.
Now “reason has indeed fled to brut
ish hearts" if the people of Georgia
can be longer deceived by the artful
dodging of this modern exemplar of
Mr. Oily Gammon! He Is “the peo
ple’s friend’’ on the stump, but will
the public not draw the conclusion
that he is the selfish corporation law
yer and the corporation lobbyist tn his
private practice! He ts the foe im
placable of the Mquor traffic and the
whisky ring, but the supporter of a
candidate who has been elected to tba
legislature by the votes of the anti
prohibitionists of his own home coun
ty!
He is tiie great reformer who step
ped into the arena to cleanse the cor
ruption the people of Georgia have
been electing and enthroning in their
government for h quarter of a cen
tury in such governors as Gordon, Me.
Daniel, Nortben, Atkinson and Cashier
and then turns out on being unmask
ed to be intimately identified with the
only cases of ‘TegfsTattve persuasion’’
that have ever shocked the public
view in Georgia! He poses as the
candidate of the state prohibitionists
and his own handwriting rises up to
convict him of being six years ago
their most virulent denouncer!
What more should he said? The veil
is removed and the eyes of the people
now see the full face of the false
prophet and will repudiate him and
his double dealings at the polls on
June 5.
WARNER HILL.
Atlanta. Ga., May 21, 1»W.
, [he Union Central
Life Insurance Co.
Guaranteed Loan Pa d up and Ex
tended Insurance, Placed in Face ot the
Policy.
Premiums reduced each year By An
nual Dividends
Policies Incontestable from date of
Issue, as to Residence and T-avel.
Strong old. and reliable Company.!'^ Ag'nt,
B. tV, TORRANCE. General
GRIFFIN, GA.
QfOffice: Merchants aud Planters
Bank Bld'g.
JUNE SHERIFF SALE.
Will be sold before the court house
tloor in the town of Zebulon, Pike coud
ly. Ga., on the firfet Tuesday in June
1002, betwecu the hours of 10 oVlock a.
m. and •? o’clock p. ra. to the highest
bidder for cash the following described
property to-wit:
All tint tract of laud belnc part* of lot
number n netv and so much of lot nuns
tier one hundred and three (103) as lies
ea-t of Elkins Credt and the line thtougn
said lot dividing the same lie'ween John
VV. ami James Flem.ster and abo so
i.inch of lots number one hundred and
three (t03)one hundred and twenty m e
r. 121), one hundred and twenty ihree
(123), as lies between said dividing lin«
and Elkin’s Crcea, containing one buns
,irtd and eighty (ISO) acres more or less,
the Ssrne beinj! the lands when on J. M.
Phillip* resides, heretofore l.eid l>y said
1 liilfips under a bomt for titles from
John W. Fleuiia'er and said land lieing
described in ids said bond as follows;
Parts • f lots umnbeis one hundred and
three (103) one bun,lied and twenty one
on ' hundred and twenty two (122)
3,1,1 oue hundred and twenty three (t2f).
The same i» levied on as the property of
J • M. Phillips to satisfy a ii fa in favor
E. J Flemister, Administrator of John
W, Flemisier decea-e 1 , against said .1.
M. Pmliios, now proceeding in name of
u. f|, Drake, Administrator of John W.
be having B * succeeded E J
“ 0 r^T '
’ ' ^ tt-Dani in pusseai-ion * - ,
no “ Hed in » rUi "* of 11,18 levey »»
re, I u rcd bylaw. L*vfed to c -lkct bafj
a,H ' e 1 f Fhrcl as-r money, Detd convey
ln K '-his i ail d t> J- M. Phillips, lias keen
filed am! recorded in the Cleik’s office as
required by law. This the 1st day of
Msy 1002.
.1 . H. M.lm:k Sheriff.
■9
JUNE SHERIFF SALE.
Will be sold before die eouit house
riojr ia the town of/.ibuton, P ke eon li
ly. Ga. on the first Tuesday in June
1902, between tire leairs ot 10 o'clock a.
in. amt 1 o’clock p. m to the litglrpst
bidder for earh the following described
property to-wit;
Oit« hotiHt* and live nm*s of land m the town
of liarne^vifle, 1'iktJ coflnty. <*a - the same be-
1112 the home t>!ace oi def«a<1ant and a fa»t ot
lot No. lod m thu 7fh district of said rutinty ami
btmmted a« follows: on the north 1>» Iv. L.
HMAttP, 4 »h the ett-i' b> -Nualjorn Orteal, oh k fhe
vstiHt uy Cronev White amt on the skiuth ny
tin* L-eiitrai Kail way of Georgia. l.evied on a*
die property of Floyd FamUro l»*. virtue of anti
ro Hfif jxfy a jn-tnuofiri r>:j3ni tl fa i — ned from tin*
ju^ti t U4»un <d tir«* DiNtriut O . >1. of 1’ike
roimty m fuvor of the Nt'aota (in no to. vs
Flovd Fambro, W 'I’itteh imtifu itiven of thi»
iovy as required Uy law. Thi# tfte (ith day ,* f
May HK)i.
It. MtLSrn. sheriff.
THE COMMONER i
Issued VYc ki ,
William J. Eryan.
Ed tor arid I'ul Usbe
Lincoln, » Nebraska.
Teiiu —Payablein Affiance
One Year........... *!.00
Six M nit's,...____ • l,0
Three Months._____
c-ingle Copv-------- .05
Journal ami Commoner 1 yem. __ . 1.50
No travil.ne canva-sers meinplojed
terms tor local agents will l*t -ent upon
application. A! 1 money should he seni
by P, O. order. Express order, or by
bank draft on New York or Chicago.
Do not send individual diet ks or stamps
AGENTS WANTED
LIFE OF DEWITT T iLMAGE. by his
Son, REV. FRANK DEWITT TAL
M AGE and associate editors of
Herald’ Only book endorsed by Tal -
Ulage family. Enamours profit for
agents who act q .ickly. Outfit ten cents.
Wiite immediately CLARK – GO.. 2‘22
S 4th St. Phils.. Fa. Mention this Paper.
Wgmm a Tr r °
PM® WJ; y
Repea G-> :
ton ar;. the and bfffittUS ft.c jcclors.
t
TUt* t>pt\re l ontts «
solid sli.cM of sIdm.i'../ -p±s.U*
between t*e s„
head *r*ri fi e cartn*.?i
a', ail li it.H. throws t.-e.
emputts TYWhy frnni h'.m
* instead cfc|ato his tace {
prevents kraoke ana
gases iromMenterinif ins
eyes and and
keeps LFIrLIN- the line of T> si^hi '
action
«arks easily and
smoothly, filtte noise. ir.att-.nx Oar very
ccvr
iotomaur rr.Loii rpcr
atins makes toekipg r!:c Marlin device the
£?.tcsl breec built, h-leading
rtnn ever- izo*
--1 raxe caralog-uc, 300 il
iusrraiioyv, cover in
nine ect-rs. maiied for
A three surops.
Thf Mur?h» Tire Arms C®.
Kew Ilaveu, Coua.
We promptly obtain U. S. and Foreign
- PATENTS
Send model, sketch or photo ot invention for
free report on patentability. For free book,
K^rTRAOE-MARKS "ST
GASHQWI
OPPOSITE U 5 PATEHT OrFlEE
WASHINGTON. O.C.
■vwwwWH»*wv