I r . .. - . " - -4 '. -- . " . . : , y?-.- ' , y.y;- fy y ''--"!."; I' -. .; - .... 0 VOL XXII-TIIIRD SERIES- SALISBURY, N. C, JUP 18, 1891, NO. 33. i 1 ---" for Infants and ChUdj-jiit I t-ecoramcnii it as superior to any f irescriprtioa to nift." H. A. AacsxK, 2L XX, ,tU So. OxXord t, Brooklr X, T. Bonr atomach, IMarrbasa. 'xMJXSlm dfc. KiUs Worma,es Bloep, and tVctfd6 An an AS 'rtie Astoria is aonni'saS ( "r'Vnd it Few aret) y Vork Cttr. -? -Ke York City. A Sonff of Clianjjre. f snnj? in the gun Uic n hok ily t sn m the ft wcrry song.; i -oA not bclicVe in grief or vrronjr, 5 sing in &c s-jn tbc wh6lc day lotig. ik T Ue lark and mrurncl all niplit, k 6iad lost my laith in Vtmlh and right, And I had no hepc f eftraiwg VipliU sat in the dark mwirncd mgltt. Mid yet at dawn in my heart j ; heard XJnce more the voice of n singing bit, Ht memory hwAed it ith a ord, So my lips ne'er echoed frhat I. heard. And noVy I ars nc?l?-.cr Sa not pay; have learned t last that night and day, fcVinshine and shadows, yassniy; o rtow 1 km wrfther sad nor gay. 8. C Wctc, in Apdl IJrfMrtan'S. !OOK OOliUXTIVES. EVERY B Dry Goms ! ' GOO DRESS HOSIERY, SltOES, ! , UftD'EIlWKAR NEOKAVEAlt, ;siiuits. OPY IS INVITED! TO GALL AT SOSTIAITS ' un s?co his NEW STOCK of - illi iS, , Notions an iery, '1.UIV and GOH3ETB. 3lis:4 AMn-si), ofiJaUimoiv. 'niul t'vuininc her stock. WHITE GOODS, J,b LINEN'S,. LACES, TRIMMINGS, WRAPS, ROBES. tlic Women .inl Children ployed in Factories. TVif niciiiivs in last wjfk's Yuutli Companion May 21st, of the oi oiuiiKf wnmoil of tSoSEMll. :U"C IXt SO IkkI sis the Georgia factory in The Century, hut the description of their miserable condition is worse :uid arous es the most intense ily ami indigna tion in the mind of every reader. Is it possible that such inhumanity to helpless women and children is allowed in a Christian laud? We do not know Fletcher Osgood, hut he seems to l) well accredited by the publishers oPthat great Boston uper, munis the scene is laid in liosUm. we take it lor grunted that he h: not overdrawn the painful pictuie. The homl line says, Starved and Hopeless Livs." Mr. Osgood has been investigating and tells us at sixty contract shops in Bos ton that are operated by ' Jtassians or Polish Jews in the man u fact lire of ready made clothing. Their workrooms arv in the cheapest of old. buildings that can be found in the worst s.c- ome tit the shops six or more nignis ui stairs, antl aie invariably foul with ac cumulated litter and dirt, ihe rooms are crowded with toiling women and girls, with here and there a bo . Tbe atmosphere is fejid and fatal to the health. The i sen ts, who are always guarding aud protectiii; her frisoners from inhu- mnnitv, but wno 13 tnere to protect those who h:ive 'cotnT:iittl no crime: f It takes A t5 tfeurt to do it, for it is in nssatut oton capital an accusa tion-, .H aVtaigrrfent of Ihe rich at the bar of HiblKj Vifttoin It is said that VraHirMHtirce exclaimeI, "The pub lic d V' bnt the public won't be 1 (K iblic ,opli.iion is a mighty ViVr, ad !oft.etirArt 6Serflows it battles and sweens tVvrVthing befdre it. literacy rs not the question lwfore 'tis now. ft is tteteV the Question with the fvV arid oppressed. Slow, piti vS5, v4ing death that stares one in the fctffce evry day is not concerned about reading und writing. . Bread is the first thing. Good food, good clothingr good shelter, some pure, fresh air to breathe, some mitl ici ne for the sick and a dtceut burial for the dead come be fere books. If many of these poor girls need reform in their morals, begin with their tem poral wants. Hunger and rags won t hear preaching. A hospital is a good thing for the forlorn and desperate cases, the sick and the dying, but the great work is to do away with the ne cessity of the hospital. Healthy work and fair wages and comfortable homes will do it, God said to, Cain: "Tha voice of thy brother's blood cries unto me from the ground." And it sewms to me that the wrongs of the suffering poor and every death in their miserable homes cry unto God against us. Then" let the investigation go on, the search the arrignmput and the reform. It is a lonely pitiless task. But one man iu all of England was found vh would dare vi it the prisons aud cry out for reform. But John How ard did it, and he reformed them all and brought bles.-ings to thousands of the oppressed. Our people read the paper eagerly to see the last big adver tisement of cheap goods. Cheaper and cheaper thev get every week, especially ALLIANCE SEWS. prominent and influential in the coun cils of the nation and various states. Eqa.il Bights te all, Special PrI til eges la-instances where such men haVe to i one. j b?en timid or slow about acquicscnjig Copyrighted y Ai.cricaiT Reform Prcs3 A89octa-!in such measures ns are being agitatjrd .Udn ! for the public weal, the people have The great vincirmntti Confreuce is ! fclimvn im n:it Jpiifp and there have hern. a thing if the past It has made his-1 ,,,,,1,,, iu.lipnt ivi of callinj? forth a A b i a- -v rory. In the Uitited SUtes of. Ameri cA tlws first sltjp towards the formation of a neu? great political party is taken, the Krhicf corner stone being "Equal rights to all, special privileges to none," and this party standing on this founda tion is one against which the united cohorts of greed, avarice and monopoly shall not prevail. It must win and will rule The preparation for and the gather ing of that conference was watched by the countrv at large with mingled in terest, anxiety and contempt. Drones and those who were barnacles on the body politic were aroused to some in terest. Men and patriots who have long and earnestly leen trying to in augurate a revolution that would re store to the whole people their individ ual privileges and protection were anx ious painfully anxious lest there might be some misstep by which all heir painstaking efforts might be in ured or nullified. Those who hate tnd try to crush everything but them selves composed the elements which ned to brand the conference with contempt. AN UNUSUAL SPECTACLE. The large gathering presented the unusual spectacle of a political assem bly in which tnere were no packing uid in wnieh there was no effort i r impose to buy and sell. Many men f widely divergent views and strong convictions composed the bodv. But clothing for men and women. tune linen-bosom shirts for ID cents! How workers have air of suppression about them such as characterize a gang of prisoners. The majority of these workers are Ameri cans, their fges from seventeen to thirty, but there were some women of ive. cheap! we all exclaim we must buy soir.e how can they aflyrd them at liii i t iiihincc? The sewing women can i I tell vou. Bill A hi 'ANN 1 12 LAUKII'V fifty-live and some girls not over twi "I ii . . ... ,-v,-w- Allf l t I 'I'll, rl v ! iv sii I ni:inv or llie uiuici hh; liiiiiiiiiiumuiio j-u'-j rv,v,i., ... f 1 ......1 11.....iiwl iliil T Ml V- You are earnestly mvitcu tu uuu n a s:uU T, A A Little I5oy Who Sanir It Sherman's Sohlicrs. for much "Whv do I- think so beautiful old song. ''Annie of that L: nine 1 . .it til i 4 i I1 1 L woilc said Albeit li. t'. lines, lenor, to a re morn- ' porter at a tathc:-iug of mu dcal people nri'ssum iKird and sad. 1 ne iimir4 sir 'from 7 o'clock in tilt Iiicr ffvA in .-thn eveiiin'' with frt y- 'the other evening. "Well, I will tell five minutes for lunch at noon. The 1 you. Ever since I was two years old I IT LIE prae most expert girls earn as much as b-o ( a week in the busiest season, but their i 5ivrnTPs are from to $4 a week. ! ----- The exacting ovewght ;0f the bosses forces the workers to unusual tension, and then there is the fetid air, the abounding dirt, the forced association wltli mnn .f nnploriii habits I adveilisethe larst stock of FURNITURE in the State, and the lqvvest I ftnJ filthy speech, and the lowering of the moral tone of the lemales. io girl is free to .look upon her work," and a minute late loses her half a day. Hat the girls can't stop, hot for a day, to look for a better place. If they do they are boycotted, and can t get work of ai! dealer North or South. " I shall prove it hy "figures. Head Tlieso Prices. I.hdii's Itattafi liockers, Antique Oak Centre Tables, 10 inches square t Holland Window Shades, Dodo Fringe and Sp . l'lattorm Spring Rockers, carpet seat, T Sterling Organ, 7 "stops, walnut case. , Sterling Piano, 7 octaves, bony case, S 7 50 25 00 35 00 Some of the bosses have y-v x I J .... . t 1 1 lb W J a way of "slowing the clocic so as to get extra tune out ot the gins. ine 1 50 foreigners are all filthy and use hard io ffirls r.:u l not escape KMlgUWv , n 2 00 it. . Some of the girls won t tell where 100 thifvlive. They are ashamed to. They 2 50 find rooms in old dusty; attics in bad 1 50 localities. T)iey can't keep up but a few ' 65 years at nicst, and then they die of 3 50 overwork and destitution. 50 00 This is an abstract ot Mr. Osgood's 225 60 sketch of these starved and hopeless and am receiving orders lives-thrse human machines, who. daily work is killing the body and nw ii-.n i..vvikiwivn. in rav wav of doina business. If Utarvinir the soul these creatures 4 IJH.V ' mvw ------ ' - - J. " . . ' . I ' P Rattan brlv liabv Carriage, Wire wheels, only Genuine Antique Oak Bed Room Suit (10 pieces), Walnut Frame Wool IMush Parlor Suit (0 pieces), Antique Oak Sideboard, with large glass, Standing Hall : Macks, with glass, ; Antique Oak High' Back Vo4 Seat Kockers, Mexiqui Grass llainmocks, large size. rMosquito'Canopies, with Frames ready to lfang, Bamboo Iktsels, 5 feet high, hnvi' lov.d that OilL'. It was the first one I ever learned and 1 was fully seven years old before I cared for an nfhpr. One dav. soon after I learned it, my mother missed me from til lmus. She made a diligent though fruitless search for me in the neigh borhood for several hours, lunally ; policeman came along who said, afte listeniiii: to hr stt rv. 'Why, thatmus be the little fellow with long curls thai follows the Italian organ-grinder nearly (vrv dav and sink's "Annie Liurie fur him. I iust left the pair at th corner of st I often think what an interesting appearance I must have .... r j ii new men, and when these mutterinjgs were heard, the men in political danger would l)e pointed to as a hero and benefactor. ! kkSee what he has done for the people" is a common "idea for the retention of such men. But the people are not so gullible as they were twenty, ten, or even two years ago. They are beginning to exclaim: "See what we have done for hiui. e have given him th highest honop, we have eUvated him to the highest honorary position, and we have kept him there year after year.- His name will be in history because we make for him the opportunity. Now we suffer from national irregularities and diis- Lcriminations, and we ask for relief. He does not heed us. He knows not what to do. Then we present a measure for our relief, saying, give us this !or something better. Mind now, if ypu can give us anything better, we will honor you and thank you; but if you cannot, then give us this." And the people are dazed and hurt and wounded by the way in which their reasonable requests are received by the man they have honored lor years. He turns from them pooh-poohing and mutter ing "unconstitutional" and offers noth ing better. There are some things the people are perceiving, and that's why they get impatient,1 COMMENDING THE PRINCIPLE. The Atlanta Constitution comes squarely to the front and says that the issuing ot money by the suh-neasory with all this, "concession and not obstinacy was the characteristic fea- Tiiere was friendly and earnest 0f congressional authority ture. I but does not involve a greater stretch . . . . i than tfoes oon-Siiltation which soon concentrated much of the -leirislation that has been uid crystalized ib.elf into the shortest, enacted for bommeree and mauufacto- ut grandest and most comprehensive latform promulgated by any political bat it is now conquering. Twenty three counties are organized, twenty foar commissioned organizers are in the field, and the Bureau has .offici information to the effect that tho FV M. B. A., which has a strong hold i'i many counties, will soon join the alli ance and also the patrons of .ITnsbaiTi1 ry. The alliance workers tjiink fliy will have a "sufficient" organization -before the close of the year. - STORMING NEW ENGLAND, A few weeks ago it was assertel that the alliance could neverTJSjrifV with any favor in New England. Tol- v . there are alliance organizations in th;. famous section. The wall around New Hampshire and Vermont have been breaclied,1 and the-next state to b invaded will be Massuchusettsk The first national organizer will go inU that state to work within the next two weeks. - r 7 A NOTE OF V AltNING. 1 . Prominent alliance men have callel the attention. of the Bureau to the fact that many "patent sheets" professing, to Imj issued for and iii the interest o the alliance, contain as ranch or more matter of an antagonistic nature j the order than in firt'or of it. The al liance expects and invites discussion; but such groundless misreprentations and unwarrantable attacks us-liave been noticed in some alliance paper.4 which use "patent sheets" ought. uior. to be disseminated by affiance organs. Editors who use-these sheets should be caretul to stipulate that no matter ex cept such as deals fairly and favorably with the alliance shall appear tu them. II. W. A YF.it, Manager Refoim Press Bureau arly in a third of a cuitury. The work of the convention was a confounding surprise to old partisan uid sectional politicians, lhey p re lated tnat the platform would be rot- i i : . ten Willi numerous auu imposMuic Msms. They nnsjudged the men whom they were strying to cond- mil, uid they failed to realize that politi cians and. great new.-papers do not possess all the brains of the country. 1 he work ot the convention has eitner caused ominous silence or conservative expression among them. V.'E ARE WITH YOU. The Cincinnati convention is to be followed by another great meeting ries. The C institution's article is -noth ing but a stioug commendation or the sub-treasury. Thisipaper is the ac knowledged leading paper of t!i2 south, from which section the bitterest oppo sition to the su'o-treasury system seems to come. The Fort Worth Gazette, one of the most prominent 'papers in the great State of Texas, recently coiii nifiidtd th nlan in plain terms. One , , by one they are coming over and great thing is bound to win. THE ALLIANCE CAMPAIGN VIGOROUSLY SUPPLEMENTED. - i The great national alliance educu tiomil campaign which will be a fea ture wf alliance work this year, will be vigorously and gloriously supplemented bv mass mcetin.s, county meetings, A good next February, whjch will be a con- encampments, etc., all over this vyhole vention officially authorized by tha country. Never: was there such a stir grat agricultural and labor organiza tions of the country. More than five millions of citizens will be represented. The platform of the people's party homched at Cinciiinatti. embraces all ring Never up among me jieopie, was tneie siicu m v.uv., .......... desire to study and be informed on great political questions aud - issues. Wivpi- wi f her' such a political neu- A . v . v. . ..... I Obituary. Died at Cleveland, N. C, May 2ith, Mrs. N. B. Thompson, after an illness" of nine week?, aged forty-nine years, two mouths aud two weeks. She was a consistent member of the Episcopal church for "more, than thirty years, She leaves a husband and seven .chilk dren, four sou aiid three daughters, to mourn her.death, Jsides many re- . lations and friends She was-a nob!.; wife, a devoted mother, a kind neigh bor, charitable and affectionate. She visited the sick .in their suffering and distress and delighted iu doing good, "Blessed are the dead which die in the Lord fronr henceforth; yea sait'i the spirit, that they may rest from their labors; and .their works do follow them."- . Ami is she gone, forever pone? A:ui is hur carlMy journey o'er; HUM yt'iirs nii'l ivoj still roll on, Antl shall re henr hor voit-c no more? Hits was ft loving spirit too; JTwns always S4vootr'twas iilwnys kiuU'; I never knw.v a heart more true, - A nLIer?oul, a purer mini. An l now wtitti RtHhis dreary hour, - I'm tJrc-imin? of Unit ?; ii it fled, Kacli st.ir.each hree.c,c:u !: blooming flower Sterna whispering forth, she is not dead. A. Fim;'. top, ring Rollers, I liave just put in the Furniture for throe largo hotels, from all over North and South Carolina daily One price to all, am you buy an article from me utvl it noes not cwne up aa ri-iiescnw;o, .um.. .w - j expense and get your money back. " Write mo lor Catalogues. E. M. ANDREWS, I I and IC. A Tr.i.lr St Charlotte,- N. C, THE TYPE-WRITER "Simple, Durable. Prints from tdoar Metal Type," does the work'of a $1Q0 Machine; Perfect Align- mentj Prints Capitals, Small Let ters, Figures and Characters 78 m an. j'nee complete, $uj Acrents and canvassers wanted Apply to ' - J. ALLEN BROWN, Ag t for W. N. C. -r Salisbury, IV. C. God from whom ."hope' has withering fled and mercy sighed farewell.11 Sixty factories in Boston; lidw many more in New York and Brooklyn and Chicago and Cincinnati? Will history keep on repeating itself? It-is loss than fifty years since Tom Hood wrote "The Song of the Shirt,1' and now in cul tured Boston it fits the time and the place as well as when he said: Stitch, stitch, stitch, la poverty, hunger and dirt, " " Sewing at once with a; double thread, A shroud as w ell as a shirt. Oh (iod! that bread should be so dear, And flesh and blood so cheap. Women and children working as prisoners work tor crime, ana no jmpe better lime nomingv uiwn presented on my first concert tour. I had run away from the house in order to go bare-fwoted and had fallowed the organ, when its owner played my favorite tune. When I was only six years old I had the honor to sing 'Annie Laurie1 before General Sherman and his staff. "1 shall never forget that day. It was in 1804. The army had just re turned from the South and was en c mped on Biker's Island. One day my brother, who was an aide-de-camp to the General, obtained permission for my mother and me to visit the island. 1 was dressed in black velvet with a xvi.ly linPM rolhir and had a soft hat of black felt stuck iuintiy over my i A T II. 1 ..Iwuu tlwk vilhiOY nf white canvas the othcers ami men would come out and hug and kiss me .-w thev thou-dit of their own dear ones at home whom they would not see soon acaiu. I w;is the tirst cuiw tney had seen since their arrival North blv mv brother, hat UI-JIIIC u.i J" J J . f.vi.i thm sibout mv sonr and they tl'lll - J - b. ;u-r ih As I sanr the tear would roll down the rugged cheeks or the dear old fellows, as with brok-m voices they joined m the chorus. 1 Hen- oval took a practical form. My I L I . . 1 ....... T VI' 1 f ' 1 )-r.ui to uo iiW'M '" the principles which these oanizatmns trality inon. the masses- ' , encampment of have supported ami pa-sseu into nauon- tlmt lj0 preserved until tney snau begin at Wrighk- al prominence despite raiiery, villihca ,ret rock bottom information on the 1 ; 1,, tin-17th turn and vituperition from socallcd ?ssueg of the day, and then they will r ' wiH 1,, leading men who ought to. have' leen choosc their own course. The speak- their friends and wot m.ir . - ing and l.arangueing o i ue I, ' . GuVerno, who wasMe voted to The primary object oi me nisi mcenug orator will he wasteu ureaiu. uuuuk is to le virtually the same as was mat tae ast week lntorination naa wen ie- ceived at alliance headquarters ot meet ings, and encampments to be hdd in Pennsylvania, Missouri, West nrgin ia, North Carolina, Tennessee, New . .-.I III' O tl. V ork. II HO. Illinois, ouui-a v.uuon.i, f rhP first. The national committee of the people's party will at tend the February convention for conference; and in that conference the alliance ...,.i r.thur nrrr:ini-.,ition3 will take the liiu . . deceased Governor, the State.Guard. ' Quartermaster General Olds ;jay that the four regiments of -North Carolina will be under the;commaud oi' Brig. Gen. John W. .Cotten, and th ; lt "Virginia Iteginient, of UichnioniT coinmaTiu oi uu.. ill .... i i i - M,.;Jr.'. :',.....:. 4. m...., wi Uw under the people s party uy tue nauu, auu Mississippi, irgmia, i iuusa.-, ,1..,. live millions of member caij, and will Llld other state-, "and front three "ft'J of Virginia, 11 i unnKwnr ii.ivok: c i .n nntinjrinn ii:lvh i-iiiui: i " ' ' - . . . say inrouu .r.v..-...- IX OL ulcao CT -II i nresent for some days, and U0. -Your principle- are our principles rom eacll State. ; Uy with the btlas long a. your platform is. our piatronu e ai. all want alliance speakers. .;nf iM will nremit. yours; we are with you ana wm swna M ' wU y extensive preparations are be- I. .r inMI T f TI1M Hill I . 1 - t I ' I . . u I "J Jv" l" " ,M4 in s n( out some trood a.n- OXE OR TWO PARTICULARS. Tt. mav be mentioned in particular that the platform of the people's party ;., ...b.f.. tiM v it not Wlioiiv. tne and pleas to stud out some good a.li- j ance speakers to address the peopje who . - 1 in" made lor a grauu .bhwih((u.ui, matiou and md it is about certain Unit htteen or d boys wi.L 1 it. .,..1 .buM-tnds; Piiiinciated pialLOliu auu nvi.t."'." 1 farmers alliance anu tliv ni'w dust rial union at bt. by! in- Louis iii lbSD, and emphasized and reaffirmed at Oca la, Fla., in l&K). And that there miMit tje no dodging or misunderstand ;f nlwiuk what tuiuht or might not have been meant, the sub-treury p I. . 1 1 - hi !.... are huir'ering and seeking lor ,111101-Uixteen Hundred wen irame li 'ht on puolic allairs -b th.v oivL- eitiier ignored lor has been kept from sneakers ' would 1 r years or wnicu tluMn. A hundred scare! v be able to till all demands, but wherever it is possible the requests are complied with. ! THE WORK IS NEW MEXICO. The New Mexico alliance is discus- atteud. MM Ahibainians are. Vid5 Awnkc. - of THE "MERRITT" aoiu poeki c ins s soon 1 man i;i the STAPIL i LE MARBLE ' WORKS Is:th-Plac9 to Get Monuments, Tombstones, &c A iar'e.stock-of VF.UilOXT MARBLE to arrive in a few days I guarantee 'satisfaction in every respect and positively will not be undersold. Granite Monuments Of all binds a specialty. , C. B. WEBB, ; ! PltOPRlETOR. . farmers feel that they are opprced they crv aloud, and their wail is heard from" the Atlantic to the Baciiic oceans. But the poor and friendless aw too weak to cry. They can't be hard as far as the nearest church. Compared with these wivtched women nnil children the Poorest tanner in Bartow county is a prince, lor ho al ways has enough to cat . And the sky ii above his head And the grasi bjiK'.ith his feet. He is a freeman, and cringes not be neath the tyranny of any man, much lew' under the frown of a llusian or a Bolish Jew. Friends, Americans, countrymen, can such things be and we be silent? It matters not where such sutlering and misery are found whether in the workshops of Boston or the factories of the north or of the south let our philanthropic .men and woui u sek it. out and cry aloud nun of various Kinds ":ivi me tne last Cent world. None of them had much mon ey at that time, I fancy. I ust !.v;0, besides a uag ui . 11 1 t it:.... iVtaliy he had received cracker.- :,.!. o i.-iiwl-h.-ivii-d si) blier rave me n .uv." - - lnf-L- however atteiuU-d n an was especially emphasized and ,iug the adoption of a new cVnslitu- ei dors d. Anothe? particular to be fum and by-laws, such as will remove noted is that the platLrm was adopted solue restrictions winch have unrated w Ada unanimity and amid the against local growth and pi ogress "u" i.1. m 1 ,-.11- u'.,. th,.v.. is beiinning to. be an of the ible to The this lual tug which had brought us from .n.nl ..wsiv !ind Iclt US. We t,, hire :l farmer to take us to the outer 1 w lie; we c iai c 1 1 .. ; I.... 1 ... iivi--.il" 1 1 1. ...... took a lerry uoat. lue-i.on.. x .-e l us S5, which . about used up my first professional, foe. -My love for the song is . so well known in the musical profession that an American woman violinist 11 order as .-lie said, to keep peaec iu tho family, has nick-named mv wife 'Annie Lau ne.'" N. Y. Tribune. 1 11 1 The finot garnets and nearly all the t!ie !eridots found iu the Uniud StaW ... . ... 11....1...1 f .-. .1:1 :nit lolls and scor- in X. .iv Mexico and An- t i.....,..ic tw husiasm. oiiii 101 nioM- 'w""1"1 . . ... other particular to be noted w that a 1 I. ..I- i.f fhn ilnh'-TateS to tlw iarse iium'i o c . 1 .....j nr convention were no-, lueoi.-i-. e. ,.0 l!i-.iM'i- anil not eligi membership. Friends of the sub-treasury plan may lieely disuu.s all doubts .... ,,.w.-,dn,.ss as to the ultimatH vie- Ul UIH."-.-".. t,-v If the particulars as now pro-- nosed are not put iu operation principle involved will 1 II. 1....1 nofbill" esiaunsucu ""n found. HE IS A "POPULIST." There must be some short and easy v iL.-i.rn.-d in" :i member 01 me third nartv. 'to say of the people's party ,.1-ulwinovi' enoULu i l . 11 r. .. . .. fi. hkvvrr ii-.it there IS awakening there as clse'.vmre About C 1. I 1 ..... l-iih'i L' . to i-er cent. i tie- p.-.nv... . .1.., .,-.nih laiiLrua-f, and theiterrilo- LUO l , " ' . 1 ,l;-,f rial .secretary has rcipnted t.u.t I ' I i .......... ... I . 1:1 I AtlOU a! h I" 1 V .... II..U' I.I K' 11. 1 . . 1 . I 1 r I . . k 1 w l . . 1 -" 1 - - - 1 ' ... 1 1 I 1 .... . ..vhm n,ir steadily Hi RT.-:iioito, Ala., June 0, W3L . Mr. EliturJ: Flease forward meou t or more copies of Tu.r: Carolina Wak-mmak. ;lf I bke it' I will sub scribe and get as many others to do so as I can.' Hurrah for the fanner..-, working?, men, sub-treasury and frv coinage. r Tariff t; ffy is fooling r. sensible alliancenicii -down iu th. sunny part of the world. Respectfully, II. Ben Feukell. i dorbit a Shamokin, Ba.mstabl' be countable is all right, but the uV d from blood poisoning, auu va wants thu constable shot. , i''t UWiR'i L 1I..1i..j1'1IijI I r. Mil ln'i-'A eSiaOll-SUei:, mi' """'n the ill.. I ... eventual iv itselt ninating proper be ..1 . . 1 . . t. 'he is a meniocr :ln preGcueuv vnlil lc cuiti- I i r oiu-erned. rather slowly,' is tixm :md (irmly and is disac information. - THE CULOliEI) ALLIANCE 1 1 1 The ine;n!)orsliip ot tue colore I alu -...,. w iiu-re.aMUi' beyond count. Na tional President Humphrey writes that the organisation is prospering beyond i - 111.1... i.... - . a... ,.. l,n:1 int . 1 ue u 1 ... ...,.,i 1. nr. u'll 1 L u iuu s lil imu...- lien-Mve eiiwii.. - i.' .. .. 1 i.-ifi 1. !7 itlilll S l.U C UlnMl.ll..l.i"" His m-eatest hindrance 1 o 1 a i't A. . , I . . in i.vin- ! 1 I 4 . I I nii'Al' I . I 1 I T lit .1 I I I 1 H iT 1 ill 111 i: . I I . .1 1 i-iil 1 il'I I I !1 UHHMi LI I IHMIlll i'Vil llVLi'o. v mucn time. .r . ' .. . 1 .......1.. VVl.i),. 1..-.r:li-;.i on L i ... . . . i . j ii'irru i 1 .1 .1 u v ui s 11 t. h nn.-. 1 attlllator 01 uie l""J rr-'iT, ,,;,.!. eUS auu niviniT llieiatuic j HOW- TO am nooulistf for a new.party ne deserves a new term. TMi? PEOPLE A UK ISIiol-ii- IXTEKPUSX IT- Some of Ihe phases, of the new revo lution have been the endangering ot the tenure of honorary othces aud po rtion held by men who have been A Beau of 1923. When grandpa went a-wooin. H,: wore a -satin vest, y A trail of running roses , Kmhroidcrol oitTlc breast. The pattern of his trousci ' His linen, white and tine, Were all. the latest fanhioii , In eighteen and twenty-uinc. Oraudpa"was a line-looking -oinr Mlow rlitii, so the .M ladits. Kiy, uad 1 is -line-looking-old gentlcmuu iiu. v. .f -.w. r it rme ot years ne nas wu. I Ul 11' 1 i, in h.-iUiVr. lie ihe uirnlsol in-. fieri- aL ItlltW- Itio . can dis of. can -do much by forwarding 1 to Fre-iident lFiniphrey, or distributing i- .i-.ul ininiirfs tluit may be ill illllOil vji-viv. - ij near tie.n. ; rUOM INDIANA. The alliance Iwts no greater struggle iu auv other :,Utc than mi Indiana, Co t en Medical liiacoxci j .,iv vmiih," he fituuently s;iys unly blood purilier mid liver luNviu. 'uurcnteed to hcnelil or cure, or uio., y oroinptly itfuuded. It cuicsbver uvV eass, ,!y.-peiia. scrofulous oes, b....i . ruj.tion. aud all discai s of the b.o I, Fur lingering coughs and coiwiuip . , (Anicii is luug-sciuofulu in its t.-.x .tage.-)Jt is an uiipaiallelecTieiuedy. Children Cry for Pitchjers Castdria; pare uot. G;oigii boo Lcr trusted zioiia-