The Montgomery monitor. (Mt. Vernon, Montgomery County, Ga.) 1886-current, December 02, 1909, Image 5
Gov. Brown's Sufficient Reply. Atlanta, Cm., Nov., 25 —\\ hen occasion demands Governor Brown can be about aa tart and to the point as any man alive. Usually mild ami pacific in his bearing towards all mankind, he can and will fight back hard and straight from the shoulder wheu crowded or unjustly criticised. That is just what he do“s in the case of Judge X • >vt Morris ot Marietta, long a political em in> of the governor and an ardent ad vocate of Hoke Smith. Judge Morris wrote a lengthy open com munication to the governor criti cising him for allowing Kellogg, a Cherokee count}’ negro to hang, while he saved Elliot,the LaGrauge veternarian, from the gallows. Governor Brown’s reply is short and to the point. He says: “I find only two points in it ' calling for uot'ce, viz: Your ref erence to my decisions in the Kol-1 logg and Elliott appeals for clem ency. Regarding Kellogg who was tried before you, you say: “ “With that construction, lie was only guilty of manslaughter; construing it m its strongest light ho certainly was not guilty of such I murder as would demand the i death penalty. 1 have discharged j my duty—the responsibility u upon you.’ ‘“Tins is a clever effort on your .part to avoid responsibility plac ed upon you by law uh judicial officer, and shift it on the execu tive. It should not only be youi pleasure, but it is your sworn duty to correct errors committed m your court either hv you or the i jury. The executive department is separate and distinct from the judicial, and you should know j that 1 have no authority to set a side a Verdict and judgment in your court, and order a diffient one, Kellogg was not hanged in consequence of any order of mine, but in pursuance of a solemn judg ment and sentence pronounced by you. “I regret that you feel that the ■ blood of innocence isou your hands but the place for correction was in your court, and a confession of them in the newspapers neither j absolves'you nor does ii add any credit t o the adniinistiition of law i in your circuit. “Concerning your criticism of ; my decision in the Elliott case, I ! will merely remark that your: words show clearly that you have | not read a syllable of the record which was exhaustively examined j by me, or if you had, certainly not understanding!v; hence I shall not gratify your desire for a controversy m the uewpapors or j elsewhere on that subject.” ENORMOUS TAX FROM COR PORATION. Washington, Nov. 27. —The cor poration tax regulations are com- < plete and ready for the printer. The latest estimate indicate a j net revenne of approximately $25, 1 ouo,ooo annually, and 122.000 cor porations are likely to have to, pay corporation taxes. There are mauv uncertainim about its effects. In one of the i far southwestern states, for in- j stance, it nas been found that not j more than ten per cent, of the i many thousand of corporations j whose official existence was au-1 tiiorized have ever actually done business. Improper registration in many cases is fully expected with such a gigantic scheme, but the various penalties will apply without re- . gard to whether a concern has tailed to g«’t the forms and regu I latimis: The mailing of the forms and blanks to every corporation , listed in the various districts is | not specifically required by law, , and is merely to usa.ai the corpo rations. i J. M. Brooksher Jc Son, the stock men, will have a carload of the best horses and mules in Mt. Wrnou Dec. 3. and if in need of clock, do not fail to see them MR. SUMNER ALMOST ENDS HIS LIFE. It was a shock to his many acquaintances here when they heard that llev. W D. f. Summer on last Thursdaylnight had.seriously cutjhis‘throat with a pocket knife, evidently with suicidal iuteut. Dr. Keution stat es that, he harelyjmissed severing the jugular vein and this fact., that he did not cut the vein, saved inis life. And today he appears to he getting along all right from the tl«ctsCotjthe*cut. m £ jl licjattemptJto end his life oc curred in the bedroom whereJMrs. Summer and some.'Jfriemls were sitting talking and Mr. Summer had just lain down on the bed anc! without warning of any kind the tirstjthe family (knew* was when t hey discovered Mr.Summer,strug glins and saw blood flowing from the wound. Mr. Summer had been in very feeble health tor several months, j but his physical condition for some days before Thursday had improved considerably and he was able to sit up and walk around , the house. I’he opinion of tin doctor is that, he was mentally un balanced for the time and really I did not know what he was doing. At first, Mr. Summer stated t< i those around hnn that a aegr had cut his throat and he insisted on this. Since recovering some what and since his mind hn j seemed to clear up, he states that he has no idea why he should have ! done,this act, that, while he had | been sick a great deal, the thought l of suicide had never' occurred to him. The doctor states that there is a noticeable improvement in bis physical and mental condition now. All hope that Mr. Sumner may soon bo well and strong agitin, and trust to see him out attending to his affairs in a short while.— Telfair Enterprise. Caroline’s Chapel. OoiTUHiioDilunco. Among those who attended tlm tackey partv at the home of I)r. | Sharpe were Mr. J. L. Sharpe, Miss Alma Sharpe, Jim and Bruce Sharpe, Mr. Frank Galbreatb and sister. Miss Esther, Miss Beatrice Sharpe and Rosa McLemore, and Messrs. Bert, Powell, G. R. Evans and J. If. Drew. Mr. Arch Carpenter spent Sat urday night at the home of Mr. J. W. Sharpe. Miss Agnes Odom spent Satui - j day and Sunday with Miss Esther Gaibreath. Mr \V. A. Henriot called at the homo of Mr. B. L. Powell Sunday. Misses Jennie and Lottie Gar rett visited Miss Galbreatb Sun day. Sunday school was well attend ed at Caroline’s Chapel last, Sab bath, and it is hoped that the at tendance will increase. Misses Nettie Byrd andLolliej Adams visited Miss Alma Sharpe j Sunday last. Our school is progressing nicely; under the able management of Miss Ruth Clapp. Mrs. C. J. Jackson was a recent visitor at the home of Mrs. Sam Rollins. Miss Marion Sharpe, who has been ill for some time, is now im-j proving. —Rosebud. CHURCH DYNAMITED. Dahiouega, Ga., Nov. 27. — Last night the organ and altar in the Presbyterian church was dyna mited and many windows were broken by the concussion. Penti costal worshipers have been using the chureh'in holding protracted services. The people of Dahlonega will offer a reward for the perpetrators ot the deed. N w is the time to cook your fruit j cake Seeded Raisins, Currants,! Prunes and Apricots to be found | at M [■ Fountain's, the grocer. | 4 THE MONTGOMERY MONITOR— THI USDAY. DEC 2, JMOO. THE BAREcK'S TRADE. Mon Who Followed It and Afterward Ro«« to Fame. Perhaps the best known of all fwirbers who have attained fame .vote Arkwright, the improver <u ; the spinning jenny, who is said t<> , have turned to mechanics when the wignmkiug trade fell ol!'. and Jere my Taylor, who was brought up ii his father's shaving shop at Cam bridge. Edward Sugden. afterward made Baron Saint Leonard.-, was the son of a hair cutter in a simp in Lin oln's inn. London. A storv is told to the effect that one** when Sug -1 hen was addressing a crowd in the interest of his camDlacv to purlin I incut a man called out to know i what soap cost and how lather was i made. “1 am particularly obliged j to that gentleman." Sii Edward is j reported to have said, “for remind i ing me of my lowly origin. It is ! true that 1 am a barber's -on and 1 that I myself was once a barber. If I the gentleman who so politely re I minded me of these facts had been • a barber be would have continued to remain one till the end of his I j Charles Abbott. Baron Tenter den. was also a barber'- son. and ii | >s related how. when he was made J a peer of England, lie took his own j son to a little Westminster shop ; and bade him remember it was there I that his grand fat her had been nc j ustothed to .shave other- for a pen ny. i William Falconer, the poet, was a I poor barber in Edinburgh until his poem “‘The Shipwreck” brought him renown and incidentally a com mission in the royal-navy. I ragg . associated with (he south sea bubble, was a barber turned promoter. lie been me enormously wealthy. But. when the south -ea crash came his fortune dwindled, and in despair he committed .-ui cide. Giovanni Belzoni of Padua was a barber with a varied and interest ing history. -Belzoni set up a shop in England, but soon found more profit in posing at Sadler’s Wells as the “Patagonian Samson.” Being of thrifty temperament. Belzoni m ; cumulated quite a fortune as the i discoverer of interesting relies in the tombs of Egypt and n« a travel 1 er.—Chicago Record Herald. A Professor's Tact. While conducting examinations !at an English university Professor j D’Arey Thompson learned that one | of the students to be examined, a I young woman who was a candidate for a degree, was so timid and nervous that it was likely -he would not. do herself justice in the exami nation, and he was asked to make allowances for this. Professor Thompson asked to be presented t<> her before the hour for examina tions, and after'meeting her he sug gested that as they had a few mo ments at their disposal he would be i pleased to have her show him about i the museum. She gladly agreed, j arid they spent a delightful half 'hour. But when the dreaded tinie i approached the nervousness of the j young woman been me apparent, j Finally she summoned courage to i ask when the ordeal would take | place. The conclusion of the storv iis obvious—Professor Thompson told her the dreaded hour wa- over. While they sauntered about the museum he had put her thrombi a rigid examination. She had an swered his question.- brilliantly, and she received her degree. H«roe» That Pass IJnhonorsd* The unselfish nurse who devote | her days and nights on the battle ! field or in the bo-pita! to the relief 'of suffering nun,amt v: tin* pool overworked mother who sacrifice. i her pleasure and her health for the sake of her offspring; the laborer j who toils anil toils for the support lof his family, in tieknes- a- in health and in spite of the diffictii i ties that beset hi- uphill path -all j these and maitj* more arc doing , things perhaps more truly heroic than the deed- of -erne whom tic , world acclaim- as its greatest lie roes.-- Baltimore Sun. Repaid. Torke—Your doughtci" rini-ienl ; education must have co.-t a lot of money? I>e Porke—Ye-, it «Ini. I,at I’ve got if all hack. J "or l»e — Indeed ! I )'■ Porke Yes. I'd been frv dig to buy the hou.-e next door for years, and they wouldn’t -*-! 1. But since she’s come lini.ie thevhe sold it to rnc for half price.- Harper’* Weekly. Higher Things. Grace—Women are not so frivo j Jou- as you think. To n. There arc ‘ Mill some who have ihoi.lit- of j higher thing- than dre--. Tom—Oh. ve-. I know—bat-! 1 London Illustrated Bit.. I A CALL DOWN. J The O Yica 3g> s Comment V/hrn th* K ick Got to Him. I | ““Good morning, Johnson.” -a I •|I he pr*- idem wlu-n ihe miner,i: ; yiatiagei stood belorc Inin. “Do , 1 volt know then seem- to lum iiem . a Inlle lulling oil in the work of the office for the la-t month? No ! catastrophe or anything ot that (sort, ion know, hut the ,-taudurd of ; efficiency seems to have lowered j jusi a little. I merely wanted,to; • j call your attention to it. Nothing i j more. \ ice dav. isn't ii ?" "S.tv. Brunner,’’ said the general ! ! manager to the office manager, “do • | you know vour office force is tailing ■ {down? Well, it is. for the period jn-t passed there ha- been a drop in : your system that made considerable | . ; trouble. I'd jerk somebody up if 1 ! were you. A hint to the wise, you j . , know “\\ ilsou." said the office manager . to the chief clerk, “come here. I i 1 want to tell you one thing, and that I- that there's got to be a change in the way things are going around ; , | this dump. Do you hear,, me? ' What's the matter? What’s tin , , ; matter! That’s a line question from j you! What isn't the matter i< the ; proper thing to ask. Tilings liavi 1 been going to the dogs for a month I pa l. I'm not laying the fault at vour door—ail ot it anyhow -‘but,! i ! you know what that, means, fulling | > I down. Gel a lin.-lb* on von. now, l j -tiii! see that your clerk- don t .keep j falling down or- I leave the rest to j your imagination.” “Say. you prize mutts,” said tin chief clerk to bis underlings, “do you know vv Ini I’s going t< • happen to about half a do/ell of von? S o.i’je ’ going to get decorated w ith a large, 'shiny tin can it von don’t smoke up \ and do better work than y ou’ve b,een ■ guilty ot ior the last month. You’ve been working like a lot of sewer. j diggers. I never saw anything to heal win for tin* cellar champion ship. Now , get bust uml do thing-. | and do them right. J'd bate to have , lo recommend a wholesale cunning ! stunt, hut- von know what I’m i here for." The clerks went humbly hack to 1 their desks. Out. to them came tin'.' , office boy with u grin on his face. “Say.” tie began, but I luce voice cut him short. “Blank, blank, blank yon!” said i (be voices, “You little ruul ! \Vliv ! don't you tend to vour tni-inc -. so we can get things done right?’’ Then they all look a kick at him and went back to work satisfied. “Gee.’ -aid the office bov. rub j hing his -ore spots and'eying tin j president’s office, “'gee, hut ihm call down certainly traveled some!” j Chicago Ti ibtine. Rest Astor Meals. Hurried eating of meal.-, follow- j jed immediately by some employ ment that ecciipic-- the whole ah | tent ion and take* up all or neariv all of the physical energies, i sun to result in dyspepsia in one form i or another. Sometimes it show itseli in excessive irritability, a j sure indication that nerve force ha been exhausted. The double draft, in order to Vli gest the food and car-tv on the busi ness, ha- been more than nature could ,-t.ind without being thrown out of balance. Nature does not do two things at a time and do both ! well as a rule. All know that when a ton e is divided it is wea .die I. ; If 11n- meal vvro eaten -lowly, w ith out preoccupation of the mind, and i the ■ toinacli allowed at lea-1 half an ! hour’- chance to get it- work iu'i [ undertaken before the nervotr- : fm ... re tinned m another dire lion | alii ni- suffering from dvq'.e t -in would I*' couiparativi'ly few,— Family Doctor. D.-rcieg by Halve*. “At a dam e the nllu r night I nut the mo t popular girl I evei •a'v,” said a Harlem bachelor. “I , a ked her to dance. Site sai l -be , would like to, tint she had oniv half ia dance left. If I vva wiling to i lake l hat. al! right. “I* vva- u new experience to share one dunce with a rival, but I agreed ;to tier terms. I thought up to the j la-t minute that -In- was fooling. hat when my part of the waltz va i done -he (iui me down tor the lir-f ■ half site glided awe; from tie- arid -ailed off in I fie arm- of I lie olid! ! cliup. v. ho had In eli standing j 'around awaiGiig hi-, mtportunily.' , “‘That i- v!iat I call popularity 1 rais'd to it- verv highest power.”— New V ork • ilohe. The Gallery GocJ. At an interminably long perforro -1 aiice of “Monte tiri-to. with i Cliarh-s Fed'! .-r in t! c cfiara'tcr of j the hero, the curtain ro c for the ■ia t act at a quarter <•*! I in the morning. Eeehw r wa- di-eovered sifting in a conternplaf.i < e allil.odc He neither moved nor -poke. Ju-t then a clear, -ad voice in the. gallery exclaimed. “1 bo|ie vve urc not keep ing you up, *-r!’’ 1 The Panic is Over! I As an indication that tin* panic is over, times arc prosper- fjjj !s.j oiis, and money moi’i plentiful I halt ever, we note with 53 i v 7 pleasure the numlierof new accounts that are 82 «£ being opened. We've Opened more « new aeeounts since S<• |>t. I than ever before in the same JBCie period of time CSfx $ Let This be Your Invitation S 5 to open an account with u- it von have never before done JH W so. We will appreciate it, and yon will appreciate n W it, when you have t rnnl us a while kN j| If You Have a Deal in Prospect jg I and have not enough money to swing it, call on us. We W will help vou out. We are now making loans KX due in the fall of HllO M THE MT. VERNON BANK g AU. Vernon, On. S* Horses and Mules. CARLOAD JUST RECEIVED. See Them at Our New Barn AND TAKE FIRST CHOICE. Nothing Iml Slock to bo round in tin* Lot. Call at once. There <*oinj»-. Mcßae & Bro., 31 OP NT v FUNON, CJA. I Patrick 8c Company < l Ztl l l'S y Z I Zr. *Tarrytown, Cia. « £ Staple and Fancy Groceries * l Dry Goods, Notions, 3 l Fruits, Produce 4 > ... 1 j> Fresh and Reliable (ioods at Fair Prices 4 > A T rial is Solicited 4 VVVVt%VVVVV%\VV\VVtVVVVt W'VW%^'WW*V^'VW L: S E ABOARD I i AIR LINE R’Y. 11 These iimviils and depart ire- published only iih ]j |l information, and are not guaranteed. j! ( |i Schedule Fffective .hiniiary .‘ld, 19(H). ij - -■ - -- - ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■■ ■ 5 |,v. Mr. VKHNoN' am. thus* oaji.y. lj # : - < |();0)s j, m. Fir If. lenn. Ahbe.vilh*. Cordele, | f Alliel'iClM, Columbus, ' s H"2'2 |i in. Montgomery, uml all point* west. 1 J —— “ i 0:17 a. in. For I,yon*, Collins, Savannah, t 4 : 5!5 p. in. and all points east. ; j Jo further informal e,i reservations, ratua, etc., see your | f nearest Sea boa id li<' *d Agent, o r write i | It. 11. STANSJCI.L, A. (i. 1* A., i I i Savannah, - ... (ikohuia. i U »*%WWW W«*W >%W.WVW*W*VMWWWWtH»WWW»