Newspaper Page Text
WAY0R8SJJOURNAL
Brothers Speak For The
First Time in Many Years
St. Joseph, Mo., July 20—Robert f h )" lcal ailment and that In moat ca
and Joseph Miller, brother!, spoke to aea 11 ma >' ■» Prevented by proper
each other this week tor the Drat time care ' “ d recommending State control
I >-fifteen years. All this time they of the " ale of a 'eohollc liquors were
( Dave lived in the same house, eaten adopted.
at the *ame table, slept in the same
room and been partners In the produce QIIVT II , | FNDQN
farm which they own. They are well- ■ ■ HI LkllUUIl
to-do.
Fifteen years ago when their stock
in trade consisted of a run-down lit- —
tie truck garden they had a falling out Atlanta, July 20.—In a letter to A.
WILL NOT RUN
FRIDAY, JULY 24, 1014.
The Hardwick meeting held last
Griffth’s brief testimony, Miss Grace |
O’Neill, special Judge, granted the de- j
crec. j
"Everything went along smoothly 1
and even the lawyers behaved them-1 . . . .. ... ,.
selves admirably,” said Judge O’neill Sa ‘ urday , n * ht n0 doubta d ‘ op '
after she had dismissed the court. «“ ,ntment 10 h,a a “PP° rte " la Way-
cross.
Hon. Thomas W. Hardwick, candi
date himself, was present and the fact
that he would speak bad been widely
advertised. A brass band was engag
ed for the occasion, and notwtthstand-!
ing the fact that it was Saturday
night, and that the meeting was held
In an open street close to a moving
Hardwick Meeting Falls Flat
"I really enjoyed the experience."
ANDERSON IS
SURPRISING ALL
Atlanta, July 20.—From every sec
tion of the state encouraging reports
over who did the most work, and Jo- H. Ulm, secretary of the Democratic
seph vowed that he would never speak State Executive Committee. Hon. S.
to his brother again until Robert Guyton McLendon, who recently
spoke first. Pride prevented each stated he was In the race for gov-
from being the first to break over. | ernor, announces that lie will not
When they had anything to say to seek this office,
each other they did it through the I Mr. McLendon’s entry into the race
medium of a third person. | was given all sorts of absurd political
"Ask Joe if he is going to town to- significance. It was said that the meeting friends frojn all parts of the
day or whether I shall go," Robert Smith people had put him in the race. Btate and incidentally he Is perhaps
would say to a hired hand, even This was denied and the counter the bUH,eBt man ,n Atlanta,
though Joseph were within a few feet claim was made that the Brown peo- Among the visitors at the head-
of him. | pie were responsible. j quarters yesterday were G. W. Stew-
"Tell Bob I am going because there j Mr. McLendon, however, has tfut art of R,B, “ g .f ft ^. n ®’ S ’.
Is some private business I want to see at rest the whole matter by writing
about.’ Joseph would reply through the folowing letter:
the same medium. | **a h. Ulm, Secretary, Democratic
During their resting hours and, Executive Committee,
through the long winter evenings the "Yielding to the request of a gen-
two played cards together, but each tleman who claimed to speak for
gat stolidly smoking a pipe and neith- ’ himself and others, one I had known
L ®r spoke to the other. With other for several years under professions
people they would talk freely and 0 f friendship and who came under
* easily, but never to each other. J the tongue of good report, I consent-
The silence between them was bro- e d that he and others might enter
ken when Robert was buried under- my name as a candidate for governor,
neath a slide of cordwood which he i now withdraw that consent. Yours
was piling up. Joseph rushed up. truly. S. G. McLendon."
"Oh, Bob, are you badly hurt?" he
asked. Afterwards he said that he did 1
picture sliow there were only about
300 men, women and children present.
Mr. Hardwick had about a dozen loy
al supporters who stood close to the
speaker's stand, and frequently ap
plauded. Outside of these few there
was little or no enthusiasm.
Congressman Hardwick made a hard
effort to explain why he opposed the
parcel post law, but fluring the expla
nation the silence of the crowd was
so pronounced that it was very plain
that Hardwick’s opposition to parcel
post Is not popular in Ware county.
Mr. Hardwick In his speech stated
that he is with Senator Hoke Smith
first, last, and always, but he admitted
that he had been against Smith on the
two greatest laws that have passed,
that is the parcel post, and the
Palmetto; h7 E. Blalock, of Bulloch- I rency bill. Mr. Hardwick while clalm-
vllle; S. F. Strickland, of Alpharetta; that « Slaton ahould go to the —
continue to come Into the headquar
ters of J. Randolph Anderson, and
the indications are that he is rapidly
gaining ground In his race for the
governorship.
The headquarters in the Kimball
House are filled dally with friends of
Mr. Anderson who come to assure
him of their support, and pledge their
efforts In his behalf. Every minute
of the time that he Is not engaged In
the Senate he spends In answering
growing correspondence and
customary for the speaker to vote un
less his vote is necessary to break a
tie. As to the inheritance tax, Speak
er Slaton helped to draft the bill and
when It was passed he, as governor,
approved it.
Alfred C. Newell, chairman of the
Slaton state campaign committee,
answered the Smith card by saying
that "J. R. is evidently violently In
ebriated with his own public import
ance. He wanted Governor Slaton to
name his as Senator Bacon’s
cessor, and J. K. failed to get the
place. If Slaton's record is bad now,
it was equally bad when J. It. wax
supporting hint vigorously for gov
ernor.”
THE change may be critical and cause untold
A suffering in after-life. The modem young
woman is often a “bundle of nerves” *—“high sftrttnf"
—fainting spells—emo ml — frequently blue aiid
/>• a VIdissatisfied with life, buck girls should be helped
hirlhnnd 9 over this distressing stage In life—by a woman’#
* tonic and nervine—that has proven successful for.
40 years.
ravorite Prescription
regular graduated physician of u
carefully adapted to work in harmony
It la now obtainabla (n liquid
drag store—or send 50 one-cent
i of woman. A medicine p repared by
trience in treating woman s diseases—
: delicate feminine constitution*
I tablet form at the
i for a trial t
... —_—. _.phy»W
at tu iH.AU* XIuU ...J Sun.;.
N. Y., and may ba st. rat hat hrr raze w
ful, conseienUoua. confidential eonaMeration. and that J
experienced medical advice will be siven t ‘
to
r omanhood
Off. PIERCE'S
* M laWrtraf*
—— -Aai«d, #i
•3 PLEASANT PELLETS
i utomath, fiver and*
tiny grannie* eaty to loit>
and boutrta.
not realize that he w*as breaking his >-£W8PAPER WRITER
vo “'-. . „ „ , . I JOINS FOREIGN NAVV.
"No, Joe” was the reply, "but this
wood 1. holding mo bo that I cannot Wubin(tDn . July 20 ._ Louto E
*et out without help.’ ! Brown, a young Wa.hlnaton new.pa
Then the two men laughed, .hook man „„ ^ , ,| eutenBllt
hand, and began to converse about comn . anier ., comm „ aloB ln t he Ore-
Edward Black, of Doerun, and H. J.
Quincy of Ocilla.
Mr. Black, who Is the son of Ed
ward Black, Sr., who has been sher
iff of Colquitt county, predicted that
Mr. Anderson will carry that entire
section of the state, without any dif
ficulty. The counties which he enu
merated as certain to go for Ander
son, of his own knowledge, were Col
quitt. Early, Baker, Mitchell and De
actur, the extreme northwestern sec
tion of the state.
Irwin county will go for Mr. An-
1 derson by a big majority, according
to Mr. Quincy of Ocilla. Mr. Ander
son has a number of frieyda In t’| 1
county who are actively supporting
him, and who believe that his election
Is certain.
ate he would vote against Hoke Smith
on every proposition admitted that he
had opposed Hoke Smith on the TWO
GREAT measures for which Smith
fought harder than any other.
Mr. C. E. Dunn is chairman of the
Ware County Hardwick Club, and
claims that Hardwick will carry the
county by a safe vote.
S. F. Strickland, of Alpharetta as-
getting Robert out of hi. unpleasant HeTu'g"o“ne" t o"Nortolk7o aured Mr ’ AndcrBOn lhat he wou,d
captivity. board the battleahip Mississippi,
MRS. CARMAN
IS
BAIL
^reeport, N. Y. July 20.—Mrs. Flor
ence Conklin Carman, indicted Satur
day on the charge of manslaughter'll!
the first degree in connection with the
killing on the night of June 30, in lifer
doctor-husband's office of Mrs. Loillse
Dailey, came back to her home and
her family here today, temporarily a
free woman. She was released for
trial under $20,000 bail fifteen minutes
after the grand Jury made known its
finding.
When Mrs. Carman was led Into the
court room late today for arraignment
she plainly showed the strain she had
been under since her arrest. Her at
torney enterted a pica of not guilty
with the understanding that his client
would have the right within two
weeks and file a demurrer and a mo
tion to quash the indictment on the
ground of Insufficient evidence.
After the ball bond has been arrang
ed and signed the physician's wife was
led to an ante-room and there she col
lapsed.
While she was on her way home
District Attorney Smith reiterated
that he had new evidence which might
later lead to the finding of a super
seding indictment charging Mrs. Car
man with a higher degree of homicide,
He sent detectives to a marsh about a
mile from the Carman home to dig in
a place an Informant said he had seen
a man bury a revolver the day after
the murder. No revolver was found
there, however.
The district attorney also asserted
that if certain clues were developed,
a member of the Carman household
would be placed under arrest as an
accessory after the fact.
which, with Che battleship Idaho, has
been sold to the Grecian government.
Lieutedant commander Brown will go
on duty as soon as he reaches that
country.
' Brown spent three years at the Na
val Academy at Annapolis, but had
to withdraw on account, of ill health.
He then came to' Washington anff fbr
several years wrote state, war and
navy news for a New York newspaper.
His home Is In Bridgeport, Conn.
Watt Hardware Company,
Va.
Joe Schadd and Atlantic Coast
Line Railroad Company.
Complaint. Lien foreclosure.
In City Court of Wayeroaa,
Ware County.
September Term, 1914.
jftou are hereby commanded to
tV and appear at the next Sep
tember term of City Court of said
county to answer plaintiff’s de
mand in a* suit for foreclosure of
material man's lien.
Witness the Honorable John C.
McDonald, Judge of said Court.
E. J. Berry,
Clerk City Court of Wayeroaa.
6 5 6twky.
Mr. R. L. Singleton, while fishing on
St. Simon Island last week got a fish
on his hook that he was not looking
for.
Mr. Singleton is a game fisherman
alright, but he says that he does not
want to catch any more 400 pound
fish with a line and pole. And there
is no denying that the fish Mr. Single-
ton landed was a shark, and weighed i
400 poungs. The proof consists of
three written statements by three gen-
without doubt be given the prefer
ence in Milton county, and Forsyth
county, and that he will carry other
counties in that Immediate section.
B. S. Roan, mayor of Palmetto,
Campbell county, stated that Camp
bell, Carroll and Coweta counties .are
strongly Inclined to Mr. Anderson,
and that he will have no trouble in
carrying them.. Dade county is also
solid for Mr. Anderson, according to
G. W. Stewart of Rising Fawn.
Monday Mr. Anderson will speak
at Decatur. Wednesday at Eastman,
at a log rolling to be given there.
Saturday at Monroe, Monday, July
27th, at Inman Yards, a suburb of
Atlanta, and Thursday, July 30, at
East Point.
PINNCTIKK RESULTS IN
FINDING $130 FIN
Orange, N. J., July 20.—School Com
missioner James P. Keeley of Orange
set out today with his family in hi*
tlcmen who aaw Mr. Singleton land ’ new automobile for the Orange
the shark. j Mountains to find a diamond stick-
This Is not the first fish that R. L. * P*n worth $160 which he had lost
Singleton has told about catching, but. over tbe “me route a week ago.
It is the first one that be can show u I There were sixty miles of roadway
photograph of, and written statement examine. He hoped
Of three other men to back up his fish toexamtne. Hope dwindled as they ran
story. j over the course. When near the Swln-
{field bridge on the Passaic river a
400 SHIPS OF WAR 1 tlre e *P ,oded from a puncture. While
REVIEWED BY THE KING* WM making repairs James
* * P. Keeley, Jr„ found the lost pin. His
London. July 20,-Ore.t Britain, father all * hte, » thorn Inst week,
home fleet of 400 .hip, were reviewed, — i nuvFHTFn
today by the King and bis officers. t.lSHli&if, LUSVKKTKD
Macon Man
Kilis Self
SHAKE IT OFF.
Rid Yourself of rnnercNNiiry Burdens
A WiiyrroKM 4'ltlxen Shows
You lion.
Don’t hour unnecessary burdens.
Burdens of a bad back are heavy.
Get rid of them.
Doan's Kidney Pills are for bad kid
neys. ,
For lame, weak and aching bucks.
Ieocal endorsement proves their
worth.
Mrs. A. James, 105 Carswell Avo.,
Waycross, Ga., says: "Two of my
family had weak kidneys and they
suffered from their bucks which were
lame and sore. They had headaches
Whenever they have had such
troubles, they have taken Doan's Kid
ney Pills and have always been ben
efited. We are mighty well satisfied
with the results Doan’s Kidney Pills
brought and are glad to recommend
them to others.”
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't
simply usk for a kidney remedy
Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that
Mrs. James had. Foster-Milburn Co..
Props., Buffalo, N. Y.
CANT FIND TIIK OPPOSITION*
"We undt istand,” says the Dublin
Courier, "that the 1 fggest trouble
Hoke Smith's campaign managers are
having Just now is the Job of locating
the opposition.”
Women will never Htop dressing the
way they do until all the men arc
struck blind.
Strange, but the smaller the calibre
of the man the more hot air he can
shoot.
THE GREAT SHIP "SEEANDBEE'
Lrngth 500 forl| Waadth *8 tet, 4 inrlm; SlO ititfrumn
gar*. (ImM la raS-bflN I* ill |**t«i«iu*»-rlflit»
talaad watrr* at tha meld. lu MTwJr# Jum litfc.
Magnificent Steamer. '’SEEANDBEE." "City of EH." eaJ "City of Buffalo”
Daily -^CLEVELAND and BUFFALO—May 1st to D«c. let
la-ava Ocvrlaad . * *:00 P. M. !«** flnfbl* * • 8:00 P. M.
Anir* Uaflale • • 6:10 A. M. Anlva Uavolaad . 6:30 A.M.
(Central .Standard Timr)
CaniM-rtl*** at WafUa fa* Niagara Falla and all Faalam aad Camadlaa Palata. Paltraad tlcVrta
reading tn-lnraa ClavaUssd aad Haffale are good for traaayartaUato •« aar .tr.Hirr*. A*k
juar lickat *f#*l for tlrkata via C. A II. IJaa. Writ# a* f»r V«nit,nai* i!l*.lr.lwd boaklrt lire.
THE CLEVELAND 4k BUFFALO TRANSIT CO* Cl.velaaJ. O.
S5»
Macon, Ga., July 20.—Sidney H. How To a,ve Q ulnlne To Children.
Boynton, at ono time one of Macon'. viv,n to an
well know merchant, committed au- uk?°dee, n£tdiHe'mu&'ura^h!
Icde at hi. home 6S Arnlgton Place.
i»t mght by .hootmg him..if through , u .5*„ , fes: , . ,, is:rtSs? f r.Ksr.*d“is
the head. 1 11 next tlmo you need Quinine for any pur-
— , _ . . . „ ' Poee. Ask for 2-ounce orteinnl packayr. The
Mr. Boynton had been a sufferer •'•mo fkbjuunk io blown la bouie. si ceuu.
from Bright's Disease for over a year
and had been unable to lie down iu
that time. For a week he had shown
evidences of being mentally deranged,
and had previously threatened to kill
himself. ?
He was 68 years of age and came
to Macon from Twiggs county forty-
five years ago. Besides his widow
he Is survived by the following chil
dren: Mrs: J. T. Olover. Blrmlng-
Mrs, W. L. Sherrill, New York;
Sidney H. Boynton. Chicago, and Mrs.
W. P. McNair, of W«ron.
GEORGIA SCHOOL OF TECHNOLOGY, Atlanta, 61
As the 400 ships lined out for re
view and the King with his high offi
cials sailed by an hundred airships
sailed above the men of war making
the maneuvers the most spectacular
that ever took place.
It is estimated that Great Britain has
spent $3,5000,000 during the past score
of years ln construction of her home
fleet alone.
ASHMORE CHALLENGED.
Atlanta, July 20.—The senate was
considerably amused today over
speeches by Senators Allen and Mc
Gregor, who replied to alleged at
tacks made upon the senate and Inci
dentally them for championing the old
Webster blub back apeUer, in a re
cent resolution passed by the senate.
Their principal grievance seemed to
be against Prof. Otis Ashmore, super- BRIDE $<t GROOM 77,
Intendent of schools of Savannah, j MINISTER tl—224,
whose criticism they did not like, and Pasadena, Cal., July 20.—With
pleasant resolution of censure of combined age of 234 years for the
Prof. Ashmore, accompanied by a vote bride, bridegroom and minister,
CONFESSES OLD THEFT
Sayre, Okla., July 20.—Following
conversion to Christianity, C. W.
Jones, foremer csshier of the now 11*
quidated First State Bank of Texxola
Okla , returned here and confessed
that on the night of January 8, 1908.
be robbed the bank o$ which he was
an officer of $5,000 hid the money
and then returned to the institution
tied a towel round his mouth and
handcuffed himself to the bank fix
tures to lend color to the story of
being attacked by robbers.
As partial restitution Jones has
paid over to the officers $400 and of
fers to surrender an Insurance pol
icy on which he says $300 can be
rellzed.
NO ATTENTION IS PAID TO
SMITH’S ATTACK ON SLATON
Attain*, Ga., July 21.—The card of
Mr. J. R. Smith, ot Atlanta, attacking
the record ot Governor Slaton, ha.
hardly cauaed a ripple ot excitement
though there have been many exprea-
•lona ot surprise that Mr. Smith hu
turned against a former friend. Gov
ernor Staton hu not dignified the at
tack with a reply, hut some ot hi.
rrtend. have pointed out that
Smith nude several direct mlutatd-
ment. mad several statement, which
were by no mean, the whole truth.
They show that Governor Slaton,
as t legislator, did vote for the Iran-
chlee tax and the dlafranchlsemep:
law. On the convict lease bill he had
no occasion to vote as he was speak-
end there Waa no tie, and It la not
ot confidence in the senators In qi
tion wu adopted. Later Senator Me-
Gregor announced his challenge to
Prof. Ashmore to a “spelling hu* and
named Smith Clayton ot Atlanta u
the senate representative, the Mae
luck speller to be used exclusively.
WOMAN JtDGE CITES
-SISTER” QUICK DECREE.
AUEN1STS URGE SEX
HYGIENE IN SCHOOLS.
Chicago. July 2fl.—Tha teaching of
sex hygiene In public school* above Terre Haute, Ind., July 20.—For
the primary grades was advocated to a fifteen minutes a woman occupied the
resolution adopted today at the sea- bench of the Vigo Superior Court to
•Ion of the alienists and neurologists hear the divorce action of Mrs. Voor-
now holding their annus! convention hoes Griffith against her husband,
here. who Is comptroller of the city of Ter-
reeolutloos urging the aboil- re Haute.
Ubor, the education of After the formal presentation of
public to. the fact that ev- the complaint, which charged cruel
Insanity Is caused by some and inhuman treatment, and
novel wedding ha* Joined a
aged ,7 to a woman aged N years.
The bridegroom Is William Mc
Bride who two years ago celebrated
the H anniversary ot hla marriage
to bis wife now dead. The bride I*
Mrs. Emma Hughes aged M, mother
of thirteen children and since her
marriage of yesterday wife of on
and widow of toother Civil war vet
eran. The minster Is tbs Rev. Levi P
Crawtoed, ninety-on*.
D. T. DEBX. A. C. BRAT.
BEEN a BRAT, LAWYERS.
322-328 Bunn Bldg.
WAYCROSS. - - GEORGIA.
New Zealand trades unions are de-
Mrs.mandfng a minimum wage for women.
m HER FRIENDS
HARDLY_KNOW HER
Bat TU* Does Not BotWf Hr*.
Baton, Under tbn
Grcmmtancei.
Houston, Texas.—In an loteresOnt
letter from this city, Mrs. S. C. Button
writes as foOoto: -I Brink It Is my duty
to ten you whit year medicine, Csrdui,
(he woman’s tonic, las done far me.
I wis down sick with womanly trouble,
lad ay mother advised several different
treatments, but they didn't seem to do
SK any food. I lingered along for three
or W» months, end for three weeks, J
wee hr bed, so sick I couldn’t bear tor
•ay one to wtlk across the Boor.
My husband advised me to try Carthd,
(be woman’* tonic. I lave taken two
bottles of Cardui, am feeling fine, gained
15 pound* ind do *H of my housework.
Meads hardly know me, 1 am so well.”
If you suffer from any of the allmesi*
so common to women, don't allow the
trouble to become chronic. Begin taking
Csrdui today) H i* purely vegetable,
it* Ingredients acting In • gentle, natural
way on the weakened womanly constitu
tion. You ran no risk in trying Csrdui.
It has been helping weak women back to
health and strength lor more than 50
yean. It will help yon. At all dealers.
*VW tor Csawi ■* MeM* Cs,Je«n
boot- Ofl—nogri. !*•«-. tm tponn!
jnMructitm ** j awr a * an4t*-Mt b—Is. H
— « Hate muff*. X
The South's great
Technical and
OmTeehSpells'
lunity” tor the young
men of Georgia and tha
South.
Offan fun fomsyoor toaxom la
Mechanical, Textile, Chemical, CM]
had Electrical Engineering,
and Architecture.
K. a FnATKESOre, Frcidtnt.
Fifteen Free Scholarships For Each County in Georgia.
—The U. S. Senatorship—
HERE ARE THE RECORDS
1. Thomas W. Hardwick
first contpicuouR act was
veto In Congroao to raise h
own Mlory U 1.1 por cant.
Parcel Poit—th# greatest boon
tho farmers hove hod In o gen*
orotlon. Ho boooto thot ho still
1. John M. Slaton loft tho
choir in tho Stoto Senate and
•oved the Income Tax amend*
ment which putt the burden of
taxation on tho rteh.
, 2. Mr. iioton would, If modo
Senator, maintain and axtond
tha preeont Parcel Poet »ya*
f. Mr. Hardwick fought Proa*
Idant Wilson's new currency
« en which tha Wall Strati
nkort opposed. Thlo new law
will anabla tha farmers of tha
United States to borrow $600,*
000.000.CO. Tho proportion to
Georgia will be $10,000,000.00.
Tha Torti\*rt win be able to bor*
row on cotton, corn, live-stock
and produce.
4. Mr. Hardwick turned tha
facilities of tha Government
Printing Office In Weehlngton
over to a paid lobbyist. Ho haa
been using the Government
franks to send hie speeches
broadcast to promoto hie can
didacy for Senator.
ft. Mr. Hardwick has not an
swered a dozen roll-cells In
three months. Ho Is drawing
down $2ft,40 a day from tho No.
tlonal Treasury as a Represen
tative of ti.o Tenth District.
ft. Mr. Hardwick whlto pro*
claiming bombaitlaaMy through
out tho fttato that h# cut tha
duly from sugar, tho record lo
» alnst him. Ho waa Chairman
a Committee to Investigate
tho Sugar Trust. In hie report
of thirty-two pages not ono
word can be feund about reduc
ing or taking tha tax off sugar.
(Boo report 111, aixty-eocond
Congress, Second Session.)
, 7. During hi* twelve years
In Congrats. Mr. Hardwick haa
not bean tha author or tho
chief premotor of any ana nets*
tern.
ft. Mr. Slaton la far tha now
Currency Law, bocauea It will
provant panic conditions and
high money rates. He la for •
system of national rural eradlts.
In hli own pockot for I
palgn expenses. If elected ha
wiir not bo under obligation to
any man or set of men.
ft. Mr. Slaton hao boon a
consistent advocate of low tariff
and of all acts which would re
duce tha high cost of living.
7. Hero are some of the acts
which characterize tha record
of John M. Slaton i
I am I
BED!
that ffeti the jenra
>efort the fftraw get
the hoc.
One tablespooaful of Bod Devil Lye
dissolved la a pint of *6tor, then
to the slop or soft feed for ten
fergs f«d to bogs Bight aad aaoralrf
iJrroogboot tbe^per, will FBCVOtT
e;.olsro and warms.
io heeoem worn .
» bogs ekk. Give me a choose
at those germs aad worms aad lit
SAVE YOTR HOPS
I am
Red Devil Lye.
Mr. Slaton put over the Inheritance Tax Law which
many others had recommended but not produced.
Put over the Revised Registration Law which other*
had failed to get through.
Reduced the State's expenditures for the first time fn
forty years.
Protected the State’* credit and financial itanding by
borrowing money for Georgia at 3 per cent when neigh
boring States were paying 7 per cent
Fought for and put over the Tax Equalization Law,
which ha* put million* of formerly unreturned property
on the t$x books.
He Raved the State’s credit and made ft possible at
the same time to lower the tax rate.
Redeemed In a year hi* pledge* as Governor, and
accomplished more constructive work during that pe
riod than had been done in ten years before.
HE IS THE BEST TRAINED PUBLIC MAN IN GEORGIA.
John M. Slaton State Campaign Committee
ALFRED C. NEWELL. Chalrnia* J. A. MORROW, Skkutt
N. B.—Don't forget that Hardwick boasts that ho fought
Parrel Foot.
6-A. *