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VOL, X.--NO. 52.
Eminent Minister Again Tells
of Mr. Brown’s Standing.
From Valdosta Times.
In order to ascertain whether or
not Mr. JosephM Brown is as bad
a man as some of his opponents
make it appear, a gentleman here
wrote to Rev. John E. White, of the
Second Baptist Church of Atlanta,
to find out something about him.
‘Dr. Whites reply makes interesting
reading, and is as foilows:
“My Dear Sr: I am in receipt
of your letter of the 13th instant,
making inquiry of me as the pastor
of the Second Baptist church, At
lanta, coucerning Hon. Joseph M.
Brown accompanied by the state
ment that reports are being circulat
ed in your country to the effect that
he is an immoral man and a whisky
man. Ido not feel that I should
hesitate a moment inanswering your
letter with frankness. Such reports
abovt Mr. Brown are utterly false.
He is 2 member of the Second Bap
tist Church, Atlanta. not only in or
dinary good standing, but in the
particular high esteem ot all ‘who
krowv him. He is 2 modest, earnest
and unostentatious Christian. No
breath of immorality or wrongdoing
has ever, so far as I have heard or
so far as the people of the Second
:Baptist Church have heard, beeni
-attached to hisname. He 15 lare
est individual €ontribntor to mis
“sions in the Second Bantist chm‘ch%
and has been for many vears, gl-‘
though his residence was in Man
_etta, Ga. Only very recently he
RN T SO\ el SOl
L “”3’ £y dere T 2
“cer endowment fund, Mr. Brown's
record on the prohibition question
1s well known in Fulton County, he
stood with Henry Grady and Dr,
Hawthorne in their campaign. Dr,
Hawthorne is my authority for this
fact, ant many others Identified
with the leadership of that campaign
on the prohibition side. Peculiar
significance was attached to his
~ stand because of the fact that he
was against hs father and other
members of his family in obedience
to his personal convictions that pro
hibition is right.
“[ am also in possession of the
intformaticn that he has always
steadily refused to rent his private
and personal property for saloon pur
poses in Atlanta although he owned
property constantly in demand for
such purposes at a very much higher
rate of rental. |
*‘Personally, T believe from what
I know of Mr. Brown’s character,
conduct and coanvictions., that the
interest of prohibition can be safely
trusted to his hands. Of any other
issue 1n the campaign I have noth
ing to say. I am merely desirous
in answer to your letter that the
false reports which you say are be
ing circulated concerning Mr. Brown
may have a positive denial from his
pastor.
I am, sincerely yours,
Joun E. WHITE.
All teachers or applicants for li
cense to teach in the common
schools of this connty are required
to atiend the teachers’ institute
which converes here on Saturday,
June 13th and closes on June 18th.
We expect a good attendance as the
institute will be held just prior to
the examination and offers some
good advantages to all teachers and
especially those who intend taking
the examination.
Now, we especially insist on a
good attendance as the law requires
all teachers to attend.
We trust that our teachers will
show more interest in fhis work
than heretofore.
Very truly,
L. E. MaLrarp, C. §. C
Master Jesse J. Anderson, of
Wainwright, 1s stopping with his
brother, Mr, J. L *nderson, here.
Jesse is practicing telegraphy, and,
says it is the hardest thing he ever
tried to learn, but he takes courage
from the fact that a young lady is to
begin practicing soon and he will
then have some one to share his
troubles,
CAND/DATE SMITH
" &
DENIED THAT GOV.
SMITH WAS HAPPY
~ WHEN SIGNING
'~ PROHIBITION
4 BILL.
lm: ADDRESSED A LARGE AUDIENCE
LAST NIGHT AND HIS“"SPEECH WAS
WELL RECEIVED, HE HAD SOME WARM
ALLUSIONS FOR EDITORS WHO ARE
AGAINST HIM THIS YFAR,
Agusta, Ga,, Mav 11—Gov Smith '
arrived in Agusta this morning shorts,
ly before 7 o’clock, -via, the Georgia
Railroad. Nobody met him at the'
train, and he went alone to the Al
bion Hotel. Later in the day many
friends called upon him and it was
explained that Agusta’s seeming lack
of courage was due to the fact that
the Governor was ;’éxpecl‘e‘fl to arrive
on a later train, for which a recep
tion commitiee was @rganized
About g o’clock tonight the cur
tain rose at the Grand Opera House
showing Gov Smith and about nine
ty citizens of Agusta on the stage
with some 1,200 people occupying
the house. Mr, E. F. Verdey, act
ing as chairman, introduced Rodney
S. Cohen, Esq., who, in turn, intro-i
duced the Governor. % |
Along its general lines thie speech 1
was the same Gov. Smith has been
delivering at other places, but he in
jected some new matter and made
numbers of local allusions. Qutlin=
ing his stand-on prohibition, the
speaker said he was prohibition i
his own county and for local optiri%‘
throughou/t the state, but' he had
said he wounld sign a state prelibition
figl,’_jtit was passed, and that he
PO, DAY.
While Gov. Smith was ralking
along these linesa voice from the
gallery criad out: ““And this is the
happiest day of my life,” ,
Pointing his finger straight at the
man Who had interrupted him Gov.
Smith said: “The man who says
that lies. [lhe man who said that
lied. and he knew he lied. I never
said 't was the happiest day of my
lite when I signed the prohibition
bill. What I caid was simply that
the bill had passed and ‘was now
law.” :
The men in the gallery answered:
1“Well, the newspapers said you did.”
“Yes, and they lied.” replied the
‘Governor, and added that no man
had ever dared to come to him face
to face and say the report was true.
DID HE SAY IT OR DID HE NOT?
If Governor Smith did not say,
when signing the prohibition bill,
**This is the happiest day of my
life” why did he let the assertion
remain so long uncontradicted?
Why, when Mr, Brown announc
ed his candidacy for governor, did
Mr. Smith try to make us all believe
that he was the only true and safe
man to be elected as governor of
Georgia to protect the prohibition
cause? Why, after doing all this,
did he in his speech in Augusta on
May Irth, braad newspapers and
everybody else who 1s not for Smith
for governor, as liars?
Will candidate Smith please ex
plain? The fact is, Governor Smith
has lost his head, and ‘“Wliom the
Gods would destroy thev first make
mad,”
The World’s Best Climate
is not entirely free from dicease,
on the high elevations fevers pre.
vail, while on the lower levels mala
ria 1s encountered to a greater or
less extent, according to altitude.
['v overcome climate affections lass
itude, malaria, jaundice, biliousness,
fever and ague and general debility,
the most effective remedy is Elec
tric Bitters, the great alterative and
blood purifier; the antidote for every
form of bLodilv weakness, nervous
ness, and insomnia. Sold under
lguarantee by all druggists. Frice soc.
FOLKSTON, GA THURSDAY, MAY 21, 908,
KILLED HUGE BEAR.
Last Thursday Messrs. Sam and
Allen Chesser located a monstrous
bear eatinz a hog which it had car-?i
ried about a mile into the Ukeefino-?,<
kee swamp. Together with -their
boys and dogs they drove bruin out.
his thicket into the open, where Mr.
Allea Chesser, by a few well direct
ed shots, brought lown one of the
largest bears that has been killed'
around here for a long time. '
' JOEBROWN ON ORATORY
| *‘l will candidly confess that [do
not claim to have been gifted by
Providence with an orator’s voice,
whereby I could be heard by throngs
in the open air or in large halls. In
the present condition of affairs, it is
my candid conviction that the las
boring masses of our staté, whethet
in factories or shoys, or son the
farms, need prosperity rather than
oratorv. In truth, it is more thas
a figure of speech to say that.'lfif
time has come wken Georgia should
}dlsassociate herself from the aris
!tocracy of oratory and clasp hands
‘with the democracy of deeds. Hence,
‘m this campaign I will not under
‘take to make political speeches, but
\will seek to bring about that spirit
of sympathetic accord and co-oper
'atWe endeavor which would again
secure employment, with fair wages,
to those of our fellow-citizens who
are now unwillingly ‘idle, whose
families are deprived of the come
forts of life, and to restore “such
imnfidenc‘e in the good faith ot_ our
state and her officials i guarantee
ing t every dollar invested im sthe
state equal protection of the lawglas’
will attract to the caital'n J
develop her resources of ev 4
. g e A’
governor, | pledge every endeavor
us my nature to the upbuilding and
development of of this great state
and the restoration of prosperity to
ali of her people,” - Joss M. Bruwn’s!
Aunouncement,
e
BIDS WANTED I
The Board ot County Commis
sioners will receive bids for the re
filling of the Suwanee canal at the
Icrossing of the Public road, knownl
as the Swamp read,
' Specification—the road shall be
fifteen feet wide at the top, two feet
higher than the main land, no ob
structions shail be used to prevent
’dirt rolling to bottom of fill. Bidsl
must all be in by Monday June Ist,
1908, l
’ The Board reserves the right to
'reject any and all bids.
| Done by order of the Board of
County Commissioners.
‘ 8. F. MILLs, Chairman,
This April 28th, 1908.
' A CGalifornian’s Luck.
““The luckiest day of my life was
when I bonght 2 box of Bucklen’s
Arnica Salve;” writes Charles F
Budahn, of Tracy, California. “I'wo
26c. boxes cured me of an annoying
case of itching piles, which had
troubled me for years and vyielded
to no other treatment.” Sold under
’guarantee at all drug stores.
l DENTAL NOTICE
I will be in Folkston on Monday,
‘Mav 25th for a few days. Call
early and make 2ngagements.
Dr. DanieL, Dentist.
its a he,” says Governor Hoke,
And this time its not a joke.
He’s mad. and he’s sad,
And he’s not 2 bit glad, |
That he signed tte bill. l
Then he was happy;
Now, not a bit! |
That’s why, each day he throws,
A new conpiption fit, |
| What a lot of lying newspapers
(there are in Georgia. According to
Governor Smith thev are liars, all
of them, that gave circulation to
that “happicst day” utterance.
; Blackshear Times,
They are fighting in Florida ever
the ofl“;:es. Georgia politics haven’ti
quite reached that point yet, though
‘our governor candidate has lost his
thead and is giving the lie to his,
[ prohibition principles.
3TN L RS e 2 v‘—*—'——v—T—v—r——w
“‘fwslnuuxsonxnm i g
_3‘: -.E“ U,r—---‘ o
h‘St Thursday night. Mr. T
A, Christie, of this placé was ‘de
-00 ’}q a dark spatnear Melson’s
stables and rofbed of about forty
dolfars gnd a gold watch. The cir- |
cufligtances of the case as relateq by
Mrg Christie are that he bought a
hote some time ago from Meison
under a guarantee, ‘and from some
reagon decided to ‘return the animal,
Jimie rode the horse to Jackson
ville arriving there about sundewn,
M# Christie having gone,.on the. as |
tcio‘fi train. - Mr. Christie. and
Jitfinie left the stable about dark.
Affer eating supper at Light's Res
taiffant, ‘they became separated for
a sllort, time, when a negro came.
miifhg up to him a'ndup,s'l{‘if-hfeyfl
not the man that brought the horse
frdin Georgia, saying that the horse
wal sick and about to die and that,
M M elson sent form%
quiek. On reaching the stable;: the
négro told Mr. * Christie tg,fi}”‘tfiey"
had .'pfobabl;v’ carried -the: horse to
thé veterinary lot just across the.
ways, they proceeded, and whea
ju;?about half way the negro ga\u;i
a whistle and :two others rose, up,’
théthree ganging him, and throwing
hithudown gwent through his pockets
with'the above results. 1
We take the following, written-by‘
Thos. E. Watson and published inl
the ‘Macon Télegraph of May 12th,
1908, showing the injustice of the
mdjority over the smaller count'es.
.-glor. ‘Watson goes on to say : “
; éf*‘lf'_ ou would but read thel
%u‘of Neison Tift, A. R, L‘nw‘-.j‘
ton; Robert Toombs and others—
'ffiliati'pg. this question of represen
tation Py population and by teriito
%qu erstand the dark plot which
lurks behind the revolutionary rule
which the new committee has adopt
ed,
The control of your state is about
to pass inta the hande of the ling
sters of the big cities,
Is that where you want it?
Heretofore, in nominating a can
didate for Governor, the state has
adhered to the constitutional meth.
od
All the counties were equal, ex
cepting that to the six largest and
the twenty-six next largest were giv
en the constitutional allowances of
advantage. :
But under the new rule the coun
ty units are ignored and the majori
ty vote will rule, no matter how
mbch of that majority may be con
centrated in a few big cities. The
practical effect will be that Atlanta,
Macon, Augusta and Savannah will
each have twenty or thirty times the
vote of many smaller counties, in
stead of having (in conventions)
only three times as much, as pre
scribed by law and nrecedent.
To clinch the advantage of the
majority, those counties which vote
for the losing candidate are to have
their convention delegates chosen
by the successfnl candidates. Thus,
the minority counties are not to be
allowed to choose their own 'dele
gates at all!
Minorities are to be obliterated—
deprived of voice, vote and repre
sentation,
Is that the kind of home rule you
expected to get from Hoke Smith?
- NOTICE.
To WHOM 1T MAY CONCERN:
I will introduce bills into the
Legislature at the coming session to
work the public roads in this county
by taxation, assessed per capita on
public road subjects, and a general
road tax of one mill on all property,
Also a bill compelling railroad com
panies to fence their tracks in this
county with a good fence, and se
cure their right-of-way so that loco
motives will not start fires by ig.
niting grass in their right-of-way,
causing destructive forest fires, by
November st of each yeat. !
A, J. Howarp,
Representative of Charlton County,
ofe SEIE g SN A." "“7-.-.
% OLETO.
Everybody has fine crops. Somé,
tore grass than corn.” . R
SoX S N R
- Miss Tora Stokes and Mr,' Nor
fif;\n’ Allen were quietly married at
the home of the bride's. parents at
r1:30 o'clock Somday A. M. The
bride is the charming young daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs: N N. Stokes
and Mr. Allen s highly appreciated.
by every one'who know§ him., They
will make their future home at Edith,
‘Miss Virda ‘P'rivctt aad Miss Cal
lie Ostéen went kof;l?fié‘flg. Muonday,
. My‘r. N. N."§§dk”c§, \\'i-fe and two
daughters, Lizsie and Hortense,
visited Mrs. Canuie Osteen Tuesday,
o 8 Well Wisher:« ,
I . DENTAL fiOTICE
- T WAll'be at Folkston pn Monday,
June 15t and every Monddy there.
after until further notice, prepared
to.dodental work of any kind.
- Callgarly and make engagements.
e o R ST CUBREWER, Dentist:
T Ty Rt g S RS GRS TS B eA e R TRy ey
TYBEE BY THE SEA.
GEORGIA'S GREATEST SEASIDE RESORT.
. . Offersthe greatest attractions for' a.
Summer Outing, Fishing, Boating Danc
ing, Surf Ba,thmg. Skating, - Bowling,
and many other forms of amusements.
‘HOTEL TYBEE |
Under new management has been thorouglly over
hauled and refurnished, and is new throughout. ~ Splen
did Orchestra, Fine Artesian Woater, Fresh Fish and
other Sea food.
STUBBS & KEEN, Proprietors.
- Also the New Pulaski, Savannah.
Savings Department :
.
The Atlantic Nati
e Atlantic National Bank, -
Jacksonville, Florida.
" Compaunded suarlerh' T Resources over
avings nt. ' 211
_ Four Million Dollars.
B) : y
' WISTINCT pp T — :
OFFICERS.
EDWARD W. LANE, President, THOMAS P. DENMAM, Cashier,
FRED W. HOYT, Vice President. DELMER D, UPCHURCH, Asst. Cashie
Banking bY Mail !saVery Simple Matter.
s e B 0 OPED 41 SECOUNT, | Seod
your name and address with your first deposit. = The money may
be sent by registered mail, postoffice money order, express money
order, or draft, or by check on your local bank. As goon as this
first deposit is received the bank will send yon a pass book, in
which Will be written your name and the amount of your deposit.
It will also send you signature and identification card, which you
will sign, fill ovt and return. Your pass book must accompany
all deposits and withdrawals. You can withdraw money by mail
just as easily as though you visited the bank. Your signature to
a blank withdiawal receipt, which we will send you to fill out, is
all the identification necessary. We will sead you our check for
the amount you withdraw, or, if you prefer, we will send you the
cash by express or registered mail.
When answering this Ad. pleasz mention the
Charlton County Herald.
SIOO A YEAR.
' WEACHERS’ EXAMINATION
"'The State Examination for teach
ers will beheld on June 19th and
20th, Those preparing for examis
nation should reéad Page’s and
Roark’s work, also Dutton’s Sehool
Managenient, 4
_ Dane by order of the State School
Comihissivner, ewLk e :
This April 28thy ¥goß. e
Lo B MALLARBWESS, (.
‘ kg DR
% A
' STRAYED FROM
FOLKSTON. .
" One bobtail Tiver colored pointer
dog, answers to the name of Frank,
strayed off about four weeks ago.
A(jy information as to his -where
abouts will be thankfully reeceived
and suitable reward paid on delivery
of dog, e o
o Addresst S, M. Mills,
: ¢ Folkston, G,
ICE CREAM PAR
. LOR.
T fature a supply of Till's fam
ous ice cream can be found at the
’Foikston'Pharma('y at all times.