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HnlesWeekly
X. NUMBER 19.
umniers Bros if
(HEAT MAM Ml
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before this, but not quite finished, but we 1
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will surely be ft
Show will be the Racket JmL ’]
forget the main at Rare Birds show greater
monkey’s no
> : of fee eonipeti- Sum- Store until June 25th. variety than Summers of beautiful New colors Dress
Jro&. Goods.
| _ Big ri ots the of new Big house. Gooods being opened every day, that was
ought for
Let us help you to make money, Try some of our special
emoval AllenD. Summers and Bro.
J
EPLIES TO THE CARD OF
MRS. C. C. POST
I Mil BAMMG CARD,
tates the Charges Against
Post and His Wife.
Eposes to prove them—
T that douglassville peti
SS—gauntlet is NOW
thrown down.
. I-«tfenPost
i imbroglio
payday. grows
P® Northern, in his speech
F e ^n, Saturday, produced
Ner^dh^ a ? a * DS *’ l ^ e Bard
ie ^8 band. Whitby, of Doug.
a /
* be remembered that Dr.
[■ ‘^seveaal «e Journal days ago, had pub
a challange to
debate in
f C— toen ba d the made. ctar g es Gov
L D | the le legrams the
r " ttrentoa governor
was one from Dr.
rJ
Pug* comes Dr. "Whitley
with
la answer to Mrs. Post’s
h 1 Journal of Saturday.
is salty.
t, b. thitley's
^ooolassyixle card
( Editor MvviJO
* tiff l t
L :ee in Sat ’ 0Ur nal:
hwa i^ t Journal
Helen 6 a
tr
• “a hate been
GEORGIA, SATURDAY JUNE 4, 1892.
for her if she had just waited
to see whether I proved the
or not.
But I am more than glad that
concluded to write a card, for I
been thinking for several days how
would get a chance to expose her in
famy, as mv challenge was only to
P ost and not include her.
I want to say here that there is no
man who loves virtue and woman,
hood more than I. My life I would
give for the protection of the fair
name of our southern women, and it
is for the love I have for my country
that I would lift the veil from this
satanic emissary from Chicago and
let the people look on her, with the
man who now lives with her, and ex
pose their infamous doctrines; that
they are a stench in the nostrils
all those who love morality, Chris
tianity, virtue and abhor infidelity,
socialism, free love and all the other
ism that are trying to tear down the
hu rehes of our land.
Mrs. Post cannot evade the ques
tion by denying that she sent
to the anarchists, as stated.
knows she did, and she knows I can
prove it, and the mere denial bv
female of her “ stripe ” is not
tive evidence in Georgia.
Mrs. Post says all the people
Douglassville love her except “
Whitley and two or three of
stripe.” Who are the others of
stripe ? I am sure I feel
ted by the camparison, as the per
sons referred to are the ministers
Douglassville who denounced
from their pulpits, and she
^ ne Methodist ministers’
tion of her methods and
struck her like a clap of thunder,
she well remembers how soon she
gan to look lor a new field.
that when
Douglassville the people got up a
HHon ashing them to come
Now, Airs. Helen WiJman Post,
know better than that. You
know you had been gone for months
from Douglassville when Mr. Bag
gett, a somewhat new resident
Douglassville and a strong third
party man, circulated a petition ask
mg you to come back. A few signed
it; a great many refused. Another
petition was gotten out asking you to
return to Chicago. At this juncture
i he first petiiion disappeared from
Douglassville ard we thought it had
been withdrawn. But the people
stated on the streets there that it
was a trick of yours to use afterwards
to try to show that Douglassville ap
proves the damnable rottenness of
your unholy methods.
No one can but be disgusted with
your idea of purity. When you
speak of a man who knows no God
who does not regard the Sabbath,
who denounce the churches, who will
lie to suit his interest, as “ the pur
est man in the world.”
The very idea of Chicago Charlie
being pure! IVho on earth would
ever have thought of it ? But it is
said that the vulture enjoys the
caying carcass with more relish than
he would a dish from the table
the ejncureans.
This is the second time this
you have seen proper to write a
because Charlie was from home,
I thought when Col. J. S
wiped you from the face of the
in the New South that you
know better than to attack
man who knew you
I will tell you, as long as there
any southern blood there will be
to resent the infamous lie C. C. Post
when h. Mid . short time ago
women of this country had to
PRICE 1 00 A YEAR.
a life of shame in order to get
There is no use in card
The charges have been made, and
piopose to meet him and
them. If I fail, all the better
him, and the worse for me.
I feel perfectly able to take care of
myself, and feel conscious . of the tact
that I am serving my country and
honoring true womanhood by unmask
ing you and “ Charlie, ’ politically
and socially. T. 11. v\ iiitlia,
It is said that a petition endorsing
Mr. and Mrs. Post was attempted in
Douglassville today and that only one
signature was obtained. Mr. E. II.
Camp circulated the pietition, and
signed it. He failed to obtain any
other signatures and abandoned the
attempt.—Atlanta Journal.
THE INSTITUTE CLOSES.
The closing exercises of the
Conyers Institute are expected to
be interesting this year and in
some respects new to us. They
begin one week from next Sun¬
day.
The following outline program
was furnished us by the popular
principal, Prof. W. F. Perry:
Sunday, June 12, 11 o’clock
Commencement sermon at M. E.
Church by Dr. J. M. Brittain.
Monday, June 13, public ex¬
amination of Primary and Inter¬
mediate departments.
Tuesday, June 14, public exam¬
ination of Grammar and High
School Departments.
Wednesday, June 15, public
program of songs, essays, and
declamations.
Wednesday night, Literary
Address at Institute Hall.
Speaker not yet secured.
| NESBITT AT COVINGTON.
Hon. R. T. Nesbitt, State Com¬
missioner of Agriculture, will
speak in Covington on June 10,
on the subject of Agriculture, and
is anxious that every fanner in
Newton and adjoining counties
should come out and hear him.
Col. Nesbitt is au entertaining
speaker and will interest all who
honor the occasion with their
presence, Come out and hear
him.—Covington Star.
A dispatch of Monday from Crook
Bavou says that divers we e at work
all day on the sunken wreck of the
St. Fouis train on the Cotton Belt
road. The Pullman and chair cars
were buried under twenty feet, Sun¬
day night nine bodies were taken
from them. Over a dozen of the
wounded are ia house near the scene
of the wreck, badly injured,
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