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DAILY TIUE3-CNTERPRI8E, TH0MA8VILLS, GEORGIA.
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MAY 9 .1922.
Make Mother Happy
On “Her” Day
There'* a day devoted exclu lively to Mother. Let us all join In
making Sunday, May 14th, a moat signal aueeeaa. There are so
many thing* which will make her happy—
CANDY, FLOWERS, CARDS. B00K8, STATIONERY, FINE
TOILET ARTICLES, ETC.
Select early and If good* are to be mailed to some distant home ■
—be sure that they will reach their destination before the 14th.
WEAR A WHITE CAR RATION ON MOTHER’S DAY.
Agents: Idle Hour Nurseries, Nunnally'a, Mills, florists, or or*
ders telegraphed anywhere
INGRAM DRUG CO.
NUNNALLY'S AND WHITMAN’S CANDIES.
The Fact Is
That the quality is high
est, Prices Most Reason
able and Variety Plenti
ful at Vann's.
Fat Beef, Choice Milk-
Fed Veal, Fancy Native
and Western Lamb,
Corn Fed Pork.
FRYERS, HENS
and other good things-
Quality Service
yji&si
TWO PHONE —15
May
... 21.25
21.25
holding titles of nobility. ,
Lard—
The Marquis de Dion, another
May
... 1165
11.47
Deputy, is a manufacturer of auto-
July
... 11.80
11 72
mobiles. Baron Maurice de Roths-
Riba—
•
chila is well known as an owner of
May
... 11.60 .
11.72
race horses.
July
... 11.60
11.75
Two dues In tne house are Due de
Newest
Combination
FAWN
BACK
PATENT
VAMP
l STRAP SLIPPER
Medium Heel with rub-
hpr welt sole. A beauty.
PRICE
$8.00
Your patronage appre
ciated.
Mitchell
Shoe Co.
tNorth Broad Street.
CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS
MARKET.
Chicago. May 9.—Wheat closed un
settled. Corn, heavy.
Wheal— t*rv. Close
May 1.36%
July 1.24 %
Corn-
May • 61%
July .84%
Oats—
May .. .37%
July 39%
Pork
FORMER SERVICE MEN IN TURKISH OFFICER
LARGE NUMBERS IN THE RESIGNS AS PROTEST
LEGISLATIVE BODY Adafha. Turkey, April S—(By
i Mail)—Hamid Bey has been governor
Paris, April 20.I_(By Mail) ' ot CU,cla - th ® Stohera Turkish pro-
The debates in the Chamber of vince, since its ^evacuation by the
Deputies on the military service bill French troops, has pust resigned his
disclosed the fact that 350 of the 606 post as a protest against the manner
members of that body served as'. .. . .. ... ... , „ .
officers in the French army. Most in wh,ch the 8oId,ers of Kemal Pasha
of them have scarcely rea ched j have trcated U,e Christian P°P ulation ’
middle life and faw were active in j It has been charged that officers of
politics prior to 1914. jthe TutfUiah Notionalist army -and
Observers predict that French; Turks who have n0 respect for -, aw
politics for the next generation will . , ......
f .. . . . ... have been roaming the Ameman
be in the control of men with war
records, in very much the same quarters in the cities and towns of
manner ns the American Congress Cilicia molesting women and children
was after the Civil War. jand committing various crimes.
General Viscount de Castelnau is.
the most notable soldier in parlia
ment but his influence is scarcely
Close
137%
123%
.60%
.63%
.36%
■39%
TURPENTINE
Savannah, Ga., May 9.—Turpentine,
firm. 86: rosin, firm.
st. louis market.
S|. Louis, May 9—Wheat No 2. red,
*1.43: No. 2,hard, *1.36: May. *1.35%;
July. *1.20%.
Corn, No. 1, white, 61%: May, 59;
July 63%.
Oats, No. 2, white, 41; May, 33%;
July, 41.
Diplomacy.
A diplomat Is c man who. when lie
arrives home hit!*, gets into bed hack-
wards so thnt If his wife wakes lie can
say he Is Just getting up.—London
Opinion.
MIDWAY
The all day sing at Modway Sun
day was very nice, there being the
largest crowd in the history, of this
place. But there was plenty of
dinner for all, we had with us several
good singers among whom was Mr.
Brady, Mr. Dees. Mr. Faircloth, Mr.
Wilkes. Mr. Stepens, Mr. White, and
others. •
Miss. Bertie Pitcher is at home
jgain to the delight of her many
'riends.
Mr. ana Mrs. Tom Rowe of Monti-
cello were the weekend guests of Mr.
snd Mrs. J. W. Smith.
Mrs. W. H. Downs and sister, of
Atlanta has been the guest of her
lister and brother Mr. and Mrs. L.
R. Ferguson.
Mr. Hubert Standland and Miss.
Sallie Daniels of Bethel, were
here Sunday.
The melon crop through here
looking fine, but a good rain would
help everything .
Missis, Mamie Sasser and Edna
Standlcy of Brainbridge visited Mr.
and Mrs. C. R. Sasser, for the week
end.
Mr. and Mrs. Bullie Bainstcr and
sons, Gus and Herbert of Bethel
were visitors here Sunday.
Messers Duff und Moody Smith
of Monticello Fla, visited home
folks Sunday.
Several from Meigs, and Pelham
attended the sing here Sunday.
Mrs, J. W. Hall and Mrs. Bettie
Smith are visiting relatives in Crisp
county, this week.
greater than thnt of Lieutenant
Colonel Jean Fabry, who was Joffe’s
chief of staff on his visit to Washing
ton in April 1917.
Vicomet de Castelnau is better
known as a general than as a deputy.
De Castelnau was on the list of thoae
whom Premier Cleinenceau thought
were entitled to be marshals of
France.
Clemenceau, it is said, finally de
cided, with great reluctance, to
leave de Castelnau a general be
cause he had appointed one Catholic
Foch, to be a Marshal and he did not
like to name a second Catholic, de added:
Castelnau. The general is a devout
churchman.
Besides Castlenau, there are 40
others in this republican chamber
They are alleged to have extorted
loans from the frightened Christians
without intention of ever replaying
them.
When Governor Hamid protested,
Kemal Pasha is reported to replied
only: "This is war.”
Before leaving Adana, Hamid Bey
declared in an interview that he was
disgusted with attitude and behavior
of the military authorities who. he
said, considered the promises given to
France to protect the Armenians as
a scrap of paper. After recalling the
heavy sacrifices of the Turkish terri
tory as a consequence of the war, he
Audiffrey Pasquier, whose title goes
back to 1750 and the Due oe
Dalmatic, a descendant through the
female line from Napoleon's Marshal
Soult, Another Napoleonic name is
recalled by Deputy Prince Joachim
de Murat. Baron Albert d’Aubigny
has specialized in aeronautics.
ATHLETES USED TO FIGHT
PERSONAL BATTLES OF
BUDAPEST CANDIDATES
Budapest, May 9.—-A new occupa-
ion, open only to young huskies not
afraid to fight at the drop of a cab
bage, has come Into being here as a
result of intensive- campaigning for
the pending elections.
Candidates opposing the goveren-
ment have met with such pronounced
many athletic young men as their
campaign funds will permit to act as
bouncers, body guards, spotters and
shields for the speakers.
Opposition candidates decided to
buy protection after dozens of their
meetings had been'broken up by bands
of the notorious "Awakening Hun
garians,” who acquired remarkable
skill at heaving cabbages and soft to
matoes, 111-smelling bombs and oc
casionally bricks during fits of politi
cal enthusiasm.
The bouncers are stationed at vari
ous points through the hall and galler
ies and on the speaker's platform.
Those in the audience attempt
We Turks must first learn to re-
spect the rights of minorities if we are
to win the good will of nations
France and England would never be
willing to restore to us Asia Nlr.or
unless we prove to them our capacity
for good and just government "
Leading Aijme fians jhere assers
that, despite signed pledges and pro
clamations, Kemal Pasha ordered thnt
all Greek Christians and Armenians
be dismissed from all administratativc
posts. This threw hundreds of
Christians out of employment and
left their families without means of
support, so that they must look to
charity for subsistence.-
Amenians charged also that, in the
last few months, thousands of Turks
have invaded Cilicia and helped them
selves to any vacant or unprotected
property belonging to Christians with
out compensation.
wantkFamhjMaire
FAMINE AND PESTILENCE
NOW STALK BROADCAST
IN THE CAUCASUS
London, April 6.—(By Mail)—
Advices received here from the
American Near East Relief organi
zation at Tifiis depict terrible con
ditiona in the Caucasus,- where star
vation overcrowding in the towns,
severe weather and attacks by wolves
are causing great distress,.
The central government is making
efforts to secure food supplies from
Persia and Turkestan (and several
small shipments have arrived from
Persia, but the difficulty is to find a
medium of exchange which the Per
sians will accept.
Migrations o starving peasants
from the villages owing the ex
haustion of food stocks arc causing
acute embarrassment in the towns.
Fiteen hundred o them have arrived
at Alexandropol, where the Near East
Relief organization is already feed
ing 5,000 refugees and 20,000 or
phans.
Severe temperature and heavy
snowfall are theatening to delay the
spring farming. The snow is nou
six to nine feet deep in the eastern
districts, where the villagers are
terrified by incursions of wolves. Two
soldiers on outpost duty nea r
Darachichak were eaten by wolves
after a desperate fight Near Alex
andropol five peasants lost their lives
when a band of wolves attacked their
village.
ALLIES IN ACCORD WITH
AMERICAN OPINION
aion of the Russian problem as It is
affected by the negotiations at Genoa,
at today’s session of the cabinet dev
eloped the opinion that the attitude
of the allied governments is in virtual
agreement with the policies* of the
United States.
COLLEGE STUDENT KILLED
(By Associated Presfll
Oklahoma City, May 9.—-Beckham
Cobb, student, was shot dead on the
campus of the Oklahoma agricultural
and mechanical college, at Stillwater
today. Earl Gordon, a student, Is un
der arrest.
with which to dig wells, erect wind-
. . mills, buildings and fences, and se-
In the extreme northeastern por- curc tbe nuce i„ B 0 f a herd. He plans
tion of Shantung,- Chaina s sacred ^ bave tj, e work done on the farm
crovince,- there are two counties by boys who wjn receive schooling in
which have been buried m sang by e j emen tary subjects some three
successive river floods. This popu- bours a day an d who will earn their
lation lives in extreme squalor at food and c i ot hing by their labor dur-
hootmtv. that ,W. , best > a ? d dur !F!? recent drought I i n p, the remaining hours . These boys
hostility that they now employ as years the conditions are shocking 1,1}, bc seIected from the immediate
’ even to hardened old China hands . | neighborhood, and upon the com-
Last winter, Prof. Joseph Baillic, j pletlon of the j r elementary court*
serving with the Red Cross forces in |wjl , ga back tp their fathers’ plots to
that section, discovered two im-. t into prac ti C e what they have
portant facts; one that good water learned of a better form of agricul-
could be had at a depth of thirty feet, ■ ture j t is expec ted that after the
and second that alfalfa makes * [first three years the Farm School can
good growth on this soil under be made fully self-supporting 1 ,
irrigation. There is an almost coit-| Hcre ig B wonderfu j opportunity
Stant sea breeze over thisare and , or gome practica i minded phllan-
Prof. Bailie, lmmediaely concet cd t hropist to erect a splendid monu-
toe idea of a ^mon^tion farm *,ment to the memory of himself or of
b ® jttjKeted by welis pumped by Qne e]3e dcar b lm. j t wi [,
bave « Incalculable result upon toe
. — .. . ~;*,u ;*o nave an uicuicuiuuie team*, upvu
seventy wells In connection with ite „ of h ha , f , rollHon peopl
highway work proving up that fea-, people knpw as the most patient,
ture. Alfalfa is already growrng in ^moil industrious and the most
isolated patches. It would be a eable of on tho globe,
comparatively ample matter to *~ Th|a ject J vouched fpr by Mr .
develop this whole region • John Earl Baker. Director of the
farmers Red Cr0S5 china Fjunlne Relief. In
01 fact, the donation of land was
__ prosperous district if the
quell disturbances at the source, but' ?. ould bc . tau J[ b ? tb ? P L° P< d Iwv,, . aacs me uunauun u. ■■mi nos
shouid a stray vegetable break loose'‘"V b °utalso°a malUunk h^bor S’jomndt taTSSritton‘to ™ke
and head for the stage there is al-;serves the district, putting it in con- tba contort between any interested
ways some Of toe hired help readp to tract with the railway and w th such pergon of me#na and y, e officers who
Jomp in front of the speaker for an as Cheefoo, Tientsin and b e responsible for this Farm
| D Prrf. Bailie is an old "China/^JSSSl
On the rare occasions when there Hand". He speaks Chinese fluently. Lincoln Highway Longest Read
are no disturbances, the huskies act He is a promoter of parta. He has; The UnCffl|n „, f £ way uld to - ^
as claquers. In many of the gather- P “A °" Jf" ,2? I tb * 1<,n lf«»‘ rosd In toe world. It
lags this Is said to require almost as exper ien C ed. He is a Sentific as well 1 12 * ,at “ ,nd '* ,a «
much courage as speaking, for an out- as a practical agriculturist. He is the! , ten New York and San Fra0c * sc 09
burst of applause from any section of founder of the Nanking College of' , a . .** ne a * PO«»ible v con-
the house Is sure to bring a collection Agriculture for wealthy Chinese. J wl “ , b P T“2?nt
„ Now he needs an endowment of any- coun, ry. Its length Is about 3,284
or missiles. where {rom l2 6,000 to >100,000,
/5=
SOME PEOPLE
LIVE WELL ON LITTLE
MONEY
They know how to Ijuv food, how to cook it and
HOW TO KEEP IT so that flavor and nour
ishment are fully retained. That’s the whole se
cret.
No well-informed housewife, for instance,
would be without ice in early Spring. The weath
er is too changeable; the temperature is too warm.
The food might not spoil so badly that it could not
be used; but it would lose the appetizing flavor
which makes eating a pleasure and it would have
• less of the nourishing quality which your children
especially need.
From now on, ice should be taken REGU
LARLY It actually saves money.
THOIBLLE ICE 4 MFC. CO.
SPECIAL
— NEXT
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY
RADMOOR
FULL FASHIONED HOSE
Regular $2*50 Special $2.00
All Colors, Black and White
Neel Brothers
. : ..
HAVE YOU .
HAD YOUR -IRON
TODAY?
Eat Raisin Bread and Pies
April 27th "SPECIAL RAISIN DAY"
In Bread made
Have you tried that delicious
by Isaacs Pastry S
The week of April 23rd-9th has been designated
RAISIN WEEK all over the United States, and
we have prepared this delightful bread for you.
GET YOUR LOAF TODAY—Only JO Cents
Raisin Bread and Pies are a real health food, and
contain that Mineral Matter which builds tissue,
bones, teeth and red corpuscles.
Pastries of all kinds FRESH EVERY DAY at
ISAACS PASTRY SHOP
No. 113 E. Jackson St. Phone 620
H. GOLDSTEIN’S
SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK!
25c Pajama Checks, per yd 15c
25c Bleaching, per yd J6c
Silk Pongee, worth $1.50, per yd. 98c
Ladies Gauze Vests 10c
50-inch Brilliantine, all colors, per yd 79c
Crash for runners, per yd 10c
Yard wide Soisette, per yd 25c
Ladies' Waists, each 69c
Best quality Percale per yd 18c
H. GOLDSTEIN
^4
Look at This
Brand new Army Pillow Cases, actual size 21 x
31 only 35c
A. T. Chastain
PHONE 192.
P. S. Another lot of mosquito nets at $1.00
Chase and Sanborn’s Seal
Brand Coffee
has made thousands of friends on account of its
superior quality—a cup of it in the morning invig
orates you for the day’s work easure.
SOLD BY
Pringle Company
Don’t Beat the Life
Oat Ot Your Rags With a Stick, Use
Oriental Rug Cleaner clean* rugs the easiest, best, and most
economical way. It does not injure the rug in any way
- but on the other hand,, preserves the life of the rug by
thoroughly cleaning it.
You willbetutprisedtoaec wliat a t;iK and new appear
ance your rugs will have after using Oriental Rug Cleaner.
A Generous Shed Can One DjlUr
Thomas Drug Store
ThomisvlIk,G*. Phone» 41 end 795