Newspaper Page Text
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OAILY TTMMNTIBFRUt THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA
RBI AILMENTS
ALL GONE NOW
Mr*. Sherman Helped bp
Lydia E. Pinkham'* Veg
etable Compound
Lake, Michigan.—"About onevear ago
I suffered with irregularities anda weak-
j] ness and at times was
11 obliged to stay off m?
Ifeet. I doctored with
It physician
BaJJvaaidba
could not understand
[my case, so 7 decided
to try LydiaE. Pink-
ham T s Vegetable
Compound. After I
had taken the first
bottle I could se
that I was gettfni
— was g<
U better. I took i
lottles of the Vegetable Compound and
•* " •LPtakham’s'’"
used Lydia E. Pinkham’a Sanative Wash
and I am entirely cured of my ailments.
You may publish this letter if you
wish.”—Mrs. MafiY Sherman, Route 2,
Lake. Mich.
There is one fact women should con
sider and thatis this. Women suffer from
irregularities and various forms of weak
ness. They try this and that doctor, as
well as different medicines. Finally they
take Lydia E. Pinkham's Compound,
and Mrs. Sherman's experience is simply
another ease showing the merit of this
well-known medicine.
If your family physician faOa to help
you and the same old trouble# persist,
why isn't it reasonable to try Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound t
GOVERNOR HARDWICK
PARDONS MULLINS
Atlanta, Nov. 23.—Governor Hard
wick yesterday Issued a pardon to
Jasper Mullins, a young Washington !
county man. sent for ten years for -
manslaughter, because he was
▼inced that Matins’ parole had been re
voked by W. T. O'Shields as a punish- 1
ment for writing letters to bis friends
asking them to vote for the governor :
tor re-election.
O'Shields is a construction to remar,
of the state highway department s
tloned at Thomasville. He Is now t
der charges by the highway board of
discharging three of his men because
they voted for Governor Hardwick,
ng The board will Investigate these
- charges at Its next meeting, Novem- i
Mullins killed a man In Washington
county and was given ten years for
manslaughter. He contended that the
killing was forced on him. He was
serving his sentence on the Macon
county chalngang. O'Shields at that
time was convict warden of Macon
county. Mullins impressed Macon
county cftlcens so favorably that they
petitioned the prison commission
parole him. He had served six years
and was eligible to parole. A promi
nent Macon county cltixen Informed
the commission In Mullins' behalf that
he though enough of Mullins to have
EDDIE LEWIS
Hat Cleaning Works
HATS CLEANED, BLOCKED
AND REMODELED
Ladles, Msn and Chlldrsa
Ws have the equipment, ex per-
lenee and a daalra to please.
322 WEST JACKSON ST.
Phone 310.
F. A. STROBEL, D.C
Licensed Chiropractor
Chronic Dlsaas# and X-Ray
Work a^8paclaMty
Dr. R. B. O'Quinn
DENTAL SURGEON
Office In Mtdlcal Bldg.
Extracting a Specialty
^jblm at his table when Mulllna
acting aa foreman of convicts In the
absence of O'Shields.
The prison commission recommend
ed his parole and Governor Hardwick.
granted 1L O'Shields In the meantime
had resigned as convict warden of;
Macon county to take his present Job
In the highway department Mullins'
asked to be paroled to 0'8hlelda as his
sponsor, and O'Shlelda was so named.
Mullins was then put to work by
O'Sblelds as a truck driver at 9125
month.
Some days ago O'Shlelda wrots tt
prison commission a letter recom-j
mending that Mulllna' parols be re-1
vokad. Ha accused Mulllna of getting
drunk and taking a highway depart-;
ir without permission and run
ning it Into a telegraph pole in Thorn-
asvllle and getting arrested. Mullins
the governor a letter accusing j
O'Shields of recommending revocation
of his parole as punishment for let
ters he wrote to kinsmen In Washing
ton county requesting them to rote!
for the governor's re-election. Walter
Vance, one of the governor's aecre-
obtained over long distance tele-j
phone from the Thomasville chief of ;
police that information that Mullins I
an drunk but did not drive a car into j
telephone pole and was not arretted.:
Governor Hardwick not only refused
i revoke Mullins’ parole but gave
m a full pardon. He said be was -
convinced that O'Sblelds was glulty of
the accusation charged against him'
by Mullins.
f The Smart Shoppe oi
Beauty Culture
Upchurch Building, 2nd Floor
Room 210, Phone II
Permanent Waving 91 »sr earl
Anna M. Lightfool
Graduate in Baauty Culture
APPLES—APPLES
5
Washington Stats
S
3
f
Variety
Small size, doz 20c
Large size, doz 30c
r
l
J. R. EVANS
!g
’TJ
r
PHONE >28
r
5
K APPLES—APPLES
TIGER MADE TALK TO
NEW YORK BUSINESS MEN
N’ew York, Nov. 23.—Georges, Clem-
enceau yesterday laid at the door of
the United States blame for all the
unrest in which Europe now seethes.
Speaking before his second New
York audience—so audience of busi
ness men—nt the Chamber of Com
merce of the state of New York, the
Frenrh war premier declared that
America had left France “In the lurch"
after the war.
s a great mistake to leave
without any proposal for an adjust-
of matters," be declared,
the greatest mistake and the
source of all the evil that Is taking
place now. |
"People ■* *
IF
You Need Anything in
Groceries
Meats
OR
Notions
Phone 275
Roy Smith
hiiihh
Ic me. 'What do yon want
he continued. “1 answer
I don't know what I want you to da
I want you to Interfere in Europe be- ^ ... t . . . ... .
cause you left it too soon. I want you W » Wt b f wln *
to come back, make a little new tri, ^claiming to bla escorts, “las petite,
t. Eurone. saving: Well. now. gentle- «»“••• < Th# 1ItU « V>eUDge)-*
French expression of affection.
■omethin* sone wrong? I will give T,tv 106lh ermorr, which aeats | Declaring that the esUteof the
vmi.omohf.in Can I h« of use?" about 10,000 was packed and the Tiger | t,oa "Patents very much to Justify a mony of gratitude for the bounty
The chamber .beech wa, bat one o! w “ * |T “ * ">”« 0, * Uo " »* •» d “■>« - ln " r ' »*U- w61< * >»t beea bcstowcj upon
the high .pot. 1. the moat .tlrrlb, ? d ‘ lo » l » b "° r ” <»'
PRESIDENTS THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION
a nation-wide and most sincere test!-
day Clemencau has had since he an ‘fooP*
Tint boro Saturday (or > tour, the " ,er ** h * d ‘ ,Uc,d * ,rr “ th °" tbl
'aim ul which wa. to both., lottlb. o! >* hl « commemoratlb, tb. regiment.
'America to a clo.er r.l.lloD.blp with de,d - Clamenceau faced lb. Ubltormed
rance men and addressed them "as a man ot
Guarded by h double torco of motor * c ' l0 “ ot
cycle police, boc.ua. aomo one elgnlng tb " r w ° rk *»"«• wblcb
hlmiclf “World War Veteran." had *• •*“ »• b * d «“ d “««• >° remem '
aebt a tbreal.nln, letter, tb. Tiger ber the Tiger deetered:
rod. to the, chamber building, In tbo 1 "• ">« rot »»« 1*
down town financial dlelrict. through to »• M great la peace aa you .or.
a big cheering crowd. HI. Metropoll- <» 1 *“> "“A 1 " “ u * t
ten Opera Hour, addreae Tuoeday bre * th * «"*< • dmlrCT »' u “ lted
night apparently had heightened Inter. s ““‘- A " d 1 wl " remember
eit In the etormy, outepoken old atatea behind the cltlgena^tbere
From the chamber he drove to
Brooklyn, where Borough President j
Rlegelmann had proclaimed
mony of gratitude for the bounty Though we have lived In the shadow
which has been bestowed on us," of the hard consequences ot great
President Harding In the annual conflict, our country has been at
Thanksgiving proclamations calls up- peace and has been able to contribute
on the Americas people to observe toward the maintenance and perpetua-
Thursday, November 30th, -as a day tlon of peace In the world. Wa have
of thanksgiving, supplication and de- seen the race of mankind make gratl-
votlon." The text ot the proclamation lying progress on the way to perms-
follows: neat peace, toward order and restor-
“By the President of the United *d confidence In Us high destiny.
States of America. A proclamation: ! “For the divine guidance which has
beginning of our country enabled us, In growing fraternity with
the custom was established by the de- other peoples, to attain so much of
Mit forefathers of observing annually progress; for the bonnteous yield
day of thanksgiving for the bounties which has come to us from the re-
and protection which divine Provl-. sources of our soil and our Industry
dence had extended throughout the we owe our tribute of gratitude and
year. It has come to be perhaps the with It our acknowledgement of the
most characteristic of our national duty and obligations to our own people
observances, and as the season ap- and to the unfortunate, the suffer-
proaches for its annual recurrence It ing, the distracted of other lands. Let
Is fitting formally to direct attention U s in all humility scknoweldge how
this ancient institution of our peo- great la the debt to the Providence
pie, and to call upon them again to which has generously dealt with us
unite In Its appropriate cel«*>ration. and give devout assurance of unself-
‘The year which now approaches l*h purpose to play a helpful and
its end has been marked. In the ex- ennobling part in human advance-
pelienee of our nation, by a complex!- meBt - It Is much to be desired that
Harding, president of the United
States of America, do designate Thura
day the 30th day of November, as
day ot thanksgiving, supplication and
devotion, f recommend that the peo
ple gather at their family altars and
In their houses of worship to render
thanks to God for the bounties they
have enjoyed and to petition that
these may b« continued In the year
before us.
'In witness whereof, I have hereun
to set my hand and caused the seal
of the United States to be affixed.
Done at the city of Washington,
this aecond day of November, In the
year of our Lord, one thousand, nine
hundred and twenty-two, and of the
Independence of the United States ot
America, the one hundred and forty-
seventh.
■WARREN O. HARDING. 1
h ol"„ “ review the loth In,..Try j ENGLAND TO GET FRESH
regiment Crossing Manhattan bridge, j FRUIT FROM AUSTRALIA
the Tiger’s car plunged at once Into! T .
a lane ol wildly cheering achool chll- 1 ^ , " don ' ° ct *° (B J "‘‘D—
dree, man, o, than. «.rbed In plo *•<*• "“'l”' 1 ”'”*”?
uvaaqu. coatume, moat ol .hem way. and the Mother
. r* . American flics and all countr 7. a western Australian ayndu
ol th^m cheering and cTylng "rive h “ b ““ ' oraed -htchwlll build j,‘, trt a], and trtam'pha, nl dlttlcnl- lh rendering homage lor thafcteatlngi
LaTiaer” and “viva LaFrance.” nt * ff-'IfLt and fruit ships to j ties and of achievements, which wa which have coma to ua wa should
The children whose number was as- op * r * t * between London and Aux- [moat regard as our Inevitable portion earnestly testify our continued and
floated as high aa 350.000, lined both ^ TttB ^ to i la epoch aa that through
rides of**toe street for nwtr.y five ^ A«stealta. and the ^rntlkate [which all mankind te wcrUrg. A. wr
miles—all the way to the armory.
Clemencaa, visibly moved, kept wav-
expacts to keep the markets of the'survey the experience of the passing
British Isles supplied with Australian | twelve months wa shall find that our
estate presents very much to Justify
Increasing aim to make
great fortune a means of helpful and
serving, aa bast we can, the cause of
humanity.
“Now, therefore, I, Warren G.
POSTAL TWINE WOULD 00
AROUND GLOBE 13 TIMES
Washington, (By Mall)—Enough
twine to encircle the earth more
thirteen times is wanted by the Poet
Office Department
Bid* have bean asked for 1,000,.
000 pounds of two-play Jute (wine
This amount of twins la only half
a years’ supply used by the depart,
ment thronghont the entire service.
The twine la put up in balls weigh
ing half a pound each, thus the order
will consist of t,000,000 balls. As
each ball contains 800 yards, there
will be 800,000,000 in the lot, or
840,009 miles of twine.
TAXIMETERS IN MEXICO
CITY CUT CAB FARES
Mexico City, Oct 18 (By Mall)
-The rainbow i. .wall repi^tei
in the veritable flood of taxicabs that
has descended on the capital during
the past few weeks.
Displacing the small cars which
hitherto have been the only means
of motor transportation, one may
now ride in a taxi of almost any has
—yellow, blue, white, brown,
green and variegated. The original
colored taxicabs were operated by
organised companies but their com
petition became too rreat and several
ehuffenra mat It by painting their
cars. The new taxicabs have far*
meters, something new in Mexico, and
the result has been a general decrease
in cab fares.
Brighten up tnat room with new wall
paper. You will find exactly what you /
want here, and rapid and expert work,
men to hang It, too. Jamas H. Brown,
Wall Paper, Phone 251.
MASONS ATTENTION
Regular communication of Thom-
aarifia Lodge No.
819. F. £ A. V.
will be held Thurs
day avaalng at 8
©clock. Nov. 23rd.
the regular routine of business.
J. H. INGRAM, W. M.
R. J. McCLENNr, Sec.