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DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRI8E. THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA
TUESDAY AFTESWtJW, NOVEMBER 2S, 1922
FLOWER* BULBS at
HALF PRICE
Due to a late arrival, we have quite a few bulbs left.
These are in good sound condition, and you would
not have been given this opportunity, but for a late
arrival. , \* '•'
Our Stock Consists of
HYACINTHS (dou ble and single) NARCISSUS
FREESIAS, OXALIS, ETC.
It is not too late to plant.
INGRAM DRUG CO.
Seedsmen Phone 600 Druggists
I They differ even t» “ftiele” it Asserted air. Appeals -from land to “Save our
land they differ fundamentally in Souls” are received almost hourly and 1
[other particulars. Hence following ire taxing the capacity of the Amerl
j this line of reasoning, it held that the can radio staff here. i
slate could impose a tax upon ' Appeals come from every part of An- j
anthracite which would be valid al- atolla, where whole Christian commu |
though bituminous was tax free, j nitles are migrating and where the,
Emphasis given to the importance American Near lfcast Relief is working i
of anthracite as a fuel in those states heroically to overcome almost insup j
which attacked the law was reviewed j erable obstacles, including the remow
by the court, which pointed out that' a j of orphans for great distances to the j
of them municipal laws and j Bea< : .
i forbade the t
•al for domestic purposes. It v
> pointed out that 80 per ce
le total anthracite produ
Turkeys—
GEESE- -
Chickens—
BEEF, PORK, VEAL
LAMB,
OYSTERS
-FOR-
Thanksgiving
Our store will be clo-o<(f
on Thursday Tha.iksgiv
ing day
COURT DECISION SAYS
STATES MAY IMPOSE
TAX ON PRODUCTS
^hipped outside e j
Cryptic radiographs received yester- J
day indicated that t “critical situation .
was developing with surprising sud- j
deness; the whole interior Is blanket* I
Justice McKenna declared, depends
upon the law or action and not upon
what may be said as to the motive
for it.
A tax upon articles in one state
that are destined for use in another
state” he said “cannot be called a
regulation of interstate commerce,
whether imposed in the certainty of
a return from a monopoly existing,
or in the doubt and cham.es because
of competition. The action of the
state as a regulation of interstate
adding immeasurably
i to the misery of the exiles. Wireless :
law or action | from , he destroyer-Barry, said:
itate commerce | .. Flvp hundred Christian are arriv-
end i
“Ten thousand Christian and two
thousand orphans trudging through the
snow from Sivas are looking to the
. Another destroyer relayed a dramat
ic appeal to the Near East Relief at
Constantinople from James H. Crutch
yji & si
Quality and Service ijj
of inti
i illegal
other states, i
in!” Can :
child re
though they have not moved from
the place of their production or pren-
lic constitutionality j arat,on - the possibility of
>f the tax imposed by Pennsylvania ,,prtn5nt - v that an article produced in
ipon anthracite coal, and was render- one state was destined for markets
•d by Justice McKenna, no dissents »n another determined it to be inter-
jeing noted. ! state commerce before the beginning
The importance of the dec
•mplmsized by New York, N<
Delaware and the New Er/iand states
in denouncing the tax as giving Penn
sylvania a monopoly, and as levying
a tribute upon those states which do
not produce but must hnva anthracite
i fuel.
whether I’em
thficite and t
•sylvan;
lot bitum
! presented,
ung ;
hethei
Mens
Hunting Boots
JUST RECEIVED
The boot you have been
looking for,
PRICE
$8.50
Same l>oot two years ago
sold for $14.50
MITCHELL
SHOE CO.
North Broad Street
illegally discriminate!
sificalion and the other
was contended by those
le tax that, if sustained
tht* Supreme Court, wheat and ci
producing states could tax si
grains, the Southern states cott
ites could
vely a new method anu
for raising revenues, apparc
crowing in popularity, and th
,• pending in the Supreme Co
lposed by Minnesota upon ii
mined within its borders.
The Pennsylvania ease was broui
by Roland C. Hairier against
Thomas Colliery Company and oth
and officers of the state. The 1
such commerce from the instant
from its growth or pioduction and in
the case of coals as they lay in the
ground. Such a ruling would, it
added, naturalize all industries.
There comes a time when goods
cease to be under the power of the
state, and come under federal juris- j
diction, the court stated, and that I
moment was described as being reach
ed when they began their finni move-|J e8s * ro
pint for transportation from the state j Harpoot, repo
I Harpoot orphi
? If not it n
One from the desire
came from Americans
declaring: “We cannot
ation of Treblzond orpin
Treblzond,
much long
Instruct Immediate-
Start Right
Good flour is the foundation of good baking.
Use
and your biscuits will take care of themselves
Blish Milling Co*
Seymour* Indiana.
F. B. Harris Co.
Wholesalers* Thomasville.
MARKETS
Chicago, m„ Nov. 28.—Wheat closed
strong: corn, firm.
WHEAT— P- C.
Dec 118%
July ; 1.05%
I CORN—
Dec 60%
July — .67%
,nds of orphans. The destroyer I OATS—
>n, stationed at Mersina, recelv-iDec - -42%
radio from Christie Murphy of-July ......... -39%
York—“Not a ship In sight for LARD—
efugees; where can they go?” Jan. - 10.22
Charles Thurber of Manchester, N. '.May 10.35
... sent a message—“Must have fifty | RIBS—
Clou
1.17%
1.07%
.39%
1.000
of thei
origin to thnt of thei:* des:i-
uoting from another dec:.*; on Jus-
McKenna said:
'Jor is exportation begun until
they (the goods) nrc committed to
.•ommon carrier for transnorta-
out of the state of their desti
nation, or have started on their ulti-
passnge to that state.” Until
then, he said, they remain a part of
the general mass of property of the
and arc subject to its juristic-
For these
I held that the tax
s the court
hich
liked
pass
1921, and sustained by th«
courts, and sustained by the state
passed and substantially the same
in all essential features, had been
declared by those courts unconstitu
tional.
Regarding the contention that an
thracite and bituminous coal are fuels
and necessarily therefore must be as
sociated in the same class for taxa
tion, and that not to so associate them
was arbitrary and unreasonable
creating inequality which rendered
the tax invalid, Justice McKenna, af
ter describing the respective uses of
the two fuels, declared that “it is
competent for a state to exempt
certain kinds of property and tax
others, the restraint upon only it be
ing against clear and hostile discrimi
nations against particular persons and
classes- Discriminations merely are
not inhibited, for it was recognized
that there are 'discriminations which
the best interests of society require.”
The differences between anthracite
just basis
their
ASIA MINOR CHRISTIANS
SEND S. 0. S. CALLS TO
THE UNITED STATES
Constantinople. Nov. 28—Another
human tragedy that promises to rival
the Smyrna fire is developing in north
ern Asia Minor. The tide of a quartet
of a million Chrlstlon inhabitants Is
sweeping In full flood to the fringes
o fthe Black Sea and the Medlterran-
These refugees are clamoring to be
saved. The American naval base at
Constantinople Is deluged with S. O.
S. calls from the flotilla of American
destroyers patrolling the Medeterran-
ran and Black Sea coasts of Asia Min
or, which are crowded with Christian!
fleeing from the Turk. There Is ;a
poignant note of despair and tragedy
In every message snatched from the
thousand Turkish pounds to buy bread'Jan 9-65
for ten thousand destitute orphans an 3 May 9.65
adults crowding Sivas. The sltnatlon!
is becoming worse hourly. Unless ad
ditional funds and transportation are
provided immediately thousands will
The destroyer Fox relayed • wlro
as from Carl Compton of Boston, at
‘All Malta and
9.65
Dr. William Dood of Montclair, N. Jh
reported: “The evacuation of Konia or
phans was completed Nov. 20, but mors
are on the way.”
MULLINS’ PAjlDON IS
8T. LOUIS MARKET8
St. Louis, Nov. 28.—Wheat No. 2 red
fl.32; No. 3 $1.25 to $128; D<
$1.17%: May $1.15%.
Corn No. 2 white 71% to 72c; No.
70c; Dec. 70%c; May 70%c.
Oats No. 2 white 45c; No. 3 44c;
Dec. 45c; May 44%c.
TURPENTINE
Savannah, Ga.. Nov. 2S.—Turpentine
qniet, $1.45; rosin, firm.
Brightei
BEING INVESTIGATED!-*—
v wall
, Nov.
m with
ixactly -
want here, and rapid and expert work
men to hang it, too. James H. Brown,
Wall Paper, Phone 251.
.—The matter o
pardon for J. H. Mullins, servini
sentence in the Macon county gang for | ■ - —
manslaughter front Washington coun- ««*Pt of this, the governor announ
ty, has been held up by Governor Hard-j that he would issue a complete par
wick pending a further Investigation. I f° r , Mullins.
Mullins, it will be recalled, was pa- Yesterday the governor was in
rolled some time ago, given a Job with 'ceipt of a letter from W. T. O’Shields,
the state highway department in of the highway department, entering
Thomas county as a truck driver, late?; general denial of th® Mullins state-
promoted to foreman and recently I ments and also of affidavits from
complained that his parole was revok-! Camilla directed against O'Shlelds
ed by the prison commission upon com-1E. Jack Smith, also of the department,
plaint by W. T. O'Shlelds, under whom; charging the dismissal of several ra«
Mullins was working. O’Shlelds who supported Governor Hardwick,
charged drunkenness and that Mullins j O'Shields asserts that he had be-
had, while under the influence o! friended Mullins; that Mullins had
liquor, driven an automobile belonging j been caught buying liquor from
to the department .Into a telephone>by the assistant chief of police of
pole. - 1 Thomasville, was warned and promt®
Mullins charged that revocation of ed to stop It. Later he was drunk and
his parole was because of letters writ- ; was arrested, whereupon O'Shiold*
ten by him to relatives in Washington paid his fine and put him back
county asking that relatives vote for ' work, upon promise that Mullins would
Governor Hardwick’s re-election, and stop drinking, but the next day Mul-
his own activity in that connection, i tins drove a motor into a telephone
He asserted that he Jiad been warned j pole. O’Shlelds then reported the In-
Jn advance against‘writing such let-! fraction to the prison commission and
•ters. Mullins’ complaint was endorsed a warden came for Mullins. O’Shlelds
by a certain county official, who made declares the charges ar® false,
the declaration that the statements governor now is making a complete in-
made by Mullins were true. Upon r® I vestigatlon.
classifications.” I
RED ★ COAL
BURNS
FURIOUS AND LONG
Many coals quickly l.urn themselves out—
Red Star Does Not.
ONE TON WILL CONVINCE YOU
EXCLUSIVE T56XLERS
PHONE 6.
Something New
VERY LATEST IN
Sport Coats
Values From $30.00 to $40.00
ON SALE
SPECIAL
Neel Brothers
READY TO WEAR
The Monument
You Erect
W HETHER on® of simplicity or
grandeur, our (acsktie* for its
mccution ar® unsurpassed
Direct connection* with th® quarries
•nablc us to select the most beautiful
md durable monumental material In
wistencc — GEORGIA MARBLE
If not convenient
to come to the
Yard and see
what you are get
ting, we will
gladly submit de
signs and prices.
THOMASVILLE
MARBLE CO.
Madison St.
Thomasville* Ga.
CHEAP EXCURSION FAKES
TECH-fllJBURN FOOTBALL GAME
ATLANTA, NOV. 30th (Thanksgiving)
$s.ss
ROUND TRIP via A. B. & A. Railway
FROM THOMASVILLE
Tickets sold for all trains Nov. 29. Return limit
Dec. 3rd. Additional information from any A. B.
& A. Agent.
Rubber Boots
For
$3.00
A. T. Chastain
Now Is The Time For Hot
Buck Wheat Cakes
And
Rye Bread
Fresh Self-Rising Buckwheat and Rye
Flour Just In
Pringle Company
PROCRASTINATION
Don’t put off too long, painting your house. It's bottor to paint be-
for* the house needs It, than to wait too long, for then you have
to acrapo off, or burn off the old paint, which le an exponeo you
ONK OR TWO COATS OF
Devoe’s-Pure Lead and Zinc Paint
will make your hous® look like new, and will last longer than the
ordinary paint.
The Best is the Cheapest.
Thomas Drug Store
DEVOE’8 AGENTS
Phones 41 and 795 Thomasville* Ga.