The Daily times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1925, December 20, 1922, Image 6

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DAILY TlMEft-KNTERPRItl TH0MA8VILLE, GEORGIA WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 20, 1S22. For The Man Who Appreciates SERVICE You will find just the kind of Service you want for your Clean ing and Pressing during the Xmas rush at— Troy Tailoring Co. Phone 43 208 West Jackson Street Cleaners and Dyers NO DIRT NO DISSATISFACTION WHEN WORK IS DONE ThomasvilU Laundry French Dry Cleaner* 1 ** 134 a Msdlson St. PHONE S7 ThoWStviV Don’t Suffer Relapse FromjFlu-Take Sulac with impurities and you ache, fellj tired and have no appetite. i At this period, unless the proper frequently more dangerous than the, first attack. This is the time that the body r.eeds all the aid possible* and a good tonic will hasten a re-! turn of your strength and make aj relapse improbable. i Sulac, the master prescription, which has been justly calles "The Great Modern Tonic," was designed to meet just such conditions to furnish the nourishment and the stimulant needed by the body in throwing off the impurities and ill effects that Flu leaves. In Sulac you will find a compound syrup of hypophnsphites, (in perfect solution), according to the national formulary, with just enough sassafras added to make the taste more agree- appetite, help you to properly digest your food, and enable you to sleep as soundly as when you were in per- feet health. We are receiving letters every day such a wonderful tonic on the market. No need to risk danger of a relap! from Flu, or to go on suffering the torture of a nervous, dition. Health is just as near as your nearest drug store. Go to your druggist today and ask for Sulac. It Is on sale at the stand ard price of $1 per bottle. If your druggist, and we will mail you Sulac direct, charges prepaid. Southern Laboratories, Inc., 57-59 Eugenia Street, Atlanta, Go. Advertisement SURVIVOR OF HERRIN SLAUGHTER TELLS A GRUESOME STORY Marion, 111., Dec. 2C.—Robert Offi- •r, one of the survivors of the riot- g in which twenty non-union men ere killed at Herrin, testified yester day at the trial of five men charged jwltb their murder. Officer, a graduate of (ho University of Pennsylvania, bookkeeper at the trip mine where the tfOttW* etarted. He de- purely personal capacity, having down from Springfield when he heard , pf the tronble. Officer said that Col. Hunter hi talked to him over the telephone and said that W. J. Lester, the owner, had authorised the surrender of property. Just before nightfall, the witness testified, those in the mine raised white flag, but the sniping from sur rounding hills continued all night and the flag was lowered at daybreak when the non-union men took refuge freight care. Then the fierce ness of the attack Increased and the besieged decided to atHTfnder, raising ■erlbed th. .tUck os ttt troPCUr , wb ; t , j,« old. tfternoon of June II. wbQn three union I' .,, , miner, wor. .hot tsd klllod. *« bom, ...orod of miners were shot and killed^ Col. Sam Huater ; ' 0 f the adjutant general 1 ! office at Springfield, another witness, testified there were no agree- “Sit belWtSh the aon-nnion workers tht mine and local official* of the United Mine Worker* for a truce *Ml 4 safe conduct for the besieged Wbfkbr* out of tbe district Officer’s testimony corroborated this. Col. Hunter skid he had tried to ar range such a trube while acting in a * For Christmas Give Something Useful Auto Accessories DRIVING GLOVES SPOT LIGHTS KLAXON HORNS RADIATOR CAPS MOTOR METERS FLASH LIGHT TOOLS TIRES TUBES REAR VIEW MIRRORS RAIN VISORS BUMPERS SPARK PLUGS WINDSHIELD WIPERS CUSHIONS AUTO PAINTS TOP DRESSING For The Home It's here OIL HEATERS ELECTRIC IRONS ELECTRIC GRILLS PERCOLATERS ARMSTRONG TABLE STOVES ROGERS POCKET KNIVES SWEATERS The New Perfec tion Oil Range with SUPERFEX Burners that equals the cook ing speed of gas. their eafeiy, according to the witness, the iotif 1 eight non-union men were led flWn did mine. C. P. McDowell, the euperintend- ent, limping painfully along on hi* ar^ tlflQl&l leg. The crowd constantly In creased and Officer quoted one of It* leader*, whom he ctmld Identity, shouting: "They are nothing but itrikebreakera and we ought to kill them all.” About a mile from the mine, the ness said, McDowell Wa» led kway by two men. Other witnesses have testi fied the crippled superintendent wai slain at this spot. Then the crowd marched about twi miles farther where the remaining forty-seven prisoners were lined before a barbed-wire fence near a clump of woods. Officer said. “We’e going to give you a chance for your lives,” he quoted one of the leaders as shouting and then the firing began. Officer said he dropped at the first discharge and rolled under the fence, fleeing while the crowd was hunting down those who had escaped the rain of lead. He described the crowd 'howling like wolvei.” “Only those who have guns can er the woods,” the witness said heard one of tbe mob leaders cry. it the wire fence tbat otl bave testified fourteen bod- 'ound. Four others, accord ing to the testimony, were found in a clump of woods a short distance away, having been shot down as they fled. Six fugitives were captured, witnesses have said, driven through the streets of Herrin and shot do' tery just outside the t< tance from the mine through the woods to the cemetery has been given as approximately six and one-half miles. Tbe time of the start from the mine has been placed at 6:40 a. m. and tbe shooting at the cemetery at 9 a. m. to 10:30 a. m. Officer aald the only man he rec ognised waa Hugh Willis, state board member of the United Mine Workers. He said Willi* drove up to the crowd before the ebootlng at tbe woods, asked for the leader and then disap peared from view. Under a severe cross-examination, Officer said there were forty-five workers in the pit and about twenty-, five guard*, all of whom h&d been brought from Chicago at tbe time of the riots. He said he was at present employed in a Kentucky mine in which W. J. Lester had an interest Officer said McDowell had dealt out arma and ammunitions which the men used In the mine at the time of th* first stuck and aald he himself had a He alto told of an airplane flying rer the mine and said he heard ex plosions beneath It as though it was dropping bombs. j Officer was oh the stand most of the day, his cross-examination Uklp* Bp all the afternoon ic»sl0h of court which adjournlM With the witness still the stand- HU cross-examination waa rasiVmed this morning. 'gas-oil” a heavy petroleum product remaining after the gerosene has been extracted. It coats here 12 cenU a gallon as compared with 56 cents for gasoline. The car made about 7 miles to the gallon and about 280 miles on a gallon of lubricating oil, so that the cost of operation worked out at two cents a mile. Expert* in charge of the oxpeii- ment predict a great future for this type of motor. The engine used was found too small for the weight it had to pull, but an average speed of 30 miles an hour was maintained, which waa regarded as creditable. The "semi-Diesel" type of * motor, its friends say, not only costs less for upkeep but is simpler and therefore cheaper to make tha n the standard type. Experiments are being con- ducted with the idea of using this new engine on the automobile busses of Paris. JAMES GRIBBEN Monument Corner ThomaW®e, Ga. New automobile enoine SUCCESSFUL IN FRANCE Paris; Dec. 1 (By 'semi-Diesel** automobile is ifeis a* accomplished fact One of &**» oil burning motor* recently MU Installed on a heavy touring dfrttauU weigh- ing two and one-half ton*. The cr 4t made the trip to Bordeaux and b* 4c k In two days, cart 5 ytrtg five pamr,.*^ much baggage, wad 60 gallons 0 f r » serve fuel. Th* mote* la designed to. burn, "High Noon." •High noon" Is exactly at 12 o'clock, ir apparent noon, as distinguished from the hour between 12 o'clock and I o'clock, generally designated as "the For Christmas STONE’S RICH . ; FRUIT X CAKES - One, Two or Four Pounds at iw ? 65c .r/'f lb. W. P. Grantham Grocer VENIDA Clintonic Twin SOAPS Wash the Venida way. for enlarged pores, pim ples, oily skin, white- heads, rough, red and chapped skin, black heads, chafing, excessive perspiration, etc. The latest and positively the BEST Skin Soap yet devised. MONEY REFUNDED IF NOT SATISFIED —25 Cents—- HONIENTA, the great Cough, Cold, Catarrh and Hay Fever Remedy 40c and 75c. J. W. PEACOCK 104 E. Jackson St PHONE 606. Square Deal Druggfit. JAMES B. BURCH Lawyer Civil and Criminal Practice Third Floor Masonic Bldg. THOMA SV1LLE, GA. F. A. STROBEL, D. C Licensed Chiropractor Office Phone. IBS Br.R. & ©'©uian bkAttk IUAHOn fcivM to Medial kid a- Extracting a Specialty The Smart Shoppe ot Beauty Culture U.church Bulldlnc, Sll Dm Boom 310. rtiow It nmuu wattae n. *• wt Anna M* Ughtfoot Ortdneu la Ball, MUB mm ike no Mg Some Make and Spend- Some Make and Save WHAT CLASS ARE YOU IN? Join the savings class and come in and get one of these BOOK COIN SAVINGS BANKS to help you save. THE PEOPLES SAVINGS BANK T. J. BALL, Preet R. J McCLENNY, Cashier H. GOLDSTEIN s SPECIALS FOR 10 DAYS ONLY Men’s Overcoats, at $4.98 Ladies' $25.00 Coats at $16.75 Ladies' Suits, at $9.90 Baby Blankets, pair. 49c Chiffon Broadcloth, 54-lneh, yd. 4 $2.79 54-lnch Prunella Skirting, yd *. ■,. ... $2.95 54-Jnch Stflfm Serge yd. $1.39 H. GOLDSTEIN’S Hail Xmas Just received a nice line of Real Leather Hand Bags and Brief Cases We are agents for Braxton Belts for men — they make nice gifts. HAVE YOUR'SHOES REBUILT L. J. STURDIVANT . THOMASVILLE, GA. 125, So. Broad St. Thomasville* Ga» WE SELL Syrup Barrels Syrup Cans Lard Cans WE iBUY SYRUP Brothers Feed Store %£uth Madison St Phone 780 =2=