Newspaper Page Text
SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES-EIfTKRFRIS K, FRIDAY JHARCH 81, 1013,
••• ' ' • ■
wm
TIE TIMES - ENTERPRISE
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION'.
Every Tuesday and Friday
MEMBERS ASSOCIATED 1*RESS.
Bally and Semi-Weekly Tlmes-Enter-
prlac Published by tha Tlmea-En-
terprtee Company, Thomaavil'e, Ga.
E. B. JERGER Editor.
W. D. HARGRAVE .... Rim. Mgr.
HAZING FINISHED WITH 8ER- ; Federal Government, tbe accusa-
of a North Carolina University of
manslaughter, the result of a haz
ing prank should have a salutatory,
effect upon »:hools throughout the
country and it’s lesson should
i
thoroughly and sufficiently empha
sized in college magazines and pa
Entered at the Thomasville Poit pers. The three young mea who
tfflee for Transmission Through the. .{jj j iave lo g erVe time in the peni-
Mail8 as Second Class Mail Matter.-
- teatiary, were not wilfully -guilty
Subscription Ratee: j of murder . They forced a college
VITUDE. jtioa being that it is a trust in all
| that the Sherman law designates.
The conviction of tnree students »p wo 0 f ^he members of the corpora
tion are accused of criminal pro
ceedings and are being tried for such
offense.
The sulpension of the concern ba
be cause, as the statement sets fort;
the proescutlon has seriously in
paired its credit, will doubtless es
tablish conclusively whether it was
a trust in fact, or not a trust. Tae
naval stores people were accustom
ed to dispose of their product
©ns Year $1.01, . ,
Six Months SI'student to perform "stunts wnicjijthis concern as soon as it was manu-
■ ■■ ■ — —“ ! appealed to them because of his ua- j factured. They always had a place
Warmer again today!
willingness to do them, and the in-: where it could be sold and readv
Thomasville ls\o erect its first | di S nlty iL o ffer9d ’ He feli i m ° ney c!)tained for “• Th *
public school building this year,
Lucky 3913.
from a barrel on which
standing and in the fall, a piece of
j glass
• | vein.
Underwood will be good and ready
lor the barber act when the tariff
measure time comes.
bottle severed the jugular
however, was, it is alleged, a mui-
The French President gets five
times the salary Uncle Sam pays
and the job is not as big, either.
Ben Tillman ougth to have had
what he asked for, just as Senator
Bacon should have been made
Preisdent Protenv.
ter of absolute control in the hands
of this trust, which marketed eighty
•five per cent of the product manu-
Tliere always has been a wonder j factured in the section which it
on the part ot those who have not j touched.
taken part in such pranks, why j If, as the Government alleges,
Senator Smith is being made an
even bigger man than his friends
supposed he was, by .the activities
of his enemies.
The rains have just about stopped
mail form the West and the pas
senger service has been three days
late ever since the severe blow last
week.
they should appeal to the average,
intelligent and well-raised boy, who
attends a university. The pranks
often degenerate into unrefined, un
couth performances which, are de
signed merely to humiliate and in
timidate the student under fire.
There has been a crusade agair.nt
it is a trust, it is just as well that
it has suspended business. The in
dustry is one which is ed valuable
that it will not suffer for any length
of time because of the failure o.
this company to market the prt>
duct. It will be done in a way
which will, m the end. prove more
the practice in every university I beneficial to the producer than in
where it is prevalent, with varying | the past. The suspension of busl-
McCoombs decided that after all
Paris isn’t such a bad place to
spend a few years at Uncle Sams
expease.
success. The lesson which the
courts of North Carolina has ad
ministered to these three should
warn others that the pranks should
not be connected In any way with
the slightest degree of danger, and
that they should confine them to
harmless pastime. This was one
case where courts have failed to ex
cuse because it was a boy and a boy’s
playing.
It seems fairly certain that Rufe
Hutchins isn’t going to get a job
from President Wilson, at least the
one he most wants.
HEALTH OPERATIONS IN THOM
ASVILLE.
The Coast Line is to have indi
vidual drinking cups on trains,
which is one improvement that all
roads in this and other states could
well afford to adopt.
It is really good to see the in
terest which Mayor Luko and some
of his adherents are taking in the
health of Thomasville. These gen-
tlonu-n after an Investigation have And * a place 0:1 th « P rogranl and
let him sing, too. We sent him
there to sing and sing he will, in
ness in the face of four million as
sets is, In the minds of many, proof
ipso facto that It is illegally con
ducted and that the suspension was
not necessary or consistent at this
time.
Rod lenbery seems to have stirred
things up a bit in his defi to his
party mates. He may be right and
he may be wrong, but we will bet
dollar to a ginger cake that 1
thinks he Is right. The collective
party interest may have to crush
the individual we think it will, but
he has at least let the bullies know
that his prime purpose is to look
after the Second District of old
Georgia. They just as well give
eplte of h—1. Aud as long as the
Every fly killed now’ means a mil-1
lion less to kill a few weeks off
Every breeding place destroyed (
means less danger of disease and
doctors’ bills and death.
Who
found that flies spread typhoid fe
ver and flies alone and that It 1s
done because of the fact that tho.
surface closets of the city are not; burden of hls tune 19 s° me,1,in S fot
•properly screened and protected! the fo,ks at home - let him sing un '
from flies. The Council will un- i 111 he bu9ts a lung ’ You can 't P ut
I questionably pass an ordinance | a curveblt » a a Georgia Cracker of
, .-hich will either require Conner- ! tbe Wiregra8s P«rsuasion k
I ■ tion with the city sewer, which Dr.! wan ^ 5 Bainbrldge Poet.
, 1 Daniels, the City Physfcdan
i nestlv hoped would ultimately
f done, or have closets which are a j
Bryaa and his close followers i i 1 l TO <ectlon to the community,
the Senate ( were solely responsible
for Bacon’s defeat. Smith didn't' wiirh ,he People will be educated
have anything to do with it. and re- u P ,0 - Dr - Daniels last night. In a
any Georgian. 1 short talk, stated that it was not
_ jhi> ideas as health officer to force
I measures on the people In anv
•rough or undesirable manner, but
| to show them as he proceeded ex-
j actly what he was doing, what It
was doffe for and, if possible, to se
cure their co-operation, rather than
I their opposition. In this manner
A Washington woman resents the . , ..
suggestion that women ride sidei^ ‘° ** the pe0 ‘ lle tb ° r -|<»e big dailiea. Somebody got
saddle. She says it is easier ! ou f ,y awak * *» bealth coitions j money that didn’t belong to them
greti it as much
^ I Toddy, in one of hls biographies
| admits that he was licked when he
i "as four years of age. and the S
I vannah Press thinks that he mav
There are a great many things L
t t ® ...... 9 | be working up to that little affair in
j which he figured so inconsplcuous-
! Iy last November.
15
RESIDENCE WHERE HE WAS
BORN IS. PURCHASED AND
DAUGHTER IS FIRST GUEST
TO ENTER THE PLACE.
Caldwell, N. J., March 18.—The
wooden house where Grover Cleve
land was born, was dedicated today
as a permanent memorial.
The day’s program began with
the transfer of a purse of more
than $17,000 in payment for .the
house, -which was purchased from
the trustees of the First Presby
terian Church of this city.
Richard F. Cleveland, a son of the
late President, was selected to re
ceive the key and open ilia door,
while his sister, Esther, was chos
en as the first official visitor to en
ter the room, where her father was
born 76 years ago. Her mother.
Mrs. T. J. Preston, was rmong the
spectators
SOUTH IS IN
THE SADDLE
DUDE LEAD THE
TAKI BANDITS
TWIRLING HIS CANE AND WITH
A DAPPER AIR, HE CONFESS
ED TO THE POLICE THAT HE
DID THE STUNT HIMSELF.
New York, March 18.—Joseph
Taylor, a dapper, cane-twirling
young man, who cooly confessed to
the police last night that he was
the leader of a band of taxi-cab ban
dits, Is expected by the police tp
make revelations whl u will lead
to further arrests.
Besides Taylor, ten other men are
being held today, as the result o'
the detectives’ work.
VETEDANS MUST
WAIT FOD MONEY
Atlanta, March 18.—It looks as
if it will be April before the veter
ans get the remainder of their pen
sions in Georgia. There is still
8537,680. due, and not much proB-
pect of getting money to meet It
until after the first of the month.
Have Escaped and the Detectives of
New Y’ork Are Looking For
Two Men High and Low.
New York, March 18.—Private
detectives are scouring the country
for Antonio Muelca, and son Philip,
who disappeared recently in connec
tion with the importation of human
Atlanta, March 19.—‘ The South
is in the saddle,” says State Sena
tor W. J. Harris, who is just back
from Washington. As a Woodrow
Wilson leader, Senator Harris had
an opportunity to get in close touch
with the administration and to min
gle with the democratic statesmen
who now have the destlntles of the h sa
nation In their hands. Senator j Behind the transactions, accord-
Harrls himself has been recom- lng to banks concerned, lurks the
mended for appointment as director 1 possible loss of three hundred thou-
of the census, a position which and here and abroad,
stands next in importance to the' The American hankers Associa-
cabinet portfolios. I tion, acting for several complain-
"I am convinced,” says Senator! ant8 is prosecuting the search.
Harris, “that the great Wilson vie-'
torv will not be barren of results nriiniMITP ■■fllir
for the South. This section Is tak- DEMOCRATS MOVE
lng its proper place at last In the
councils of the nation. Wherever I
wentl found an almost universal
sentiment that the Georgia delega
tion in the House and Senate i* „ , . „ ,
conceded to be the ablest of any state ^eiuitors of the Party in Powet Will
in the Union. Our Senators and
Congressmen are making themselves
felt.
Now Take Over the Desirable
In the Senate Building. All
to Move.
“The thing that is bo particularly 1 Washington, March IS.—Demo-
true of Georgia is true in a general cratic Senators began today to
way of the delegations of all the 8eize upon the choice offices in the
Southern Statee. Georgia and the committee rooms that had been oc-
South have come into their own at cupied by Republican 3enators for
last * 1 many years. Practically every Demo-
Senator Harris is confident that cratic Senator will move his offices
Georgia will receive proper recog- during the next few days.
•nitlon in the matter of her appoint-1 - ...
ments at the hands of President
Wilson.
Aro You Constipate**?
CITY COURT CHINOS RAPIDLY
If so, get a BOX of Dr. King* New Criminal Docket Being Cleared With
Life Pills, take them regularly and
your trouble will quickly disappear.
hey will stimulate the fiver, im
prove your digestion aud get rid ot
the poisons’ from your system. They
wHi surely get you well again,
at all druggists.—(adv.)
MORMON IS
PRACTICED IN ATLANTA
Why did a Senate leader defend j
the dynamiters who were tried some |
few weeks ago, at Indianapolis !t!
look# as if he was more fond of |
dough than justice.
Atlanta has gotten up another
police scandal and is going to have
a full fledged publicity scented
vestlgatloa.
The State of Alabama faces a big
scandal, according to the headlines
stretched across the front page of
thor-jthe big dailies.
eafer to ride astride
was or not the woman would try
it because it is something new,
Whether ’ a,Ul '° ‘ he neel8 °' ‘ ,roU!Ctlon alo,,e j and it happened to be a large pile.
x\ iietner it tho8e Hneg- _______
The women who are trying to live
os four dollars per week In titles
are urged by some Influential mem
bers of the sex to go to the country
where there is plenty of work, fresh
air and good folks to take care of
them.
Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Marshall
both object to the slashed skirts
that display the hosiery of the la
dies wearing them. If the young
people would listen a while to the
old folks they would appear more
sensibly dressed, at least to the ma
jority of people.
There is one chap by
Wilson who asked the President for
a position that “paid five thouland
without too much brain work," He
probably asked it because hls name
happened to be Wilson, which ex
cuse Is quite in line with some oth
ers that have been seriously ad
vanced by politicians.
Dr. Daniels has a milt tester
which he has been using in the city
for a short time and he haB found
that some of the milk is not what it
should be, to best serve as food for
children, especially young children
Dr. O’Shea, the Lynn health offi
cer, stated that the Hoard ol
Health in their campaign against
Impure and Improperly produced
milk had reduced the mortality in
that city among children from in
testinal disorders about fifty per
cent., in three years.
The awakening will come in
Thomasville toward more genera!
and beneficial health measures, and
It will be the result of education,
rather than force, if they are to be
effective and generally beneficial,
name The city physician is to be congrat
ulated on his start and we hope he
will see fit to continue stehilily to
ward the ultimate goal of perfect
civic health In the community.
Wonderful Despatch—-Civil Bus
iness Will lie Taken Up
Soon as Completed.
(From Tuesday’s Dally.)
The Cl’ty Court was busy the en-
35c tire morning and many cases were
disposed of by Judge Hammond.
- . The docket was taken up, case by
| case, and unless there was some
I very good reasons for delay, the
cases were either tried or dismissed.
There are more cases at this term
of court than in some months and
tbs Judge and Solicitor are work
ing vigorously to dispose of most of
them.
The criminal docket Is being
called today, and will probably be
finished this afternoon. Then tho
civil business will be taken up, as
the calendar calls.
One of the main features of the
court this morning was the testi
mony of some Russian Jews who
COTTON FOB FEBBlMf ' iM llS FORGOTTEN
Consumed in the United States Wa*
Considerably Less Than for the
Same Month Last Year.
Washington, March 18.—The cot
ton consumed in tbe United States
for February amounted to 466,933
running bales, Including 33,091
llnters, compared with 533,251 in'
January. "
The cotton on hand February 38,
was 4,309,338 bales. ; j
The active spindles numbered
30,518,019, of which 11,739,983
were in the cotton growing states.
Atlanta, March 18.—la the
stress of vice crusade, politics, mov
ie-war and other local excitements
Atlanta has practically forgotten
that there Is any such thing as an
automobile speed law.
It Is asserted at poclle head
quarters that there is not an auto
mobile owner in Atlanta who does-
not violate the law in one way or
another. Most cars run on an ov
erage of 35 instead of 16 miles an
hour except In the very heart of the
city. Even on the business streets
they make 30 when traffic will per
mit.
Jnoudancfo
r/mwn,
Have Been Restored to Health By Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
last
There is no doubt about this fact. Why 1 during the
it 30 years we have published in the newspapers of this
country volumes of letters from women who have been re
lieved of all their suffering by the timely aid of this grand
old medicine. Letters like the following, true, genuine and
honest expressions of gratitude coming from grateful hearts.
Surely you can believe these women.
Mrs. L. S. BRENNER, Hudson, Midi., says:—
“ Sometime ago I was taken with a terrible pain in my right side, such
sharp pains just like a knife sticking me. I tried hot applications but that
did no good. I went to our family doctor (we were living in Fayette, Ohio,
at that time) and he said it was organic inflammation. I doctored with him
a while but kept getting worse. The pain was so terrible I could hardly
stand on my feet. I would have that sharp pain in my right side, and a
dull heavy pain the whole length of my limb. I realized that something
had to be done quickly, so I looked up all of your advertisements I could
find, and saw several that described my case. I got a bottle of Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound end it helped me from the first dose, and
when I had taken two bottles mv trouble was gone. Your medicine has
done so much for me that I am willing you should publish this letter for the
sake of other suffering women.”—Mrs* L. S. Brenner, Hudson, Michigan,
Mrs. L. E. BOWERS, Girard, Pa., says: —
“ I take pleasure in informing you of what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has done for me. I had a sick spell lost February, and for
some months after that I was not regular and had many bod feelings. I
was tired all tbe time, had dull headaches, not much appetite, and also
what the doctor called organic inflammation. Your Vegetable Compound
haa entirely cured me and I feel that too much cannot be said in its praise
as I am now able to do my own work. You ore perfectly welcome to use
my testimonial for the benefit of others.”—Mrs. L, E. Bowers, R.F.D, No. 1,
Girard, Pa.
Mrs. ELIZABETH GENTILCORE, Buffalo, N.Y., says!—
•> I feel that I must write to you about your wonderful remedies. About
ten years ago I was troubled with female weakness and was all run down.
I was tired all the time and could hardly walk without feeling dizzy. I
heard about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, took It, and also
used the Sanative Wash. I got stronger, and have not had those dizzy
spells since. I feel that I owe my health to you, and hope your remedies
will help others as they have me. I tried most everything I heard of, and
yours are the best medicines for women’s ailments,”—Mrs, Elizabeth Gen-
tilcobe, 26 Glor Street, Buffalo, New York.
For SO years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has been the standard remedy for fe
male ills. No one sick with woman’s ailments
does justice to herself If she does not try this fa
mous medicine made from roots and herbs, It
has restored so many suffering women to health,
(Write to LYDIA E.PINK1IAM MEDICINE CO.
//i A VCT1YD1VTT1 T.\ T.VXV. Iff A AS., fnp fulrloo.
|^K*>Vniei01iKviA Lsriaanaia ml—
I^r (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice,
our letter will be opened, read and answered
- . ——a xukiA ju strict confidence.
Atlanta, March 19.—“Mormanisni
as practiced In Atlanta is a crime,
not religion,” says Dr. H. 31. Du-
Rose, pastor of the First Method!:-,
church, in an interview this morn
ing. Dr. DuBose demands an im
mediate Investigation by civil au-
horlties.
The Mormon missionaries In
Georgia have converted hundreds of w e “re unUkTto ta1k° Englished had
U 9 ® 1 ’ 1 ? *° tholr r i dlgl ° n wltkln tae to have an Interpreter to give what
I!!!... ..fI ,.-, . '°, U . r !! d ! r8 o ' the ' *onW testify. The language
Atlanta alone have-made over 2 )0 was _ of course, unintelligible to the
TURPENTINE 3HRKKT WILL BE
RESTORED.
There has been no little degree of
novellette,! speculation among those interested
One of the thrilling
just in time episodes is said to have j in the manufacture of naval stores
oocnred In Chicago when a father In this Immediate section of Geor-
ia frantic search for hls boy heard gla, as to what extent, the suspen-
hls voice through a tr msom In a sion of operations on the part of the
hotel In that city and
Company
J»»t in time to keep him from sul- woald affect that business.
converts In this city, and they are
now planning a state-wide cam
paign for more converts.
Dr. DuBose says: "This cult Is
not religion. It Is a crime. These
elders and 4helr doctrines should at
once I e investigated by law, sup-
prevented from
Rest For Skin Diwiiim.
Nearly every skin disease yields! prcgsad“ byTa’w!
"Thetis' bU j’^n°Deye‘o?-Gla 0 dwm ra " ely Polltida^.ecklj itrengt™
’d heals. John Deye, of Gladwin, ... th „ v „. mov . m . n , , hr „„. h ...
tich., says, after suffering twelve
years with skin ailments and spend
ing $400 m doctor's bills, Bucklen's
Arnica Salve cured him. It will help
you. Only 25 cents. Recommend
ed by all druggists.—(adv.)
HIS TROUBLE
NOT OF HEART
Real Facts In Regard To F. R.
Huffman’s Uness. Relief 0b*
tained By Caring Hls
Stomacn Ailments.
WaynesvilIe,N. C.—Mr. F. R. Huffman,
of this city, says: “ 1 suffered dreadfully
with what I thought was heart trouble,
ind tried various medicines in vain.
After other remedies had failed, Thed-
ford’* Black-Draught restored me to
health. 1 would not feel sale without
Black-Draught in the house. I consider
It worth its weight In gold.
It cared my indigestion, and by thto
means I was restored to health. I can
not express my gratit tde for its benefits."
Qood health depei ds on the condition
of your digestion. Poor digestion and
good health do not gi together.
Thedford’s Black-Draught will
thoroughly cleanse and set in order your
digestive system.
It has done this for others, during the
past 70 years, and Is today the most
popular vegetable Uver remedy on tho
market TryfL
Insist on Thedfonf*. Price 25c.
for the vile movement through ep
slaving men and women in their
grew so me tolls.”
The civil authorities, of course,
refuse to Interfere with the Mor
mons on any ground of religious
doctrine, but they say that if Dr.
DuBose cares to make any charge
of specific violation of law, they will
take it up.
court or Jury, but the directness of
the replies and the force with which
some were given, especially by the
woman, were amusing.
« MINERS IMPIISQTED
FDR SALE: IMPROVED NAIF S HALF COTTON SEED
No other variety planted or ginned on my place. I put 1000 pounds
of seed cotton to the bale, and my entire crop ot 194 bales averaged
427 U pounds per bale. Under -good picking and ginning conlitions,
this cotton will run from 45 to 48 per cent LINT.
It Is a vigorous growth and matures very early. It Is a big round
five-lock boll, running 50 or 63 bolls to the pound. It ha* * tough,
clinging fibre, does not string out of the-boll or cow-lick In picking.
It will make as much seed cotton per acre as any variety, and more of
It can be picked per hanl than any variety and damages less from
storm. •
$2.60 per bushel 1 to 10 bushels
*2.00 per bnshel 10 to SO bushels
Ol.ffO per bnshel BO bu. or more.
J. J. L PHILLIPS,
TIFTON, GEORGIA
BIG DMI.IS DONE
Tallulah Falls Work About Ready
For Official Inspection—Power
Ready by July First.
Atlanta, March 18.—The big dam
at Tallulah Fails has been complet
ed, the official announcement hav
ing just been made. This giant
concrete structure is 115 feet high
and 380 feet long. It has roadway
across the top. The lake it will
form in the gorge will be two miles
wide in places.
When the two openings at the
bottom of the dam are closed up,
the water will rise to the top of the
dam and flow over, underneath, the
roadway, making a beautiful water
fall 115 feet In height: The vol
ume of water that wilt operate the
power house does not go over tbe
dam but will come through a tun
nel 14 feet in diameter, a mile and a
half long, built In the side ot the
gorge. This tunnel, hewn for a long
distance through the solid, living
rock. Is one of the most wonderful
engineering feats In the develop
ment at the falls.
’The Georgia Railway & Power
Company officials estimate that cur
rent from the power house at Tal
lulah will be available about July 1.
• 'JSfe....-.''
Henderefln, Ky. arch 18.—One
hundred and thirty miners were
imprisoned today In a coal mine at
Basketts, near here, because of
cave-ln, which closed the mouth of
the Bhaft.
It le expected that the men will
be released late today. It Is stated
tbat there are no fatalities among
the entombed men.
TWELVE PERSONS HAVE
TAKEN FRIEDMANN “CURE.’
New York, March 18.—The prog
ress of the twelve persons who re
ceived Dr. Friedmann's treatment
for tuberculosis at th*e Bellevue
Hospital yetserday. Is to be told by
a dally series of bulletins from the
office of the Board ot Health.
The first one of these bulletins
Is to be Issued-in about a week, as
no change In the patients' condition
is expected before that time.
A Card of Thanks.
,We wish to sincere!/ thank the
many friends who so ably assisted
us In making the box supper at Oak
Hill School bouse, the success It
was. Many brought cakes and other
things necestary for its success, and
all of them we wish to thank most
heartily.
MRS. W. J. McMi.VTH,
MRS. SIM DAVIS.
Money Loaned
FARM LOANS PROMPTLY MADE
At 6% Interest, payable annually. The borrower has the
privilege of laying part orall ot the principal at any interest
period, etopplng Interest on such payment. I will save you
money. Come to eee me, or write. Prompt atteatlon given
el’ vritws inquiries.
W. M. BRYAN,
OFFICE OVER POST OFFICE, THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA.
Cantaloupe Seed
We offer for sale our Celebrat
ed Eden Gem Stock seed, grown
and reselected at Rocky Ford, Col
orado, under the personal supervis
ion of bur Mr. S. C. Mayo; of Red
dick, Fla. There are none better.
Prices oa application.
JOHNSON-BROWN Co., Albany,{Ga.
or S, C. Mayo, Reddick, Fla.