The Times-enterprise semi-weekly edition. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1???-????, June 03, 1913, Image 2

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SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES ! \T PHIS':, TUESDAY, JINK 3. 1013. THE TIMES - EITE1PRISE SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION, luutxl ivTcrj Tuesday aad Friday MEMBERS ASSOCIATED PllKSS. Bally ard Semi-Weekly Tlmes-Enter- prlee Published by lbs Tlmes-Ea- terprlse Company, Themazril’e, Qa. B. R. JKRGER Editor. W. I>. HARGRAVE .... Bus. Mgr. Entered at the Themaeville Pest •flics for Transmission Through ike Malls as Second Class Mall Matter. Subscription Rates: One Tear 11.JJ Six Months •• The first day of June was the hot- test. mmm If Macon does get the capital. At lanta will secede. RooseTelt is temperate but not a prohibitionist. Yesterday was delightfully cool a»d pleasant—at the North Pole. Governor Slato-a will practically he the first unanimous governor in many years. The Government should get rid of ihe parcel post stamp just as quick ly as practicable. Things aren’t so bad after all— rantaloup‘*8 and watermelons are going to be extra fine. The Militants of England have turned their attention to hay burn ing. Eight-pound watermelons and cot ton In bloom is the boast of Pavo this week. The ’’absetemous Colonel” is the way the Brunswick News designated the biggest of them all. President-that-was-Taft is trying mighty hard to hold his own during the tariff discussion and the Roose velt slander trial. n If Sisson and Hobson, backed by Theodore, could go over and tall? to those Japs for a year or so, they would quit in disgust. <# -rf 0 * r * It in perfectly useless to tell Ja pan to go slow. The Jap has seen enough of war to know Just what it means and also what it costs. Underwood wants all legislation, except the tariff and currency barred from consideration at the special session. As usual, the l°ader is right. An Asheville doctor is said to have discovered a serum for tuber culosis which is meeting with the approval of the surgeons in the U. 3. >*avy Department. Charlie Morse came back into the financial world by being elected President Of some steamboat com pany. He is going to attend to Its affaire in person aad feels like this is not half enough to do. „ Rodlenbery is right; Caere is nothing more invigorating arid re freshing than a two days* fishing trip on the banks of the Ochlock- nee.—Thomasville Times. What is the uoe of fishing for mudeats in the swamps? Way not go *!cwn to Warsaw and get the real thing?— Savannah Press. Where is that? THE POISON LABEL—A NEEDED (AMENDMENT. For the purpose of safeguarding tilt public ngainsi the dangers of poisons, Mr. French, of Idaho, has introduced in the House of Repre sentatives a proposed amendment to the Federal Food and Drug Act. Tb« amendment which refers to lii* labels and containers of poi sons declares that a drug’shall be deemed misbranded: "If the contents of the pack age be a virulent poison and shall not be placed In a con- talner labeled ‘Poison’ and shall not contain on the label at least one suitable antidot * and the name of the person, firm or corporation dispensing the substances, and in the case of liquids, in addition thereto, said container shall be n colored glass roughened botMe of a type described by Secretary of the Treasury, the .Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary of Commerce.” Idaho Is to be congratulated on having a representative whose so iieitude for the public safety may be the means of strengthening the Food and Drug Aft. “In *he past,’ Fi.ys The Journal of the American Medical Association, “it has been altogether too easy for careless or unscrupulous manufacturers to sell powerful drugs without giving the purchaser any hint as to the poten cy of the product he was buying. Another amendment sh old be made, or the proposed one modified, so as to protect the public still fur ther. All ‘patent medicines* con taining poisonous drugs should be required to be labeled ‘Poison.’ The protective action of such a: amendment would soon be demon strated. In Great Britain, where there is such a legal requirement, preparations like Winslow’s Sooth ing Syrup, containing such insidious poisons as morphine, have to labeled ‘Poison.’ As a result, the Winslow concern has taken the morphine out of its British product and has substituted a dru* that I not listed in the schedule of poi sons. But Winslow’s Soothing Syr up still goes to American babies v/ith its deadly morphine The value of the requirement li‘*s in the fact that the word ‘Polsotf has Very foal and definite meaning an> person that reads English. The same cannot bo said of the chemi cal names for various poisons. Thus the most ignorant of mothers would heeitate to Rive her child a ‘patent medicine* that was labeled ‘Poison,’ but she would pay little attention to the statement that it contained morphine, for instance. The weak ness of the pre«3nt federal law has beeci referred to many t!m«. As the law now rtands, ‘patent medi cines’ may go to the public contain- Ir.f such deadly ltolsons as strych nine, atropin, prussic acid, arsenic, etc., with no warning or hint of the 1 res a nce of thes® drugs.” TALK OF A NOTH Eli OANAL. Splendid Address by Captain Miller Before Many IVcpIfS—Exercises Very Delightful. SAYING** OF GREAT MEN. ‘‘We have buried the corkrcrew.” —W. J. Bryan. •‘Golf hath its victories.”--W. H. Taft. "Don’t cheer boys. Tb* y»llow devils are lying."—Gov. Johnson. "Last place is the last place I ex pected.”—J. Tinker and F. Chance. “Please belif the dumb.”—T. Roosevelt. "Let me break the heads of a na tion and I care net who breaks Us hearts.”—Em. Pankhurst. "They also son's who do but stand and blab.”—Tom Marshall. "I regret that I have but 4,000,- 000 blankety-blaehed cuss words to give my party, tllng-dang tho blat- ted-blinglty, glam-swotted luck.”— Jos Cannon.—Ex. Tbs Suffrage arguments In Con gress will bring out some very In teresting debating, when Hefiln gets to working and tbs Ohio Congress men gat back of him. Even before the Panama Canal is completed there is talk of building another canal through Nicaragua. This talk, it is tiue emanates from a representative of the Nicafaguail government, that country boing anx ious to sell the United States exclus ive rights from the Atlantic to the Pacific for the sum of three million dollars. *• - * t • This Nicaraguan reprere.i’ative points out that this proposed canal would shorten the* distance front American ports to the Orient by more than two thousand miles, and that while the Panama canal is a military and strategic necessity, this canal will sooner or later be de manded by the commercial interests of the country to which a saving of two thousand miles in shipment of freight means everythin?. It will be remembered that Sena tor John T. Morgan, of Alabama, who knew more about the canal proposition than any other Ameri can. living or dead, was always an advocate of the Nicaraguan route, and it is yet believed that such would have been the route had not Theodore Roosevelt boldly and with out blushing, stolen the canal strip across the Panama isthmus end fixed the route of the canal at that place. The building of the Panama canal has cost so much money and jive* so little outlook for a profitable return, that it is very doubtful whether this country would even *:ntertain a proposition to construct another canal, at least during the next fifty years. Still there arc those who yet favor the Nicaraguan project.—Athens Banner. The Graduating Exercises of the ligli .School of Thomasville were ield last night at the Young’s Col- ege Auditorium, and the house was row ded to i*s capacity. The stage had been effectively decorated for occasion with flowers, daisies be* used in profusion, both on the stagt and the bouquets of the young, ladies .v«*r3 also made of them, this being tho class flower. Y.bo Class History was given by Ir. T. L. Sje:ice, Jr., and it was plemlidly prepared and told in m amusing and clever way, the lit- $he incidents of interest school days. This was followed by the class poem which was read by Miss Gladys Stanaland. This win some young woman was very happy in her rendition of the clever poem which she had prepared and it made quite a hit with the audience. The Class Prophecy was inter spersed with interesting and enter taining futures for every member of the class and was read most effec tively by Miss Rissah Zangwill, its author. The Class Will Miss Elean or Howell prepared and she “willed and bequeathed” everything imag inable to the next class in line, and to various favorites among the stu dent body. Mr. John Finlayson Mays, first honor graduate, delivered the Vale dictory and it was a well-written carefully prepared paper which showed unusual ability. The exer cises were intersi^rsed with songs which were given by the chorus of the school under the direction of Miss Ida Hel°n Mathews, the head of the music department. Each one was thoroughly enjoyed. The address was- made by Captain A. G. Miller, a former resident of this city and head of . the South Georgia College. 'This address was splendid in every derail and con tained an eloquent tribute to the valor, chivalry and ability of the South and its men. Captain Miller, in easy, forceful words, urged the young men and young women to as sist in the upbuilding and advance ment of this favored section and urged them to greater efforts in all lines of useful activity. Mr. E. It, Jerger. President of the Hoard of Education, with a few re marks, delivered the diplomas to eighteen of the graduates, as fol lows: r -• • Misses Mary Elizabeth Cochran, Esther Knight, Mollie Louise Brucj, Eleanor Charlotte Howell, Sarah Alberta Levitt. Margaret Haile Mays, Gladys Stanaland, Margaret Lois Vann, Alexander McGee, Annie Montgomery 3wlft, Rissah Zangwlll. Messrs. Campbell Wallace Ansley, John Finlayson Mays, Thomas Louis Spence. Jr.. Marrs McIntosh Cooper. William Bruce Newton, Lawrence Stey«rman, Theodore Titus, Jr. KEMJER AND EXTIiiK CABI NET OF SPAIN, HAS (JUIT. (By Associated Press.) Madrid, 3paln, May 30.—Premier Romanones and other members of Spain’s cabinet resigned today. Card of Thank*. We, the family, wish to express our thanks to the many good peo ple of Thomasville for the many kind acts shown us, and for the many floral tributes sent us in our hour of bereavement, and especially the ones who ministered at his lit tle bedside during the illness and death of our darling Ralph. May God bless each and every one. MR. AND MR8. P. B. WRIGHT. II QUEER STREET In Three Counties aud Hus All Sorts of Twists and Turn* That Re quire Leiral Advice. Atlanta, May i>0.—When it coihes to casting votes and going to court the queerest street in Georgia, and i-robably in the wcrld, is Athens street, in the town of Winder. The western side of this street is it Gwinnett county, the eastern side n Jackson county, and if you stand in the middle of it, and look s( i:th a few hundred feet, you will lie in Walton county. At one point on A’.iens street is a father and son who live just oppo site each other. When the father ourt he travels to the town BE ALLEN IS ! Scientists Say No Person Is Naturally Lazy Atlanta, May 30—Judge Join T.. ... Alien, of Milledgevllle, state sena- Scientists have found that no person is tor-elect and former member of the ■eturally lazy. Laziness Is Invariably assembly, strongly disputes the caused from Impaired health In one claims of Randolph Anderson, in I formx>r another. Ninety-nine per cent< °»h« W ^«nVi e r ‘vf! ! °* indolence, lifelessneit, lack of ambi tion, lack of appetite, la caused by the dent of the Senate. Mr. Anderson has made claims In the newsi/apere to a majority of 25 votes, but it is understood that Judge Allen, while he himself is not making such ag gressive claims, has got absolute assurance of 3D sure votes. Local politicians who have been discussing the situation are ot tho opinion that Mr. Anderson must have over-estimated his possible strength. Judge Allen, who is an blood being impregnated with Malarial Germs. These little Germs, ten thousand of which could be held on the point of a pen knlle, destroys the red corpuscles In the blood and at last manifest themselves In the .form of Chills, Chills and Fever, Cold and LaGrippe. No. 101 Tonic is Hade from a prescription, which ia guar- oi Jefferson. When the son goes to | able parliamentarian and exper- court he travels to I^awrem eville. i fenced in politics, says he is eonfl- Although their houses are 1 aimed-1 dent of election, lately faving each other, if a bur * ~ — 1 ■ glar would break into them both the (ATLANTA WANTS BUILDERS same night, they would have to send r ASSOCIATION TO COME THERE ia two directors lor two different ‘ sheriffs. Each time th°re is an (dec- lion in Winder, two different polling places have to be provided. The people of Winder are hopins to solve these complications by tir creation of the new' county of Har row', with Winder r.s the conn*) seal. This new county would take and ! Atlanta, May 29.—Am its first offi cial act, the Association of Building Owners and Managers of Atlanta, which was organize 1 yesterday, will -send a delegation to Cincinnati attend the Sixth animal convention {of the National Association. in parts of Gwinnett, Jackson and ! This delegation will be empowered WaPon, all three of which are | to invite the 1911 convention to At- among the large counties of Oeor- . . . .. . u gia. and which \vi:i not be material- antl, ' an( Pr “" "o' 13 "', ^tary !y hurt by the change. The opinion ' of the local convention bureau, an- is now said to be general over the j nounces that he has already had state that Winder lias about the j assurances from national officials !•'?!./t 1 '™ f0 . r „.' hn .. eS ; that Atlanta stand, an excellent tabllshment of a new county that have yet been put forward in Geo EIGHT RUSSIAN JEWS CREMAT ED WHEN HOUSE WAS BURNED nailed their victims up in seting fire to it afterwards. chance to get the big gathering, The local organisation, which ex pects to attain a membership of or 40 at once, already numbers among its members some of Atlan St. Petersburg, Russia, May 8J. | leading millionaire financiers. —Eight Russian Jews were burned!The national organization inc'udes to death today in Pontnew f, Rus- ! sorae 0 f biggest capitalists sian Poland, by a band of men, **hoi th country i The following local officers have ! been elected: Claries F. Wilkin- a.ftu-rrnrit nan aia-vrnrn rirn*p! son ' ma *iager of the Candler Build- MONTEREY HAS ANOTHER FIEHT ; inK - 7'"; A w - Mart,n - mana - |ger of the Atluntn .National Bank ■ „„ _ . . building, Vice-president: Fred 3hae- «»SSU?SUt=rK!!!*rT *"" — that a mob attacked the Governor’s; Building, Secretary and Treasurer, place at Monterey yesterday and j If the National convention comes the authorities killed or wounded here next year, it wll* be one of sixty of the rioters. jthe most important gatherings of \y\xx TO SEE THE CITY? jthe kind the South has ever had. GET AEROPLANE DIRECTIONS' Berlin, May 30.—An aerial guide j book, just published *at FranKfort-J on-the-Maine, tells how to see .hat city a'.id its environs to the best ad | vantage by baloon cr aeroplane. J K CASE A DIED AT SEA Nashville, Tenn., May 30.—Tile 'Jury trying 'ho ease of Mrs. Leola .Jones, who Is charged with til- ! murder last year of Mrs. Alva Cavo. | widow of a son of former Captain- j General Cave, of Ihe United Coufed- jerate Veterans, failed to agree, and j was discharged today. Mrs. Cavo was shot through the mother’s by Mrs. anteed fo drive these little demons from the system and rebuild the whole anato my, This No. 101 Tonic is made from a prescription of a physician who had 30 years experience pradlldng medicine in one of the worst malarial sections In the south. Try it on a guarantee, If It falls to cure you, the money will be given back. Druggldto and dealers everywhere sell it, or we will send dlredl by parcel podi mail. Price 25c. and 50c. per bottle. TheG. B. Williams Co., Sole Manu* fadlurcrs, Quitman, Ga. ° (Advertisement.) Queenstown, May 30.—Hev. Den nis O'Sullivan, of Savannah, Ga., | heart la the hall of her died of heart failure on the liner j home, where she lived, Adriatic, May 20th, while on a vr.y- j Jones, who alleged that Mrs. Cave age from New York to Queenstown, j was receiving attentions from her The burial will take place at Cah-; former husband, J. G, Jones, lroiveen. Kerry, Ireland. j j ( In Mcmorlam, Sturdlvant-ILuvthorne. On the twenty-first day of May, Mr. Lcander Joseph Sturdivant just as the nooa began to cast Its requests the honor of your presence J shadows toward evening, all that at the marriage of his daughter,, was mortal of little Ralph Wilkes Laura Katherine, to Mr. James Val-j Wright, after a-a Illness of nine nere Hawthorne, on Wednesday, the [weeks, passed over the great river eleventh oT June, at twelve o’clock, noon. St. Thomas Episcopal Church. 3 homasvllle, Georgia.” The above invitations have been received here by the friends of this popular young couple. The ceremony will be performed by Rev. W. H. Higgins. Rector of St. Thomas Church. The bride will be given away oy her father, Mr. L. J. Sturdivant. of time to rest beneath the shadows of the trees In tho measureless realms ot the great beyond, where ■pain, suffering and heart-aches are forever ended. • He bad bean confined to his room for about four months and to his bod for nine weeks, but It was with the greatest patience did be submit to the will of the Divine Power, his young body Anally giving away to Curat Old Sent, Other Ramidlit Won't Cura. ! The wont cssea. no matter of bow long Btanding, ' are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. P^rter'a Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relievea Pain and Heala at the same time. 35c, 50c. $1.00 AUREAL IN FAMOUS SUIT. ownership of Tallulah Falls Prop erty to l>e Settled By State { Supreme Court. Atlanta, May 31.—Although the suit of the state against the Georgia Railway & Pow°r Company has been appealed to the State Supreme Court, it is understood that the ver dict 'in the Rabun Superior Court, declaring that the defendant power company lias a full and good title to the disputed lands, will settle finally aTid forever the old wrangle, gtar*ed by Mrs. Helen Longstreet and the Tallulah Conservation Association, over the ownership of land at the Fal’s. * "T The appeal to the state supreme court is desired by the defendant power company as much as by the plaintiff state, in order that by a confirmation of the lower court's ve diet all possibilities of further dispute may be ended. The verdict rendered at Rabun confirms at law the views taken by Governor Hoke Smith and Governor Brown, when the matter was put up to them by tho Conservation Asso ciation. Both decided, after having the attorney general go into the matter, that there was no just ground on which to bring suit, but tho legislature passed a resolution ordering the attorney general to go ahead and proceed with the suit any way. Miss Ethel Miller will be maid of the pangs of the much-dreaded dis honor and Mr. Hubert Hawthorne ease, known as infantile paralysis, will act as best man. ! Everything that medical ail and The young couple will leave at- skill could conceive, and love and L:03 o’clock for a bridal trip to'science combined in a way most •New York, Boston, Albany and other, unusual, but it was without avail, (points in the North. Little Ralph was born January [ - ■ ■ *24, 1901, thus living to brighten and be the cherished flower of his fami ly, but nine years, three months and Raleigh, N. C.. May 30. -The po- ! US? , H */ M “ brUht lice here this afternoon are holding | and lovl ‘‘« <*»<». loved l» every John H. Kilpatrick, a white man of!one with whom he came in con Wilmington, and three negroes, on i tact, and as a member of the third suspicion cxl ; r *J B I grate of the Thomasville Public School, his sweet disposition won for him a tender place In the heart of ACCUSED OF STEALING *1.000, FOUR MEN HELD AT RALEIGH package containing nineteen hun dred dollars, which was en route from the Treasury Department, at Washington lo a Loulshurg, N. c. r bank. , . CARDUI WORKED UKE_A CHARM After Operation Failed to Help, Cardui Worked Like a Cham. Jonervllle, 8. C.—"t suffered with womanly trouble,” writes Mrs. J. 8. Kendrick, In a letter from this place, "and at times, I could not bear to atand on my feet The doctor said I would never be any better, and that I would have to have an operation, or I would have a cancer. I went to the hospital, and they oper> tied on me, but I got no better. They laid medicines would do me no good, and I thought I would have to die. At last I tried Cardiol, and began to Improve, so I continued using IL Now, I am well, and can do my own work I don’t feel any pains. Cardui worked like a charm." There must be merit In this purely vegetable, tonic remedy, tot women— Cardui—for It has been In successful use (or more than flO yeuu, tor the treatment of womanly his class and playmates as well as his teacher, which only time can erase, as wae proven by the many floral tributes *.hat were cast on and near his little casket. He was laid to rest In Laurel Hill cemetery the following day at 3:30 o'clock, In the presence of a large concourse of sorrowing relutlves and friends who bad gathered to pay their last respect to the cherished little one. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. Mr. John stone. “We hear no more the patter of those little feet. Nor the sound of his voice so aweet; But In hcavon, with his Saviour alone, Ho is waiting to welcome us home. "A precious one from us Is gone, ■A voice wo love! Is’ stilled, A place Is vacant In our home, Which never can be filled.” “A FRIEND." Please try It, (hr your trouble*. N.B.-TPriUf« UZW Mel. CMfe FARM LOANS 5 year* time — Eaey Payment*. Lowest rate*. Largo amount! a Specialty. HARROW LOAN * llBJTRAOT COMPANY. Pelham, Go. Special Subscription Offers for clubbing with THE SEMI-WEEKLY MS-ENTERPRISE Soinl - Weekly Timea-Enterprlse |1.00 Southern Rurallst (Soml-Monthly) 50 Southern Poultry Journal. (Monthly) 50 Welcome Guest .25 Total $2.25 FOR $1.50 Semi - Weekly Times-Enterprise $1.00 Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal .75 Southern Poultry Journal (Monthly) 5D Southern Rurallst (Semi-Monthly) ... .50 Total ..$2.75 FOR $1.75 3eml - Weekly Times-Enterprise $1.00 Tri-Weekly Atlanta Constitution 1.00 Southern Rurallst (Semi-Monthly) 50 Southern Poultry Journal (Monthly) 50 Total $3.00 FOR $1.75 THESE CLUBBING RATES HOLD FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY. DR. W. C. MORGAN Come to Thomasville to have your DENTAL WORK done where you will find^some good dentists. I have no unkind |or adverse|criticiun lo make of my competitor*, [who are good dentists. I am in need of cath to meet my outstanding obligations and for that*reason 1 will furnish best material; S. S. White’s; and tor 30 days will do your workfatjthe following named charges: Gold fillings $1.25[and up. Amalgam fillings .50 and[up Set of teeth $8.00 22-K Gold crowns $4.50 to $6.00 Thank youlforlpastjfavors, W. C. MORGAN, D. D. S. Thomasville, Ga. SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR THE SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES ENTERPRISE Money Loaned ' FARMHLOANS FRCNPLY MADE At 6% Interest, payable annually. The borrower haa the privilege ot paying part orall of tho principal at any interest period, (topping interest on auch payment. I will eave you money. Come to eee me, or write. Prompt attention given ell written Mulrlei. W.?M. BRYAN, office ovBB. row ggjgL.JB8!!SgS5**> g ®orgia.