The Times-enterprise semi-weekly edition. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1???-????, June 10, 1913, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

-iKMI-WEEKLY TIME8-BNTBRPRISK, TEES DAY, JI VE fit. 1913. THE TIMES - ENTERPRISE 6EHLWEEKLY EDITION, tuned Every Tuesday and Friday MEMBERS ASSOCIATED PRESS. Dally and Semi-Weekly Tlmea-Enter- prJse Published by tba Times-Bn- terprlee Cempany, Theaxavll'e, da. Herald gave the substance of it ta a parasraph, ns sonic of our readers B. B. JKRGKR Editor. W. D. HARGRAVE .... Bua. Mlcr. will ;io doubt recall. The story was ~ to the effect that a prominent Entered at the ThemasTllle Peat; far Tranamlsslo* Through tU Thomas county farmer discovered. Malls as Sectnd Class Mall Matter. jj a ^is a ^j lle streak stretching j an< I a long distance on the ground THAT THOMAS COUNTY BUG STOHY. The Thomasville Times-Knterpriso published one day last week a bug story—a "blue” bug story—that created considerable comment. The i these liniiit-workliig families earn- • ed less than 1" cents an hour, al- j together. j In the end, however, the con sumer not infrequently must pay an. i / : awful price in sickness and in : death for "bargains” prepared un der such pitiless and often pestilent conditions. Well indeed, has Dr. ! Solomon Solis-Cohen observed that . "the poverty of Lazarus makes Jt- ! self felt In the house of Dives”; yes, Infections also! Subscription Ratos: On* Year Six Vonth8 - and • l.M| when he investigated he found that * | It was made by millions of very Buttermilk Is even grape-juice. The Balkan war was ended a#ain yesterday. DISI’llOYING Till: DAVIS LIBICL. Doctor Cook is going before Con gress and later he will go after it. If some men would become self starters they would get in motion without to much delay. The Columbia State is pleased at having an ex-Georgia Cracker as Democratic Whip of the Senate. With tweet girl graduates and June brides, the high cost of living will advance tot father and bride groom. The high cost of living is myth, according to an exchange, which states that Teddy got a suit in Mich igan for six centt. The Thomasville churches are the coolest place in the city about eleven o’clock Sunday morning. If you don’t believe it, go and see. When a woman makes a show for herself, the Enquirer-Sun doesn't think she should kick because the crowd looks and possibly applau Is. LaFollette and Roosevelt arc still tentatively ready for the nomination for President and they do say that Mr. Bryan is in about the same pre dicament. It does look like the Empire League moguls got bit when they adopted the schedule which they paid fifty bones for. Valdosta wants to changed and the others do too. small hugs. The next day ho led some of his neighbors into his field! The News recently pointed to show them the phenomenon, and.how hydra-headed is the libel on ♦he blue streak was not to be found Jefferson Davis—how it has devel —the little blue bugs had disap-' ope( j f ro m a silly, cowardly canard peared as mysteriously as they had j j n a matter of far more serious pro- appeared. This latter feaure of the I portions. story caused some of the state [ The original libel was repeated papers to question the veracity ofj so D f ten no the North) that care- the farmer who made the dis ov-1 h>8g wrlt( . rs i iaV e incorporaed .it in cry and told the strange hug story, i hooks am j encyclopedias which pur- and one intimated that he had per haps been drinking something that made him color blind or caused him to "see things” that existed only in a deranged imagination. Reproducing from the Waycross Herald a paragraph that made in sinuations on this lir.6, and ra’led attention to the fact that the name of the farmer who claimed to have seen the bugs had not *been given by The Times-Enterprlse, the latter paper retorts: "The gentleman who saw those bugs saw them, and we know he saw them because he said he saw them. And further than that, thoio isn’t a man in Moultrie or Waycross that would dare come over and tell him port to be historical. The libel in question is the baseless and mali cious fabrication that he was dis guised as a woman and was seeking to escape when captured by Federal troopers near Iiwinvllle, (la., below .Macon, on May II, 1X65. Several weeks ago a I’hiladclph’a veterans celebrated the anniversary of (he capture of Davis, in which he says he participated, by declaring ‘hat the President of the Confeder acy was not attired as a female. Hardly had a wave of gratification and edification subsided through the South, upon the publication of this statement, than another head of the hydra made its appearance. A Washington, D. C. t veteran re- LL BE F The Associated Charities plan hich was contemplated by thos<* interested in that work in Thomas ville, will be formally inaugurated next Fall. The arrangements are being made to perfect an organiza tion and to systematize the work as other institutions of that < haracter are doing and it was thought best to start next Fall. Full details will be announced as soon as plans arc perfected. NEGRO BOY KNOCKED DOWN Scientists have found that no person is I naturally lazy. Laziness la invariably Atlanta, June 6.—Atlanta minis-1 caused from impaired health in one ters, police officials and reformers form or another. Ninety-nine per cent gree in finding a simple explanation | of Indolence, lifelcssness, lackofambl- to the charges made by the Preshy-: tlon, lack of appetite, is caused by the terian minister, Dr. Samuel Z. Pat- blood being impregnated with Malarial ten, in Philadelphia, to the effect Germs. These little Germs, ten thousand that ia walking along the streets of j of which could be held on the point of a Atlanta he was solicited for im- knlte, destroys the red corpuscles in moral purposes nineteen times by K^e blood and at last manifest themselves ^ omen (In the form of Chills, Chills and Fever, Their explanation is that he min ister is lying about his experience Running Itnckwurd He Collided With Auto at Kiks Club Corner This Morning. Willie Hester, a little negro boy collided with an automobile this morning about eleven o’clock at the corner of Jackson and Crawford streets. The result was not fatal to the boy but it did serious damage to his face and head. It seems from witnesses to the accident that the boy was 'running from his brother, both near ten years of age, .and looking back as he ran. Mr. J. E. Baker was driving from Coolidge and turned into Crawford at Jackson street. He did not see the negro boy, but before he could get around the curve, the boy was upon him. Mr. Baker made a:i ef forts to stop the car but not before the boy was knocked down. None of the wheels ran over him, hut his face was bruised in several places and his chin cut open. Doctor Lit tle was summoned and immediately gave necessary medical aid. The boy was stunned for several min utes but after a short time recover ed and was taken home. He will not suffer any grave injury. LOCKER GLOB DECISIONS Social Club* of t!;, vision of a fev veeks he didn’t or that he wasn’t in con-^pouted the old tale, declared that dition to tell whether he did or not. J personally made the capture, and! And, furthermore, unlike Teddy, of! suggested that Congress now give t Hamlejl Down l»y High Com*! the temperate habit, this gentleman . him a medal. I Disturbing the Horizon of does not touch, taste or handle.’’— j As suggested by The News, it Is Albany Herald. i advisable for this slander to be dis* We shall see that gentleman as j proved now, while the people of soon as he conies to x town and ask j the South have the opportunity, that we be allowed to mention his | There are still living numbers of name in connection with the story, the men who belonged to the troop If Editor McIntosh, after he knows which captured Jefferson Davis, and ♦he gentelman’s name doesn’t say J their statements should he secured that the story Is absolutely true, its I and given wide publicity. The la- treats on us. Why we would al-Idles of the Daughters of the Con- Arc the (ourt ago. most swear that those bugs were there In billion lots, and blue, and stretched down both sides of a san dy road for some distance, just as if we had been there and seen them really for ourselves. The woman s edition of the At- 1 lanta Constitution has proven that: tha women can do anything they try j ta da. aven to running an up-to ds • paper and has incidentally! much advertised The ConstitutioM. A MODERN “DIVES AND LAZ ARUS.” victlng a waiter of a lo< ker club for selling whiskey was discussed at the time as a possible interpreta tion of the law that would put many locker clubs "out of business,” hut subsequent analysis of the decision showed that it would have no ef fect whatever. On top of il. however, comes an other decision, which, after mature consideration, leading attorneys and curing th e proper corrections and j judges believe may be used in sue-, refutations in those books in whi -h Icessfully abolishing a certain class federacy should also devote a part of their patriotic efforts toward so- 1T ™ mSsBiKiJ ScientistsSay No Person lsNaturallyLazy (Cald and LaGrippt. No. 101 Tonic is 1 bide from a prescription, which is guar- They say the statement is a plain falsehood and slander. This view concurred in not only by the po lice, the vice squad who have been Investigating vice conditions, but by .Marion Jackson and the Men and Religion leaders who are striving to make things better than they now are, and who do not always aeree with the police on such subjects. Even fellow Presbyterian minis ters of Atlanta admit that the state ments attributed to Dr. Patten are not a true statement of conditions as they exist today on Atlanta’s streets. Fine Hutterl>eans. Mr. I. M. Dyke, of Merrillville was among the visitors to the city to day. He brought with him several bushels of butter beans which he raised on a quarter of an acre plot at his home. The beans are as pro lific as any ever seen in the county and the sample he brought showed the vines fairly pulled to the ground (with hundreds of well filled pods. Mr. Dykes will make quite a neat sum from his crop. IT WANT TO BE REFORMED antced to drive these little demons from the system and rebuild the whole anato my. This No. 101 Tonic Is made from a prescription o( a physician who had 30 years experience practicing 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. Druggists and dealers everywhere sell ft, or we will send direct! by parcel port mall. Price 25c. and 50c. pec bottle. ThcG. B.'Williams Co., Sole Mann- fadturers, Quitman, Ga. (Advertisement.) lAtlanta, June 7.—"I do not want lo be reformed! Go on and send me to the stockade," cried Aina Barrett, a young woman arrested in a ho'el raid and carried before Judge Broyles for sentence this morning. The Judge had asked her If she did not prefer being sent to the Martha Home. She scoffed at the eon-^icj ea , told the judge that a woman or her type could not be reformed, that she did not want to b6 reform- ttd that If he was going to sen tence her at all, the stockade was the proper place to send her. lib. i of locker clubs throughout the Curas Old Sons, Other Rsmsdlss Won't Cura. The worst cates, no matter of how Ion# standing, are cored by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. Porter's Antlaeptic Healing Oil. It relieves Pain and Heals at the same time. 25c, 30c, $1.00 COAST LINK TO HAVE 'RHONE SYSTEM ON LINE TO THIS CITY 1 now appears. , , , state 1* is stated that the Atlantic Coast This subject is again male peril- Tf , ... . , I The derision is by Judge Moses Une railroad will shor'ty start iient by the observance yesterday o' b right, of Home, and has been tip- work Installing telephone equipment •lie anniversary of Davis' birth, and held by the Court of Appeals. Judge between Waycross and Thomasvlll more especially by the affidavit Just Wright granted a permanent injunr- fp r the dispatching of tralnB by made by a I'nlon veteran at Flu- j'lon restraining the lull City Hub. gerald, Ga. He, too, was a member! 0 .! rro,n 1,8 lo< ’'' ipr Despite much that ha. keen «a>d , KorauI> ua He , t00 . wns „ mem ,nd written to th e contrary, health ' , he faptur)ng gl| , lad , I conditions in American cities, as *~ . ... . ; i that Mr. Davis positively v j elsewhere in civilization, are im-j proving, If diminished death-rates! coatlf and annottn <»d by the I'resi- , are a criterion. And yet health... . . . , , dent was that of Pleasant A. Sto-1 , I the account given by both Mr i conditions in our great cities are not' Ambassador to Switzerland. ] good enough to satisfy the humani- the tarlan—at any rate those condi-; ...... at . . , Post and his friends are glad for jtates the falsehood that the great .erary features connected with it, no tions which accompany or follow i rnnfnA — seeking' Initiation R*‘*s or dues, then such a club was dearly a subterfuge *.o evade the law, and that the dis- Arnoog the appointments made re- vall. The Savannah editor dese: I The litigation was instituted by th* a ^*|Rome Law and Order League, not! In ruling on the case—and now dressed like a woman. While his!the Court of Appeals has upheld statement differs somewhat fromj** ia ^ ri, li.ig Judge Wright held that where it could be shown that a club was organized primarily for the purpose of dispensing whiskey, It imrtlcu-• where there were no social or Iit- j.Mrs. Davis, yet it corroborates them | ! in the essential details. him that he was so honored. Caruso got a call-down recently in London for ogling women, accord ing to news Items. The old chap must have forgotten when the even tenor of his way was disturbed for the same thing at one time in a public park in dear old New York. President Wilson has been cueed of lobbying for the tariff. follow the gravest social and economic dis- i “uses of the body politic. At a re- i cent woman’s industrial exhibit wer e J placards showing discase-en-tender ing conditions: obviiously unsani tary sweat-shops, in which consump-1 I lives work on hnderwear, shirt- ‘ waists, bed and table linen, lace ! collars and other garments, to he 1 sold on the bargain counter, ana ‘.o c j be introduced w ith all their germ- lt j content into other homes. Confederate chieftain fo escape In his wife’s clothing. Fori that reason the affidavit of this Vet-' , , . . , j pensing of whiskey in such a place eran is deemed worthy of repro-! amounted in the eyes of the law to duction in another column of The j illegal sale. i News.—Macon News. The application of such a princi pal In Atlanta, while it would not touch *he leading clubs, would put out of business a dozen or more of the smaller organizations. PATTEN NEWS NOTES ;MRS. WILSON SENDS FLOWEOS Harwich, Ga., June ti.—Our r<l°:i was visited by a hail storm I j tills week. It did not damage th' brings to mind the aicusutions| A placard bor« a doctor's state- crops in this section, very much,!To Hospitals and Sanitarium From against Hoke Smith whea bejntenl: "1 have found 1S2 families,[however. ^ the White House t'onser. brought about legislation such ,'S 179 with contagions diseases, doing 5lr - Cullen Rogers and his sis- 'stories. Washington. June 6.—llu.tdreds ’jof sick rooms in hospitals here were l 1 '®* | brightened today with flowers and Iters, Mrs. John Gardner and Mias ,, . i l-ouella Rogers, were among the personally approaching and influ. Nicely bottled pecans are sold aslp aMen |)eo „ le wh0 attende<1 „ le encing influential members of both titbits for the well-to-do; In this nlc at Merrillville last week. [potted plants, which were sent by houses of the State Legislature. I exhibition were photographs of a! Mrs. R. R. Gardner and Miss ' lr *' ^ Voo,trow Wilson, from the - • [ mother and two children In a, Pearl Gardner visited Dixie last | Whlt^ House conservatories. Some newspapers are worried at 1QU alid room cracking the nuts, one Friday and Saturday, the publicity which Hoke Smith l»'„f the children facilitating the! ^ ra - J ■ Dixon has returned •getting In Georgia, and accuse him work by using Its te°th By such from a abort visit to her father. ot conducting a publicity bureau I poor women and itUe children also j "V', "“I Trom M*m.;s, where she has been for himself. The accusation Is. of, <often Illegally kept front school) visiting friends and relatives, course, not seriously taken and the 1 0 rc bristles put into hair-brushes, Messrs. R. A. Gardner and John publicity which he gets Is not more j artificial flowers made and paper'Hudson made a business trip to freely or graciously given than his j elgarette tubes rolled—and licked. Thomasville last .Monday, opponents give anything which j On*? of the most melancholy aspects I and Mrs. Holland, who reside he advocated before the people, by this tenement work.” JUST WANTED THE MONET Is the IMen of YounK Man Who Sent Letter to Wilson Demanding Five Thousand Dollars, Youngstown, O., June 7.—Gui- seppe Pomaro was arrested here to- i - | day, charged with sending a Black they believe will prove detrimental of our civilization, says The Jour-i in «I )e nt a few days with Hand letter to President Wilson, in nal of the American Medical Asso-1 ^ aug * lt ® r * •' lr8, **• Lancas- j which he demanded five thousand ter, this week.. ... to his interests politically. j About the silliest thing ever writ ten about Thomasville Jn all of the history of silly things, relative to the cow, was the article in The Georgian sometime ago by Nevln. The people of the city were amused and aa usual made the comment, •*ths newspapers never get anything tight" That time they were abso lutely correct for the cock and bull •tory was worse than absurd. elation, Is the pay for sweat-shop | Mloses Cora and Leona Oreea. work: (1 a dozen Jor skilled work i from the McGraw district st gloves for which the retailer Tuesday afternoon in Patten, charges |3 a pair ;30 cent* for four dollars. It Is said that Pomaro has admlt- 8| ' enl ted his guilt, saying he Just wanted the money. hours' crocheting of a hand-bag which sells for 11.50. In 101 Inspected horns*, 25 per cent, of the worker* were between 5 and 10 year* of ago; nearly half were under 14: a fourth ot tae children worked five hour* or mor* a day after school: threc-fcurth of Siwplort contacted. HiHe»l im**. cited- UataJ Tm* LANARK SPRINGS On tli« Golf of Mexico. Fine bathing, boating and fishing. Only 4 54 hours ride via Balnbridge. A delightful resort. Low rate*. Aak Ticket Agent, or write C. J. Acosta, Tralllc Manager, O. F. & A. Ry., I Balnbrldge, Ga. telephone. The equipment has lived and the work of Installing It will begin at once. It i* said. The Toast Line now dfspsfehes trains from the north of this city to Jacksonville by telephone, an 1 It I 1 the aim of the company to com plete the telephone system al’ over the line. Over the Coast Line from points In Virginia to Savannah, tele phonic despatching of train* Is now- in operation and Is giving complet satisfaction.—Waycross Herald. No Mo 3 Biliousness He iache or I ver Ills Dr. L. P. Arrington’s Private Pres ription Now on & leral Sale, Dr. Htrrim ton’* Liver PiUt For Geor gia People, i .mous for many years in Waynesboro >ud the adjacent districts are now bein : prepared on a largo sea], and may be obtained by men, women and children in every lection of the South. These pills are the same *s those used with such g -eat success by Dr. L. P. Herrington in hi* private practice and are prep ired from hi* original for mula and under his close supervision. They are ob:olutelr pur* and harmless and may be depended upon absolutely for prompt and sure relief in all cases of Biliootneti. Liver, Kidney and Stom ach Disorders, Neuralgia, Fain in the Side, Fevers, Headache, Indigestion, Dyspepsia. Easy and pleasant to take. Wayaeihero, Ga.. Ju. 1st, 1913.—I bars ued Dr. Bsrriaglsa's Liver Fills FarGtsrgta Pscyleaed like yleesxre la receueadisl theta. I thick they eheald be is every hose. I eat glad is hsew the! a company baa bees •rgamlxsd right her* ia Waymeiboro tor that perpeie. FRAME S. PALMER. Mayor. Dr. Herrington'a Liver PiUs For Gear* f ia People are 2Sc a box everywhere, f your dealer cannot supply you do not accept a substitute but send the price to the Herrington Company. Waynes boro, Ga., and we will immediately send you the pills prepaid. For sale by Peacock-Mash Drug Co., Ingram Drug Co., Thomaavllle Georgia.adv. FARM LOANS) S years time — Easy Payments. Lawrst rates. Largs amounts a Specialty. BARROW LOAN * lABJTRAOT COMPANY. Pelham, Ga. Special Subscription Offers for clubbing with THE MS-ENTERPRISE Semi - Weekly TImes-EnlerprIse $1.00 Southern Rurallst (Semi-Monthly) 50 Southern Poultry Journal, (Monthly) 50 Welcome Guest 25 Total $2.23 FOR $1.50 Semi - Weekly Times-Enterprise $1.00 Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal 73 Southern Poultry Journal (Monthly) 53 Southern Rurallst (Semi-Monthly) 50 - Total $2.7.1 FOR $1.75 3emi - Weekly Times-Enterprise $1.03 Tri-Weekly Atlanta Constitu'.ioi 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. Made a Quick Sale T HE Investment Department af a Bal timore stock exchange house had a caller who wished to buy fifty shares of a certain investment stock. While the customer waited, the manager called up the firm’s Philadelphiaagent on the Bell Long Distance Telephone and secured the stock, with the promise of delivery next day. Quick trades are often made by the fiell Telephone service. When you telephone—smile SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR THE SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES ENTERPRISE Money Loaned ' FARM ’ L OAKS lFCIYF l Y MADE At 6% Interest, paySblo annually. Ths borrower ha* th* privilege ot paying part orall of ths principal at any Intsreat period, (topping Interest on such payment I will save you money. Come to see me, or write. Prompt attention given *1' wiittss inquiries. W. M. BRYAN, OFFICE OVER POST OFFICE, THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA.