The Times-enterprise semi-weekly edition. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1???-????, June 24, 1913, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

X THE TIMES - ENTERPRISE SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION, iisaed Every Tuesday ud Friday HEALTH, HYGIENE AND HAUNT-1 adequate equipment. Whenever it ED HOUSES. MEMBERS ASSOCIATED PRESS. It is by no means a new exper ience to find the miracles of a-nclent days and the mysteries of occult arts fading away in The light of modern science. The bloody btead of tho B. R. 4ERGKK Editor. W. I). HAROUAVS .... Bu*. lUsr. Iai£ and Semi-Weekly Tiraos-Entar- ?ri«* Published by tbs Times-Ba- terprlee Company, Thomaivli'.. «a. MWdle Agos for elam p] e> wI th its sinister forebodings and religious Implications, has today become a Entered at tb# ThsmasrilU Peat simple demonstration in bacteriolo- Unexpected luminous surfaces ring i:i the absence of any vlsi- lllllble source of light are easily ex-j . .It plained by any student of the biolo-| Gffic® fsr Transmission Through the Malls as 8econd Class Mail Matter, Subscription Rates: One Year x Vonths . • Next come, the Georgia Leglsla- ture and the Fourth of July. Love at first sight has often turn ed out to be temporary insanity. Jests are always annreelated when they are ou the other fellow. They are buying bon weevils In Alabama in order to kill them out before the seasons opens good. Valdosta seems to have one-half of the pennant cinched. Let’s hope somebody else will get the other. Man makes a martyr of himself when he rolls a baby carriage sev- eral mile, every Sunday afternoon. Ttom Watson hasn’t said anything abeut the Georgia Legislature yet. Wonder what has become of the “oage of Thompson.” Mrs. Pankhuret gets in and out of Jail aa easily as she does in and out of her own home and with much more regularity. They expect a good yield of corn and cotton in this section of the state and it would be mighty had if some of them didn’t. They say that some girls get real angry because it is not possible to read the kisses that have been printed on other girls’ lips. It’s alright to Bwat the fly, but its a darn sight more easy and sure to prevent the formation of breeding places in every block of your town. Those spike-tailed close-fitting coats the girls are wearing reminl us of a dress suit, and that’s an aw ful uncomfortable summer thought. Those flat shoes that women wear make some of them look like they ar« trying to slip up on somebody. It Ua’t a bad guess that some of them would like to. Young girls in Paris are spending two hundred dollars for their spring outfits. By young girls, we mean these under fifteen yeara of age. There Is no telling what the older ones spend. gy of-phosphorescence. Even the almost impenetrable marvels of the active minds as well as those cur ious manifestations, like hypnotism, which pass under the name of psy chic phenomena are yielding to the a rational interpretation. Weird visions and strange ghosts have at length become the expressions of a disordered mind rather than the visitations of an offended deity And now the "haunted” house— chronicled in fiction and actually shunned in real life—has been de prived of its mystifying wonders and frightfnl horrors by the findings of twentieth century hygiene. Dr. Frank Schneider, Jr., of the .Massachusetts Insitute of Technolo gy, has iavestigated a house in the Back Bay district of Boston, which had acquired the annoying reputa tion of being "haunted.” The ex periences which led to the investi gation were too serious, the symp toms too real, the reports too often repeated and reliable to be over looked or regarded as mere halluci nations. The slumbers of the la- mates in the upper stories were dis turbed by strange sensations, such as those of oppression or paralysis; they frequently continued after the sleeper was thoroughly awake and even after the lights had been turn ed on. The involved children ap peared pale and sluggish in the morning, even cold water losing its power to enliven them. IA careful inspection of the build ing gave the key to the situation The theory of undetected leaks of illuminating gas as a source of in toxication could not be verified in this case; but it developed that the gases escaping from a "viciously defective” hot-air furnace were suf ficient to cause the trouble. The separation between the fire-box and the hot-air ducts (on which the hy gienic integrity of the outfit de pends) was badly broken, and as a result the inhabitants of the house were bathed in an atmosphere of di luted flue gases. The Journal of the American Medical Association is confident that this condition might be discovered in many other American homes. Flue gases con tain, especially when the combus tion is incomplete, considerable amounts of distinctly poisonous gases. The symptoms in Sneider’s case pointed to carbon monoxid as the probable chief offender. Sensations was given money, it was necessary for tho alumni to take active and aggressive b’.ops to interest the leg islature. It has been hard work but the result more than justifiec -he expenditure. Tho University has made marvel ous strides in the past ten years. [In 11*03 the enrollment was some thing over four hundred. This year showed an enrollment of about j seven hundred. The enlarged at-; tendance necessarily calls for more equipment and better facilities. It appears now that this request on the part of the alumni for a hun dred thousand dollars from the State will not be granted. Usually we are not strong for appropriations of this character, especially durln? times of stress. We are not for It now, unless it can be given without serious detriment to the fiances of the state. In the event it can be done, the Georgia Legislature could not spend the money to better ad vantage than improving the insti tution which bears the name of the State—"Georgia.” TURN Kit-HOLLIS WEDDING Was Brilliant Affair of the Week at (’amilln—Bride Was n Grad uate of Young's College. This week's issue 01 the Camilla Enterprise contains an interesting account of the marriage of ( Miss Marie Turner, of that city, to Mr. Frederick Hollis, of Dothan, Ala. The bride has a number of friends in Thomasville, having been a grad uate of Young’s College, which she attended for several years. In part, the account was as fol lows: "The marriage of Miss Marie Turner and Mr. Frederick Hollis, of Dothan, Ala., was solemnized Wednesday night at S:30 o’clock, at the First Presbyterian church. The affair was a, brilliant church cere monial, witnessed by a very large concourse of friends and relatives. "The decorations of the church were an elaborate and beautiful ar rangement of smilax and pink roses. "Miss Hattie Heath was maid of honor, Mr. Ben Hollis, of Amerlcus, best man, and the other attendants were Miss Carolyn Norris, of New- nan: Miss Milmed Hollis, of Ameri cas: Miss Ida Bell Hendry, of Quit- man; Miss ‘Annie Bess Outler, of Thomasville; Miss Lucile Fleming, Miss Kathleen Acree, Miss Weldon Brown and Miss Ruby Worley, of Camilla; Messrs. Kip McKinney and G. 3. Jackson, of Dothan, Ala.; j Tom Vereen, of Moultrie; Robert HORNED SNAKE HAS DIED ATLANTA YOUTHS Atlanta, June L’ 1.—The horn-tail ed hoop-snake, recently captured on Marietta road by a Cobb county far mer and brought to the state capitol alive, has died, and consequently legislators will not have the oppor tunity of seeing the used won der, but the remains .- e already been pickled in alcohol and will occupy a permanent place on the shelf in the state capitol museum. This Is the cnly snake of the kind ever captured in Georgia. It has a horn like that of a cow on the end of its tail, and popular tradition is that in pursing its enemy it takes this horn in its mouth and rolls along like a hoop. WOMEN WORKING FOR INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL FOR WAYWARD GIRLS. Movement Has Spread Until It Is (Now State-Wide in Scope, It has been said that the love of human beings for each other is not a dream of religion; it Is a law of nature. It is bred of human con tact, of human relation, of human service; it rests on identical inter acts and the demands of a social development which must include all .if it permanently lirts any. And thus our Federation has em braced a work which, if left un done, will most assuredly leave in complete the beautiful structure it is building. A bill is to be introduced In the coming legislature providing for a state industrial school for wayward girls. Movement is Spreading. The movement In behalf of this measure, started by the Association of College Women, has spread, as the people of Georgia have come to realize the intense need of legisla tion on this subject, until It is now statewide. The citizens of one county after another have taken up the matter and brought it before their legisla tors. Every week brings news of: members of tbfe legislature who are ♦ pledging themselves to support tne bill. Georgia stands practically alone among the states in having done absolutely nothing to solve the problem of her warward girls. Statistics of 1910 showed that thirty-four states had Industrial training schools already established, and that, with few exceptions, the •other states were agitating the question of some solution of the problem. Only last year, Alabama’s legislature voted an appropriation for a girls’ reform school, and so thoroughly did they realize the need that the measure passed with but one dissenting vote. Why has Georgia done nothing? The Case of a Boy. In Georgia, if a boy is found to UK III CLUBS Atlanta, June 21.—That boys and ScientistsSay No Person Is Naturally Lazy Scientists have found that no parson Is naturally lazy. Laziness Is Invariably caused from Impaired health la one girls or tender years have been seen f#lmoraBotfwff Ninety-ntne percent, intoxicated, In several of Atlanta's J of todoleace, llfeleszne* hick of atnbl. cheaper loekor clubs, and that pro-1tlon, belt of appctlle, Is caosedbytbe miscuous drinking by minors is permitted in several of the.n, has W U1 bceu reported to Chief Beavers by citizens who say su< h conditions are an outrage against the morals the city. appctlle, Is caused by the hlopd being Impregnated with Malarial perms. These little Germs, ten thousand a! —I aL ma.,1 J t. — LaIJ a. a e_ — — , _ a _ M _ of which could be held on the point of a pen knife, destroy* the red corpuscles in of the blood and at last manifest themselves In the form of Chills, Chills and Fever, : from a prescription, which b guar- To Prevent Blood Poisoning apply at once the wonderful old reliable DR. PORTER’S ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL.i gical dressing that relieves pain and heals at the same time. Not a liniment. 25c. 50c. fl.oa (adv) KNOCKED DOWN IN ONE COUNTY, KILLED IN OTHER Hawkins and Henry Lanier, of lAmericus; J. D. Wesson, of Albany; be wayward, in need of restraint and Julian Whiting and Earnest Black, proper training, likely to become a Bishop Candler hasn't muel apect for the tone of Carnegie’s mil-1 of oppression and other mental dis- Hon dollar gift to Vanderbilt Uni- j tarbances are typical of acute car- ▼ersity and doesn’t hesitate to speak ! 1)0,1 monoxid poisoning, as are also out and say so. They will, how-J^ 088 psychic powers, the con fused sensations and other features | which ex; lain the sense of oppres- j sion that persistently entered into nd a ! tbe delusions of the inmates of the "haunted” house. The belief in walking spirts is easily of Camilla. Mrs. M. C. Bennett and Mrs. C. J. Hurst, sisters of the bride, were th rt matrons of honor. "The bride, entering with her father, was lovely in her graceful gown of white satin. It was made with a court train of satin, the cor sage was of rose point lace, seed pearls formed the edgings an 1 trimmings. A wreath of orange blossoms held in pla.^e her veil, and her Jewels were a necklace and pen dant of diamonds, tho groom’s gift. Her bouquet was of bride’s roses, showe-ed with lilies of the valley. "The maid of honor wore a charming crepe do chine gown with overdress of shadow lace. Her bou quet was an elegant creation white snow-balls and asparagus fern. The bridesmaids were all beautifully gowned in pink brocade satin, with pleated chiffon uv*i- dresses and carried bouquets of pink carnations. j "The matrons of honor wore nourished WM,e 8atin g0W:18 ' en ,rai "’ with short veils held In place by coro- mlnds real nc(s of nij CS of tl)e va jif-y. They become |carried bouquets of Kllarney roses. "The ushers were Messrs. T. R. Bennett, E. L. Whitworth, J, [». Me- Bee and T. I. McN'eiH. "In the family party were Miss Laura Be.nett, Mrs. T. R. Be.inett, Miss Winnie Merritt, Mrs. J. n. wls, Miss Elhaheth Hollis, Mrs. |J. I., Hand and children. 'After a month's wedding trip, . I Mr, and Mrs. Hollis will be at home d. ounty Progress comes in for | log effect—and with Justice when,( 0 (heir friends and (properly operated and In perfect in Dothan, Ala." condition—may evidently become a j distinct menace to health, as well as cause of "ghosts." Atlanta, June 21.—To knock man down in one county and kill him in another was the apparently impossible thing that happened on the Seaboard Air Line Railway, when it struck a citizen of Winder. The man was on the Seaboard rack In the town of Winder when the engine struck him. It hit him in Gwinnett county and knocked him across the street into Walton county, where he died. The conditions naturally compli cates things for both sides when the case came up for adjustment. The same kind of complications, some times triply complicated, are coming up every day. Cases appealed from the mayor's court to the higher courts, have often been thrown out on the ground that it was not speci fied in the trial which of the three ao counties the offense was committed in. These unreasonable burdens the people of Winder want to do away with by the creation of a new coun ty, and scores of legislators who are not In favor of the general proposition of Increasing ths num ber of Georgia’s counties have promised their endorsement of the menace to the community, he is sent to a reform school provided Winder proposition because of the h> the state, and there taught to-ipeculiar circumstances. | become a normal citizen. That boy's — — — sister lives under Identically the LAST CONFEDERATE OON- same conditions. She is subjected to the same evil influences. She needs help as much as the boy. GRESSMAX GOES TO BEYOND ever, take the million without m quibbling. Meigs, they say, is going to delegation to Atlanta to work the new county of Hansell. would be well to save that expense, | b >' Persons in whose unless they have more money than they can wet] use up in that neck of *.h» woods. Thera seema to be developing a right healthy Bcrap over road-werk- Ing in Thomas county, with the terest to the students Pavo Progress and the Thomasvlll» I manifestations. The hot-air fur- [ J Press taking opposite sides. The! nace, often praised for its ventllat- noises would he likely to exaggerated during the intoxica tion. The sensations of apparitions In duced by the breathing, during sleep, tainted atmosphere are of in- psychlc| a say erery so often and sides The Pi ess. acquaintances With all due respect and meaning!; absolutely no harm whatever wei riiould like to ask The Thomasville Tlmes-Enterprise if it has wen any! more of them there Blue Hugs ( Wayerovi Herald. No, nor any edi- •ora who would come to Thomasville that they weren't seen In 'he first I place. thr* every THE STATE UNIVERSITY. There is a proposition to come be- I fore the Legislature to .3rant an I appropriation for the University of j Georgia. In the present state of j financial chaos into which the state We are going to have & cracking has been drifting for several years, good fair this fall, and lt’a up to * there seem® to be little possibility everybody to come and if poislble!°f that appropriation being granted to send eome of the many good! to the extent that i® really needed, thing® that Thomas county raises' This institution, the first State TAX NOTICE. I will be in my office Court House in Thomasvill day for the purpose of receiving Tax I whe „ Returns from June 1st to June 20th, when my books will clo^e. F. S. NORTON, T. R. T. .C .. 9°* ta Httls—m»k« big bomt. BlmpUnt. fastest, UchUst runnln*. IT'S ILL II TNI UTtOl fllh Emj mill fit tad with wir» eabla drivt. sst-oat attach- {Mots and adjustable Idler. Improved cantata and Thomaa County folks make, in j University to be established in this Eliai!Si^s^pJmbirand^uttowy 01 * ** TtT * order that there may be a good die-i country, has been forced to eke out ml 1?iiHiSil “£*»',S 1 .! i iprteMcow. , UI|1C| pier as existence tor many years without Mallary » Tijler hi, Woiki, In 24, Hitts, la. charter. si.e of less importance than he? It would seem bo, for the state, to all intents and purposes, absolutely Ignores any responsibility in regard to her. There is no place where she can be sent for proper training, She is given no chance to learn the better way. She is forced to remain under the evil conditions by which she is being ruined, to sink lower and lower, and eventually become a criminal and the mother of crimi nals. Fake Economy. Aside from the social obligation unfulfilled, such a policy is plainly a matter of false economy. Sta tistics show that 75 to SO per cent, of wayward girls who are sent to industrial schools "make good.” For lack of a little money spent in such preventive measures, Georgia allows a hunred girls to go to ruin, to become when grown in crime, a hundred continuous drains on the community, where a little investment made in time would bring a contin uous income of moral and material gain. This appeal has evoked the loyal Federation spirit, that is so reaching in its sympathies that. It goes out to all helplessness. Our women’s heart® ache for thore who are unfortunate and downtrodden, hence who are more fitted to dis- rn and meet the needy of this class of girls. •Some one has rightly said that aroused against injustice, women have a tremendous power. There js then an undercurrent of fierceness which no man may with stand. gather inspiration from our succesaes.—(From the Woman’s Club Page. NOTICE OF LOCAL LEGISLA TION. At the next session of the Gen eral Assembly of Georgia, applica tion will be made for the passage of an Act Amending the Charter of the Town of Melge, in the County of Thomas, providing for the election of Mayor by popular rote, the reg istration of voters of said town and other beneficial changes in said 1-6-41. Btrmln-hahm, Ala., June 21.-— Judge Henry C. Jones, age ninety- four, w-bo was tho last surviving member of the Confederate Con gress, died today at his son’s home at Florence, Ala. Special s a result of the report, Chief |CoId and LaGrippe. No. 101 Tonlo is Heavers has Instructed the whole police force to keep a close watch ou certain clubs where these prac tices are alleged to be going on, and pull the whole business, mana ger and all, in cases where sufficient evidence can be secured. "The said of liquor to persons not members of the clubs is bad enough," says Chief Beavers, "bat when it comee to selling to girls who are hardly out of short dresses, it has reached a stage when I feel that the most drastic action is warranted by my department.” It is fair to state in explanation, that the s< andal does not touch the larger and long established clubs. The charges are directed against an entirely different class of locker clubs, patronized by a different class-of people. anteed fo drive these little demons from the system and rebuild the whole inato my. This No. 101 Tonic la made from a prescription ol a physician who had 30 years ezperience practicing medicine la one ol the worst malarial sections la the south. Try It on a guarantee, If It falls to cure you, the money will be given back. Druggirii and dealers everywhere sell It, or we will send direr!) by parcel poll mail. Price 25c. and 5tc. per bottle. ThcG. B. Williams Co., Sole Manu facturers, Quitman, Ga. * (Advertisement.) Subscription Offers for clubbing with SEMI-WEEKLY 8eml - Weekly Tlmes-Enterprise |1.00 Southern Ruralist (Semi-Monthly) 50 Southern Poultry Journal, (Monthly) 50 Welcome Guest 25 Total , $2.25 FOR $1.50 3emi - Weekly Times-Enterprlse J1.00 Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal 75 Southern Poultry Journal (Monthly) 53 Southern Ruralist (Semi-Monthly) 3eml - Weekly Times-Enterprise $1.03 Tri-Weekly Atlanta Constitution 1.00 Southern Ruralist (Semi-Monthly) 50 Southern Poultry Journal (Monthly) . .60 Total $3.00 FOR $1.75 THESE CLUBBING R ATES HOLD FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY. No More Biliousness Headache or Liver Ills Dr. L. P. Herrington’s Private Prescription Now on General Sale, Dr. Herrington's Liver PiUe For Geor gia People, famous for many years in Waynesboro aud the adjacent districts are now being prepared on a large seal, and may be obtained by men, women and children in every section of the South. * -These pills are the same as those used with such great success by Dr. L. P. Herrington in his private practice and are prepared from his original for mula ana under his close supervision. They are absolutely part and harmless and may be depended upon absolutely for prompt and sure relief in all cases of Biliouenete, Liver, Kidney and Stom ach Dieordere, Neuralgia, Pain in the Side, Fevers, Headache, Indigeetion, Dyepepeia. Easy and pleasant to take. Waynesboro, Ga., Ju. lot, 1913.—I have used Dr. Herringtou'u Liver Pill, For Georgia People and take pleasure in recommending them. I think they should be in every home. I am glad to know that a company has been organised right here in Waynesboro lor that purpose. _ FRANK S. PALMER. Mayor. Or. Herrington’e Liver Pills For Gear- ^ 'a People are 25c a box everywhere. 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 Bend you the pills prepaid. For nale by Peacock-Mash Drug fo., Ingram Drug Co., Thomasville Georgia, adv. FARM LOANS} S years time — Easy Payments. Lowest rate*. Lug* amounts a Specialty. BARROW LOAN 41 IABJTRAOT COMPANY. Pelham, Ga. Saved Mine Option A WESTERN Mining Engineer, with an option on a valuable mine was about to close the deal, when, at the last minute* the Western capitalists with drew their support. With a few hours left in which to find the money, he got New York on the Bell Long Distance Tele phone, talked with a hanking house and outlined the proposition, which they agreed to finance. A psnonal interview by the Bell Long Distance Telephone •ton doses a ends or saver a lituation. Whin yon telephone—smile SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR THE SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES ENTERPRISE Money Loaned FARM'lLOANS PROMPTLY MADE At 6% interest, payable annually. The borrower haa the privilege of paying part orall ot the principal at any tntereat period, (topping Interest on such payment. I will save yeu money. Come to eee me, or write. Prompt attention given a)' written iMUlrlee. W. M. BRYAN, OFFICE OVER P09T OFFICE, THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA.