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SEMI-WEEKLY TIME8-ENTKRPRI8 E, FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 1014. __
THE TIMES-ENTEBPSISE
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION
Issued Every Tuesday and Friday
MEMUEItS ASSOCIATED PRESS.
Oali; and Semi-Weekly Time*-Enter
prise Published by the Timea-Ba-
terprise Company, Thomx'’vil'e, Ga.
£. R. JEIUSKU ■ ■.
W. D. HARGRAVE
Editor.
....Bus. Mg»>
SLATON WILL NOT RESIGN.
Governor John M. Slaton will not
resign the governor's office until af
ter the primary elections on Au
gust 19. he announced to the pub
lic yesterday. He made this clear
in the following announcement:
“I was elected Governor for a
two-year term by the people, and
when I resign it will be by the au-
Entered at the ThomasTille Post thorlty and command of the people
Office for Transmission Through the themselves. !f the people, in tho
Kails as Second Class Mail Matter,
Subscription Rates!
primary, record It as their will that
I leave the governorship and repre-
ate. then I shall of course oney. I
Aren t you sorry you dldu t re w m res | gn , and i n doing so I will
ter?
'obey the will of the people. They
E
MANY CITIES AND COUNTIES IN
SEVERAL STATES BANISH THE
SALOONS IN YESTERDAY'S
ELECTIONS.
Chicago, April 8.—Women voting
for the first time in Illinois town-
ms
BEIT CHIPS
SECOND GAME WENT TO VISI
TORS BY LARGER SCORE THAN
FIRST — SNEDECOR'H WORK
FEATURED CONTEST.
The Bllllkens walked away again
Support your home paper aud help ; ^ ^ them ^ Bay whptbfr
it support its workmen. j ,-hall be promoted to the Senate.
0 l "By the time the primary la held
Everybody against Villa .s a vil i eg | 8 ] a ture will have adjourned
the state which formerly had been
wet, namely Bloomington, Qiaos-
burg, Elgin, Decatur, Canton, Free
port, Bellvldere, Monmouth, Ke-
. _ . , , wanee, Lockport. and East Galena,
elected mo to the governorsh.p, and No clty or town , whlch was Jry be .
ship elections yesterday, colsed the I Tuesday with a game of ball. They
doors of more than one thousand sa-(dld It quite as easily as on the pre
loons, and added sixteen counties toj v i°us day and showed that pitchers
thirty already dry. Their victory in-1 were Immaterial to them - The
eluded eleven of the larger cities of score, eleven to two, is In fair pro
portion to the hitting ability of the
teams’ and the bunching thereof.
Day held the visitors scoreless and
hitless until the third, when a sto
le, another single and a triple and
lian—to hear him tell it.
iand the period between then nnd the
, inauguration of a new Governor will
The Chronicle, of Augusta lines,
be an interregnum, so to spcik. I
the Smith-Slaton combination.
They say that John Lind la <onv
ing home to stay and not to t^’k.
| win have accomplished all I can ac*
i complish, as there will be ro more
j sessions of the general assembly
during my tern: of office.”
Underwocd is going to leavi
Champ to finish UP.
THOMASVILLE’S EARLY Iff STORY,
It’s easy enough for anybody to
take things easy. It’s the h?rd
thing not to.
The man who is eternally hunting
The following short con,‘illation
of various Interesting facta -elat<ve
to the early history of Thomasvllle
has been sent Hon. L. L. Knight, for
his Georgia History of Facts, and was
soft thing usually blames Us fail- . . . cities. and many cities went Into
son iu. h u i. , prepared by W. I. MacIntyre, who the dry column
uro on hard luck.
It now remains for the Macon,
Telegraph to make Senator Smith’s
election unanimous.
And a fellow who came from Ala
bama with ‘‘official dope,” wanted
bet us the other day on Hobson.
If South Carolina would get busy
and defeat one Blease for the Sen
ate .things would look much better.
has taken a deep interest In the
county and city history and has pre
pared several short sketches of the
facts as he has gleaned them from
various and sundry reliable sources:
By the Act of December 22nd,
1826, Thomasvllle, in Lot Thirty-
nine, in the Thirteenth District, was
made County Seat of Thomas Coun
ty, said lot having been bought for
said purpose. Previous elections
were held at the house of Charles
Kingsley, as provided in Act of De
cember 24th, 1825.
Thomasvllle was Incorporated by
the Act of December 26th, 1881, with
ijurisdiction over all lots laid off in
[compliance with Act of December
Let Randolph Anderson be Gov.r- “nd 1826. Isaac B Brooks. Ed-
1 Iwnrri RprrHnfirtnn. Malcolm Fei-miRnn.
nor for a while
him for the Iobs of the race he is
going to run.
There Is a man In Georgia who
goes regularly with his llrst wife to
put flowers on his second wife’s
grave.
Mr. Underwood seems to have won
a race which was characterized by
many attempts to befoul his caarxc
ter and besmirch his record.
Taere are so few soreheads In
Georgia now, with reference to Hoke
Smith and the Senate’s Job that they
are a rarity that always excites pity.
mice.
ivnrd Remington, Malcolm Ferguson
That might content | j ame , Kerksey and Murdock Mc-
Auley were named Commissioners.
On March 6th, 1856, a new char
ter was granted, providing for a
Mayor and six aldermen, with In
creased territory.
By the Act of December 24th
1825, Duncan Ray, Archiboid .McMil
lan, Paul Colson, Hardy Bryan and
Malcolm Ferguson were appointed
Commissioner* of the Thomas Coun
ty Academy, and the proceeds from
the sale of town lots In Thomasvllle
went to this Board. A building was
soon built, and Mr. Cresman taught
forty (40) pupils on corner
Madison and Monroe Streets. He
was succeeded by Mr. Rolph, who
boarded with Col. Mike Young, and
taught until 1837.
Next year, Mr. Scott, who boarded
with Mts. McLean, taught in the
new building, corner of Broad and
Monroe Streets. January, 13*8, the
old building was renovated, the up-
stairs being music rooms, with Mrs.
Metzger and Miss Sophie Metzger
teaching the girls, Mr. Scott still
teaching the hoys, In the new build
ing.
In 1839, Mr. Stinson and .Misses
Price and Smith were the teachers.
835, the prominent residents
of Thomasvllle were Messrs. Ed.
Remington, Isaac Brooks, James and
William Kerksey. and Dr. Gnuley.
Mr. Jame3 Kerksey had the llrst
store, on corner of Broad and Jeffer
son streets.
Prior to 1840, the prominent fami
lies in Thomas County, as it then ex
isted were the Neelys, Bluckshoars,
Youngs, Jones, Hayes, Rays, Had
leys, Dixons, Parramores, Adams,
McMaths, Bryans, Dekies, Chas
tains, Hancocks, Slngletarys, Cones,
McCanns, Wards, Hartwells, Mitch
ells and MacIntyres.
Prominent Congressmen who have
resided at Thomasvllle were James
L. Seward, Peter E. Love, A. T. Mac
Intyre and S. A. Roddenberv.
Among the distinguished Jurists
and lawyers have been J. U. Alexan
der, Augustine H. Hansel), Wm. M.
Hammond, A. T. MacIntyre, Jr., and
Arthur Patten.
From 1876 to 1900 Thomaspllle
was a prominent winter resort, but
the Plney Woods Hotel was Durned
and the transient tourists lost to the
city. A few still occupy during
the winter excellent homes m thr
vicinity of Thomasvllle. The winter
residences of Col. O. H. Payne and
Mr. J. H. AATade are the finest homes
In the State.
Tell a girl it would be impropor
for her to stay at home and wash
the dishes and you couldn’t keep her
out of the kitchen with a dozen
When accusing a young woman of
a falsehood, the proper expression Is,
‘■Darling, you lied.’’ If she isn't or
hasn't, she will quickly assert her
self.
When they talk of limiting court
ing to two years, they had better fix
a surplus fund to support tnose who
can’t get along because they mar
ried under that time.
Governor-that-was Joseph If.
Brown may rua against Mr. Smith,
also Governor-that-has-been, If be
chooses to, but it would be quite a
useless and senseless waste of money
and energy.
Mr. Slaton may keep his Job if ho
wants to and It won't affect hie race
for the .Senate. The people know he
• don't need the money, nnd has no
Inducement to stay except to do what
he finds to do at the possible tlsk of
criticism.
Go Into a store where It Is a nor
mal condition for the clerks *n keep
busy and you will see a prosperous
business and employees who
making good salaries and fitting
fore the election was lost by the
anti-saloon forces. Springflc'd re
mained wet.
The Chicago City Council, as a re
sult of the votes yesterday, remains
Democratic. Although seventy-three
per cent of the registered Chicago
women took ndvantase of the fran
chise, the women candidates receiv
ed only a scattering vote. Aider-
man John ("nath-house") Coughlin
was re-elected by nearly four thou
sand majority over Miss Marlon
Drake. He also received more votes
of the women voters than did Miss
Drake.
Yesterday’s vote show that about
55,000 Chicago women are Demo
crats: 51.000 Republican, 20,000
Progressive and 13,000 Indepen
dents.
FOURTH-CLASS CITIES OF
MINNESOTA VOTED DRY.
St. Paul, Minn., April S.—The
anti-saloon forces won sweeping vic
tories yesterday In the liquor elec
tions in the fourth-class Minnesota
ANTI-SALOON LEADERS ALSO
AVON OUT JN NEBRASKA.
Omaha, Neb., April 8.—The local
option elections held In Nebraska
yesterday, resulted In seventeen
changes from wet to dry. and nine
changes from dry to wet, In the
one hundred and forty towns re
porting results. None of the larger
cities of the state voted on the
liquor question Tuesday.
NEW YORK VOTERS WANT
CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION
-New York, April s.—Returns re
ceived today Indicated that the vot
ers decided yesterday to call a con
vention to replse the State Consti
tution. The majority registered In
favor of the convention, was proba
bly twenty-five thousand.
SOCIALIST LOST OUT IN
MILWAUKEE ELECTION
Milwaukee. Wls., April 8.—Ger-
hardt Badlng, the non-partisan can
didate. was re-elected yesterday by a
majority of six thousand over Emil
Seidel, the Socialist candidate.
RULES FOR PRIMARY
Seem to Meet AVlth General Approval
Although Things Are Yet Unset
tled In Many Cases.
FIXED TEX DOLLARS OR GO TO
JAIL SHE STARTS HAT PIN
AVAR—RELEASED AVHEN FINE
WAS PAID.
a hit batsman netted three runs. In
the fourth, they were white-washed
but in the fifth, the stock rose five
points and trading became awful
dull. Four hits, got live runs, one
coming in when Dud dropped Bar
net's sure peg to the plate.
Mabry, a new hurler. from Tal
lahassee, pitched the four remaining
rounds, nnd kept the .hits scattered,
a hit batsman and n base on balls,
followed by a hit, earning two runs
In the seventh. For the locals. Dud.
started things off in the thlrj with
a blngie. Day followed suit and
Kliimp walked, filling the sacks.
Murch got a sacrifice fly and Dud.
tallied. Telken was an easy out and
things stopped. In the eighth, Dav
enport singled, stole second and
scored when Daniels singled, his
second safety. Schultz, who was left
with Thomasvllle by Gilks, the lead
er of the Billikens, pitched tho last
three innings and while a bit wild,
showed that he is a good mau.
Snedecor's work at. the bat and on
the first sack easily featured the
contest. The fellow who was rated
below Davenport In the College
world, got four safeties in as many
trlrs to the pan, one being a freak
ish home run, the ball hitting the
pennant pole in the center field and
bounding over the fence. Snedecor
stole a base and fielded llks Hal
Chase at llrst.
The game In detail follows:
FIRST INNING.
First Half—Hollander Hied out to
left. H. Baker filed to deep short.
Daly hit one which went by short,
and stole second. Elwert out, pitch
er to first. Runs 0, hits 0, errors 1.
Second Half—Klump filed to first.
March flew to left. Tolken hit a
hot one which pitcher knocked
down and threw to first. Runs 0,
hits 0, errors 0.
3ECOND INNING.
First Half—McDowell fanned.
Jantzen easy out, third to first.
Snedecor walked, and was o it at
tempting to "eal. Runs 0, h'ts 0,
errors 0.
Second Half—Davenport hit to
short and out at first. Barnett out,
second to first. Daniels bunted and
was thrown out. Runs 0, hits 0,
errors 0. 1 >
THIRD INNING.
First Half—G. Baker hit one to
short and beat 't to first. Bu*cher
fanned. Hollander hit safe over
third, Baker held on second. H.
Baker tripled to center, Baker and
Hollander scoring. Daley hit one to
second, out at first, H. Baker scor
ing. Elwert took first when hit In
the back. -McDowell filed to first.
Runs 3, hits 3, errors 0.
Second Halt—Champlln hit to
pitcher and out. Dudley blngled by
Atlanta, April 6.—The rules adopt- pitcher. Day followed with a safe-
ed by the State Executive Commit
tee, covering the approaching pri
maries, are being widely discussed,
and appear to meet with general fa
vor. The rules provide agalnBt the
necessity of a second race for Sena
tor Governor, or other statewide
offices, without abrogating the ma
jority rule.
Briefly, the county unit system Is
adopted, and the candidate receiving
the majority of the county unit vote
at the convention In Macon oil 3ep-
tember 1, shall be declared me
nominee. However, it Is provided
dial shall two candidates receive the
same county unit vote, the one who
leceived the largest popular vote in
the primary shall be declared the
nominee.
The state primary will be held on
August 19. Each eouniy will have
twice as many unit votes ns it has
lepresentatives in the legislature.
Candidate must receive a majori
ty of the convention vote, not two
thirds, ns was the case some years
ago.
The races for Congress shall be
controlled by tile county unit sys
tem or by popular vote, as tuo dis
trict committees shall decide
Candidates for solicitor general
nnd superior court Judges shall ba
nominated by popular vote In their
respective circuits.
SLATON IS VERY BUSY
The four gunmen In the Becker
case are to be executed, the Gover
nor refusing to stay the execution
until after the trial of their leader.
TAX NOTICE
Third and Last Round.
I will be In Thomasvllle at the
oui-t bouse every day. from March
ar ® 19t'a to May 1st, when my books
111 close, after which It will be
themselves for higher steps lo Pfe’s I Impossible for me to accept any re-
Udder. /turns.
T All city property must he roturn-
Th. fellow that stands on the V A “ U “ d
, , I mt of town by lot and district
ner and talks politics half bin time, j numbers. Please don’t ask me to
usually rule* the world with a mighty copy your re turna from old digest,
hand, but allowa hla wife to do the’as I must have a full description of
housework, provides Insufficient food property) and signature of par-
ead makes her weer three-yesr-old! *' r makln * returns.
dresses 1
r. 8. NORTON, T. R., T. C.
Atlanta, April 9.-—Governor John
M. Slaton is being given hardly time
to enjoy his meals these days, with
callers crowding his reception room
and the letters piling high on his
desk after every mall. Pledges of
support and commendation for his
stand In remaining in office until he
has fulfilled his pledge to the peo
ple are pouring in upon him.
Dr. L. O. Hardman's formal an
nouncement for tne governorship is
the first gun in that race, though
W. C. Vereen, of Moultrie, and sev
eral others are expected to make for
mal announcement by next week.
Congressman Thomas W. Hard
wick has given out In Washington a
statement criticising the state execu
tive committee for the adoption of
the County Unit system In tae race
for the United States ser.atorahln.
He characterises the plan as unfair
and unjust to the people of Georgia.
ty over third. Klump walked, fill
ing the bases. Murch filed to .enter,
AVilson, running for Dudley, scoring
from third. Telken out on ground
er to first. Runs 1, hits 2, errors 0.
FOURTH INNING.
First Half—Jantzen fanned. Sned-
ocor bunted and beat the throw from
pitcher. G. Baker fouled to third.
Buscher fanned. Runs 0, hits 1, er
rors 0.
Second Half—Davenport funned.
Barnett hit one which got by short.
Daniels popped to third. Charaplin
hit safe by pitcher, Barnett on sec
ond. Dudley was passed. Day fan
ned. -Runs 0, hits 2, errors 0.
FIFTH INNING.
First Half—Hollander hit one
which Champ grabbed with one
hand at the third station, too late to
throw. H. Baker singled over sec
ond, Hollander going to third and
Baker to second on throw In. Daley
hit by pitched ball took first. With
bases full, Elwert hit safe over
second, Hollander and Baker scor
ing and Daley taking third.
Dowell filed to right, and Daley
scored when Dudley tumbled Bar
nett’s perfect peg. Jantzen filed to
second. Snedecor hit one to deep
center, which hit the pennant pole
lying on the ground, bounding over
the fence, Elwert scoring ahead of
him. G. Baker out, second tn first.
Runs 5, hits 4, errors 1.
Second Half—Klump hit down to
first and out. Murch went out tho
same way. Telken struck out. Runs
0, hits 0. errors 0.
SIXTH INNING.
First Half—(Mabry pitching and
Wilkes catching for Thomnsvllle)—
Buscher out, pitcher to first. Hoi
lander singled to center and was
out trying to steal third. II. Baker
fanned. Runs 0, hits 1, errors 0.
Second Half—Davenport fanned
and was thrown out at first. Bar
nett fouled one on which Hollander
made long run and pretty catch.
Daniels tingled over second. Cham
plln out, short to first. Runs 0, hits
1, errors 0.
SEVENTH INNING.
First Half—Daly hit again, thla
time on the teg, took first. Elwert
hit to short and out, Daly taking
second. McDowell walked. Jant
zen was out at first on bunt and
Daly scored from second. Snedecor
singled bv first and McDowell tal
lied. 3ned stole second. G. Raker
out .second to first. Runs 2. hits 1,
errors 0.
■Second Half—(Schultz pitching!
Kleinow catching for Montgomery)—
Wilkes walked. Mabry fanned,
jKlumo filed to tint. March hit to
London, April 8.—Pandemonium
attended the sentencing of "Gen
eral" Flora Drummond today for
creating the Suffragette dlsurbance
at the Unionist rally here Saturday.
She went to Jail for a two months'
term rather than pay a fine of ten
dollars. She became so violent that
three policemen had to remove her
hat pins befor the magistrate found
an opportunity during a pause In
the uproar to pronounce sentence
upon her. Later some one paid her
flue nnd she was released from Jail.
All during the time Mrs. Drum
mond was In court, she kept up a
flree struggle, and shrieked denun
ciations at every one present. She
seized a policeman's metal whistle
and flung it at the magistrate’s
head, but he dodged It. She then
sprang from the prisoner's enclos
ure. but was dragged back.
STIE TIES OP TILLMMI DIPS
COIL PRICES
Savannah, April 9.—Traffic on the
Savannah and Northwestern Railroad
known as the Brinson route, was
tied up today by a atrlke of the con
ductors. An attempt to start one
passenger train from at. Claire was
balked when the substitute conduc
tor was induced to abandon his post
at the last minute.
One freight and one passen
ger train was run through by the
officers of the road. No disorder
was reported anywhere along the
Hr-
en conductors, the total number
employed by this road, went on a
strike last night, demanding higher
wages.
ST. MICOSTIIIE IMG
6RE1T PLANS FOR FUTURE
SENATOR FROM SOUTH CARO
LINA URGES INVESTIGATION
OF THE METHODS NOW IN USE
IN THE SOUTH.
Daley was out. Runs 0, hits 2. er
rors 0.
Second Half—Telken fanned.
Davenport singled over second. Bar
nett filed out to center, Jantzen
making spectacular catch. Daven
port stole second. Daniels got I
Texas Leaguer over second, Daven
port scoring nnd Daniels taking sec
ond on throw in. Champlln out.
second to first. Rune 1, hits 2, er
rors 0.
NINTH INNING.
First Half—McDowell out, pitcher
to first. Jantzen walked. Snedecor
hit safe by first, and when Barnett
fumbled, Jantzen scored and 3ned
went to third. Kleinow fouled.
Schultz dittoed. .Runs 1, hits 1, er
rors 1.
Second Half—Wilkes hit to sec
ond out. Mabry singled over sec
ond. Klump walkod. Murch pop
ped to short. Telken hit to short,
Klump out. Runs 0, hits 1, er-ors 0.
The Box Score.
AB R
Montgomery
Hollander, ss.
H. Baker, 2b .
Daly, if . .
Elwert, 3b .
Showers, 3b. ,
McDowell, rf.
Jantzen, cf .
Snedecor. lb.
G. Baker, c .
Kleinow, c .
Buscher, p .
Schultz, p .
6 2
H FO A
3 3 3
5 2 3 1 4 0
5 2 110 0
3 1110 0
1 0 0 0 0 0
1 4 14 0 0
4 113 10
0 0 2 0 0
TOTALS
39 11 13 27 11 0
Schultz and Kleinow started In
seventh.
Thonuwvllle
Klump, ss . .
Murch, 2b. .
Telken, cf .
Davenport, lb
Barnett, rf . .
Daniels, If .
Champlln, 3b .
Dudley, c . ,
Wilkes, c .
Day. p
Mabry, p . .
AB R
3 0
H PO A
0 2 1
0 2 4
4 0 12 1
Although Fire Destroyed Property
Valued at Over Half Million, Vot
er's Decide on $050,000 bond Is
sue for Paving Roads—Other In
teresting News Notes .From the
Busy, Hustling Southeast.
Columbus, April 8.—The Indus
trial Index says in its Issue for this
week:
•’The enterprise and progrcsslve-
ness of the Southeast were illustrat-
5? f trlk '“ ?ly at , st- Augustine, Fla., to confine the major portion of the 1
during the week- A fire destroyed supply to the mines In Pennsylvania,
property in St Augustine valued at Mervlnnd and West Virginia, to the
more than 3600.000. St. Johns exclusion of the coal mined right
county, of which St. Augustine is the here In the South.”
chief Icity, voted 3650,000 of bonds I ,
Washington. April 9.—Senator
Tillman today had read to the Sen
ate two more letters from Southern
coal operators, supporting his reso
lution for an Investigation of the
so-called “Coal Trust.”
3enator Tillman charges that a
monopoly Is acting through the
Southern Railway against South At
lantic ports.
Jake Bewley, of Bristol, Va., In
his letter, charged that the "Coal
Trust indirectly, or possibly directly
outlines the policy of the Southern
Railway in the matter of establish
ing coal rates, and in building coal
docks at Charleston and other South
ern ports." This letter further de
clared that the failroad of tho South
ern railroad to build docks "looks
like a more on the part of the Coal
Trust to get Its grip on tho throat
of the coal industry In the South as
it has in the North."
Frank G. AVrlgh. a prominent coal
producer of Southeastern Vuginla,
wrote Senator Tillman that his reso
lution touched the real Interest of
the South. If such an investigation
was authorized, he said, It would
“uncpver the conditions In the South
east under which the cost of fuel is
maintained at a figure high enough
for paving roads with brick and
plans are being prepared for erect
ing four hotel buildings find other
buildings in place of structures that
were burned.
A company with minimum capi
tal stock of 31,750,000 has applied
at Springfield, Ga., for incorporation
and will merge a number of lumber
manufacturing companies and estab
lish new plants, Georgia and New
York capital being Interested.
A company with capital stock of
3150,000 has been organized by
Louisville, Ky. t and Brunswick, Ga.,
Investors to establish a cresote plant
in the latter city.
Among the items of construction
work to be done, as reported this
week, are: Road construction, Es
cambia, Marshall, Mobile and Talla
poosa counties, Ala.; paving, Ft.
Meade, McClenny and Redlands,
Fla., and Ft. Valley, Ga.; court
house, 3t. Augustine, Fla.: library
buildings, Ocala and Ormond, Fla.;
school buildings, Monroe, Ga.. and
Phoenix City, Ala.; theater build
ings, Selma, Ala.: two apartment
houses, Atlanta, Ga.; auditorium,
Tampa. Fla.; bank building to be
CONDITION OF EX-GOVERNOR
OF MASSACHUSETTS CRITICAL
Greenville, 3. C., April 9.—The at
tending physicians report there was
no change today In the condition of
former Governor Eben S. Draper, of
Massachusetts, who Is critically 111
here. It is now believed that the
chances for his recovery are slight.
enlarged and remodeled, Miami,
Fla.; church buildings, LaFayetto,
Ala., and church building to he en
larged, Oenilka, Ala.; clubhouse,
Daytona and Miami, F'a.ffl fact'—'
buildings. Tuscaloosa. Ala.; offl-q
hulldlng. Savannah, Ga.; warehouse,
Birmingham. Ala.
Construction contracts have been
awarded as follows;
Bank building, Boston, Ga.; Iridc-
es, Birmingham, Ala.; apartment
house, Atlanta, Ga.; clubhouse, Au
gusta, Ga.: sewers, Forsyth, Ga.;
garage, Tilton, Ga.; school building.
Fort Myers, Fla.; paving, LaFayette.
Ga.
Sixteen new corporations have
been organized, with minimum capl-
*nl stocks aggregating 32,155,030.”
PPP
THE GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER.
A successful remedy for Rheumatism, Blood Poison and
all Blood Diseases. At all Druggists $1.00.
F. V. LIPPMAN CO.. Savannah. Ga.
Try A Want Ad
TOTALS. . .83 2 8 27 13 3
Mabry and Wilkes started la sixth.
Summary: Earned runs, Mont
gomery 9, Thomasvllle 2; 2-base
hits, Hollander; 3-base hits, H. Ba
ker: home run. Snedecor; base on
balls, off Day 1, Mabry 2, Busch 2,
Schultz 2; struck out, by Day 4, Ma
bry 3. Busch 3, Schultz 2; left on
bases, Montgomery 7, Thomasvllle
10: hit by pitcher, Daly by Day and
Mabry, Elwert by Day; stolen bases,
Davenport, Daly, Snedecor; hits, off
Day 8 In five Innings, Mabry 5 In
four Innings. Buscher 6 In six la
nlngs, Schultz 3 In four Innings,
Time of game, 1:55. Umpire, Me
Don gal d.
DR. W. C. MORiAN
FBBVCHAlTHOB M.«...
DIED IN PARIS TODAY,'o hlt , 0 . 0 .
. ~ . EIGHTH INNING.
(By Assort ited Press.) v'r-t f.H—Rrtiults out. rltcheP
Paris, April 9.—Pierre Sales, one;t 0 first, Hollander fouled to. catch-
of the most popular of the Fraaeh er H. Baker bunted one an.! waa
authors of storlaa of romance and »f*. Murch fsBInlr to vet boll tn
adventure, died here today, aged six-> time T>sl» singled by short. Showers
ty ' batting for Elwert lilt to second and
DENTIST
For Two AA'eek* I Offer to the
Public;
Amalgam Fillings 00c
Crowns $3*50 to g.1.00
Bridge-Work, per tooth $4.00
Set 3. S. White Teeth $7.50
I expect to Remain in ThomasvlUe.
W.C. MORGAN, 0.0. S.
Brighton Building
'hone 107. Thomnsvllle, Ga.
FARM LOANS
5 years time — Easy Payments.
Lowest rates. Lar-e amounts a
Specialty.
BARROAV LOAN « ABSTRACT
COMPANY.
Pelham, Ga.
MONEY LOANED
FARM LOANS PROMPTLY MADE
Dr. John Schreibei
FOtMKKtV OP OCHLOCKNBK
•At 6% Interest, payable annually.The berower has the
privilege of payjng £art or ell of the principal at any Interest
period, stopping interest on such payment. I will save you
money, come to sen me, or write. Prompt attention glvan
all written Inquiries.
•> Now, . Located on Madison Stree
Opposite Timos-Entotpriso Office
TKomasville Georgia.
Ofics Phons zn K'tUcoc* rheas |SS
W. M. BRYAN,
OFFICE OVER rOSYl<QFPICE, ,THOMASVILL*. GEORGIA.
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ZS&fifS&iisichi
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