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THE FLOWERS SEEN BY JUDGE
PARK.
The following reference to Con
gressman's Park’s speech In regard
to the extra lot for the local post
J
THE MS-ENTERPRISE
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION
Issued Every Tuesday and Friday
MEMBERS ASSOCIATED PRESS
Dally and Semi-Weekly Times- Enter- office is reproduced from the 1 Baln-
prlse Publlthed by the Times Bn- br)dge Searchlight. The Tlmes-En-
terprlse Company. ThomasvMe, Oa. , ; „ , .....
‘ terprlse failed to notice tills speech
K. B. JEUGER In the Record and Just states, for
W. D. HARGRAVE Bus. Mgr.
_______ The Searchlight’s Information, that
Entered at the Thomasvllie Post , t ls i ntended to bliy a larger lot j should right the wrongs of her chil
Mads a"Second™cfass MM* Matter* for the government building and to| dren - she 18 ,ar l,ehind every other
| make It attractive and beautiful. Itsj sta ‘« ln the UIllon ' as t0 cblld leg -
One Year 8nb * W,Ptl0 “. Ra . te * : ... $1.0# [location being In the center of the 1 Elation, and the time has come
SI* Months 5*; town and well adapted for a p«r-i" ,len s,le niust take action and es-
clilld labor law that will
teen ln order that they may eater
the factory, mill or shop. '
If the cotton manufacturers of
Georgia hate the compulsory edu
cation of the poorer children, sin
cerely at heart, they should wel
come the Sheppard child labor bill
as being greater than the bill they
have prepared, or any bill which
they have supported ln the past.
The time lias come tvnen Georgia
Why ls It men l'.ke llckle girls?
Barrow county has won, hut Hnn-
sell has not.
town and well adapted for a pur
pose of this kind. Thomasvllle ap-1 tablish
predates his interest and efforts to' 1 ’ 8 8 crpdlt to her and not a shame '
Let every man in the state hend
his energies to the passing of the
secured this extra apnroprlation.
*The Searchfight says:
We agree with Congressman
| Frank Park in his modest insistence
Pences seem to he mighty popular j “°‘VThU JSfiS’ Z
down in this section of Georgia. s speeches there is a strain of poetry
0 1 simple and beautiful, that eclipses J
. . . 'oratorical efforts of 'wind-jammers, j
When the new era of business, An illustration of his simple pow-|
comes along, we want to get a front ier is found in a speech made before i
, . ! Congress last week, when he was
seat and take whatever comes a on j fighting for a bill to appropriate j
--o- ! $5.01<> to be expended on a pari*'
. . ... , at,_'in Thomasvllle. which will be nam-i
Very few impartial men la the. (i(] jn bonor ()f , nte Congress-!
State will deny that Slaton has a I man S. A. Roddenber.v: I
, , , , ' , ' ’ The park is to he sodded and I
substantial lead in the race for tue I
HOW TO LEARN THE
ARTJFSnMINI!
one lesson will teach any.
ONE WHO FOLLOWS THE 8UG-
GK8TIOXS AS OUTLINED IN
THIS ARTICLE.
With summer here and the sea
son for swimming and surf bathing
on, the following rules are given ter
the benefit of all desiring to learn
the art of swimming, which, If fol
lowed, will assist' materially:
Plrst—Observe the motions of a
swimming frog.
Second—Find a beach or pool
with level bottom. No “step-offs”
or holes. Lean forward. Take a
long breath. Let your head sink into
the water as far as It will. Allow
Sheppard bill, which will give the ‘ th e arul s and legs to assume their
chance to the factory child that pwn positions. Then reacn for-
, . ... , ,. , „ ward with the arms and bring up
God intended he should have.—Ex. | the , eg5 as y0 „ have seen the frpg
judge Charlton and a few oth- Third—Bring the arms back with
j an outward circular motion, kicking
ers in Savannah, are being raked t j, e i eg8 back at the aame time,
over the prohibition coals with a Fourth—At first you may not get
A ,, . .. your head out of water. Never
The folks outside I m | nf j t j iat Swim as long and as
-ou conveniently -can under
You will not be very
Senate.
vengeance,
looking in, say that they haven’t
dune what they should have done to
enforce the prohibition law. We
much surprised if it
planted in bulbs, shrtubs and trees, [wouldn't
“Here will commfnyle the blue of \ , ..
_____ the violet and the gray of the lily. wasn 1 about as much or more the
~' i “Here will intertwine the white fault of the people than of the
Mules are dying of heat in sec- rose of the North and the red roses |
“ons further north from the ’ __
tor. than Thomasville. None havej to be broken by warring sec-j
died in this countv vet * , tlons. Frankly we believe that Mr.
uie d in tnis couni> >ei. , •• 1ere the Confederate Jessamine.! . , , , A
■ - -o | bravely clinging, will reach to kiss; Hardwick has seriously hurt him-
Judge Nat Harris, they sav, Is vlth perfumed breath the foils o!| self ln an attempt to hurt Gover-
the sheltering flag. j ^ -
making a great race for Governor, j “Here morning-glories, in sweet f nor Slaton. The charges have nz-
but too the others are air being' accord, .will point their purple bu-l»ied to nothing and the reflection,
' | gies to the skies to greet the ros- , , .. „ . , .
touted as winners ente dawn -here may the myrtlej ,f there an >'- ,s on Mr * Hardwick.
9 . . flaunt its crimson plumes in the gol-jThe fellow that tries to throw an-
* den sunshine, and the aromatic
The best directions to planters of j csiirubs iwaft their perfume In atmos-
hay crops in this section of thejphere trembling to the droning of
bees. *
“Here, in the heart of this health
resort, set like a Jewel jn the bosom
State is “plant it.” The climate
and providence will do the rest.
other into the mud is as bad as the
fellow who wallows in it.
The farmers in this county would
of Southwest Georgia. I ask C° n -j rather f enCe the farms than the cat-
?r**ss to peroetnate the memory of I
A dip in the surf or a stroll up Seaborn Anderson Roddenbery. j tie and as they are more interested
aorne mountain in the cool of j anyb0dy ^ 9houId h <“°
afternoon, pounds mighty good from died and is buried, the country of | their way without question.
|the rape, the melon and the peach: j
i fhe clime of the honeysuckle, the; — * ~
Itrelatine and the yellow Jassamine,
BE GROWN IN SOUTHEAST
this distance.
. SURE corn m
both ln the race for the two places tbev b ] oom and rlnen—here will
would make It a double defeat for ’the musk of magnolia hank thick h,
, the air and the lily a phylacteries (
the anti-smith faction, as they term broaden i n praver. In this lovely j . ,
themselves Unrk the mocking bird, ’the trim! Recent Test* l» Department of A*.
o— ! Shakespeare of the South.’ will year; ^culture Bring Favorable Ite-
I * —after year build his nest and rear his: B|1 i ts in Th | a Connection.
If the money ln the world was dl- , young a nd trill ln sweet concord his j
sided we would each get thirty dol-,roundelay. 1 .... ,, , Tlllv , „ resu i,
' "Ami all will go to enshrine ln the, Washington, juij 3.—As a resuu
lars. and then have the dickens of a beart , n f b j s countrymen the name of recent tests by scientific methods
time keeping it from the fellow who »nd fame,of a loyal son of the j on lbe (-aroilna uplands, the Asrl-
had It before it was divided. gentIments , s „ oken of a city/"'" 11 ” 1 De P ar ‘ ment , announ ' ed ^
„ — which fought his candidacy, won his;day that certain sections of the
. '-uht and the park for Thomasyllle.; Southeast ran produce long staple
We do not believe. In all candor, |' » cotton of spinning quality, eqcual
that Mr. Hardwick himself believes! CHILD LABOR LAW. j t0 tbe standard Mississippi delta
the statement which he took from j ! grade. While It Is not so strong.
an insurance man as against the! It Is certain that the Sheppard j j t i s less “wasty." bears earlier, has
emphatic and decided denial by Mr.!Child Labor BUI will pass In the!larger polls and is more prolific.
Slaton and Senator West. j House when it comes up. It Is eer-
n - - 1 tain also that there will be a fight
the put up by the manufacturers of
water,
under. Your hips will probably be
above water, but your mouth and
nose under.
Fifth—Try and try again and
keep swimming with your face un
der as long as you can endure it
without pain or inconvenience.
Sixth—Directly you will find that
as the arms start to coifie back they
will elevate the head out of the
water, so that the mouth is clear.
Then take a good deep breath.
Seventh—As the arms go back,
the head will sink again. Let it
sink. That is the way to swim.
Eighth—as the head sinks, bring
the arms forward again and also
legs. Then go through the same
motion as before.
Ninth—-Remember, ^ach ‘time the
arms come back in the stroke, the
head goes up. Let the mouth Just
clear the water far enough and Ion"'
enough to take in a good breath of
air.
Tenth—That is the way the great
swimmers swim. They do not try
to keep their mouths far above wa
ter. They bring the month Just far
enough above the water to take a
breath. That is all.
Eleventh—What handicaps most,
beginners is the desire to keep the
head too far out of water. Cham
pions could not do wh*at beginners
try to do.
Twelfth—After you have learned
to keep afloat and swim a hit you
can learn the different strokes ana
the proper way to apply them.
SOME VERY IHIEBESTIIIC
' FOOD FACTSJi FIGURES
Detroit, Mich,, July 3.—Sales
Manager N, A. Hawkins of the Ford
Motor Company has some Interest
ing figures ln regard to Ford mil
eage. He says—
“There are now 500.000 Fords In
use. Each one certainly averages
no less than 20 miles dally for
twelve months ln the year. These
500.000 Fords, therefore are travel
ing and showing themselves over a
stretch of 10,000,003 miles each
day. or 300,000.000 miles each
month—or thlrty-alx hundred mil
lion miles a year. '
Ths Is a distance equal to 144,000
times around the world.
If these 500,003 Model T’s started
on a tour around the world and
kept within a half mile of each
other, they iwould encircle the globe
ten times.
Every city street, boulevard, park
way; every village street, every
country road is lined with Fords.
So persistent is this constant and
ever Increasing parade that men,
women and children who never
knew anything about motor cars,
can pick idem’ out.
The Ford Is the easiest car to
think about because it Is seen most
frequently."
Invigorating to the Pete and Sickly
| OROVB’i l TA a s'fBLES^ulTONIcflff««o l ift
M.DrU.en riche, the blood.iud build, iiptheiyi.
tea. A true tonic. For adults and children. 50c
—adv.
The Fourth of July was not dif
ferent from any other day in Thora-
osville, except for the shooting of a
,,fow cannon cracker,- and the morn
ing baseball »nme. which was
tended by about throe hundred and
,-fty people. The stores did not
close 'because It is Saturday, but
•he Postofflce and banks were closer'
the entire day.
SEVERE PUNISHMENT
Of Mr*. Chappell, of Fhe Tears'
Standing, Relieved By Cardtri.
ML Alrv, N. C.-Mrs. Sarah M. Chan-
ill of this town, says: “1 suffered for
pell of this town, says: “1 suffered
live years with womanly troubles, also
’ ' " ’ mnishment
tell.
stomach troubles, and my ni
could t
Rheumatic Throat
Is Common Trouble
Should Be Treated in Blood
To Prevent Recurrence.
’-'•'’flOX ON
Stops Neuralgia—Kill* Pain.
Sloan’s Liniment gives
relief from Neuralgia
The Constitution is under
strange impression that Georgia Is Georsrfa who openly declare tor a
going to see all sorts of warm poll- fourteen-year limit, hut who make
tics this summer as a result of a an objection to the educational fea-
recent announcement of an old ture of the hill requiring the wage
friend and ally. • earner to have at least twelve
-o (week.? schooling within the twelve
What’s the use of a fellow’s sav- J months previous to his beginning
ing the ten dollars per month It i work, in the factory, mill or other
cost him to smoke, when his wife' occupation that he may take up.
can spend that much and not even j The Cotton manufacturers can-
get a hat that she thinks is half way j not or will not foresee where the
decent. ! Sheppard bill will bring about the
- 9 | compulsory education that they
This Joe Brown-*Hoke Smith fac-1 claim chould preceed the child la-
tlonalism isn’t going to crop outj'bor law, but if the parents of ehll-
In this section of Georgia. The; dren find that their children must
county of Thomas is united on learn to read and write, before they j suffered with ray head since.” Get
.. 1 . ... a bottle today. Keep ln the house
Sm V h and it seems, from all indl-; become wage earners, they sill see^, ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
cations that the other counties will to It that they are instructed be *' bu ,t, 25c., 30c„ and $1.00 at
be In the same column, | fore they reach the age of four- your Druggist, adv.
The Impression that the uplands
are not suited for such production,
the report says, is due wholly to “a | Thor, .re successful gurgles tlist .top
lack of understanding of the proper j but I^prevontjhvlr
methods with seed, and at the gla.'
was more than any one
I I fried most every kind ol medicine,
i but none did me any good.
! I read one day about Cardui, fhe wo-
i man’s tonic, and 1 decided to try it I
! had not taken but about six bottles until
I was almost cured. It did me more
good than all the other medicines 1 had
tried, put together.
My friends began asking me why I'
looked so well, and I told them about
Cardui. Several are now taking it’*
Do you, lady reader, suffer from any
of the ailments due to womanly trouble,
such as headache, backache, sideache,
sleeplessness, and that everlastingly tired
feeling?
!i so, let us urge you to give Cardui a
trial, we (eel confident it will help you,
just as it has a million other women in
the past half century.
Begin taking Cardui to-day. You
w on't regret it All druggists.
ucina lo„ uuHia
Ttnn.. for S*ci.,l
book. Hon-1
srapg.r, M.C. IV.
! lncp.ssant return, tbe blood rouat be put in J—adv.
, order. The be*t remedy in S. 8. S. B _
I Influences all the functions of the bodr to
neutralise the Irritants or waste products
and to stimulate their excretion through
the proper channels.
I Rheumatic sore throat Is * dangerous
I Indication, aa ft menns that the blood la
! loaded with more uric acid than the kid-
j nejrs can excrete, and may thua lead to
instant serious general disturbance.
t The action of 8. 8. 8. stimulates cellular
or Sciatica, activity. It prevents the accumulation of
Irritants In local spots. It enables th*
It goes straight to the painful part arterlea to supply quickly tbe new red
—soothes the Nerves and Stops the blood to ropl.c worn-out tissue.
Pain. It Is also good for Rheuma
tism, Sore Throat, Chest Pains and
Sprains. You don’t need to rub—
it penetrates. Mr. J. R. Swinger,
Louhville, Ky., writes. “I suffered
with quite a severe Neuralgic Head
ache for four months without any
reliaf. I used Sloan’s Liniment for
two or three nights and I haven’t
Influence, Is scattered and ellmlnati
other words, 8. 8. 8. prevents chronic con
ditions by enabling all the mucous linings
of the body to secrete healthy mucus. Its
Influence Is shown in a marked Improve
ment of the bronchial tubes,. whereby the
buskinesa of voice with thick, graylsn ex
pectoration* ls overcome. 8. 8. »., well
diluted with water, means a blood bath.
ln substitutes. 8. S. 8. ta prepared only by
The Swift Specific Co., 528 Bwtft Bldg.,
Atlanta. Oa. Our Afrdlcal Dept will gt^-
you free lnstructlon*bv mall on any aubje
of blood disordera. Write today.
—AdV.
i FARM LOANS
Now during the Summer ls the
time to secure your farm loan. If
you wait until your obligation ls
due, the Fall rush prevents quick
service.
We have unlimited supply of
cheap Life insurance money to lend
and can give prompt service.
Large loans on well-improved
farms at lowest rates.
BARROW LOAN & ABSTRACT CO„
Pelham, Ga.
Dr. John Schreiber
PORMKKIY OP OCHI.OCKNKK
Now Located on Madison Stree
Opposite Times*Enterprise Office
Thomasville Georgia.
Office Phone 24« R^ddence Phone Ste
The Wisdom in
Saving
A man who saves a dollar is a benefactor. One who
teaches another to save a dollar ls a Public Benefactor, and
should be knighted by the State. A dollar put In the bank at
compound Interest takes root Instantly; it is not parched or
burned by drouths; not killed by frost or sleet. It can not
be Injured by heat or cold, by famine or pestilence, by fire or
flood. It will not be lost through a hole in your pocket, nor
borrowed by some pestilential friend or boon cmpanlon. It is
"''beyond the reach of earthquake or lightning, accident, sneak-
thief, thug or murderer. It works for you by day and by
night—Sundays, legal holidays and week days are all the same
to It. It will not wilt, nor rust nor rot, nor be eaten by
worms. It will sprout and mature a crop of Interest for you
every year throughout all eternity and then, be as fresh and
as ready to go on working for you and your descendants is the
day It was first carried to the bank. It will be a slave that
neither eats nor drinks, nor sleeps, nor dies, and needs no
overseer.
* The investment of money in a savings account at THE
BANK OF METCALFE at compound interest ls tlie best Invest
ment, the most profitable business and the greatest and grand
est speculation that we know anything about.
BANK OF METCALFE
METCALFE, GEORGIA.
The Bank That Is for the People.
OFFICERS:
E. !M. SMITH, President. J, W. HORNE, Vice-President,
W. O. CARTER, Cashier. H. C. COPELAND, V-President.
I MONEY LOANED!
FARM LOANS PROMPTLY MADE
. At 6% interest, payable annually. The borrower has the
F privilege of paying part or all of the principal at any Interest
4 period, stopping Interest on such ayment. I will save you
^ money. Come to see me, or write. Prompt attention given
^ all written inquiries.
4
*
4
W. M. BRYAN,
OFFICE OVER POST OFFICE, THOMASVILLE, GEORGIA.
When in need of nice
Fronts
for your House we can please
you. Either in Plain, Leaded or
Art Glass.
SEE US
Thomasville Variety Works.
+
1 WANTED:
I CORN SHELLED
~ or EAR, ANY QUANITY
PHONE OR WRITE
W. H. BURCH & SON
PHONE 187 THOMASVILLE CA.
ROCK HILL
A GOOD LINE OF
KINSTON
TERMS TO
SUIT -
\
B-U-G-G-l-E-S
NOW ON HAND
Duality and
prices bight .
-4 ■
TAYLOR-CANNADY
me.gs.oa. CRAWFORD-MILLERCO., CA 'R°.»*•
; j i’.'
WASHINGTON
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