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TUESDAY, OCTOBER l> TR
UMI-Wn|av TIMES-ENTERPRI8E, TH0MA8VILLE, GEORGIA;
THE HMES'ENTERPRISE
SEMI-WEEKLY EDITION
Iwued EVtry Tuodiy and Friday
MEMBERS ASSOCIATED FACES
Bally and- Semi-Weekly Tlmes-FnUr.
prise, Published by tha Ttmea-Entor-
prlaa Company. ThomaarlUa. Ga.
Entered at tha ThomaarlUa Foot Office
For Tianamlaelon Through tha 1*-"-
Aa Second CUse Mall Matter.
Subaeriptlon Rataai
One Tear
Six Months ....
A iost collar button will often cause
more trouble than a lost wife.
It always comes to him who waita,
but It Isn’t always what he wants or
' expects.
The speeders will all quit when they
are in jail and some of them not until
then.
Bavaria aays she doesn't want any
tourists this year, but Bavaria Isn’t In
Florida.
Professor Tiernan Is our idea of the
sort of a bird that ought to be in an
Iron cage.
A pretty-woman always tigures that
there may be soma way to figure out
Vauccees.
It takes gas to make everything go.
but gas won’t make everything go
your way.
They even have dark norses la tha
football world and they usually run
true to form.
If America made the world what It
la today what did It do when it was
not exlateat.
The Greeks are convinced that there
la something la having a good leader
ta fight with. *
Injoacttoas work sometimes, hut
they are often aot necessary te stop
expenditures.
Turkish atrocities ara said te he
salable at all tobacco stands at a
moderate price.
Tha girls that are covering their
legs ought not To be embarrassed long
by the new regime.
"I -
W. C. Vereen would do for the ad
la termlm appointment and no better
nutn could be secured.
The brisk demand for very hand
some fur coats In this section in prob
ably due to the threatened coal short
age.
. **
The bonus bill will pass some day
and It will not lA after the Civil War
pensions are paid oft.
When a man talks to himself yyu
may be sure that he isn't certain that
he wants to be heard.
\ POLITICAL UNRE8T
Georgia politics are Indulging IS an-
jump In wlthdut knowing how high the
. ■
wares art going to dash when Um
storm gets going.
other severe spasm or volatile unrest.
the result of the action of the state- MARKETING
Democratic executive committee Tn| j T w att la his comment ea the
naming October 17tb aa the date for■ movement In Waycross to secure an
the senatorial primary to fUl the va- Increased out-of-town trade sticks to
cancy caused by the death of Thomas I 08 * method-marketing. Mr. Watt is
an accurate diagnostician In financial
E. Watson and In postponing the date
of the state convention called for
October 4th, to the 28th of October.
This action was unexpected, one of
the many possibilities that politics
presents. The action at Macon was
affaire. He Is Intimately acquhlnted
with business conditions In Waycross.
Therefore when he says^ that Way-
cross must'market the products grown
In the surrounding territory, his state
ment merits the most-earnest conbid-
taken ostensibly with the sanction of eratl0 ”’
, Constantine may find some friends
to console with him. but even that Is
too good for him.
Germany is always facing a crisis,
or a catastrophe, or bankruptcy, and
never finally arriving at It.
They don't get drunk at soda founts,
even It they sometimes take too much
for their stomach's sake. a
Football and boxing In one day
ought to fill all the needs that the
sporting element may have.
The latest models show two rooms
and a bath over a commodious garage
for the average householder.
The test of a man's character Is
what he will do when there Isn't any
chance to catch up with him.
Mosquitoes will save you. from den
gue or bring It to you. Try and keep
stagnant water M your premlaes.
A hundred per cent, booster Is the
sort of fellow you always hunt up
when you want anything put across.
The Harard and Yale undergradu
ates are now wondering how the foot
ball team will come out, according to
the faculty records.
The French Tiger says he doesn’t
ask any banquets and In that he le
wiser than some of hla compatriots,
who have visited this country.
if McCormlck'a wife can’t ting, that
to not bis fault, and probably ho doei
not care anything abcut her reputa
tion In the paat. '*
TIm man-with a two dollar bill of
ten considers It hard Inch enough to
get It changed, but not enough to aa
to bo thrown down on the street
the railroad schedules are b
kept aa good as they ever were la this
section on tha Coast Line and tbs A.
B. end A sad both roods are doing a
£ood ImtlntH.
y -
Governor-elect Walker, but apparently
this sanction has widely missed the
mark, for the governor-to-be Immedl-
atelyissued a red-hot defy of the com
mittee and calls his delegates to come
to Macon at the f tlme appointed and
take charge of affairs.
So nobody knows what is going to
Happen except that there is room for
another row. One is already on the
way and some very spectacular and
Jurld, if not altogether important, po
litical ruminating Is about to take
place. The Walker delegates will go
to Macon and meet and ta^'charge
and then there may be a contest as to
which committee will control the sen
atorial primary and which committee
will handle the aftermath. There Is
room left for a lot of juggling of one
kind or another in the denoument.
As far us practical argument Is con
cerned the state committee proBably
figured that the primary being neces
sary It was the business of the com
mittee to call it and postpone the con
vention date In order to declare on the
entire matter. It might save some
confusion and that is about all.
On the other hand the Walker dele
gations evidently are desirous of con
trolling affairs at once, so that they
may hava charge whea the primary
comes off. For wbat reason either
side would want it nobody can sur
mise. unleBS as Cliff Intimates, there
may be some suspicion of dirty work,
politically speaking. It Is hard to
figure where that Is possible unless
the Walker line-up is broken Into and
deflected during the heated period in
which the senatorial fight Is to come
off. There might be some reason^or
It In that contingency, even though the
Identical delegations meet October
28th, as are called to, meet October
4th. The split of the Walker forces
would mean one thing or another. Mr.
Walker evidently thinks It bod's no
good for him.
Those, who huveu'l any personal In
terest In the scrap, can sit off and
calmly see them work themselves into
all sorts of a fury, without any com
punction or regret. That Is what po
litical conventions are mostly good
for and- any contest of this kind 'is
sure to burst things, that were into
smithereens and make new conditions
and new problems. ■
As far as Impartial observers might
judge, the Walker contention seems
quite fair, but we don't see anything
much to- get all het up about, unless
things are rottener than the average
man seems to know about In the com
mittee, and the contingencies during
the senatorial primary f likely to be
quite confusing to a homogeneous
state organization back of Mr. Walker.
It seems that we are to have a sen
atorial primary to select a successor Jo
the late Mr. Watson. This is quite
proper, but the time in which 8ie cam
paign Is to be waged will give little
opportunity for much heat to be en
gendered or many factional alignments
to be perfected.
The avidity with which honorable
Georgians are seeking the office'Is a
result of the break In former political
alignments caused by Mr. Watson's
death and the fact that these men
figure that now Is the real opportunity
for almost anybody to get into the
office. Heretofore It' would not have,
been possible for several of these men
tioned candidates to get any encour
agement. With the Watson Influence
gone or hot solidified they plan to
grab what they can and take chances.
The people will not have time to
get real mad about It and to tell the
truth It will be hard for s good many
of them to make up their minds aa
between the men. There are several
mentioned, who are not politically
known, hut whose natural ability is
unquestioned. What they can do in a
tcn-coronerrd race Is another matter
entirely. The real ltne-up will come,
doubtless, in the second primary,
which seems almost certain unless
some outstanding and dominant figure
develops during the next fortnight. Is
that probable tram the present line-up
of candidates?
Who are yon for? We cant answer
that yet. The game is too young to
■M-SsmNV
It Is to be noted that the ambition
qoestioa had been determined by
chemical analysis to be intoxicating.
The people resented this ruling aa
aa open and sbnt effort of the court
to prevent the making of a' case
against a prohibition' violator, which
can. readily be understood. Liquor ie
liquor the world over gad it takes
very few men longer than a smell or
a taste to know beyond a reasonable
doubt that It is liquor. •
To say that all liquor must be test
ed and proven to be intoxicating be
fore an^nsrest can be made is a pure
farce, particularly as far as liquor run-
HON. SEABORN WRIGHT
FORHER LEGISLATOR* IS
ENDORSED FOR SENATE
Rome, Ga.. Sept. 29.—Calling on
Seaborn Wright, veteran Georgia leg-
er tor a generation, to emerge from
hie retlremetft and resume his .place
islator and fearless prohibition lead-
in public,.the local cb&pter of the
Woman’s Christian Temperance Un
ion this morning, at' a called meeting
unanimously adopted a resolution en
ters and other pestiferous kinds of 1 dorsing Mr. -Wright tor United States,
illegal handlers of the article that is Senator to .succeed the late Senator
banned by constitutional amendment Thomas E. Watson, and urging h|<
to become a marketing center makes , Tlle ^ udse went far .out of his way hr 1 nomination by- the Democrats of the
a change in the attltudo of the bus! j toToke a technicality; if you views the | mate.
ness man toward the customer. Just t^lng from the most pronouncedly The resolution also* recommends
as the banks have progressed from tbe. * aT0 ™’ > '° 1 ** ht ,or ll,m ' Sensibly In-^ that Mr. Wright be endorsed by toe
old attitude of "How can I collect [ terpreted he merited Instant dismissal sta te W. C. T. U„ convention. The
from a customer what he owes me?".* 8 * block and handicap to law e n -'resolution follows:
to "How ean I assist in building up a forcement,
customer’s bank deposits and banking
business?" even so the merchant must
learn to progress beyond the old atti
tude of how much he can sell the cus
tomer to how he can increase the
buying capacity of the customer.
This ambition to become a market
ing center will cause every merchant
in WaycrosB to realise that ff the
people in the surrounding territory
have more caehsthe chances that more
cash can be spent In Waycross are
multiplied. If these people feel that
they made this money largely through
the efforts of Waycross, the Instinct
of gratitude itself Is going to cause
reciprocation.
All experience of marketing centers
products to a certain city to market
them, he will spend at least part of
ths money so secured In the city
where the market Is located. How
large a proportion of harvest money
will be spent In the marketing center
Is duorto the quality and variety and
price of the stocks carried la the
stores.
In discussing markets it is always
well to summarize what Waycross Is
doing along this line. The following
MALARIAL FEVER AND ITS
CAUSE
What is malarial fever?
| “Be It resolved, that we the wo-
■men e fthe W. C. T. U., U the home
| town of Hon. Seaborn Wright, know-
ling and honoring him and realizing
- hla fearless stand to. all great moral
|measures In the pact; his great work
A disease of man, common In hot,In making Georgia dry; his broader
wet countries. ' Tabors in redeeming the nation from
What is" malarial fever sometimes j t b ® c,Ir8c °f the organized liquor traf-
called? t flc 8nd above all, that he can be
Chills ynd fever, bilious fever; tru ' ,,ed to do hls dut 3 r ia tbe ^ure
swamp fever. 88 ln th ® P 8 * 1 - w0 ®b d °rse him for
It this disease gqund in the United
Stated?
Yes. Along the coastal plain from
Connecticut to Texas, over nearly „ .
all the Mississippi Valley, and in *,V nl ‘®<> Statea Senat ®" d ;
number of valleys on the Pacific] Although Seaborn Wright has been
CoaSt l in retirement and almost seclusion
1 eb d
gla, .
our sisters throughout tbe state lu
slMeadirg the demand for hls nomlna-
tton and election In November to the
WKat causes malarial fever?
for several years at hls home on book-
The presence of certain small out Mountain, hls vigorous and strlk-
organisms in the blood of the person
who has the fever.
What do you man by an
“organism”?
Something that is alive and thus
has the power to reproduce its kind.
It may be alive as a plant is alive, or
alive as an animal is. *
Is the organism which causes
malarial fever a plant or an animal?
It is an animal, and in the blood
is said to be an animal parasite.
What do you mean by a “parasite”?
ing personality remains ln the mindB
of the people of Georgia, and If he
should bee dthe call that Is going up
to him from hls friends here and ln
other sections of the state, of which
the acttoiTby the local W. C. T. U., Is
an example, he may become thezqpst
formdlable candidate for Senator
against any one who may be centered
upon by the political faction that form
ed the basic of Clifford Walker's raoe,
the socalled Howell faction.
How strong Wright will be, will de
pend, it is believed, upon the extent'
to.which he would-be supported by
An animal or plant that lives at
goes to prove that when a man brings® x P ens ® °* 8noth * r > l' k ® ^te,
, piistletoe, love vine, rust on corn,: the followers of the late Senator
sums up the list ; Some of the gro' th# bookworm, flea, etc. The Thomas E. Watson, and at the same
cerf are_ buying fresh vegetables, eggsj malarial parasite lives in man by time could consolidate the supporters
and chickens; some of the housewives feeding on the blood cells of the of former Senator Hoke Smith and of
are patronizing the curb market; M‘man. .. ' r- Governor Thomas W. Hardwick. Mr.
M. Monro, is buying chickens, eggsj do ?<>» k ”° w «•*, these | Wright's own £rsonol following 1. by
parasite* are found in the blood of.no means negligible, although a par-
hides end furs; J. A. Wildes Is buying th()ge w ho have malarial fever? tion of that etrength lies among the
hogs and cattle: the Individual homes Because with the microscope we j Watson men with whom he was asso-
are buying wood. , •<* see them in the red btood cells ] dated in the memorable campaign of
It really is a short list, but Its very * of a mhn sick with malarial fver. 1898, when he polled 85,000 for gov- ’
What do you mean by red -blood lernor on a platfrorm that was written
cells? I by VNitson, Chancellor \ Walter Hill
They are very small bodies float- [ and himself and a very principle of
ing in the .blood, shaped much like himself, and every principle of which
a biscuit, with thickened edges; they
give the blood its red color, and are
a most important part of it They
are essential to life
shortness shows how great is the need
of a marketing center in Waycross.—
Waycross Journal-Herald.
THE YIELD FROM FEARS
It has been shown that the yield
from pear trees this year has been
very large and tbe price for pears
far above the expectations of many of
a TAX NOTICE
has alnce beta enacted into state law.
He also has a tremendous strength
among the prohibition forces, which
amounts to more now than evtf before
since the women voters of the state
are to be reckoned with. It is be
lieved that the women who can never
I will be gt tbe following placea, j orget y, Ber ylce In ridding the state
the overhead owners. Nine hundred ™ d8t * 8 named for the P“n> 08 ® ! of saloona, will vote almost solidly for
... - collecting thq state, county and school i
dollars from two acres Is hard to for the year 1922: I him. ,
realize and yet this waa true in 1922. '
The pear Industry was very produc
tive in this country twenty years ago.
when no blight had hit the trees.
When this disease got into it there
was confusion and despair.
The blight has been conquered and
although many of the old orchards,
are gone there remains plenty of time
to plant more at a very small cost,
both Initial and upkeep. This would
yield a harvest In ten years that
would be of tbe same class ln the
same proportion aa pecans. There la
and has always been a good demand
for canned or preserved years. Tbe
send pear or pineapple pear, which le
blight proof, would be available for
general planting and If the seasons
were aa they have been this year,
nothing more productive could he
asked.
We do not hold out a mirage of un
questioned wealth-' We do not believe
that all seasons will be as the last
one was. But there Is money In this
industry properly and carefully han
dled. It must not bo gone Into with
hammer and tonga, with the whole re
sources of any land own», but gradu
ally and with an end of making It one
of fiur surplus crops. A canning plant
will furnish a market all the time, aa
Cal(fornla has done, and the possibili
ties of growing them here art superior
to those In California, where they Slave
cleaned up, to use a slang expresalon.
Metcalfe, Oct. 9th and Nov. 1st.
Barwlck, Ocf. 10th a. m. and Nov.
2nd n. m. —
fatten. Oct. 10th p. m. and Nc».
Snd p. m. '
Coolldge, Oct. 11th a. m. and Nov.
3rd.
Merrillville, Oet. 11th p. m. and
Nov. 6th a. m.
Ellabelle, Oct 12th and Nov. 7th.
Meigs, Oct. 13th and Nov. 8th. (
Ochlocknee, Oct 14th and Nov. 9th.
j’avo, Oct. 80th and Nov. 10tn.
Weston, Oct. 31st and Nov. 13th aw
’4th.
I will be ln my office at the court
house during the October term of
Superior court and from Nov . 16th to
Pec.. 20th inclusive.
The tax books will dose Dad Mth.
' Respectfully,
P. 8. HBETH, T. C.
, 2t-wk. Dly. 2t-Sw.
(Advertisement)
OOTTON
Open Close P. C.
Jan 20.82 20.33 20.16
Mar 20.88 20.40 20.33
Hay i — 20.79 20.42 20.25
Oct *0.66 20.20 20.12
Dec. 20.90 20.60 20.41
CHICAGO CRAIN AND PROVISION
MARKET.
Chicago, Oct' I.—Wheat etc
W. C. Rash, Floyd county superin
tendent of schools, who was one of
tbe staunchest supporters In North
Georgia of tbs late Senator .Watson,
said today, when Informed of the ac
tion by the Women’s Christian Tem
perance . Union, that unquestionably
those who supported Watson
Wright in 1896, would rally to the
standard of tha latter now, since their
beloyed leader- Is.dead, . "Seaborn
Wright ia the logical succaeaor to
Senator Watson," said Mr. Rash.
Supporters ot both former Senator
Hoke Smith and Governor Hardwick,
here today declared that in their opin
ion neither of those gentlemen conld
so nearly-unite all elements ot opposi
tion to Um Howdfi-Waiker alignment
as could Seaborn Wright, who Is per
sonslly and potltlcslly friendly to both
of them. , .
Friends of Mr. Wright at Rome,
aroused to action by the resolution ot
the W. C. T.JJ, are planning to urge
upon Mr. Wright‘that he forego the
enUcementa of his “wash hoM, pigs,
snd puppies,” at his retreat on Look
out Mountain, and get back into the
service of hls state.
A. NEW RULING
The governor of Florida has r
moved from office the judge of
from fifteen hundred ciUsens, who
claim that ha Is lax in the enforce-.
judge that no arrests shal he made
by state officers In violation of tbe
easy; corn, firm.
r
Wheat-
4».C.
Close
Dec.
T-tOtt
L04*
May —— -—-
1.09
L07*
Com—.
V-
Dec.
.62*
-59*
May :
. 81*
< .62 '
Oata-
Dec.
-41*
37*
May
.38*
Lard—
Oct
1L10
1L17
Jam ——
9.10
9.16
Rib*—
' v y'
OcL
10JTS
1037
ips^—|— ■
1036
TURPENTINE.
- - -„.jl '.a. ot , niwinniTi fit i fTct.‘-Tunwitfoma
prohibition law, unj|se - MtoJiyMO *» Ifirmr tMKtttpertavCjilfc *-!r r 71 -t
PICTURE FRIES
We Have A Large Stock
—OF— *
MOULDINGS
AND
READY HADETRAMES
PHOTOGRAPHER
Tbotnast
THE WISE MA n ;
Saves NOW for the Rainy Day^-? * '
Trie FOOLISH ’ MAN
waits until he hears it thunder
Be Wise and start a.savings account today with a
dollar -or more and we will loan you one of fhese
BOOK COIN, SAVINGS BANKS to
. help you save.
We Pay Intjrest'on Savings at—
The Peoples Savings Bank
T. J; BALL,*Prest: -R. J. McCLENNEY. Gash.
< v
...............M 0 N E V L 0 A N E
On Improved Farm Lands at 6% interesL with tbe privilege to the
borrower of paying part or ail of the principal at any Interest period,
stopping Intsrest on amount paid, but no annual payment of principal
required. Loans made on Improved city property In -^boroasvllie.
if In need ef money, write us. or come to see na -
' ' ; W. M. BB Y AN
Offices 406-40S Upchurch - Building Thomatvlllo, Georgia
"7 s
\
AHfoyg a Saving— ■■
; Never An Expense
Ice is thf .'OjKs fiqme necessity that always. pays for
ttseif.iiiMy times over. -
Now' that the Fall and Winter Months-are coming
around, keep that in mind for your own household.,
good, Yqu will save on food bills and protect your
family’s health bykeepinf food in the one proper
way-"*in a well ired rjefrfgerator. No’other method '
properly 'protects th' purity of food, so ice is a
mighty low premium to pay for such excellent heal-
j*t|f •"?