About The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1903)
be sold befo the city of legal hours ■ Tuesday l describ in' 5 February, 1903, the ed property towitr ‘•That ce'rtain tract t being in the citv of 1 ing 90 feet on Steven ning back no feet, sai-, — being immediately back of the lot own ed by the said Leo Dekle, fronting on Madison street, said tract fronting on Stevens street now occupied by Mary Fields.’* Said above described property being sold as the property of‘Lebbeus Dekle, deceased. Terms cash, ■T A. H.S. COOKE, Admr. Est. Leb Dekle ir wuh UbHun atiem I | free toe. w. nderfnl . iother WHS cuied after ’ ig, toge her with the ;atise on Rheumatisn No matter what your form of Rheuma tism Is., whether acute, chronie, muscular iuflaioatory, drformant, sciatic, neural gia gout, lumbago, etc—no matter how many doctors have’failed in your case- no matter how many socalled “sure cures" you have tried-I want you to write to me and let me tell you how my mother was cured. .1 «m neither a Cuctor oor a Professor —simply a plain man of business—^ but l have'a *‘URE for Rhematism. and I want to-tell everyone who suffers wilh Rheu matism all about it I wish to be clearly understood and trust that atf who are suffering with thi» terrible dis'ase. how ever apparently beyond the reach of cure win wrire »o me this day and l will s**nrt by return mail this work of mine. 1 ap peal especially U, the "chronically ill" who are wearied and discouraged with "doctoring" and. those who have been will gladly sene story ot how my sears of stiffen most elaborate t JHE PROSPERITY OF 1903 WILL, I THINK, IN EV^RY I RESPECT KEEP PACE WITH THAT OF THE YEARS 1 " ' — — Si HAVE last few days have THAT HAVE IMMEDIATELY PRECEDED IT. gggRfgO BEEN UNABLE TO OBSERVE ANY EVIDENCES OF HSI RETROGRESSION IN THE SITUATION. Business in every branch continues to be con ducted on a profitable basis, the crops are abundant and the railroacU will have offered them during the present year a tonnage that will exceed that of 1902. The com crop has now begun to move in heavy volume, and ,11 signs point to a larger export trade .than that of the year just closed. Manufacturers are finding- a growing market for their iutput, the, fanners are prosperous and happy, and domestic trade will also increase in volume. The railroads will take care of their increased cost of operation by a moderate advance in rates, and their physical condition has been brought to such perfection that the large sums heretofore devoted to betterments will now become available for the dividend or surplus account. THE ONLY DIFFICULTY IN THE 8ITUATI0N IS THE FACT THAT THERE IS NOT ENOUOH MONEY IN THE COUNTRY TO TRANSACT THE PEOPLE’8 BUSINESS. If the new year brings us intelligent and adequate currency legislation, the continuance of prosperity will be assured not only for 1903, but for years to come. V FOR THE "GEORGIA." Miss Ionise DuBose, of Athens, has been authorized by Governor Terrell to radio fnnds for the purchase of a silver service for the battleship Georgia now in course of construction for tho TJ. S. navy. It will require a considerable amount to purchase a proper silver ser vice for tho battleship Georgia, and For Sale. 300 acres of fine farming land situated in lots 39 and 42 of the 13th district. This farm is known as the old Dixon place and is 3 miles west of Thetnas- yille. Apply to this office for further information. w 4t 1-31 cant asid-as “incurable." All you have thought, about Rhematism may wrong. Let me tell yon on? experience Surely have seats. All stores must dose at 6 p.m. and public houses from 11 p. m- Saturday until Monday morning. The Australians are ahead of ns in some things. . The Atlanta Journal says that young W. K. Vanderbilt has just begun to sur round his elegant Long Island estate with a fence said to be quite unpreten tious in comparison with some in the neighborhood, but which will cost him not much less than $100,000. Almost as costly as a political fence-^-that. if you eave Rheumatism or haveasufler- ing friend it will pay you to investigate ray offer anyway and prove for eouraelf these'claims I make. Send me your address today—a postal card will do—and I will mail you tl?i» wonderful story. If yen have any friends suffering with Rheumatism no every patriotio Georgian should contrib- j ute to this fund. j The government has complimented this commonwealth by bestowing its nirnifl upon one of the greatest warships in the navy. It would indeed show 3 gmw.ll appreciation if the Georgia people * failed to respond to the compliment by 1 presenting the ship with a service 1 worthy of her name. ‘ About fou^ thousand dollars is needed • to secure a proper service. With a email contribution from a number of citizens that amount can easily Jigj^sed. We want Thomasville to do its share in the matter. IN KANSAS. ‘ A dispatch from Topeka, Kansas, reads as follows: "Negroes here are enraged a$ the resolution introduced in the Kansas legislature to amend the State election laws so as to exclude them from voting. A hot contest is looked for, as there is much sentiment in favor of the resolution.” . This is strange news coming from the state of John Brown. If his body whjch has been ’“mould’ring in the tomb" for sp many years, hasn’t quite crumbled to dust, it will turn over in its grave at the thought. Minnie Cox has at last ceased from troubling us. ~ Don’t forget our slogan for 1903. Greater Thomasville. Isn’t it strange that so many people who know all about running a news paper are in other businesses. The New York Sun is calling Atlanta "the Southern Chicago." Why ?Atlan- ta girls haven’t big feet have they? •Hoke Smith has been deputized to boqm Judge Parker for the president^ in the South. A case of "Hoke der Par ker,” as it were. Thomas county fanning lands are among the best in the state, and the outside world is coming to realize that fact. • f:' Illinois has followed in the wake of Virginia and is now ruminating on a kissing law. It will no donbt go to the way of all other such foolish proposi-. tions. ; V • . ; . All doubts as to Aguinaido’s- fitness for American citizenship vanish quick ly in view of his attempt to negotiate that hundred million dollar loan, says an exchange. A body weighing one pound on earth would weigh twenty-seven and a half pounds upon the sun. The. son will be a popular place for skinny girls, when we get an air-ship line to running. The Atlanta News says another thou- BENT FUBNIS-t0. je D*c»or Metcalfe r*o»»a*r*-,Clar and daw»y ftTfftH. Apply to H«*nry i*3 Liberty, street. New York. rin TCTTCD on = °! Ull 11.11 tn mmy vaneUes of that tor menting disease called Eczema. It slum bers through the summer and breaks out in winter. The head, feet and handa are the parts most often attacked, though it sometimes appears on oth^* parte of the body, the akin hardens, crri?*s open and bleeds, while the itching and burning is at times almost unbearable. Scratching Only makes it worse, sores and scabs By Mrs. HUMPHRY WARD, the Famous English Novelist TO "NOVELS WITH A PURPOSE,” I AM INCLINED Vfl TO THINK THAT IF A NOVELIST IMAGINES THAT A/y HE OR 8HE IS GOING TO CONQUER ART BY MUCH LvSf PREACHING, THAT THE NOVEL IS MERELY THE PAMPHLET OR THE SERMON WRIT LONG, THAT "PROSE JS VERSE AND VERSE .IS MERELY PROSE,” THEN, IN THE WORDS OF GOLDSMITH, “NOTHING [CEED THE VANITY OF HIS EXISTENCE BUT THE FOLLY Petition tor Charter. GEORGIA—County of Thomas. To the Hon. Superior 4itnrt of said I County.] The petition of R. H. Blood, A. Q.j Mocdy - no Ocie Nelms, all of said Stale! and countv, res-pectfully shows: i First. That they desire for themselves! their associate* and successors, to bel come incoiricrateri as a Li-erary Society! urder the flirme and style of "The Philo-I It is no good opening out “cauld harangues on'practice and on morals.” _ NOTHING HAS ANY POWER IN THE WORLD; OF ART BUT THE THINGS OF FEELING AND THE THINGS OF BEAUTY. On that we all agree. What is sincere, what touches the artist before it is offered to the public, that we all agr*e is the first, almost tliq»only, condition of good work. If the play of religious opinion ‘or social reform or political power as it affects human life is what interests the writer, and if that writer is drawn toward the form of the novel, what authority bars the way? Some of the greatest au- meat of this purpose they de-j«jj^hb right! ot acquiring and holding in {uV^orpo-J rate name and right,real and frersonal es-’ tate. by purchase or otherwise; to make in their corporate name and right all •contracts incident to the successful es tablishment, and maintenance of such association; to adopt and enforce all bv-laws for their government as shall not be inconsistent with the laws of Georgia. ' / ' Fifth. They pray for themselves and iheir legal successors to be made a body corporate and politic; with all the rights, privileges, immunities and restrictions fixed by law. THEO.- TITUS. j24-w4t Petitioner’s Attorney. thorities of the world are on his side. The only points to be consid ered are: Can he touch other minds? Can he throw what he' has to say into shapes that move and live? And these turn upon another question, Can he see these things and reproduce them not as the student sees and reproduces them, but as the artist sees them inter preted through the forms of human life and interfused with beauty or with terror? If he can, let the critic say what he will. THE WHOLE PURPOSE OF TOLSTOI’S "RESURRECTION” IS TO LEAD UP TO THESE LAST PAGE8 IN WHICH A MAI* OF BURNING SINCERITY PRES8ES UPON EUROPE A NEW VIEW OF THE GOS PEL ME88AGE. For that purpose he has carried the whole marvelous load of that book, and but for the purpose he would never have lifted it. Are you going to glorify the book and denounce the purpose ? Per fectly true that the purpose is nothing without'the art, but hu manity, the reader, the true and ultimate public, will take care of that. A Good Lint. w Columbus—Sash, door and blind fac tory; mattress factory. Waycross—Oil and gas company. Moultrie—$30,000 plant to extract tur pentine oil, tar, etc., from pine and and cleanses the blood of all irritating sub- straw ; lumber company: Cartersyille—$75,000 lime works; bar rel factory.. ■ Brunswick—$6,000,000 steel works. Calhoun—electric power plant; flour ing mill. ., . • V Climax—dane mill and refinery. J^vp^SS^$150.000 ice and cold stor- age pSti ($20,000 paving gravel compj-. Atlanta—$25,000 machine company; 1 OinftfWl r»ruil stances and humors and does it promptly and effectually. S. S. S. purifies and invigorates the thin acid blood, and builds up the entire sys tem; then the unsightly eruption and sores heal, theakinbecomes smooth and soft, and all signs of the Eczema disappear. Our special book on Skin Diseases free. ~ M you have blood poison producing eruptions, pimples ulcers,swollen glands, bumbs ana risings, burning, itching skin, copper-colored spots or ra*h on the skin., mucous patches in mouth or threat, Jail ing hair, bone pains, old rheumatism 01 foul catarrh, lake Botanic Blood Balm. (B. B. B.). It kills the poison in the blood; soon all sores, eruptions healj hard swellings subside, aches and paihsd stop and a perfect cure is made of the w&rst cases of Blood Poison. For cancers, tumors, swellings, eatinf sores, ugly uleers, persistent pimples o nil VinJc tnUn U O l) I. J ‘ . .... .L Mr, Sam Turnbull, of Monticello, is spending a few days with relatives in this city. D. A. Denmark, of the Monon Route, was in the city on Sunday. Mrs. A. W.. Ball lias returned from a visit to relatives in Brunswick. Parker Worrell and W. Davidson, of $15,000 lumber company ; $100,000 coal ftud coke company; $50,000 construction company. The above is a list- of the most im portant new organizations^ the indus; trial world, for the past week. Geor gia is advancing rapidly along all lines. Pennsylvania, are at the Masnry. L. D. JSamett, of Greenwood, Fla., was a guest of the Brighton x on Friday. John K. Hamblin, of Pelliam, was in . the city yesterday. H. B. Roberts, of Rochester, New York, is at the Stuart. It is a noticeable fact that most of the development is in South Georgia. f TWO SONGS. x ' THE OPTIMIST. ■ * Hurrah for tho days that are drawing By JOHN MITCHELL. President United-Mine Workers of America f YTTE reports of the mine inspectors’ bureau of the state of Pennsylvania show that during the past decade ! the average yearly fatalities in the anthracite coal mines weye 437 and that for the year 19Q1 there t were 484 fatal and 1,256 nonfafe^tSceidents. THIS MEANS THAT FOR EVERY 119,000 tCS<^ OF COAL BROUGHT TO THE SURFACE ONE PER80N IS KILLED AND MORE THAN TWO ARE SERIOUSLY INJURED. IT MEANS THAT FOR EACH DAY THE MINES ARE IN OPERATION MORE THAN TWO PERSONS’ LIVES ARE SACRIFICED AND MORE THAN FIVE PER SONS ARE INJURED. . Indeed, it is a matter of record that EIGHT TIMES AS MAX^T MEM AND BOYS ARE KILLED AND INJURED ANNU ALLY IN THE ANTHRACITE COAL MINES OF PENN SYLVANIA AS WERE KILLED AND WOUNDED FROM THE AMERICAN RANKS IN THE SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR IN CUBA. H. J. Paulk and wife, of Cairo, were in the city yesterday. Jas. L. Henry, of New York, was a guest of the Stuart on Friday. Wm.- Holloway, of Valdosta, spent Sunday at the Masury. County Commissioner John Q. Bryan was in the city this week. Mr. Bryan strongly favors a better method of work ing the public roads, and is inclined to the opinion that a road tax would be an improvement on the present system. The court house has been a busy The wicked will With gladness spread o’er the scene; When the dandelions will bravely glow, lake golden dots on! the slopes, Anri all of the sweet south winds that Will add to our fondest hopes.' Ah, yea! The winter will soon be gone Ana the grass will tegin to sprout? The mower will rattle across the lawn But after the flowers have bloomed, alas, . The days will keep (lipping by, And. the first Hung we know it will come topass ! That next winter's snow will fly. —s. E. Kiser, in Chicago Becord- Herald . Kodof Dyspepsia Cure Digests all classes of food, tones and strengthens the stomach and digestive organs. Cure? Dyspepsia, Indigestioa Stomach Troubles, and* makes rich red blood, health and strength. Kodol re builds wornout tissues, purifies, strength ens ane sweetens the stomach. Gov. G. W. Atkinson, of West Virginia, savs. 1 have used a number of bottles of Kodolj and have found it to be a very effective!, and, indeed, a powerful remedy Jo* stomach ailments. I recommend iqVt<4 my tnends. R.'Thomas, jr. J White Star Pressing Uul All work prom Work for ladies pressed, repaired best style. Satisf every instance. Gsods sent for a orders received at x>.;e. bis OveitQuinn’s < place all the week, cease from troubling while court is ad journed tomorrow. But it will ’ all be- ign again next week. J. N. McGaliee came over from Boston and spent Friday in Thomasville. Among the Boston people. who spent Friday in town was Mr-. J. G. Taylor. John Lovell, of Boston, was here, on and well dot specialty. , Sui renovated in tl on guaranteed Jelivered. ’Phot A Utah legislator proposes a state hol iday for a navel purpose. He wants it to be called a health holiday, a day on which the people must give their homes The Taint of Wealth That Is Unclean By Dr. JOHN BASCOM. Professor of Political Science, Williams College ^ O MONEY THAT IS OBTAINED AT THE EXPEN8E OF THE PEOPLE CAN EVER BE USED FOR THE GOOD OF THE PEOPLE. THERE ARE NO TRUSTS IN THE INTELLEC TUAL WORLD AND NO “CORNERS” IN THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN. I DOUBT THE POWER OF ANY UNIVERSITY Tp TURN MONEY THAT HAS BEEN MADE AT THE EXPENSE OF THE COM MUNITY INTO THE WELFARE OF THE COMMUNITY. THE TAINT OF A BAD .TEMPER WILL .CLING TO IT.