About The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 7, 1903)
orR MOTTO NE.t'l WJKSM aud CARRIAGES. FARM AND TURPENTINE WAGONS IN OUR LINE YOU WILL F1NDPK1i;>-8 right. COME AND SEE OUJR STOCK OF JiTJGC.IES AND « AG< Nt Shops 22(5 West .lac’Ksi.Hi Mr fi. THAT ARE SOLD OIC a GUARANTEE. There is nothing more necessary to health than sleep and rest. If these are denied you, if you rise in the morning more tired than when you went to bed, there is an affection of the nerves plainly present If your heart is weak, or there is an inherited tendency in that direction, your weakened nerves will soon so affect your heart’s action as to bring on serious, chronic trouble. Dr. Miles’ Ner vine is a nerve tonic, which quiets the nerves, so that sleep may come, and it quickly re stores the weakened nerves .to health and strength. Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure is a great blooa and heart tonic which regulates the ac tion of the heart, enriches the blood and im proves the circulation. _ “Some time ago I was suffering severely with heart trouble. At times my heart would seemingly stop beating and at others it would beat loudly and very fast. Three to four hours sleep each night in ten months was all I could get One week in last September I never closed my eyes. I got Dr. Miles’Nervine and Hezrt'Cure at a drugstore in Lawrence- burg, after spending £30000 in medi cines and doctors in Louisville, Shelbyvillq Frankfort, Cincinnati and Lawrencebun*. and in thrcedsys have derived more benefit from the use of your remedies than I got from all the doctors and their medicines. I think everybody ought to know of the mar velous power contained in your remedies.”— W. H. Hughes, Fox Creek, Ky. All druggists sell and guarantee first bot tle Dr. Miles’ Remedies. Send for free book on Nervous and Heart Diseases. Address Dr. Miles Medical Co, Elkhart, lad. T<-.v TJ«; AND BE CONVINCE Bl»cl* xmitli'iie $1.35 All Round, The Formula tells the story Grove’s Chronic Chill Cure Not a patent medicine: a thin spirituous Baidd. of a pleasant bitter taste, made 0# Fluid Extract PERUVIAN BARK Fluid Extract POPLAR BARK Fluid Extract BLACK ROOT Fluid Extract PRICKLY ASH BARK Fluid Extract DQG WOOD BARK Fluid Extract SARSAPARILLA It Cures the Chills that other Chill Tonics Don’t Cure. The Best General Tonic. . No Cure, No Pay. Price, 50c. Elegance In Shaving Is a thing mnch sought for, bat sel dom found. A good barber, a good razor and a dean towel form a combina! tion hard to beat. We have them all. H. E. COCHRAN, 113 Broad St. - - ThomasvUle, Ga. In the midst of social rounds in New York Governor Terrell has been inter viewed by the New York Sun. - He has found time to say, acoording to that pa per, that the next Democratic candidate for President must come from New York state. J‘With a candidate-that will have the support of the party in New York,” he says “we can win.” Mv friends in the ccuntrx will al ways fine here a good fir* on cold days. Having bought out. Mr DuVes’ inter est in the business I have seconded the move by buving this space to ’ell you about it- I -» m not going to run a de partment store, but whtit I am^oing to do is run a store wLe/e you < an get Good Goods at Cbe?-p Prices . Cures Cancer and Blood Poison. If. you have blood poison?producing eruptions, pimples ulcers,swollen glands bumbs and risings, burning, itching skin copper-colored spots or rash on the skin mucous patches in mouth or threat, lall mg hair, bone pains, old rheumatism ot foul catarrh, take Botanic Blood Bain (B. B. B.). It kills the poison in tht blood; soon all sores, eruptions heal, hard swellings subside, aches and pains stopband a perfect cure is made of the worst cases of Blood Poison. For cancers, tumors, swellings, bating sores, ugly uleers, persistent pimples ol all kinds, take B. B. B. It dtjstroys the cancer poison in the blood, heals cancer of all kinds, cures the worst humors or suppuratingsv?Uings. Thou sand scurec, by B. B. U. after ail else lails. B. B. li. composed of pure botanic ingredients. Improves the digestion, makes the blood pure and rich, stops the awful itching and all sharp, shooting pains. Thor oughly tested :or thirty years; .Drug gists, Si per bottle, with complete direc tions for home cure. Sample free ana prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co., At lanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advice also sent in sealed letter. A letter was received at the office of State Entomologist W. M. Scott from Senor J, F. deAssis Brasil, envoy extra ordinary and minister plenipotentiary from Brazil, located at Washington, D. O., asking for information concerning the peach industry in Georgia. The let ter stated that the fame of the Georgia peach had reached the country of Brazil and that fruit growers in that country desired to begin the growing of the El- barta peach. Entomologist Scott will send at once all the information obtaina ble concerning this luscious fruit;..; Again South Georgia offers the honest and industrious man every oppqgtoujty for making a living. Nature is generous, and yields gladly her riches to the tiller’s endeavor. Other lines of work are open. There is a very general diversification of interests, and no where else can there he found so many vocations to suit many •man odC man^ minds. Of course it is no use to talk about in airing a living if a man'eannot he healthy. But South Georgia has been especially 'favored by Providence in the matter of health. The geographical liar, and he is num erous, spreads abroad tales of malaria, and swamps, and other dire evils. Of course there are swamps, hut no one has to live in them. Occasionally people sicken and die. If they did not oar highways aud by-ways would be filled with doddering old people, who would block the wheels of progress. But there are fewer deadly diseases here than in any other state. Yellow fever, the scourge of the south, is unknown, and epidemics never reach here. In fact the 117 Jackson Thoniasvill 0 . Ga. The Birmingham News notes '’ that “the proposition to raise the president's salary po f 100,000 has not started any applause in the galleries.” Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests all classes of food. ton?s and strengthens the stomach and digestive organs. Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion. 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. I have-used a number of bottles of Kodol and have found it to be a very effective and, indeed, a p> ’ * J ' stomach ailments, my friends. R. Th - Gen. John B. Gordon is to write out the material of his celebrated lectures on the Cival War and contribute it to the magazines. It will be a valuable and intensely interesting addition to the history of the famous struggle. mi menu Electric Bells, Indicators and Alarms put in and re paired. Batteries charged and general electrical work done on short notice. Wertz & Son,The Repairers, Phone 88-2 The Augusta Chronicle says that Car dinal Gibbons and Archbishop Farley think that modern American society is in a bad way. The fanner asserts that it is decaying like that of the ancients, while the latter declares that the deluge of divorce now prevalent is worse than Mormonism. efits throat and lung disease, rheuma tism and many other ills that make life a nightmare. And finally when it comes to climate, there is none on the continent superior to ours. In short the finest climate in the world, health, unsurpassed as any quarter of the and globe, unrivalled op- portunitiefjfor allwho are upright and in dustrious, make South Georgia the gar den spot of the world. One Minute CougU Cure gives relief in one minute, because it kills the microbe which tickles the mucous membrane, causing the cough; and at the same clears the phlegm, draws out the inflam- ation and" heals the affected parts. One Minute cough Cure strengthens the lungs, Watds off pneumonia .and is a harmless and never failing cure in all curable cases of coughs, colds and cronp. It is pleasant to take, harmless and good alike to old and young. R. Thomas, jr. Sleeping Car Line to Allan DAILY, VIA Central of Georgia Railway. Lv. ALBANY 8.35 P.K. Lv. ATLANTA 1.40 A. Ax. ATLANTA 7.26 A IS. Ax. ALBANY 7.15 A. Steeper to ruiy for occupancy la Union Station, Atlanta, a! 10:00 P. M. President Elliot of Harvard says no man can work too hard. Eliot nevor edited a newspaper. After being under a state prohibition law for fifty years, Vermont has voted for local option. Bids Por Wood. As chairman of the water works com mittee of the city council. I will receive proposals for furnishing the city of Thomasvil^ with wood for the year 1003. All bids must be handed me before Monday evening. Feb. 9. tf J. L. Beverly. ’ BRIBERY ICASES. The report of the committee on the Lessler bribery case was distinctly dis appointing. It found a young man named Doblin guilty, but went so far as to exonerate the Holland. Submarine Boat Company in whose interests he was lobbying. It is extremely improb able that the young man was spending his own money in behalf of the corpora tion. Such misguided philanthropy is New York World: Objectors to the Robert E. Lee statue lack something of the Robert E. Lee stature. f OTHER SCHEDULES BETWEEN ATLANTA ANP ALBANY As FOLLOWS Charlton county is now claiming to be a second Beanmont, and rich oil fields arc claimed for that region. L». ATLANTA. 7 50: Ar. ALBANY, 3 45, SQUARE-TOED TRUTH. At the present writing we have no de sire to hurl ourselves into Abraham's bosom, hut if wo should desire to do so we wouldn’t lean up against a double barrelled gun and then ..tread on the trigger as many do. Neither wonid we eat a square meal of rough-on-rats, blow out the gas, drink concentrated lye, sit down in the lap of a buzz saw, an unheard of thing. The committee report evidently was made in that spirit which punishes the small offender and lets the large one go .scot fre?,.R ia the same spirit that calls a poor man a thief arid 'a 'rich one a kleptomaniac. The evil of bribery is one that strikes at the very roots of onr liberties, and it can not bo too severely punished. But if can never be stamped Wayeross is going to-havb a $100,000 car factory. Go thou, and do likewise, ThomasvUle! Rocking Chairs! Fancy Tables, with hints to beginner*. A beautiful booklet of thirty-two pages, printed tin two colon, black and red, on enameled paper with the card arrange ments appearing in tttftlr nat ural colors. The cover is> la three colors with a very attract ive design on the title page. This is a work of Interest to all whlBt players and will he lent to any- address upon receipt or six cents in postage. . C. L. STONE President Roosevelt says some.very nice things, hut handsome is, as hand some does. There are no flies on Von Holbein, the Mr. J. H. Merrill has returned from a business trip to New Orleans. Louisville & Nashville R. R. l LOUISVILLE, KY. J I30 North Broad Street, SOUTH GEORGIA'S STORY. The story of the opportunities and ad vantages which southern Georgia offers to home has l would t tants toli - — in .this, great country of ours. Social conditions here pnt this section far ahead of many others. In some places a man must slave until his back is bent and his head is gray before he obtains sufficient wealth to win social recognition. Wealth is the only open sesame to society. But here, if a man is honorable upright and industrious, all is smooth sailing. His position in the • community depends upon his character more than upon his wealth. There is hut little narrow sectional feeling, and no political or religious os-' tracism. Any traces of this that may have once existed are rapidly disappear ing. People of every condition and opinion have come here from every di rection and the constant exchange of views and attrition of mind with mind has produced a broad and liberal spirit. Neighbors dwell together in unity, and all are animated by a common spirit of THE FARMER. People who are not thrown in con •t with the agricultural element of ■ population are apt not to fully see ■ • A large propor- : have no oppor- witli farmers d they natural- sr-relation exist- countiy The ag- men, the ust look It was through its wealth that America became tlie nation that it is, and it is to its interests that the nation must for sl future. ,pers oftentimes clamor for manufactories to the utter exclusion of all tilings else. The south, and this im mediate section in particular, is better adapted to agriculture than to any other industry, and it is neither good economics nor good sense for us to try to force our energies into channels where they will prove less productive. It is almosf a pity we can not all be farmers, for we should all be happier then, at any rate. The life of a fanner is filled with fewer of the worries and hardships and more * of the pleasures of this world than that of the follower of any other vocation on earth. He is his own master from the least even unto the greatest, and whatever is in the man has opportunity, fall and free, to come out. Neither is the life of a farmer en tirely without its pecuniary reward, Money rqtn he made, and what is more to the point, has been made, right here in Thomas county at farming. When a man makes $300 oh two acres of sugar cane, as Mr. G. W. Davis has done, or $376 on seven acres of cotton as Mr. Berry Johnson has done, in this county, he is not far from the road to wealth. With the present prospect in view, the man who exchanges the farm for the city vocation is serving himself but badly. PASSING OF THE ORATOR. At a meeting of the representatives of Georgia colleges held in Atlanta recent ly it was decided to hold no inter-colleg iate oratorical contest during the coming year. Anyone who has witnessed 4110 pan<ie-. monium which reigns at. these affairs, and who has known of the bickerings and contentions stirred up by them, will heave a sigh of relief at their passing. As a matter of fact the day of the old time ranting orator is past and gone. He has held sway in the south longer than elsewhere,’ but even here, he is rapidly passing. There is a tinge of regret in all this, for he was a picturesque character, and we shall not soon see his like again. But he appealed rather to the senses than to reason, more to passion and to prejudice than to logic and law. He was not en tirely a trustworthy person, and if fiction sounded prettier than fact, he spoke fic tion. He often sacrificed sense for sound, and was prone to think that the volume of voice was more important than the quality;of the spoken matter. Now, the man of the hour may not sprinkle star-dust and string roses in the facile fashion of the orator of yore, hut he has something to say and says if. He speaks in a calm, logical, and con vincing fashion. He saves his breath to cool bin broth, or for other useful pur poses. He realizes that his auditors are intelligent thinking and reading people, and cannot be led like a flock of sheep to commit blind folly under the spell of a persuasive voice. He seeks to direct rather than to enchain public opinion. The old time orator was a charming person, but tllternew logician is the bet- agar- smk Did'Not Close For a Week. Heart Trouble Baf fled Doctors. m