Thomasville times-enterprise and South Georgia progress. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1904-1905, July 08, 1904, Image 4

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TURPENTINE SALE. Susina News hems. (By 8. M. Bwch. * The Weekly edition of this payer bag a gun ranteed circulation of two thousand ■ me Hundred, and U read by several ir times that number of people. I 11 would suggest to the people of' this m neighborhood, all of whom surely have d someone interested in their welfare, 1 a that they help to make these items I i. more news^ and isteresting. < i Mr.F. O. Bose who taught ' oer i school last term came over from Met' ■ calf las* Wednesday on a visit. Messrs. B. L. Slater and J. R. JoneJ 1 went to TltomasviUe last Thursday. j; t Mr. J, Bv Wight of Cairo has bought j * the pear crepon the Btaekahear planta tion. Mr. A. 0. KHckey want to Cairo last j i Friday. The relatives and maoy friends of Mrs. E. L. Brotanof Macon, and Mr. T. B. Blackshear of Montgomery, are delighted to have- them once more ammigthem. Mr. aud,Ma. j. M. ; Blackshear are enjoying, a happy re union of all their family. Mr.B. Whitfield Jr,-finished hie con tract to carry the mail- between here and Thomasville last- Wednesday. B. J. Simmons, a colored man- of; Thomas ville. has token the cemmot for the nest four years, and biasnbstitute made (lie first trip last Thursday,-reacting here under the new schedule,, at 3:16 put. The now schedule-is giving very much satisfaction. f Are you in a rut? If so^got out Bos ter Brown's recent advico ssrikea. oa aa being so good, wo give it bore:. “Water will find lu level, so will, everybody else. Vim are where you belong. If you doit's sunk so. get out oi.it;. its ap to you. Noons else is to blame tv AND Gsorgia Progress. her of a family of thirty-two children. This ha* been generally accepted as the largest family in South Georgia. \ ■ Published every Friday by the ; i 312 s .Enterprise Publishing Co. t: ’‘ Wilton M. Hardy, Prealdent John D. McCartney, aae.di traae. At the Timo-Buterprise Building. Thomaeville, Go. Yesterday wae tlie IfiStii. birthday of the American republic. Pessimists to the ooutrary notwithstanding this coun try of ours, is bigger, broader, better in every way than ever before. Entered at the postoffioe at Thomas ville, Ga., as second class mail matter. Andrew Carnegie recently referred to a little incident of hit boyhood days as "the most touching thing in the world.” World's Fair vhntora attach a mod- 6rn meaning to that phrase. The investigating committee hat rec ommended a state auditor. Of course Atlanta will want a state auditorium for him to auditate iu. Drily,Ono Year.... " Six Months... " Threo Months. « Ono Month... Official Paper of Thomas County In some places the “Gloriuua Fourth” means u "glorious drunk,” We are glad to state'that such was not the cose in Thomstvilie. Guaranteed Circulation a,350. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Representative Mitchell of Themes is one of the million of a bili to roUe the salary of Georgia's governor from gfiOoO togSOOO. few day's illness, b was taken. tJ Ochlockoneo for burial Sunday. Mni. A. O. Dickey of lamouin, wae recently a pleasant visitor to her sister, Mrs. E. E. Hose. Ur. Frank Monroe ui Ozell ran down aud spent dun day with his sou,. Ur. W. A. Monroe. Messrs. W. W. l''elnet B. F. 'Uyer, T. E. Dixon, \i. 'h Howard and F. G. Fonrth of July pieuic u. Mouday. There is a movement on foot to uorn. inate The*. E. Watauu of Georgia for preeldout on the populist ticket. Thostate ilupsi'iuteiH of entomology lain a crippled oendilion. No wonder with tnoh a name. tvu.li .1 the Roosevelt is at Ins snmmir home. Let's make it permanent. Death of Mr E. P .sh.suu.rar Man- eeifa. MetJolfe, Git., July J.—On T.iunt,lay moraui a ui»t, a.r. 1-.1.. 1.-.. .. ., uv« ouu ut uur well kuuu h autl popular j toivuimeu, died lieie, after 1111 1.Inert! la,:mg for auiuu three luu., hWj muiu ihau a year lie had been in tug health anil it was kuuwu that i.u ■ could not long survive tlie ravages ut | the diiai* which preyed upon luuij still his deatii came 1 .ueiur- tho lew. ,Tho tale, of the beverage known as “buck” it sqaarely sud fairly a violation of the law. It is said to be more intoxicating than any of the brows, mixtures or conooctions of the distiller. The effect of iho drink would seem to indicate that scoli If the cate. Almost all of the brawls, murders, catting af frays and the like,-which occasionally blrniMi the fair name of onr county are traouiible to the Influence of buck. One of the worst things on earth ft a negro with a buek Jag and a rsxor. Then why. •lioold Its sale be allowed to continue? The good people who have been aroustd to a sense of how importaut It Is to stop tlie sale, are clicuUUug petitioua to have It stopped. When they do this they morel v petition that the law be en forced. The proper method of proced ure is to swnhront warrants.' and insti tute proceedings against those who break the law lor soiling book. Then the law already on the booke will take It* oooree. A few examples of this kind of action by the people and the sale will soon stop. ; Muting the- two good —rstls* ut Thomas and. l^on. Amongst tbs*throug 1 j wo noticed Messrs, a G. Lester, Km- j nuttt Mli(,heil.J. B. Mitchell,-Gringo j Waring. Jeff Dickey, John aiatwvXhofc | Wyoiie. Dr. Oochran, Mr. and Mrs. a. |F. : Dees. Mr. and Mrs. Da*. Dixon, j Mr», H. U. Qaarterman nud- buiulj r 16lr. M. H. Dickey and others ot: Thou- lusvilie. .VljistlsUhrop of Miehigou- Me. tone' Vjs. Jerry Junes of Yaldcsts., MisaeaLohsaad Basie Mar Glower. Mrs. W. R Glower,Mrs. Hattie Odom-. Mrs. £>. D.Ponik, Messrs Mao and,. Julut Clutter, VI i*. Crawford, Tlioe>.Doubw, uud others fruui Cauo. Mis* Margaret Hull of Tnouiasvilie. Leon, cuauty was welt represented by Dr., sstd Mrs. W. F. Robertson aud family,. Mr. aud Mrs. N. Epps. Mr. and Mr*. Thomas Brandon, Mr. Edward Sapp.. Miss Mae Manning, Ret*. Geo. Brown, Ur. Pow ell, Mr. Willis Quartermau. aud sou Willis, Dr. Edgar Stnokland.'aud many others. From tbit community we noticed Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Block- shear, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dickey. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Dickey Jr., Mr. aud Mrs. A. R. Sessions, Mr. and Mis. Richard Dross and family. Meson. LeRoy Dickey, J. R. Jones, Waltee- Brown, W. W. Wright, Sam Slater, Henry Herein, E. *'. Dickey, J. M. Blackshear Jr„ Misses Mary Hayes, Greco Beach, Winnie Sister, , Auuta Lou and Hat. io Blue. • great alum. Lu| bis frieuds and >tved onus throughout I the community. He was luiru iuay 1,; INH); tv us Mine tunes married, ah ui ! Ids wives proecdlug him to the gravet i end is survived'by Ilia egeii inuilier,' ik! biOlher aud sister oiuL four uiuuiiei.. | who liave the sincere sympathy ut ah ' here. He professed faltii«iti Glinst a few days before his ao.uii uni uivd happy in the couaviohsoesa of Iu* Saviour’s love. Ilia remain* were ui. kcl Among the now tmlustnal organize- tious m Georgia lost week were; TUtii.i—Oottongin. Colutuuus -Waterworks; 140,000 far- -milliner factory Sevnumili - gl,000,000 maunfauturing company. Ltthuuia—Kleotrio light plant. Atlauta—1900,000 land company. Tkllapoena—Naval stores' plant. Fo »ytb—Cotton mill. There cull hu nil ubjin-lto 1 to el-su amateur base.ball as a 4u uinur sport. County polities arenas smoitu as sarfa ti of a Georgia meton. 50,000 Free Samples I You Can Get One. THE GOSPEL OF DO. Tltere are many gospels that might well be taken to heart by thorn who are Interested in the welfare of tht» city— or any other. But the chief gospel Hi the gospel of “do." The gospo, of wy is an very well in iu way. It goes a long way. The gospel of do amounts to little with- Ove JOO Danish and Norwegian. eml- gram*, bound for New York, are be lieved to havu been drowned In the Noyih Atlnutto on Jnno 28; Out of neerli 8J0 souls on board the Danish steamer Norge, which left Cojieiiliagen Job* (ii, out, leeuty-suveu are known to be alive, aud for tliu rest no hope is 117,ACa WUUD, tho great vegetable remedy fpr Rheumatism, Catarrh, and, Kidney and Bladder complaints, has mat with almost instantaneous suooaaa be cause it has made soma noteworthy ouroa of very severe cases. Mr. John Post, of the Atlanta Fire Dept., writes: " For months I suffered with my kid ney*. 1 made every effort to get relief, but failed until I accidentally came in out the *ay, but the any without the do, la of no avail. We hare had a great deal of the say In the past, in Thomasville, and on ly a moderate amount of do. It seems now that the action 1* about to displaoe the word. The Young Men's Board of Trade is U> an embryonic body ns yet but It give* every proepeot of on organs iaatkm that wiU work a* well a* pray. The Timea-Enterpriae txpteam* the de vout hope and firmjbellef Hint tnoh will betheone. The committee on school laws, of the boom and watte, that will report to morrow will make a number of impor tant recommendations, tending toward the betterment of county schools. Any movement of this' kind should bring forth hearty support from erery one. Our schools cannot bo too good. ft it sold that the whole town of Al bany is divided between sympathisers of Dr. Broughton and Chief Westbrook who fought recently. The affair will af fect politics for several years, so rumor says, and the Westbrook faction has al ready selected a candidate for Mayor in 1806. Here is a Florida view of it from the Tallahameean: In Georgia when the teachers are paid by the State Instead of the oouaties, they don't alway* gat their cash. The 8t»t* now owee them160,000 which it cannot pay because all avail able funds are required to pay the mem ber* of the Legislatere. Why not pay the teacher* and 1st the member* wait? 6-17-8 United Slnte*. The nninber in the United Suites, Including the area cov ered by the twelfth eensuv, iu the con tinental United States, Alaska and Ha waii, mid Porto Rico, is 0,404,631. The report Indicates that between H and 10 percent, are believed by the census enqmi rators to have some degree of white blood. The center of negro population Is De kalb couuty, Alabama. 1 Almost 1)0 jior Tho movemont for the Ststo Reform- cent of the negroes In 'th» continental atory Is arousing onthasiasm all over United Suites are iu the Southern the State. State*. .The negroes constitute oue- fifteeuth of the city population and about ST;«.*cveuth oil the country popu lation of the coutineotal United States The ue>roe*, unlike the Indians and White*, h .Ve slight excess of females. Illiteracy among them is seven limes greater than among the wlittos. Near ly 4,001,000 in the United States arc en gaged lu gaiurul occupations. The death rate approximates 80 per, cent. ' while that of the whites, under the eamettaiwtattow 1? 87 per-cem. Major E. L. Jelks of tjoitmsu has written the oontrollor goncral to kuow whether the tax collector Micro has the tight tu tax that city’s town hall. Tlie .tax collector has sovrntl times endeav- ■ ored tu collect taxes on the city lmll there, because part* of It are used ft,£ other purposes than pob'lo business. Oontrollur 1 General Wright does not thtnk the property Is taxable and bases Ms opinion on adeolsiou of the Supremo Court m a similar case. pnssrwtrm of a bottle of Black Weed. Tha relief obtained from its ass waa so great before half the firs* bottle hod been used, that I pat adds all other ■nedioine* and am now sound and wall, having beau cured completely by Black Weed. At the same Mm* I had an ag gravated case of Catarrh of the head and throat. Black Weed ha* completely cured this, and my h*ad 1* now as dear as a bell." BLACK WEED is odd by all drug, gist* at f 1.00 a bottle, or wa will mod prepaid upon reodpt of prim. Send Your Name a trial aampla of thk gnat remedy, which wiU be mot abadutdy ft*a, to gether with eu book (wtaintng vain*. Maybe iu called common *en*e be- duo its uncommon. Shoe Sale Ext raord inary. Monday. July 11, 8:30 a. ixK we will open our doors on what we expect to make the greatest Shoe Sale ever held here. Lots, and lots of odds and ends e-oae pair of a kind, etc. wi’l bo sacrificed regardless of cost All our Shoe Stock will be specially priced for this sal* except “Dixie Girl,” the best sh~e in the world at the price, and worth its price in gold any day in the year. Other good! things will be sandwiched’ in at ridiculously low prices to make tbe >ale more in teresting. A Shoe and a fit for every foot, and a price for every pocket book- Sain closes Saturday, J»ly 23, a prize tor every customer spend ing $1, A. F. CHlIRCflWELL & Co. SUrlr Corner.. Thomasvilla; Ga. Newjdea !0c oapsr pit ern> !KM5?Jt;W«5553»K55MKWM!»55Mi55S| I Our Customers g I »re getting used to looking up I our ads for new ba« gains lor tney I g ^ now we only advertise genuine | bargains and we kno v it pays § us not to disappoint them. 2 <|( Granite Saucepan, with a coiten, the kind you always paid 2Sc(or, our low price I qt Tin Bucket, sold the world over tor 5 cent again it is cut to 3c. Suits For Children. Union Melton dark gray ground bone stripes and brown ; overplaidjdauble breasted suits. The proper thing for the surnmat months, worth $1.98, our cut price $1.28 Children’s Norfolk Suits. With sailor collars, dark blue around double breasted, belt attached to coat with nickel buckle, worth $2.25, our low price of course $1-37- 118 Broad Street.