The enterprise. (Pembroke, Bryan County, Ga.) 1???-19??, March 14, 1913, Image 2
Pembroke Enterprise PUBLISHED WEEKLY. PEMBROKE, GA. - — J" — I This blessed winter wearies nobody with Ite prolonged monotony. • _ ' A New Jersey man Is experimenting ; raising wingless chickens. A fowl act tba.t. It Is only Just that women should receive men’s wages, and married i u'omen do. All of the new counterfeit money Is in the shape of $5 and |lO bills. We should worry. Aviators are to be put through a \ rigid test. Flexible and resilient tests would be better. Another argument in favor of spring is that it will take the baseball play ers off the stage. "'ln God we trust,’" says the To ledo Blade, "is not on the. new nickel Nor on the old one. Approximately 175,000,000 persons i traveled In the London tubes last year. । What proportion sat down? The Brazilians make beautiful lace j from the fiber of the bannas. Rather a delicate food stuff, though. Pittsburg has started an antl nolso crusade. Lots of college town would do well to follow the uxample. A woman remarks: "The best hus bands are the most accomplished liars.” They've had experience A Kansas City parson says that ths turkey trot causes divorces. Hitting a fast trot like that always does. Sweden exported 35,000,000 pounds of matches during the last six months. No other country is a match for that A canon of an English church bas ■written a farce , that is said to be a corker. Evidently he hit the bulls eye. Spain is to have a government school of aviation. Wouldn't it be a good idea to sentence revolutionists to it? One octogenarian in Boston says the only rule he knows for long life Is this: "Keep your temper and don't ■worry." Boston papers are making a great stir over the discovery of In unkissed girl. But they have not Printed her picture. । 'Age Princeton studiits have SEWER PIPE HOTEL — i Starving Youth Led “Home” by Another Waif in Paris. Boy Shares In Outcast's Fare— Strang er Able to Rescue Guide But Other Inmates Perish When Stove Upsets. 1 Paris.—Robert Epiphane was look- I Ing down at tho river wondering. ■He was seventeen years old. and whenever the police arrested him his । trade was entered on the books as I "mattress-maker." Some years ago I Robert had worked at mattress mak I ing. That is to say, he had a vague recollection of combing wool for an old woman who made over mattresses outside house doors and who gave Robert something to eat when he re fused to do any more work on an empty stomach. But that was a long time ago. Rob ert Epiphane was not quite sure how long ago it was, because he had bee.n i hungry for a long time. He had slept lon a bench on the boulevards the I night before. Then the miracle happened. Kob i ert Epiphane was looking at. the wa ter and wondering. And as he looked i at the water a little boat drifted by— I an absurd little boat made of an old i cigar box, a bit of lead pencil and string. Robert. Epiphane looked at it lazily. Then ho shouted aloud. He had scon a penny piece—-two whole sous!- in the cigar box. Rob ert Epiphane never knew how he got. down to the water. "Halves," said a voice, in a whis per, behind him. Robert Epiphane gave a whimper that was meant to be a how) of rage. Then, slipping the penny into his mouth (it was weak, but it was safer than in his pocket), he struck blindly at another raga muffin, who caught him as he fell. The other ragamuffin was standing over him as lie sat on the muddy ground. "Well, old man,” ho whis pered, in the hoarse, voiceless whis per In which he had said "Halves ' the voice which starvation and ex posure gives to Paris wastrels "Well, old man, and what about it?" ‘lts mine," said Robert Epiphane; "I can get a bit of sausage and bread for it. "Come with me," said the other. They had not far to go. On the way the second scarecrow, whose name he told Robert was Maurice Faction, was spinning a fairy tale which amused Robert but which he did not believe. It was all about a forgotten sower pipe a beautiful big piece of piping furnished with sack ing and a stove —a big pipe In a quiet corner where no police .ever came, whore Maurice Faction :^d three Other^wn, Jules. George aid Henri, RIDING IN W PARK .’’s / - A MW I \i .4 3 ‘ 'z "■ '■ ; ' 'S ■ ^ ’ * £ £ / ''4 iBL tw i B* - v * * y 9 ' J OIL* ' vW*'Nt* Tho mild weather in Washington has brought out the equestrians in large numbers. Our lllustrilon shows Miss Dasha Allen, daughter of Major Henry T. Allen, U. 8. A , iking her mount over a barrier in Rock Creek Park. paper, there was a banquet jtm poor of Paris call It "arlequin.^ . a mixture of scraps of cold foof ‘ the restaurants, and you get qA ' t /| lot for a half penny, for bones ‘, salable commodities, and the quln" men have a better use folße ! fat than to seH it for food. rnust haveJuTn quite threv^B ; worth thej^Bt thq newspaper J | ert mat^^^Bish for p ha-^bjJHIL each other. The other men glanced ,at Robert, grunted and made room ' for him. Jules looked at him keenly, I pocketed the penny and then went to sleep again, satisfied. Ho was dreaming that the smoke : was choking him when he woke up ; Somebody had kicked the stove over, i The other four were sound asleep and stupetiAa The palace was a stifling VI s f° l ’Fht with the wooden WES wm<»d—Aonirc imwssn Sole Agents American Agricultural Chemical Company Complete Fertilizers Sodas Acids Phosphates, Etc. 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