The Daily times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1925, July 23, 1889, Image 2

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THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE. JOHN TRIPLETT, - - • Editor. S. B. BURR, ■ Business Manager. fhe Daily TiHss-EsTrsriiiHK is publish'd every morning (Monday exc-pted.) The TVikxlt Tmes-EsTERnum is published every Saturday morning. ISmscnioTios Ratkf.J Dailt Tmss-KsTEKrntsK, W ir.*LY “ $5 on . l oo Daily Advebtis no Rates. •Transient Rates.—$1.00 per square for the first insertion, and 50 evi ls for ea h subse quent insertion. One Square, one month, - - - $ h no One Square, two months - - - - * nn One Square, three month., - - - I'J 00 One Square, sii months, - - - - -0 no One Square, twelve mont is, - - - 55 00 Subject to change by special arrangement. M. B. BI RR, Rnslauu Mniinger. ; Bt:aiKEM Min t! Parties leaving Thomasrills for the sum mer ean have the TiBEs-KuTgnrmsE sent to any address for 50 rents per monlli. Ad dresses ean be changed as often as is desired. TUESDAY, JCLT 25, IPS!. An exchange says: “Keep your eye on Blaine.” Suppose Ben Ilutler lie employed to watch the man from Maine. Butlca could keep an eye on him it he wcje going in differenu ci- rections. The Can’t-Get-Aways will come up smiling on the last round, this fall. Though, in some instances, there may be some disfigurements, they will be found still in the ring. The Haytien soldier is paid 82 per - month. That is he is promised that amount. The average black soldier in Hayti; they are all black over there; would rather plav soldier at 82 per month, than to work on a farm at 82 per day. It is to be hoped that Fred Douglas will do some reforming in Hayti. John L. Sullivan “hopes to spend a portion of next winter in Florida.” 'Then we retract all we have ever said in that gentleman’s disfavor. It is part of the policy of the Tintes-Uuion (and in this case a very large part) never to offend visiting strangers.— Times-Uniou. A young man was married the other day in Eatonton to his fiance, on his death bed. He lived but a short time after the marringc. What would have b(!5n his wedding hells, Muffled forth .Jlic slow, solemn sound which told of death. ; The man who appointed Tanner at the bidding of the G. A. R., and who eaid the claims of soldiers “should not be weighed in apothecary’s scales,” is not the man to remove the commis sioner of pensions. Tanner is there— and there to stay. The St. Nicholas, a Savannah steamer, loaded with 500 colored excursionists, hound for Brunswick, ran into a drawbidge of the Tybce road on Saturday night. Two were killed and some thirty odd wounded. The disaster was caused by the watch man at the draw displaying the wrong lights. Hon. W J. Northern and Col. L. F. Livingston arc classed among the candidates for the democratic nomi nation for governor of Georgia. They were in Atlanta the other day to at tend a Farmers’ Alliance meeting, but it was noticed that they circulated vei^Treely with the politicians, and that they never lost a good chance to shake hands.—News. A Trusty. Mrs. Mary Trusty, of Brunswick, is advertising lor her husband, who, she says has deserted her and his children. Mr. Trusty, is, apparently, no lon ger the trusting man he was, when, in the callowness of youth, he called her his “sugar plum” his “heart’s delight,” his “tootsy wootsy” aud so forth. And she evidently trusts him no longer. In fact she distrusts him, and warns others not to trust him. A trusty husband, as well as a trusty friend, is hard, to find. Although chain gang keepers trust the "trusty” *t seems that Mrs. Trusty does not trust her Trusty. \Vc trust that the connubial cloud, which now lowers over the Trusty household, will break away, letting in, again, the sunshine of married iclicity which once bright ened the hearth stone of the Trusty’s. But we cannot trust ourselves to pur- cue the subject further, lest we fall into* sentimental strain. Howto Benefit Your Town. There is genuine truth and good practical common sense in the follow ing article from the Charlotte Chron icle, which our best ami most useful citizens and business men Will not fail to appreciate: Every now and then some deserv ing, mid enterprising newspaper gains the good will of small towns by elab orate articles on them. The most that the article generally does is to tickle I lie vanity and gratify the pride of (be citizens of the town written up. One Ibiring write up of a small town in a state paper could baldly be expected to do more than compliment the people. “Blowing” helps a town if it has anything to blow about; but the best advertisement that any town can have is a live, thriving paper, ciowdcd with well writen advertisements of every business inthe place, from doctor to blacksmith. The reason advertise nients in the local paper makes a good advertisement of the town, is that the world knows that advertising pays; and people know that where all the business men of a town advertise they must be prosperous, because prosperity is the inevitable result of liberal advertising. There are some towns whose citizens will give liberally to see the town written up glowingly in a paper in a larger town, while the borne paper inevitab'y and unanswerably gives the lie to the fulsome and paid for pulf, by its own meagrely patronized advertising columns. Advertising in the borne paper brings immediate results, from pat- rorns, and it brings collateral profits from the benefit that every town de rives from a local paper crowded with lioruc'advcrliscmcnts. A column puffin a foreign paper does not equal a one inch advertise ment in the poorest borne weekly, in immediate or collateral results. If you want to build up your own trade, advertise in your home paper; if you want to build up your town, build tip your homo paper. Why He Turned Him Loose- Judge McAllister publishes the fol lowing card in the Nashville Ameri can: I disire to stale to the public that in de livering inv judgment in tlie case of Jolin L. Sullivan I did not mention the name of Gov. Robert !,. Taylor, nor did 1 ever refer to the practice of the executive department of the state of Tennessee in refusing to ex tradite for misdemeanors. I based my judgment wholly upon my own construction of the constitution of the United 5tales and the statutes of the stale of Tennessee. The reports of the press so lar ns they attempt to divide the responsibility of my judgment between myself and the governor of the state are wholly without foundation. If there was any error or wioug in the discharge ot John I.. Sullivan 1 desire the poople of Tennessee lo know I assume the whole responsibility. Gov. Taylor was not In the city ul Nashville at the time. .1 discharged. John I,. Sullivan because there was no requisition trom the governor of Mississippi nor any warrants of extradition from the governor of Tennessee. The ques tion of extradition for misdemeanors cut no figure whatever in inv judgment. \V. K. Mc.Uistkii. Judge. The wholesale criticisms of the press all over the country, have drawn the Judge out. The plea that no requisition papers were produced, will not satisfy the public. It has been the custom, from time immemorial, for criminals to be held until the nec essary papers efluld he had. Judge McAllis.cr committed a grave mis take when be released Sullivan. This is the universal verdict. Hereafter, at least if Judge McAllister presides itt the ease, a murderer, or any other criminal,-can go lice in Tennessee— unless the officer who arrests lias all the usual documents in such cases in bis pocket. And this does not happen once in a hundred times. Tennessee, under the rulings of Judge McAllister, and flic cranky course of Gov. Taylor, bids fair to be come a refuge for criminals. The administration is trying lo keep cool at Dccr Park, Md. It is kept pretty warm at Washington—even in the coldest weather. It is right warm work, running this big government, when you come to think about it. Most men have a very refined and delicate sense tf what is due from others to themselves; hut the one who lias the same delicate sense of what is due from himself to others—he’s the man the modern Diogenes is hunting for. —Ti mcs-Union. Latest Telegrams. A SAD SCENE ON THE RAIL. Two Men Cold in Death and Three Badly Injured. Brunswick, ( 1a.. July 21.—This morning shortly after 12 o’clock terrible accident occurred on the East Tennessee road alxiut four miles from this city by which two men were killed, three badly injured and one fatally hin t, and a passenger engine jiud four freight ears completely de molishcd. The killed are: George Douglass, an engineer; Joseph Ames, a fireman. The in jured are: Vardmastor Itohinett; A. J. Anderson, a car dea ler; Daniel Scott, also a car cleaner; The two ear cleaners are colored. WRECK OK THE EM.INK. Across the track and lying on its side was engine No. 20fi with one pair of its driving wheels m the air and its smoke stack byried three feel in U e earth behind it, and three or four Icet from the track. The coal box was turned bottom up with a flat ear piled across it. Beneath these two men were cold in death. The engineer lay beneath the ponderous wheels of the engine and only his head and shoulders could he seen through the debris. A few feet hack lay the fireman, crushed and bleeding, though lie had evidently died from suffocation by steam. DIKII WITH A PRAYER ON HIM 1.1l’.S. Engineer -Simons reached the scene and his. fireman, Edward Owens, hastened to (he injured. Fireman Ames was still alive and was praying. He called Owens and requested him to tell his mother that lie tried to die a Christian. He commenced praying nfter ho spoke those words and died in a few minutes after with a prayer on his lips. Engineer Douglnssncvcr uttered a word alter he fell, having evidently died immediately. Washington, July 21.—Secretary Noble, it is stated, asked the Presi dent to remove Commissioner Tanner last week, telling him that he would stand the corporal no longer. The President is said to have responded that on account ot Corporal Tanner’s G. A. It. connections, lie could not re move hint, but instead would give him a lecture. This lie did with some se verity before leaving for Dccr Park. If Corporal Tanner obeys the Presi dent there will he less extravagance and less declaration at the pension of fice. New York, July 21.—The stable and carriage storage place of Moses Weil, on East noth street, was burn ed this morning, with 125 horses and fifty carriages. The loss is $45,000. I.ima, O., July 21.—There is a movement on foot looking to the con solidation of all the natural gas com panies in the Ohio and Indiana field, and the formation of a trust. It is understood that this airangement has the sanction of Calvin S. Brice, Oliver II. Payne and other Standard Oil magnates. They now own a majority of the stock of the companies in Ohio and Indiana, and will buy up the stock of the remaining independent compa nies. Akkeand, July 21.—The steamer Zcalandia, which has just arrived here from Honolulu, reports that all is quiet at Samoa. The American war ship Alert had left Honolulu with supplies for the Nipsic, which was waiting at Fanning island. The Alett was to take the Nipsic in tow. About the Georgia Legislature. The Augusta Chronic'c pithily and pertinently remarks that “a member who is not willing to work on Saturday should he left at home." Just so long as members carry free passes, so long will absenteeism be the erder, on Sat urdays and Mondays. What right have these members to leave their seats and neglect the work they con tracted to do ? When a resolution was introduced the other day to keep members at their post, except for providential causes, a member, a Mr. Coggins, moved to refer the resolution to the lunatic asylum committee. It is to be hoped that Coggins will lie left at home next time. When the resolution was put to expedite business by enforced attendance, except for the cause mentioned, only two men voted for it, while more than ninety voted against it. Is this honest, drawing $4 per dav Irom the State and galavantin around on a tree pass ? Wounded in (hr Army. I was wounded in the leg at the battle ot Stone River, Dec. 31st, 1862 My blood was.poisoned from the effects of the wound, and the leg swelled to double its natural size, and remained so for many years, 'lhe poison ex tended to my whole system, and I suffered a thousand deaths. Nothing did me any good until I took Swift’s Specific, which took the poison out of my blood, and enabled me to feel my- sell a man again. S. S. S. is the rem edy for blood poison. John Con wav, London, O' <nlarrh ill Ciiildrcn. Our little hoy Stokes, now eleven years old, had catarrh front the time he was three until he was seven years of age. Sometimes his breathing was heavy, and a constant discharge from the nose. He had more or less treat ment lor four years, but without any benefit. We gave him Swift’s Specific, and it soon cured him sound and well. 1'his was four years ago, and there has been no return of the disease. Mrs. W. I’. Kknnon, Salem, Ala. NOTICE Owing to the fac t tlmt f shall be very isy looking after my pear crop, and until further notice, 1 have turned over my intcr- n the market business to Mr. Noah Page, will conduct* the same in his own right. JOSHUA CARROLL. iilv 22, 1 ws:»-d2twlt. ill f N'OTICK. without cost, chemicals to puritv of quinine sold by me at 10c e. * S. J. CASSKIJ3. FOR SALE. Vii head of young horses and mares, u three to eight years old; home-raised in the best breeds tlmt have been brought his county, and most of them well broke, bided is the trotting stallion, Sam Jones, r yeui^old (sire Revoke, dam Whirlwind), rks well anywhere, double or single, ami woman or child can drive him that can vc any horse. They will be sold. I i t exped to get the value for any of m, so any party who wants good stock any purpose, will find this probably the t opportunity that will he offered in this AI S' hot to I matt i acres of land. W. M. SMITH, Poverty Hill Farm. how you fine selections, and give trices on wall paper, window shades, picture and room mouldings, fur- ash, doors, blinds. id (J. W. FERRILL. JUST ARRIVED, I»allard's fine Hours—Pauline and Marabel. French candies. Frisli ereamc/y butter; good Western Goshen at 20 ets. per pound. A. C. DROWN, 7 20-:;t«l The Jackson St. Grocer. 1 fail to try a can of l*icke!t\s Uoyal Raking l’owRtirs; guaranteed second to none in quality. 1 lb cans 2o ecu Is, arters lor Drags! REID 8s CULPEPPER’S * ' ^ 120-122 Broad St., - Thomasville, Ga :School and Blank Books, Stationery,: * Of every style. Pianos and Organs, Sheet Music, Ex. <j BEAR IN M I X 1 > -THAT THEY HAVE THE- Handsomest and Best kept Drug Store IN GEORGIA. Where you van liml fresh and pure drugs and get prescriptions compounded at all [hours, day or night, by competent Pharmacists. They use only SquibVs preparations in the prescription department and guarantee goods and prices. REID A CULPEPPER, ISO-132 Broad St. -AT- L. STEYERMAN & BRO.’S. 'X’txt© Cases o At 31-2 Cents per Yard. R,EM!E3VE BBT?. THE PLACE: L. Steyerman <& Bro.’s. One Case 4-4 Bleaching At 0 l-2c. CLOTHIHQ! CLOTHING-! Our Bargains the talk of the|town. Com petition completely baffled. $J^=»Gall and be convinced. L. STEYERIVIAN & BRO., PIMPLES TO SCROFULAR. A Positive Cure for Every Skin, Scalp and Blood Disease except Ichthyosis. INoriuuU H Venn*, llcnd.* Arm« and llrennt n Noiitl Ncnli, JSark covered willi Worn*. Rent Doctors* nnd Medi cine* fail. Cured by Cutieura Itenac- dies* a I a rout of $.’1.75. I have used the Cuticura Remedies with the best results. I have used two .bottles of tho Cuticura Resolvent, three bottles of CutiCura and one cake of Cuticura soap, and am cured of tcrribje scalp and skin disease known as pso riasis, better a would li ml \ solbl scab, ami was at the time I bo- the Cuticura Remedies. My ed with scabs from my elbows to my shoulders, my breast was almost one sol id scab, and n»y back covered with sores vary ing in sizo from a penny to a dollar. I had doc. od with all the host doctors with no relief, ....il used many different medicines without effect. My case was hereditary, and I began to think, incurable, lmt it began to heal from the first application of Cuticura. f AUCRER RUSSEL, pcshjer, OJifo. Skin Disease O Year* tinv sri. I am thankful to say that I have used thcCu- tieura Remedies for about eight months with great success, and consider myself entirely cured of salt slicuni, from which I have suffered for six years. I tried a number of medicines and tun of the best doctors in the country, but found nothing that wonld pffeef a cufc until i used your remedies. MRS, A, McCJ.AFLJN, Morette, Mo, Tlir lVoi’»i Case of Hciofular Cnred. We have Iron selling your Cuticura Romcdics for years, and have tho first complaint yet to receive from a purchaser. Oue of tho urarst ease* of Serofular I evor saw cured by the use of live bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, Cuticura and Cuticura soap. TAYLOR *Sr TAYLOR, Druggist, Frankfort, Kan. Ciilictirn Rrmedics. rpcsjps of agonizing humiliating^ •ff burning, scaly, and pimply diseases of lie skin, * ' * * “ ‘ ■ •*“*- iteh y, and pimp! „ . ... alp and binod, with loss of hair, from pimples to serofular, except possibly ich thyosis. Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, oc.:Soap, ; Resolvent, $1. Prepared by tho Potter Drug and Chemical Co., lloston, Mass. fgr»8cn<t for “How to Cure Skin Diseases,” 04 pages, M> illustrations*! and 100 testimonials. and oily skin prevented by CutiouraSoap, WEAK, PAINFUL, BACKS, Kidneys and Uterino Pains and AmjcsJWeaknesses, relieved in one minute bjr flVj) the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster, the llr>t and only pain killing plaster. Now, instan taneous. infallible. 25cents.. CATARRH CURED, health and sweet breath secured, by Shilol’sCatarrh Remedy Price bO cents. Nasal Injector free MARVELOUS MEMORY DISCOVERY. Onlr CJenoIno Sr.trm of .Titulary Training. I'our UeoU. I.r.rnt.l |n one reading. Mii|d wrundrrin* cured. Every ehU4 *n«t nd*»U vrently benefltted. * Groat inducemoitta to C irmpondenca Glosses, the Hrl.nli. a, Judah r. W,K.T. THOMASVILLE Bottling Works, l. .SCHMIDT, Proprietor. Headquarters for pure wrhnnnted hover-' ages, at wholesale and retail. Rest soda water with pure fruit juice flavors. Ice Cream Parlors Specially fitted up for the accommodation of the Ladies. 12HJBROAD STREET. THOMASVILLE. j ti Tlioitiasvillc On draught also.gtheJJJnew Mexican beverage, “FRUI MIZ.” Non-alcoholic, delicious, cooling, vitalizing. A NERVE TONIC, This delightful bever- e is not only the most palntable drink er dispensed from tl|C soda fountain, but is as wcUa perfect tank’and system vjtalUcr. It improves the appetite, aids digestion and maintains the normal tone of healthy func tions. Its Properties: Prepared from j the nutritious properties of pure fruit juices, combined with the ex tract tram n small tropical plant found in lower Mexico, ot which the medicinal prop erties arc invaluable, and its favir delicious^ It Cannot Be Used to Excess. Not a foaming gas drink, causing belching of wind and unpleastmt effects after drink ing. No etheral extracts or liquors, but a solid thirst-quenching, delicious drink; ftn extremely pleasant uad efficient tonic, over which nine out often ptrsonsare cn husias- tic with praise. Everybody Likes It, Everybody.Wan^ II, Everybody Drinks It, “FRUI MIZ,” the finest beverage in the world. * DISPENSED RY L. SCHMIDT, Proprietor Thomasville Bottling Works, FUNGS AND ORGANS W. S. Brown, tho Jeweler, has se cured the agency for nil the llrut-class rianos and Organs, which ho is selling at the lowest prices for cash or on long time. Tlioso destring to purchase will do well to learn Ills prices and terms. Kriil A Culpepper are keeping up with the procession, they have secured the agency of lie famous Star Mineral Water, the finest reparation known lor dyspepsia. It is unruotecd to cure. 4 C tf FOlt UKNT, The Episcopal Uectory, on McKean Are* nue. Possession given at once. Apply to Rky. C. I. LaRocqc, tf. Fletcherrllle. Variety WORKS. Reynolds, Hargrave & Davis, Prop’rs. Manufacturers andlOealers IN ROUGH & DRESSED ' LUMBER. Lathes, pickets, SHINGLES, MOULDINGS, BRACKETS, SCROLL WORK, MANTLES, * BALUSTERS* STAIR-RAILS Newel Posts, OFFICE, CHURCH & STORE, " Furniture. STORE FRONTS. Wire Screen Doors nnd Windows * Sash, Doors and BJinds TO ORDER. STAIR BUILDING, AND INSIDE HARDWOOD FINISH A SPEC1ALTY.| ^^CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. NOTICE. All male persons in the city of Tliomus- rille, between the ages of ID nnd 50, except those exempt by law, are subject to street duty. They have the option of paying |5 lor street tax, and in default thereof, must work 6 days on the street. Those not ex empt and who do not pay the tax arc order ed to meet at city hall Monday, July 22J, at 9 o'clock, a. ill., ready for work. E. It. Wuidiiox, T-10-tf Ch. Street Com. Grits aro just as cheap as ever Pickett's. l’ickclt Las just received a nice lot of Mt. Vernon Boneless Bacon and Slionldcrs. Call and sec them. Conic and get a can of I’iekctt’s Uoyal Baking Powder,and if it doesn't give you satisfaction your money will be refunded. Do you want a barrel of flour?. If so, come up lawn soon In flic morn ing. Call on everybody wlm bandies the article, get their lowest cash prices, Jew them, make them out at each other, and then cornu lo Pickclt’s and buy it 50 cents cheaper than (licit- lowest prices. TAKE A REST. Excursion tickets, at low rates will he sold to nil summer resorts throughout the country by the East Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia Railway, commencing Jnnc 1st, good to return on or before October 31st. Fast train service with Pullman cars. B. W. WRENN, Gen. Puss, and Ticket Ag