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THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE.
JOHN TRIPLETT, - - - Editor.
S. B. BURR, - Business Manager.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1S89.
Daily Times-Enterprisb H published
every morning (Monday exc'ptcd.)
The Wirkly Timks-E.ntkrprisr is published
every Saturday morning.
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One Square, twelve montie, - - - 3r > 00 j in Georgia. Your investments shall
Sublet to change by Eaerial arranf -met. I fae prot ~ ected » A ] arge majority ot
| The Olive Bill Defeated.
i The following special to the Times-
I Enterprise was received yesterday:
Atlanta, Ga , Oct. 16,18S9.
Editor Timci-Enterprise:
The Olive bill was defeated this
morning by a vote of 77 for to 71
against- It will not be reconsidered.
A. T. McIntyre, Jr.
It is proper 10 explain that 88 votes
are necessary to pass a bill, under the
constitution of the state.
'his puts at rest a measure which
threatened to interfere most serftmsly
with railroad building in Geotgta.
Happily it has been disposed of in a
manner which says to capitalists: ‘-In-
LATEST TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. I .Skins on Fire-
A FRIGHTFUL ACCIDENT IN CIN
Cl N NAT!.
A Congressman Dead—Alabama
Floats 4 Per Cent Bonds—New
York City in Darkness—Ea^-Gov
Perry, of Florida, Dead—Mar
ried in Cotton Bagsrinjr—The
Lease Bill Up Again.
ft. IS. Etritit, Iln.lnc. Mnnogrr.
It is now thought that the visit of
the Czar to the Emperor of Germany
will smooth the wrinkled front of war
in Europe.
The leg-stature should settle the
lease and bettfrmenl questions. I hey
should rot po-tpone them, placing the
responsibility on the next legislature.
The legislature never performed a
better day's work than that of yester
day. It drove the last nail in the cof
fin of the Olive bill. Well .done, een-
tlemen; we feel like forgiving you for
all your short-coinings.
Riley's military bill, appropriating
seven thousand dollars to the voluntee r
soldiery of the state, has passed the
house. It will no doubt become a
law. This will enable military com
panies to go into camps once a year.
Che amount should have been larger
In the convention of colored men
of Illinois, at Springfield, on Wedne-s
day, Johu C. Joues, of Chicago, said
that “there is not a charitable insti
tution in Illinois, uuder state or conn
ty control, in which colored people
get the same treatment that is accord
ed to whites.” And then the conven
tion proceeded to pass resolutions
denouncing the treatment of the ne
groes at the south, in whose charita
ble institutions they are accorded
privileges denied them in Illinois.—
Atlanta Journal.
The Augusta Chronicle says: “cot
ton bagging scored a good point at
the recent fire on the steamer Katie,
on the Savahnah river. Flames
which fed on the open, inflammable
jute bales, seemed to skip the closely
woven cotton wrap entirely. This is
a practicle proot of the excellency of
cotton bagging, and seems to confirm
the fire test made in New Orleans last
spring. This a vital excellence if it is
maintained, and will give cotton bag
ging a boom in spite of the alleged
weakness as a cover. Let the Alliance
pien and their friends make a note of
this."
There is to be another convention
to consider the cotton bagging ques
tion, and it is hoped that it will do
more good than the convention held
in New Orleans last month. The
farmers’ alliances of the various south
ern states have called a convention to
meet in St. Louis, Dec. 7, to endeavor
to find a practical solution of the bag
ging problem. All the cotton ex
changes in the country have been in
vited to send representatives to this
meeting. The farmers realize the nec
essity of assistance from the exchanges
in this matter and hope that some plan
may be devised that will insure the
co-operation of the men who raise the
cotton and the men who handle it.
There is httie doubt that their com
bined and persistent action would bring
Liverpool to terms and secure just
recognition for cotton bagging.—Tele
graph.
We lake the lol owing items from
the Macon Telegraph :
In Maryland they believe that the
punishment should he made to fit the
crime. The penalty for wife-heating
is the whipping post and it is being
used with very salutary effects.
Editor Larry Gantt, of Athens, who
was already the possessor of two Geor
gia newspapers, has added an orange
grove to his worldly treasures. The
next thing <we know Mr. Gantt will be
buying railroads.
E. W. Abbott, an officer at the
Massachusetts reformatory, owns the
largest dog in the country. It is of
the lion breed of mastiffs, weighs 182
pounds, is thirty-three inches high and
•be feet, eleven inches in length.
the people of the state will heartily en
dorse the action of the legislature.
Pay For Pensioners.
Ati.ata, Ga., Oct. 14.—The follow
ing circular was issued to the ordina
ries of the various counties to-day :
EXKCTTIVE DePARTMENT.
Atlanta, Ga , Oct. 11, l8Sf».
To the Ordinary:
Dear Sir—Governor Gordon instructs me
to inform you, and through you the benefi
ciaries of the law granting allowances to
dUabled soldier?, that the payment to them
for the year ending October 24, 1 P.90, will
begin the first of February, 1850.
Negroes Not Invited.
The Boston Herald says that
“there are large tracts of land in
Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine,
Connecticut, and even in Massachu
setts, where to-day you can buy a
farm for a song, and where Fiuns,
Swedes, Icelanders or French Cana
dians are cordially invited to succeed
the Anglo-Saxons, who have run
away to CDgage in more luciative
enterprises.”
White people from every foreign
country, it will be seen, are invited to
come and take these farms, which can
be had “for a song,” but no invitation
is extended to the negroes of this
country. As the negroes of the south
arc so near at haud, and the republi
cans of tha states named above insist
that they are badly treated in the
southern states, it must he regarded
as passing strange that they are not
included in ths invitation to take for
a song the abandoned farms of Ver-J
rnont, New Hampshire and Massachu
setts, where tiie Republican majorities
are so large.—Atlanta Journal.
CALLED TO BROOKLYN.
Dr. Kerr Tendered the Pastorate of the
First Reformed Church.
Rev. Robert 1*. Kerr, D. D., the
eloqueut and beloved pastor of the
First Presbyterian church of this
city, has received a unanimous call to
the First Reformed church of Brook
lyn, N. Y.
A committee of two business men,
bankers and prominent in the nfiairs
of t lit? church, waited on Dr. Kerr
yesterday and spent two hours urging
his acceptance of the call.
Dr. Kerr assured his visitors that
he appreciated most highly the action
of the church and their expressions
of kindness ami admiration, but
gave them no assurance as to what
he will do. lie only promised to
take the matter under advisement and
his callers left on the evening train
for home.
Dr. Kerr came here a few years
ago from Petersburg, and has won the
affection and admiration not only of
his own congregation, but of the
citizens generally. He is an able
preacher and a zealous worker in the
Master's cause.
The field to which he is called is
one of the most inviting in this coun
try. The congregation is just now
preparing to erect in the more fash
ionable part of Brooklyn a house that
will cost 8300,000.—Richmond Dis
patch.
——
Here are the mortgages held
by eastern capital on western farms:
Illinois $200,000,000
Indiana 175,000,000
Ohio 360,000,000
Michigan 125,000,000
Wisconsin
Minnesota .
Iowa
Missouri
Nebraska
Kansas
100,000,000
70,000,000
100,000,000
100,000,000
25,000,000
50,000,000
Lawyer—Do you understand the
nature of an path, madam ? Witness
—Well, I should say I did. My
husband took ofl the screens yosterday,
and is putting up the stove pipes to
day.—New York Sun.
Os win to, N. Y., Oct. 15.—Hon
Newton \V. Nutting, representative
in congress from tlie Twenty-seventh
district ol tills state, died at his ■resi
dence here this afternoon, aged 49.
MoNioo.MEP.y, Ala., Oct. 15.—
Gov. h'eay has sold, to parties in New
York, 8904,000 worth of Alabama
bonds hearing 4 per cent, interest, to
replace the same amount at 6 per
cent, bonds which are due Jan. 1,
1890. The price paid for the 4s was
101 1-5 0.
New York, Oct. 15.—New York
is again in a state of semi-darkness to
night. The Brush Electric Light
Company and the United States Elco-
tric Light Company continue to cut
oil’tlic-ir currents pending the argu
ment of the injunction cases against
ihcm in the supremo court chambers.
Pensacola, Fla., Oet. 15.—Pri
vate telegrams received in this city
tills evening from Kerrville, Tex.,
announce the death of Gen. E, A.
Perry, ex governor of Florida, which
occurred at that point this morning.
The family of the deceased are with
the remains, which will be brought to
ibis --ity for -ntemtcnl.
Cincinnati, (),, Oct. 15.—A
frightful catastrophe occuircd be
tween 12 aud 1 o’clock to-day on the
Mount Auburn inclined plain, which
lies at the head of Main street, and
reaches to n height of between 250
and 390 feet in a space i f perhaps
2,000 feet or less. The steel cable
broke and the ear shot, with lightning
like rapidity, down the incline. Of
the nine persons in the ear, five were
killed outright, and four boflly in
jured.
Ralekiil N. C„ Oct. 15.—The
largest crowd ever seen at a fair in
this state attended the fair to-day.
Tho chief attraction was the mnrriage
of W. M. Bateman and Miss
Josephine Nowlcs, of Washington
county. The ceremony took place at
the grand stand, at the fair grounds,
at noon. The bride and groom were
both attired in costumes of southern
cotton bagging, and were attended by
four couples all costumed in the same
material.
Atlanta, <Ga., Oct. 15.—The
Western and Atlantic lease bill re
ported by substitute in the Senate
this morning, after kicking around
the committee room for upward of
six weeks, embodies seme very im
portant changes. One of them avoids
the uncertain “natural wear and tear”
clause of the original, and at the same
time appears to render the labors of
the unfortunate conference committee
almost absurdly superfluous. The
substitute delays all action looking
toward a new leaso until just before
the present one expires. Twenty
days prior to Dec. 1, 1890, it directs
that the road shall be put upou the
market and bids advertised for. It
is to be offered iti such condition as it
may he found in at that time, instead
ot that in which it now is, “natural
wear and tear excepted.”
i»nizlD(, Hotline, burning nmt blent
■ Erzrnm in lu iroralA run-
•ore from hrfld lo fret* Hair gone.
Doctor* nnd ho.pilnl. loll, tried ir
frjthlBJ. Cured hj the Cuticurn
ftemedlea lor 80.
Cured by Cuticura.
I am cured of a loathsome disease, eczema, in
its worst stage. I tried different doctors and
been through the hospital, but all to no pur
pose. The disease covered my whole body from
the top of my head to the soles of ray leet, My
hair all came out, leaving mo a complete raw
■ore. After trying everything I heard of your
Cuticura Remedies, and after using three bot
tles of Cuticura Resolvent, with Cuticura and
Cuticura Soap, I find myself cured at the cost
of about $8. I would not be without the Cutl-
enra Remedies in my house, as 1 find them use
ful in many cases, and I think they are the only
•kin and blood medicines.
ISAAC H. GERMAN, Wurtsboro, N. Y.
Burning and Itching.
I was sick in the fall of 1888 with a burning
aad itching so bad that in three weeks I was
covered with a rash, and could no sleep nights
or work days. Some doctors thought it might
be salt rheum (eczema), and said they bad nev
er lean anything like it before I received no
help from any or them, or from any medicine i
that I ce»ld get hold of until I tried your Cuti
cura Remedies. After three weeks’ use I was
able to work, and kept getting better, until I
entirely cured. I recommend them to
Most Intense Itching.
I have used the Cuticura Remedies success
fully for my baby, who was afflicted with ecze
ma, and had such intenso itching that he got
no rest day or night. The itching is gone, and
my baby is cured, and is now a healthy, rosy-
clieekeu boy.
MARY KKLLERMAN, Beloit, Kan.
Cuticura Resolvent.
The new Blood Purifier and purest and best of
Humor Ceres, internally, and Cuticura, the
great Skin Cnre.and Cuticura Soap, an exquis
ite Skin Beautifler, externally, instantly and
•peedily and permanently cure *the most ago
nizing, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crust
ed and pimply diseases and huniofs of the skin,
■calp, aud blood, with loss of hair, from pirn-
ONLY REAL BIG SHOW Si BERK THIS
ENLARGED, IMPROVED AND QUADRUPLE ITS FORMER SIZE!
$100,000 IN HEW FEATURES!» $2,000,000 INVESTED! * $3,000 SAiLY EXPOSE!
THOMASVSLLE,
THURSDAY,
JOHN MIIMSON’S
*alx, eeMsmsBRt
3 GREAT CIRCUSES
V 33ZC3- XUISTCS-S
pies to scrofula.
Sold everywhere. Price, Cuticura, 50c.; Soap
25e.; Resolvent, $1.00. Prepared by the Potter
Drug and Chemical Corporation, Boston.
ly-Send for “How to Cuio Skin Diseases,”
G4 pages. 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials,
JIUI’LE.S, black-heads, red, rough, chapped, 55%-,-
IIfl and oily skin prevented by Cuticura Soap.
MUSCULAR STRAINS
THOM AS VI LLE
OPERA HOUSE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18th.
LOST.
A cameo locket, containing photos of Mr.
ami Mrs. Dave Elias, on Broad street, be
tween Jackson aud Monroe streets. Suita
ble reward will be paid on return to Levy’s
Dry Goods House. 10-17d
CITY TAX.
The time for paying your city taxes is at
hand. Please call at my office at the cotton
ware house and scstle before execution is
issued. Office lioura C a. m. to 0 p. ra.
Jab. F. Evans,
City Tr.
THE'WEEKLY TALLAHASSEEAN
—AND—
LAND OF FLOWERS,
COLLINS k SHINE, Editors k Proprietors.
The Tallabassccan is published .it the cap
ital of the state, and is one of the leading
weekly journals in middle Florida. Sub
scription $1 a year, in advance. Send tor
sample copy.
GEORGIA—Themas County.
To till whom it may concern:
John S. Montgomery, guardian for Cor
nelia L. Montgomery, applies to me for let
ters ot dismission from said guardianship,
and I will pass upon his application on the
first Monday in pecember next at my office
in Thoraasville, said county.
This Oct. II, 1889,
JOS. MERRILL, Ord’y.
SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT
Of Fisher’s Groat Musical Uxtinvagan/.a.
A Cold Day!
A Strong Coir pany of
Singing Comedians
Including the Marvelous Dancer,
OARLLOTT A,
Introducing nil the latest successes from
the New York Novelties.
YOU WILL LAUGH!
DON’T MISS IT!
• PRETTY LADIES!
HANDSOME COSTUMES!
SPECIAL.—This Company carries Special
Scenery tor this entire production.
The Great London Gaiety Dance.
PERKINS D. FISIIER.
Proprietor and Manager.
Josie DoMotto. Caroline Bichebourg,
Minnie DoMotte. Katie Stone.
Madamo Gertrude. Mamie Quinton.
Constantina Michl. Mattie Kreggs.
Emma Houghton. Mattie Neil.
Kate Hall. Fisher Sisters.
110 MALE AND FEMALE ARTISTS
Katarina Suwarow. Loonore DoToquellO#
Marie Damroff. Clarisse LaBollo.
Rose Poniatowski. Julio DeMontreuil.
Laura Ashton. Eugenio Brasfort.
Mamie Ashton. Aida.
SCOOTS, ISMS ail COWBOYS!
Genoverio 6i3tcra. Bndio Johnston.
Ella Zola. Katio Zenobia.
Tho Only Zola. Adonia Sisters.
James DeMotte.
William 11 oMot to. John Hobtn-on,
1,000 MEN ® HORSES!
Mona. Hurley. Adam Strombowski.]
John Brown. Wm. Ashcroft.
Harry Jones. Big. Sabestreuso,
George Wertz, John Lowlow.
John Kombs. Three Clarks.
BOXERS ® WRESTLERS
Ash Family of Fivo. Stiffney Brothers.
Charles Potardin. Charles Vi ilson.
Auguste Foucart. DeAlma Family.
Edward Meon. Monroe Smith.
Zurnte Brothers. N. PoparofC,
$45,000 DROVE OF GIRAFFES!
Wm. Kirby. Alexis MoScova.
Mona. Hebron. Benor Juan d’OviodO.
Th° Four DeOgloys. Frank Fisher.
Thcophilo DoPleosis. Harry Marks.
LeNord Family. McNeil Family.
9 MENAGERIES
Bnrbarv Zebra, East India Antelope, Cash-
more Goats, Ebony-headed Palatlno Shoop,
Spotted A^cis Deer, Bison of Colorado, Amer-
lean Jngunr. Silver Lion of Californio, Striped
nnd Spotted Hyenas, Llama or Camel of Yho
Giant Horse, 21 Hands! Giant Ox, P.1 HandsI
Andes, Poruvian Alpaca, Puma or African
Cougar, American Buffalo, Sloth, Gnu, Vir
ginia Panthers, Sonogal Loopards, Australian
Kangaroo, Bat Kangaroo, Tqpir3, Tawny
Mon, Shetland Cow, Spotted Tigers, Black
Tigers, African Porcupines, Badgers, Bea-
FLOCK OF GENUINE OSTRICHES!
■ra, Wild Cats, White and Gray Coons, Fox*
* W easels. Lynx, Peccaries, Chamois, Apes,
Gazeilco, Japanese Swine, African Jackals,
Ocelot, Humadras Baboons or Lion Slayers.
Monkeys, Armadillo nnd Black Monkeys,
IlipiJopotamus^GirnlTes, Ostriches and 1,500
o.uiiuuco, uauit;
Bare Animals.
Mercurial Poison,
Mercury is frequently injudiciously used
by quack doctors in easel of malaria nnd
blood’poison. ltB after effect is worse than
the original diiease. 11. 11. 13. (Botanic
Blood Balm) contains no mercury, but will
eliminate mercurial poison f rom the system.
Write to Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., for
book of convincing proof of its curative
virtue.
A. F. Britton, Jackson, Tenn., writes; “I
caught malaria in Louisiana, and when the
fever at last broke, my system was saturat
ed with poison, and I had sores in my
mouth and knots on my tongue- I got two
bottles of B. B. B., which healed my tongue
and mouth and made a new nmn of me.”
Wm. Richmond, Atlanta,. Ga., writes:
“My wife could hardly see. Doctors called
it'syphilitic iritis. Her eyes were in a
dreadful condition. Her appetite faiied.
She had pain in her joints and bones. Her
kidneys were deranged also, and no one
thought she could be cured. Dr. Gillum
recommended B B. B., which she used until
her health was entirely restored.”
K. P. B. Jones, Atlanta, Ga., writes: “I
was troubled w’ith copper colored eruptions,
loss of appetite, pain iti back, aching joints,
debility, emaciation, loss of lmir, sore throat,
and great nervousness. B. B. B. put my
system in fine condition,,”
A Son nil Legal Opinion.
E. Bainbridge Munday Esq., County., Atty.,
Clay Co., Tex. says : “Have used Electric
Bitters with most happy results. My brother
al§o was very low with Malarial Fever and
Jaundice, but was cured by timely use of
this medicine. Am satisfied Electric Bitters
saved my life.”
Mr. D. I. Wilcixson, of Home Cave, Ky.,
adds a like testimony, saying: He postlvely
believes he would have died, had it not been
for Electric Bitters.
Thii great remedy will ward off, as well
as cure all Malarial Diseases, and for ull Kid
ney, Liver and Stomach Disordersstands un
equaled. Price 50c. and one dollar at S. J.
Cassels’ Drug Store.
Dncklea’e Arnica Halve.
The Best Salve in the World for Cuts
BruUcs, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rhcuin, Fever
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains
Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively
cures Piles, or no pay required, It is guar
anteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money
refunded.* Price 25 cents per box. For sale
by S, J. Cassels, Drug Store.
WANTED!
SECOND HAND
-Carpets and Mattresses.-
Can be sold to Good Advantage,
-AT—
B. GOLDBERG’S
Aaeiloa auti Comnlulon itou.r,
13iep4m
FREE WILD WEST!
Given Free with the GRAND STREET PARADE each morning.
Cowboys, Scouts, Riflemen, Vaequcros, Cowgirls, Indians, Medioino
Men, Bucks, Squaws and Papooses, a Herd of Texas Steers, Wild
Buffaloos and Mountain Elk, Fleet Mustangs, Wiry Indian Ponies and
Genuine Doadwood Stago Coach.
$300,001 tod Free Parade
Cages, Dens and Lairs; 12 Separate Kinds of Music, 4 Musical Wag
ons, 16 Trumpeters, Troupo Jubiloo Singers, Chime Bells, 31 Sun-
bright Chariots, 8 Distinct Brass Bands, Pomalo Brass Band of 16,
2 Steam Calliopes, Fifo and Drum Corps, Femalo Opoh-air Opera, 300
Horses, 100 Ponies, Scottish Bagpipers, Steam Organ, Droves of Ele
phants, Giraffes, Ostriches, Elands, Buffaloes, Elk and Zebras.
I
i
MIL flipTEAM Q
U ttOADB^y BO ATM
Dissolution.
The firm of West & Fcarn is this c1.it [dis-
solred by mutual consent, Mr. E- 1’. I'.arn
retiring. Johu T. West will continue the
business, nnd nssumes nil liabilities and re
tains the assets of the lnte firm,
JOHN' T. WEST,
E. 1*. FKARN.
Thoinnsville, ffa., Sept. 17th, 1880.
A CARD.
In retiring from the late firm of West A
Fcarn (as I purpose removing from the city),
I desire to return my flanks to the public
for the liberal patronage bestowed on us,
and to ask a continuance of the same to my
former partner and successor, Mr. John T.
West, who la enlarging his facilities, and
will be better prepared than bef >re to serve
the public with anything in-bis line.
Respectfully,
K. P. FEARN.
Thonmsville, Sept. 17, 1889* 1-mo
Don’t Experiment.
You cannot afford to waste time in ex
perimenting when your lungs are in dan
ger. Consumption always seems, at first,
only a cold. Do not permit any dealer to
impose upon you with some ch&ip imitation
of Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consump
tion, Coughs and Colds, but be sure you get
the genuine. Because he can make more
profit he may tell you he has something
just as good, or just the same. Don’t be
deceived, but insist upon getting Dr. King’s
New Discovery, which is guaranteed to give
relief in all Throat, Lung and Chest all'ec-
tious. Trial bottle free at Cassels’ Drug
Store. Large bottles $1.
WAIT FOR THE
NEW YORK
BALTIMORTcLOTliG HOUSE.
They will open on or before Oct. 18th, with a
full line of Cfothing, Hate, Gent’s Furnishing
Gooila, etc., at advertising prices, on Jackson
street, near Broad. Look out for the big New
York and Baltimore Clothing House sign.
ThomasvUlc, Ga., Oct. 15, '89. lfioctlw
Biggest and Best Stock
OF
DRY LUMBER
IN SOUTH GEORCPA.
1 have five hundred thousand feet of
Standard Mouldings,
Which I will sell at a rare bargain, in fact
it will save purchasers money to see me be
fore placing their orders for lumber of any
Kind.
Jos. L. Beverly,
(Successor to Fife & Beverly.)
MEIGS - - GA.,
J. s.
Real Estate *Agent,
THOMASVTLLE, GA.
Office over Reid i Culpepper’s Drug Store, Broad St.
I am now prepared to buy or sell, for other
parties, all kinds of town or country real
estate, and have on my list a good assort
ment of both kinds. Strict and close atten
tion to the business will be my aim, and I
respectfully solicit a share of the business of
the community. *aug28tf