The Daily times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1925, November 03, 1889, Image 3

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gigjfS* OABPBTS! THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE. rasscn" ir for Savannah.. l'asscnjor from Sayrnoati., Fart mail for Savannah- ■ ■• CARPETS Looal Schedule; ....I>v... 050pm ....Ax.,-. 700am ....Ar..;1205pm 1205pm from* “ ...........Ar... 181 p m from Savi»nnab Lr... 200 p m Passenger from Albany ,,..Ar... B20pm Passeii^er for •* hr... 930am Freight and Acorn, for Albany Lv... 5 45 p m *? >• .» from “ Ar... 720am Freight and accom. from Way'’.. A v... 4 60 p m » “ “ for Cl*aU. 7... 600pm • «. *« for Wave..800am * *• «• .rom Chait./ *... 630am THOMAS VILLE AND MONl .CELLO. FreightaccoT. for Mo 'cel’o Lv...8«am “ “ from ....Ar...620pm Fast mail for “ ...,Lv...206pm from “ ir..1210 pm Moquetfce Carpets, Velvet Carpets, BodyBrusselsCarpeis Tapistry Carpets, Three-ply Carpets, Two-ply Carpets, All Wool Carpets, Four-fifths w’l Carpet Three-f’ths w’l Carpet Half Wool Carpets, One-Th’d w’l Carpets, One-fo’th w’l Carpets, Cotton Carpets, Hemp Carpets, R. Thomas Jr’s-126 Broad Street. O. S. Bondurant Voanteer ObRorver Weather Bulletin for tho 24 hours end'ng il 7 o’clock P. M., Nov. 2, IE89. ■ Til FIBATORI. 7 a. 2p. 72 7 P- m ................ 70 Uaximum for 24 hours...... - 72 Uinimum “ “ “ G ® Bain-fall Rainfall .05 Indications: Continued rain. Temperature stationary. All Kinds of Carpets One Entire Floor DEVOTED TO CARPETS! The Largest Stock! The Best Assortment! The Newest Styles! The Lowest Prices Ou.’tit to give us tho Carpet trade of of this section, AND WE ARE GETTING ITI MAGNIFICENT I.INE OF Smyrna, Persian, Wilton, Moquettr Velvet, Brussels and Taplsiry RUGS. ALSO A FULL LINE OF BARK MATS, Straw IbiitlngN, Floor Oil Cloths, The time to buy: THIS WEEK. The Place; leaders of Styles and Low Prices. 109 & 111 BROAD ST SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 188S. SIGNAL SERVICE BUREAU 1 I A. New Line for Thomasville! £ In Which Every One is Interested. f * £ s We mean our elegant NEW STOCK of J. S. r * © Turner’s, Jas. A. Banister’s and Stacy Adams & a l ?. Co.’s Shoes for Men, and Bennett & Barnard’s and 5 • E. P. Reed & Co.’s Ladies Fine Shoes, of which we B J i are 1 ’« SOXjES AaE3XTTS. A = & s® « ts C U K l'KlCxM l' & DA.l\iIBL 5 108 HROAD STREET. * ■ CHURCH DIRECTORY. Baptist Church—Pastor, Rev., W- laptist , . Williams. Sunday School 9.30. Preaching at 11 a. ra. aud 7 p. m. by the pastor. Prayer meeting every Wednesday, 7 p. m. Methodist Church—Rev. Geo. G. N. MacDonell, pastor. Prayer meet ing 9.30 a. m. Preaching at 11 a. m. and 7 p. m. by pastor. Sunday School 3.80 p. m. Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 p. m. Presbyterian Church.—Services in ihe lecture oom—Pastor J. H, He bener—services at 11 a. m. and and at night. Prayer meeting Wed nesday night at 7:30. Sunday school “ 30 a", m. Episcopal Church:—Rev. C. I. Latioche, Rector. Services at Libra: y Sunday morning 11 o’clock; afternoon 5 o’clock; Friday afternoon 5 o’clock. Catbouc Church:—Mass on-sec ond Su ’day at 8:00 o’clock a. m. sermon at 11 a.' m. Charming Cora Van Tassel on tho 8th Mr. Charley Stark will leave to-day for New York. Mr. C. A. White, of Atlanta, was atrthe Whiddon yesteiday. Cora Van Tassel ought to have a good house on the 8th. Mr. Bondurant will please see to it that we do nothave too much rain now. Cora Van Tassel in the “Hidden Hand” is the neat attraction. There are twenty-three prisoners, including trustys, now on the chain- gang. Mr. R O. Balfour, of the Pearl Sa loon, will leave to day for a trip North. . Mr. J. D. Newman, of Sanders- villc, is visiting Messrs. B. D. and H. B. Ainsworth. Another wagon load of fresh fish from Hancock’s pond was in town yesterday. A lady in town shot at a burglar 04 Thursday night. Twas plucky. Burglars will take notice. Not a ray of sunshine yesterday. What about tho sun always shining on Saturday, Dr. Hopkins? Oysters have made their appear ance at tho lestaurants, and other places where they are kept. Mr. J. W. Reid and bride, returned home on Friday evening, from their bridal tour, north. Messrs. C. D. and J. V. Woodson, of Sheffield, Ala., are stopping at the Whiddon. The rain, on Friday, and Friday night, washed the town clean. Na ture heats all the sanitary laws of Mr. R. C. Balfour had a fine sized watermellon on exhibition in his sa loon yesterday. He says he intends taking it North with him. &frs, C- Cabell, of Baltimore, among the recent arrivals in tho city. She arrived Friday afternoon, and is stopping at the Stnart. Mr. Dick Bradley, who formerly' resided here, passed through yester day morning, enrouto to Oxford, attend Emory College. Sheriff Hurst went down to Bostoi Friday in answer to a telegram, and brought back Moses Sheffield, who in charged with burglary. Other Days. Did you ever open a long used trunk, or other receptacle, and look over mementoes of bv-gone days? Most people have put some little sou venir away—a lock of soft silken hair; a bunch of faded flowers, or a tiny note, perhaps. To others—to those who do not know their history—these things would have no value; but to him or her who has cherished them for years, they are very precious. The sheen of the silken tress is just the same as it was, on that evening when you tenderly and lovingly cut it from the head of one whose memory, can never die. Very gently you caress it now, while a face comes up from the shadowy past, and is seen through the mist of years; seen through years of toil, disappointments, hopes, fears and tears: seen wearing the same witching smile which, in the years agone, was brighter, sweeter, dearer than all the world besides. And the flowers! You remember, when carefully holding the trail and fragile flowers;—unlike affection,dried and withered by time;—the stroll through the woods, call back again the form, features and face of the one who gathered them and gave them to you. Nothing was said, perhaps—love is sometimes too eloquent for speech— but how fast the heart beat, and how carefully you put them away that night And you have kept them ever since. And the faded note! I: may be one of many others; but this you have saved and kept these long years. It may not contain more than a dozen lines, but when first read, how the pulses quickened; how the cheeks glowed, and how the eye lighted up with a new and strange light, in that long ago. And you read these hues over and over again, as you have so often done before, and put the little note gently back where it has rested these long years. There may be tear- stains on it. It speaks of a dead past —of a past of suffering and sorrow, of devotion, of hope, of disappointment. Tenderly twining the . faded ribbon about these keepsakes, you lay them away again—lay them away to be tak en out some rainy day—some day when the mind, tired of the present, distrustful of the future, and sick of the world, would wander back to the hap pier days of the past, and paint afresh on the walls of memory, a form and face whose outlines time can never wholly efface. How tender the heart is made—no matter how callous you may have grown, when looking at some little souvenir of the past; it may be only a bit of ribbon, a programme, a simple ^rd, a charm of some kind, some little relic or trinket,but it will remind you of some one whom you have loved; loved and lost, perhaps, and it will whisper in sobs of those whom you cherished so fondly. If ’tis true, as said, that there is “skeleton in every closet, ’ so have many, some little something— veiy insignificant it may be—which keeps bright the links in the chain of memory, which binds them to the past; binds them closely, lov ingly, tende -ly, to those whose mem ory can never die. Bates to Montgomery and Charleston. Round trip tickets will be put on sale from to-morrow until the 14th to Montgomery Ala,, the occasion being the Southern Exposition which is being held there, at oue fore for round trip, with extreme limit to Noy. 20th. Tickets will be sold to those wishing to attend the “Gala Week” at Charleston for 86:30 for round trip tickets, limited to Nov. 11th. The “Hidden Hand” on the 8th. ’A splendid play. Married. At the residence of Mr. W. S. Browu, in this city, on Friday even ing, the 1st inst, Rev. J. H. lichen- er officiating, Mr. C. T. Headley and Mis9 Libby Casey, both of St. Paul, Minn. There is something of romance in this marriage. Mr. Headley left the West two or three years ago, and drifted South. He has been, for some time,foreman of the Thomasville Variety Works. No engagement existed when he left St. Paul, but Cupid got in his work through the medium of Uucle Sam's mails; and so, last Monday, Miss Casey, all alone, left her Western home to join her affianced husband in the Sunny South. Brave little woman. This is but another illustration of the de votion of woman to those whom she loves. The couple will make their home in Thomasville. May their honeymoon last through life. MoTyer's Spring. We have, on several occasions, called attention to the medical prop erties of this water. Tho wife of Mr. R N. Applewhite has been receiving, of late, great benefit from the use of the water. She was not able to go to the spring, so the water was carried to her. Mr. Applewhite says the action of the water was magical, re lieving his wife almost immediately. The spring should be improved, and its virtues more widely known. It is just a pleasant drive from town, over a splendid road. We havo been asked by the com mittee to request all parties who have agreed to furnish carcases for the barbecue, to bring them on the 11th or 12th. It is important. Do not fail. The Guards hope to get their new guns by the 15th. The company will turn out in full uniform at the grand reunion of the county on the 15th. And they will make a hand some show. Mr. J. M. Jackson moves to Thom as couuty ibis week, and will live near Barnett’s Creek. In him. Mitchell county loses one of her best citizens and most exemplary Christians. The Clarion commends this old friend and his charming family to the people of Thomas.—Camilla Clarion. The fence question was fully and freely discussed yesterday at the called meeting, but, as the proceedings are nccessanly of some length, though quite interesting, they have been crowded out of this issue, but will ap pear in our next, and in our, weekly edition. Mrs. Henry Mitchell. This estimable lady, loved by every one, for her many noble, womanly traits, died at her home on Jackson street, at a quarter past six o’clock, yesterday evening. Husband and children mourn her death, and an on- tiro community join in the mourning. We write the lines, “Mrs. Henry Mitchell is dead,” with sincere regret and sorrow. Funeral from the residence this afternoon at 3 o’clock. The into incut will follow in Laurol Hill ceme tery. -OF- PaH Winter CLOTHING! Passed Over the River- Thc Bartow Courier-Informant pub lishes an obituary notice of the late Judge James T. Wilson, who died last week, at the residence of bis son, Charles, in Bartow. Judge Wilson has many relatives in Thomas who will bo saddened by his death. He went to Florida many years ago, and by judicious investments accumulated fortune. He was a prominent Mason, and a life long, consistent member of tho Methodist church. He was a true man, a good citizen, a de voted husband- and an affectionate father. After life’s fitful dream, he sleeps well. Memory. What a thing is memory? Is it a curse or a blessing? And yet life would be a blank, in a double sense, without this God-given faculty. After all, perhaps, the storehouse of memory contains, in the great majority of cases, more pleasant than unpleasant recol lections. ’Tis well ’tis so. Better far if we could forget life’s disappointments and only remember the bright skies, the beautiful flowers and the many true friends who have journeyed with us, along the way. There are enough of these, if we would cherish them, to fill the storehouse of memory to over flowing. Can’t some of the old soldiers rig up a tent, have a few old muskets, canteens, cooking utensils, &c., scat tered around, so as to give a picture ot camp liie during the late unpleas antness? And then they might cook some dough on their ramrods, boil a stolen chicken, with some hard tack to season it; roast a leg of some mutton—the leg of some sheep which had tried to bite a soldier. Let’s have an old camp scene. Who will work it up? Cora Van Tas3ol, Secure your seats. on the 8th. “Blocks of S' Culpeppers. pussle, 10 cents, at Reid & noT3-3t. Harrison and Blaine puzzle, 10 cents, at Reid A Culpeppers. nOT3-3t. , and our line ot Light -AND- Medium MUST 60! Call and get Prices before buy ing at ANYBODY'S Cost Prices, and we will YOU MONEY HYni&Ce. -1 Glothierr. and Furnishers, loe St.,lThomanvJUo, .