Newspaper Page Text
THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE
John Triplett, - Managing Editor.
Albert Winter. Business Manager.
tiitrsdav, ji'se 1Mft *
Srnw'HiiTiox 1!atk
ks-Kstkiii-iiisk, . .
.V
| needs the money which the K'’V r . u
: incut is to iidvamv : and it he is in
; that unfiii'inrnite n'lidilnni, Irom wlint
I source is he nltmviinU to nr<iuire
means to redeem the products by re
1 turning the money and interest and
paying the warehouse charges'
. | lie concludes as follows:
' ,rS;nr»« la publish'd “It , vml !d he, in fact, the longest
,.v,TV morning (Monday cxc»pt«U L|c|> yet taken in a time of peace
,l„. iy'kkki.y Timks-Kntkiiimiisf is imlitis.ied t0W ar,l ,| ie olidation of power III
svrry Saturday morning. ! the hands of the federal government,
! and the subjection of the private
fl , affairs of the people to the supervision
1 1,0 and control of irresponsible authority,
i You and I are democrats, and as
„.v advsbt.s .*, ~ fIlc h, we believe that the government
Itatcs.—$l.on jn-r square .‘or die . f ,|, ou ] l l gcni]iiiIouhIy abstain from all
in, and :>o eei ts for rn n sulise-, um)ecegfarv interference with personal
r, on j and domestic concerns of its citizens,
s no ! and confine itself strictly to the ad
ministration of purely public allairs.
It is a cardinal principle of our polit
ical faith that the people are best
governed when they are least govern
ed, and that tluv are most prosperous
mid contented when left the free exer
cise of their own judgment in the
management of their own business,
subject only to such reasonable regu
lation as may he necessary to preserve
the peace and good order of the com
munity."
These arc the utterances of a wise
statesman, mid one who lias always
been in sympathy with the farming
classes. Now is the time for Messrs.
McCone, and other advocates of the
measure, to show and prove that Mr.
Carlsilc does not know what he is
talking about.
Daily Advkbtis su Kaths
i nmsient Rates.—$1.00 pc
lirrt insertion
T'l-nl insertion. . r , on j am ] domestic
One Square, one month, - - ., „„ 1 i
One Square, two months
One Square, three month
On. Square, six months.
One Square, twelve monns, - - -
Siihieet to change by special arranf "me
AI.RI.KT IVISTt ll Kim. Knn
! 2 00
go no
Carlisle Opposes the Sub-Treasury
Plan.
Senator John G. Carlisle has writ
ten a letter to a friend in which lie
discusses the sub-treasury plan.
.Senator Carlisle argues at some
length to show that the annual ex
pansion and contraction of the curen-
cy provided for in the bill would re
sult in absolutely destroying tlic mar
ket upon which the farmer must de
pend for the sale of bis crops, and
that the cotton farmer who supported
the sub-treasury plan would be an
especial suflerer because the plan, in
the writer's estimation, would close
every cotton factory in the country.
‘■No such facilities as this scheme will
aflord for controlling the markets lor
purely speculative purposes have
ever existed in this or any other
country, and no more perfect system
for the" oppression of the people count
bo devised. The exact quantities ot
products on deposit in the severn
public warehouses will be known in
every commercial and financial cen
ter, nnd combinations to purchase
and bold receipts could be easily
made, especially when they can be
procured by the payment of a small
per centum of the value of the depos-
Tbc senator, after rehearsing the
features of the proposed sub-treasury
plan, and noting the fact that the
farmers themselves will pay more
than their fair share of the cost ot
erecting the warehouses, and that the
officers connected with them will he
partisans of the administration in
power, says there are more than
400 counties in the United ^States,
but not more than one-third ot them,
if that many, produce and sell auual-
]y more than $500,000 worth of wheat,
corn, oats, cotton nnd tobncio, and
therefore not more than one-third ot
them could possibly avail themselves
of this plau, if it were adopted.
Speaking of the plan to store cotton
and other products in government
warehouses, the Senator says :
‘•In a great majority of cases he
will never be able to redeem them,
but will he forced to lose the remain
ing 20 per cent, of the value of Ins
product, or sell his warehouse receipt
for whatever he can get for it, which
will be very little, for it must be re
membered that after lie gets his ware
house receipts, lie has a remaining
interest of only 20 per cent., less the
charges for interest, storage, etc., and
this is all he can dispose ot. He will
(inu the time rapidly approaching
when he must have money to redeem
his products, or sell his small remain
ing interest in them, or allow them to
be sold at public auction by tlio gov
ernment, and this will bo the golden
opportunity of speculators, whose
agents will swarm all over the coun
try, ready to take warehouse receipts
from embarrassed owners for merely
a nominal sum. The receipt is simply
a privilege redemption, like a pawn
broker's ticket, and the farmer being
unable to redeem will he forced ulti
mately to dispose of it at any price
offered.”
Discussing the provisions in the
proposed bill, thet only counties pro
ducing $500,000 worth of corn, cot
ton, wheat, tobacco and cats, he al
lowed a government warehouse, the
Senator says:
“It will he seen, therefore, at the
verv outset, that it is a plan to com-
pci the government to issue and dis
tribute money for the benefit ot peo
pie living in rich and productive
counties at the expense of the people
living in flic poorer and less produc
tive ones.
Moreover, it is a plan to enable un
scrupulous speculators to take advan
tage of the farmers’ pecuniary neces
sities and extort exorbitant prices for
food from people who reside in cities,
towns and villages, and from people
who reside in the country but do not
owu these particular agricultural
products. It is evident that no farm
er will subject Ihunsolf to the labor
and expense of transporting his prod
ucts to the public warehouses and to
all the other charges which lie must
pay for storage, for handling and for
taking care of them while there, when
he has barns nnd granaries at home,
unless he is in debt and absolutely
GRORGIA—'Thomas County.
Ordinary Office, June 2nd, IS#".
Tl„ report of the commissioner, appointed
to set apart a years support to Alice .1
Patch, widow of Thomas J. Patch, deceased,
and her two minor children, having .been
tiled in office, all persons interested are
hereby cited to appear at the July term.
lSPO.'ot the Court ofOrdinary ofsaid county
to show cause if any exists why said report
should not lie confirmed nnd made the jmlg-
•nt of the court.
Jos. S. Mf.bbii.i..
Ordinary.
Yes We Will.
The New York Press, which has
been on its hind legs about the de
monstration at Richmond, when Lees
statue was unveiled, said the day after
tiie occasion:
“Yesterday's proceedings at the
unveiling of the Lee monument at
Richmond wore the last grand rally
ot the surviving participants of the
rebellion. There is nobody else
whose death or memory can bring the
rebels nnd their sympathizers together
again in such force as did this su
preme honor to the general of their
foremost army. Certainly no monu
ment to the domineering and more
or less unpopular President ot the
Confederacy, the late Jefferson Davis,
can do it.”
Just wait until all of Dixie gathers
at the base of tho grand monument
which the Southern people intend to
erect to the memory of Jefferson Da
vis, and you will hear a shout go up
which will make Editor Sheppard’s
hair stand on the end. And there
will he no disloyalty in it, either. I
will lie the tribute which Southern
people pny to their leaders as a matter
of right, as well as of sentiment, the
Press can put this in its pipe and
smoke it.
Brain and Money.
Ex-Congressman Logan II. Roots at
the Christening ceremonies of the town
of Kimball, on the Tennessee River,
thirty miles west ol Chattanooga, said
that to make an industrial develop
ment required nature’s gifts, brains
and money. The Geologist and every
other intelligent person who examined
the subject reported tlio immediate
proximity ol timbers, metal, coal,
clays, stone, and in fact everything
that can be well thought of necessary
for a manutacturing city are situated
right there on the banks of the Ten
nessee River, the or.lv place where the
Tennessee River touches the Cumber
land coal field-, t he Colonel also as-
s ured parties that ample funds had been
provided for it, so that there will be no
lack of money; and L. S. Judge Key
said that Colonel Roots’ statement on
such supjccls could he relied upon.
The Colonel remarked, however, that
he was not making assertions as to
the brains devoted to the management.
When it is known that Colonel Roots
is the President of the Company, and
that H. I. Kimball, of New England
birth and Georgia residence, famed for
his management of large enterprises, is
the Yice President and General Man
ager, the assurance of brains controll
ing affairs is complete. He who misses
being at Kimball on the roth and nth
of June will certainly miss an opportu
nity for great pleasure and opportune
ties for profitable investment.
. Nature should be
y, assisted in tho
• Ispring to throw off
the heaviness of
the sluggish winter
circulation of the
blood. Nothing
docs it so well, so
prompt or so safely
as Swift’s Specific.
I have used 8. S. S. for a number of
rears, and consider it tho best tonic nnn
olood remedy that I ever used. In fact
I would not attempt to enter upon a
spring or summer in this climate with
out it. H. W. Coleman,
Of Coleman, Ferguson ACo^
Our book on Blood nnd Skin Diseases
mailed free.
Swift Specific Co.. Atlanta, Ga.
L. SolmiicLt,
——l’I!l U’lilKTOU
ThomasvilleBottling
WORKS,
MamifitcUiiPr and Dispenser of SODA and
MINKI5AL WATEKS, carbonated with
MAT1TBA.L «AW,
imported from the Mineral Springs on the
Ithino. Oermany.
ON DRAUGHT :
COCA-COLA,
The Genuine “Ideal Brain Tonic.’
is! any headache
r. minutes.
The New Mexican Beverage,
Non-Alcoholic. Delicious.
“Frui-Miz!”
Cooling.
Vitalizing.
WALKER COUNTY,
GEORGIA,
22 Miles South of
Chattanooga, Tenn
IN LOOKOUT VALLEY,
On the line of the
Chattanooga Sontlierii Ry.,
Is destined to be one of the most important
manufacturing cities in tlie South. The
location, consisting of 1000 acres, which has
been secured hr the managers of the hl*.N-
SIXGTOX LAND COMPANY, ot Chatta
nooga, Tenn., is surrounded by inexhausti
ble deposit? of cpal and iron, equal in qual
ity to that of anv section in the great min
eral belt of the Sontll. Manufactured Iron,
Cotton, Leather, etc., can be produced cheap
er in KKN'SINGTON than at any point in
the South, and Us raiirond service will be
nsurpassed.
THE
Ice Cream Parlor,
Spcci illv titled up for the accommodation
of Ladies.
FRUITS AND CONFECTIONERIES,
Fancy Good?, Cigars, Tobacco, etc.
S:\tislact ion Grunranteecl.
CUMBERLAND ISLAND HOTEL.
TIJK CUMBERLAND ISLAND HOTEL is
now open for the reception of guests.
30 New Rooms Added
since last season.
Artesian Well. Shower Baths
and everything that is necessary for the ease
and comfort of guests. Rates $2 per day;
SKI.jn per week: $!I0 per month.
\\\ It. Rt'NKLY, Proprietor,
j,,,,,. 1 ,12m Rankly, On.
Kensington Land Go
Solicits correspondence with manufacturers
generally and otter liberal inducements to
those contemplating the removal of their
establishments or the building of new lac
tones in this prosperous section ol the
country.
Sale of Lots at Kensington
July 1st, 2nd and 3rd.
Arrangements for reduced rates of fare
ill he perfected.
Pamphlets descriptive of Kensington and
its surroundings may he had by addressing
Kensington Iiiuul Co.
CHATTANOOGA, TKSX.
Florida’s Saniturium.
Delightfully situated on the hanks of the
(ar-tarmed ri'ver in song, ‘-The Suwance,
location high nnd .try. period freedom from
fogs and malaria, with nil the comforts ot a
first-class riwort. , „ „
Water particularly adapted lor Dyspepsia,
Bright's Diseaac, Rheumatism and all Idood
poisons. Two-thirds of the guests who re
sort there urc affiicted with Kidney troubles
nnd go away cured.
Main buildingsof Coqumn rock an] brick,
surrounded on all sides by neat cottages and
groves of live oak and pine. Hot and cold
water direct from the Mineral Spring in
cacti roou and bath room and closet in each
cotta",*. The overflowing attendaace there
the past winter lias induced the company to
commence the erection of twelve additional
cottages, which with an annex building add
td new rooms to the present accommoda
tions The bathing facilities at the Springs
will also lm greatly increased and the pool
enlarged, , ,
As a summer retort it has all the require,,
ment ot the Springs in Virginia and Tennes
see, with the additional advantage ol being
nearer home. ....
Excursion tickets on sale overall princi
pal roads at greatly reduced rotes.
For further particulars address,
L. IV. Scovili.k,
May :>0 d-w .".m Suwance, Fla.
Smith.
YOUNG FEMALE COLLEGE
Commencement Exercises.
Baccalaureate Sermon at Methodist Church
by Rev. McK. F. McCook,
Brunswick, Ga.
June 8th, Hi A A- M.
(; R A I)C ATIXI i K X ERCISES,
June 10th 8 P. M.
AXNTAL concert,
June lull 8 P. M.
Mnv JO d-w tvv
GEORGIA—Thin
To all whom
Athens Foundry ,
due form applied
nuincnt lelt
ii may concern: The
d Machine Works has in
i tin* undersign for per-
dminplrntion on the
[luiueiii iciivi - , . , ,, .
ue of J. G. Philpot, to he issued to 51. A.
Fleet wood Public Administrator lor said
count V, and t wdl puss upon said applica
tion on the first Monday m July 1889.
Liven under my bund nnd official signature
forth dny ol June Isho.
J,*s. S. .Ucuiiiu..
june :> d I" l« Ordinary, T. O.
GEORGIA—Thomas County.
To »ll whom it may concern: R. IL Mar-
dn* administrator of the estate ot Will. K.
Ron don. having recently departed this life
and before he had fully administered said
estate these presents are to cite all persons
interested to show cause before me on the
first Mon,lav in July 1890, why M. A 1 loet-
w„„d the public administrator ol said coun-
IV S |,uul,l not be appointed administrator dc
bonis non on the estate ot said \\ in. K.
Bowden. Given under my hand and official
•denature fourth day of June HR' 1 *.
Jos. 8. Miami u.,
junc 5 d Iw |w Ordinary,T.C.
PLEASURE and PROFIT.
An Excursion has Been Arranged
AT
Very Cheap Transportation Rates,
1*0It A VISIT,
JUNE 7th to 14th,
lKCUMIVE,
TO THE NEW TOWN OF
KIMBALL.
Till* new town Ison tlio Nashville, Cliatta-
nooira& St. Louin Ratlni.nl. In Marion County,
Tennessee. It fronts for three miles on the
Tennessee River, sntl is the center of One Hun
dred Square Miles of as rich coal, iron, lime
stone and forest lands as can l»e found within
any .'hollar area in the world. America and
foreign Capitalists have united to make at
KIMBALL, and in its tributary property, tin
most wonderful industrial development on till,
continent. The occasion furnlahe. an oppor
♦ unity, at small expense, to enjoy beautiful
scenery, and to make desirable investments.
Tim rliristoninir sale, intended for the bene
fitof those who wish to be identified with KIM- |
BALL from its very beginning, will take jdaoc
on .June 10th and 11th.
Railroad and Steamboat offices will furnish
information al*out reduced rates.
Facts about Kimball and tho opportunities it
olfers can l»c obtained from the officers of the
PresidetlI. I.O<L AX II. KOOTN. President
of 1st Nat* Bank, Little Hook, Ai k.
Vice Prenitlonl, f HAS, U. RM’IIAllO
MON. Capitalist, Chattanooga. Tenn.
Treasurer, JXO. X. llltYAMT, President
of the Seattle Coal and Iron Co., 80 Broad-
wav, New York.
2nd Vico-1* real dent, nnd Mnnnging Di
rector, II. I.KIUBAMm Formerly of
Atlanta, Ha., Chattanooga,Tenn.
junc 3 w 3t
Hro. Jones is an Allianccman and trades
with B. A. Bans. The result is obvious—
lie's fat and prosperous.
Smith trades elsewhere, the moral you
can readily see:
If you want to prosper trade with
B. A BASS.
To Teachers.
On the 17th ot June next, the Trustees
of the South Georgia College will electa
President. Correspondence is solicited.
All communications, together with testimo
nials, should he addressed t»
WILLIAM D. MITCHELL,
Chairman Committee.
Thomasville, Ga., May 17, 1890-lm
B. D. FUDGE,
THOMASVILLE, OA. t
DEALER IN
HARDWARE
Stoves, Iron,
Tin and Hollow Ware,
Guns aM Sprtii Goods
of all kiiuls, ami agent for
King’s Powder Co.
f ;2pt-dCm
KEEP^KOOL!
—youu—
EATABLES
BY BUY 1
REFRIGERATORS!
ok
LJF. Thompson & Co
We have also in stock
CHINA MATTINGS,
of pretty designs, Window .Shades, Furniture of all descrip
tions,
OOIFIFIIsrS,
Sash, Blinds, Doors, Paints, Oils and Glass,
WHAT IS CARBOLINEUM AVENARIUS?
It is n Wood nnd Stone Preserving Com
pound Oil Stain, appllod with an ordinary
brush. It is guaranteed to preserve any
kind oi wood, above or under the ground
or water, for at least fifteen years, nnd lieop
ofl nll Itlnda of Insects. It is UBed by tho,
U. H. and almost all foreign Governments.
Telegraph, Telephone, Ilullrond, and other*
largo Corporations, ns well ns nil Real Kstuto,
4lu-nors. whnro it is kept for 8ulc«
L F. Thompson & Co.
ZfcTZETW C3-OOZDE5
—•A.T—
Come and Examine our Stock of
Sateens, Chatties, Ginghams,
Batista, Lawns, and Percals.
ALSO our IMMENSE STOCK|OE
"White Grood.s.
AVc call special attention to our JOG LOT of WHITE GOODS lor
twelve anil a half cents; they are equal to any sold for twenty ccpIs. Come
and look for yourself.
Xjools.! Locals.! .Look 2
Our Now Spring Clothing is here. Now remember that the
entire stock is new, and will be sold as cheap as possible.
' L. STEYERMAN Ss ERO.,
THESLEEPL AND RESTLESS DRY-000DS MERCHANTS.
,J. S. MONTGOMERY,
Real Estate Agent
THOMASVILLE, 0A.
fficc over M & Culpifftn Drug Store, Broad St
A. W.PALIN& BRO.’S
Carriage Shops.
Lower Broad Street, Thomasville. Ga.
1 am now prepared to buy or sell, forothcr
parties, all kinds ot town or country real
estate nnd have on my list a good assess
ment ot both kinds. Strict nnd close atten
tion to the business will he my aim, nnd I
respectfully solicit a .‘hare of the business ot
the community. ougJB
Brick! Brick!
200,001) first-class Brick now ready for
delivery. Parties supplied expeditiously
and at reasonable prices. Apply at my
yards or address me through Post Gnieo.
JOHN P. ARXOI.D.
Thomasville, Ga., April 29, iikw tf.
KVKRY DERCnil'TION OF
CARRIAGE AND WAGON REPAIRING,
IIORSK SHOEING, ETC.,
Done nt reasonable rates. Having recently
purchased a number ol labor-saving tools,
and having the
Best Equipped Shops
in Southwest Georgia, we are prepared to
do nil kinds of work [in our line with dis
pute'll and neatness.
apl22dAwly