The Daily times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1925, September 21, 1890, Image 2

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THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE Tohn Triplett, Editor and Manager. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,1800. Daily Times-Enterprise is published every morning (Monday excepted.) I'he Weekly Tihes-Extebi-bise is published every Saturday morning. Subscription Rates. Daily Times-Enteifribr 00 ‘.T.iklt « 1 00 Daily Adyertisino Rates. Transient Rates.—*1.00 per square for the drat insertion, and 50 cents for each subse quent insertion. One Square, one month, - - - - $ •> ®® One Square, two months - - • * * line Square, three month i, - - - 1-00 Or.o Square, six months, - - - - 2 ® ®® One Square, twelve months, - - - 3j 00 Subject to change by special arrangement. (JOHN THII’I.ETT, Das. IUa<i. Notice to Advertisers. To insure insertion, all changes for standing advertisements must be hand- ad in by noon of the day before. wanted^ ” A good job printer. Must be sober steady, and understand tbc business. INGALLS ON THE FUTURE. The Agnostic’s Idea of Another Life --His Speech. Abuse will not defeat Gordon. Base ball and peaches were both failures this year. ])r. Felton nas made a mistake, in opposing Everett in the 7 th. Demo crats should not divide. Kilgore’s kick knocked the "stuffin’’ out of Fatty Reed’s quorum. Let’s have some more kicks. The friends of southern harbors : nd rivers will be glad that the president has signe f the river and harbor bill. A passenger train was thrown into the Schuylkill river, near Reading, Pa., on Friday night. Fifteen dead bodies have been recovered, and more are under the wreck. The debris of Monticello’s burned depot is now being cleared away, and the S., F. & AV. By. will commence the building of the new passenger waiting rooms at once. Dr. Mary Walker hobs up serenely and wants congress to prescribe a national habit for woman. Will Dr. Walker recommend the bloomer cos tume, or the prevailing dccolette style? Speak out, Mary. The greater part of the insane asy lum at Austiu, Texas, was destroyed by fire Friday night. Thirty female patients who were asleep in the part burned, were rescued with great diffi culty. The Augusta Chronicle says: A Newton county Alliance declares that it will not paironizc any mer chant who sells jute; that any member using jute shall be expelled from tho Alliance, and suggests that guano and grain be sacked in cotton bag g'»B- _ The democrats worried Reed again yesterday. They filibustered all day long. Or course no vote was reached on the Venable-I-angston case from Virginia. The republicans arc trying to oust Venable, who was fairly and squarely elected, and seat the contest ant. Crisp is leading the fight. And he is a good one. Tickets over the Alabama Midland nnd the Savannah, Florida and Wes tern railroads have been placed on 6ale at the office of the East Tennes see, Virginia and Georgia at Mont gomery. This is a new arrangement for the convenience of the traveling public. The anti-lottery bill has been signed by the president. It is now against the law for the mail to carry a newspa per containing a lottery advertisement. Most righteous law Wc have fought these lotteries lor years, and now sin ccrely congratulate the country that their seductive advertisements arc to be stopped. Following in the wake of Sam Jones, the evangelist, has developed a school of sensational preachers who are dcs lined to do the pulpit and Christiani ty Injury.! Some oi these would-be imitators of the evangelist try to go even further than he does in the use of-sensational, uncouth, vulgar and even brutal language. Some of these pulpit slangers actually disgust and drive people from the house of God. It is time the conservative, zealous ministers of the church of God were calling a halt along thi ■■ line.—Jackson Tribune and Sun. Ingalls' speech on Senator Beck : The right to live is, in human esti mation, the most sacred, the most in violable, the most inalienable. The joy of living is such a splendid and lu minous day as this is inconceivable. To exist is exultation. To live forev er is our sublimcst hope. Annihila tion, extinction, and eternal death are the forebodings |of despair. Nations die and races expire. Humanity it self is destined to extinction. The last man will perish and the sun will rise upon an earth without an inhabi tant. With the disippcarance ol man from the earth all traces of his exist ence will be lost. The palaces, tow ers and temples he has reared, the institutions he has established, the cit ies he has builded, the books lie lias written, the creeds he has constructed, the philosophies he lias formulated— all science, art, literature and knowl edge-will be obliterated and engulf, ed in empty and vacant oblivion. 'The great globe itself—yea, all which it inherits, shall dissolve, and like this unsubstantial pageant, laded, leave not a ack behind.” There is an intelligence so vast and enduring that the fiammg interval be tween the birth and death of universes is no more than the flash of fire flies above the meadows of summer; a co lossal power by which these stupend ous orbs arc launched in the abyss, like bubbles blown by a child in the morning sun, and whose sense of jus tice and reason cannot be less poten tial than those immutable statutes that arc tho law of being to the creat ures lie has made and which compel them to declare that if the only object of creation is destruction, if infinity i: the theatre of an uninterrupted scries of irreparable calamities, if the final cause oflife is death, then time is an inexplicable tragedy and e ernity an illogical and indefensible catastrophe Mr 1 President, that obsequy is for the quick and not for the dead. It is not an inconsolable lamentation. It is a song of triumph. It is an affirmation to those who survive that as our de parted associate, contemplating at the close of his life the monument of good deeds he had erected, more enduring than brass and loftier that the pyramid ol kings, might exclaim with the Ro man post, "non omuis moriar;” so, turning to the silent and unknown fu ture. he could rely with just and rea sonable confidence upon that most im pressive and momentous assurance ever delivered to the human race: "He that believeth in me, though lie were dead, yet shall he live; and whosoever livetli and believeth in me shall never die.” To Rival the Armours, Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 18.— Late yesterdny nfitcruoou the charter of tho Nashville Tacking Company was npplied for iu tho county clerk’s office. The immediate outlay will be SI,000,000, aud when the plaut is in running order it will employ between 800 aud 1,000 men. The location se lected consists of 989 acres oil' tho western extremity of the city. It is estimated that the first year 800,000 hogs and 50,000 cattle will be slaugh tered, and this amouut, it is said, will be increased ns the supply increases till the full capacity of 600,000 hogs, 75,000 cattlo and 75,000 sheep is reached. Cold air basements will ho built in connection with the packing house to chill the air so that slaugh tering may be done in warm as well as in cold weather. The concern will be the largest south of the Ohio and east of the Mississippi river, nnd is backed by IV. II. Silverhorn, who is at present at the head of three large western packing houses, and U. 8. Garretson, a southern capitalist. A Statue of Greely. New York, Sept. 19.—A statue of Horace Greely will bo unveiled iu the morning at the entrance of the Tribune building. G-EO. "W. ZF'OXSBZES 175 Broad Street, Masury Hotel Building. LARGE RATTAN ROCKERS. BAMBOO EASLES, —AND— SCREENS. . A Dude Shoots a Dude. Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 19.—Will Crockett, a young negro dude, fired five shots at Lucius Homes, another negro dude, iu the heart of the city to-day. Ono ball took effect in Holmes’ hand. The trouble was about a woman. Furniture, Carpets, Mattings, Rugs, Oil-Cloth, ^ WALL PAPER' ANTIQUE Window Shades _ , — ..Lace Curtains, Bod Room Suits* >1^ Portieres, Curtain Poles, Pictures, Only $39.00; Worth #45.OtfV Mouldings, \ Carriages. Portiere Curtains 2.65 per pair; worth 4.50/S. Etc., Etc., Etc.. Window Shades on Spring Rollers 35 cts. Sol d elsewhere at 50 cts. as a special l'avor. Watch this Corner for Low Prices' G-BO. "W- poebbs, Cf-A-Sia: OH insrSTALLMElTTS. gcp21-<l*wly MISS LAURA JONES, DEALER in MILLINERY and FANCY GOODS THE LATEST STYLES OUT. CALL AND EXAMINE THEM. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. WILL NOl BE UNDEBSOLD. NO TROUBLE TO SHOW GOODS, BUT A PLEASURE TO DO SO. I have just returned from New York, where I have given my personal attention to tiic careful selection of the most elegant lines of Millinery ever brought to Thomasvillc. My slock embraces the very latest novelties. As new* styles or novelties come out they will lie promptly added. Special attention is called to the pretty and serviceable line of school hats tor child- 0 20- diw tf. Thomasvillc Marble Works, Jackson and Stephen Sts.' Monuments,Tablets and Headstones in Marble, American and Imported, and in Granite. Satisfaction Guaranteed.- Aldrich & Morse, Proprietors. june 18 lyd&w. L. rSOIIMmT, PROPRIETOR ThomasvilleBottling’,:*: Works, Manufacturer and Dispenser of SODA and MINERAL WATERS, carbonated with NATURAL GAS imported from the Mineral Springs on the Rhine, Germany. ON DRAUGHT: COCA-COLA,? The Genuine “Ideal Brain Tonic. 1 * Will relieve almost any headache in 10 to 15 minutes. S The New Mexican Beverage, Non-Alcoholio. Delicious, “Frui-Miz!” Cooling. Vitalizing. Ice Cream Parlor, Specially fitted np for the accommodation of Ladle,. FRUITS AND CONFECTIONERIES, Faney Good,, Cigars, Tobacco, lie. Sa^isfaction’G-uarantoed. P. D. HEADLY, UNDER HOTEL BRIGHTON, Practical Watchmaker and Jeweler, Alligator and Fish Scale Jewelry —AND OTHER— Florida Curiosities. Clocks, Watflw aid Jewels Repaired, d&vr 271y A. W.PALIN& BRO.’S Carriage Shops. Lower Broad Street, Thomasville, Ga. EVERY DESCRIPTION OF CARRIAGE AND WAGON REPAIRING, HORSE SHOEING, ETC., Done nt reasonable rates. Having recently purchased a number ot labor-saving tools, nnd having tho Best Equipped Shops n Southwest Georgia, wc are prepared to do all kinds of work in our line with dis patch and neatness. ap!22d&wly James Gribben. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER, THOMASVILLE, GA. • Ilwillbcglftdtomnk contracts for, or su perintend, all classes of buildings, nubile or private, in cither brick or wood. Will furnish plans apd specifications if required. If you want any building dbrio call ou me, and J will submit estimates whether contract is awarded me or not. I will guarantee satisfaction in all my work. I refer to tho many buildings erected by me in Thomasvillc, and to all parties for whom lliavo worked. Shop on Fletcher ■ttcct, 2nd door from Broad. Thomasvlllo Ga., April 15,1800. if Young Female College, ITHOMASVILLE, GA., The Twenty-First Annual Session —WILL OI’EN- Septcmber 3rd, 1890. TERMS MODERATE. Teaching thorough, diciplinc firm, but kind. For full information ap ply for catalogue to JN’O. E. BAKER, 8-12-1 m President. grand Central Hotel, WAYCROSS, GA. With Electric Lights. Is nuw open, and I would be pleased to have my. Thomasville friends and others stop with me when they come this way. All my help is experienced. The dining room is under the supervision of that effi cient steward, Syl. B. Van Dyke, of New York All correspondence promptly an swered. Special attention paid to ladies with children. Rates $2.00 to $3.00 per day. D. J McINTOSH, 4-19-d&wly Pro»t*«*i A. S WHITE, Contractor & Builder. THOMASVILLE GA.’ * Careful and personal attention paiu to all work, and satisfaction guaranteed in both work ami- prices. Will be glad to make estimates for you. My aim is to please my patronsj 7 10. d.twdm EXPRESS OFFICE HOURS. Express closes for liatnbridgo, Ga„.. 0:30 a. m. Express closes for Albany, Go., anil points reached v|a. Albany, Ga., and llonttccllo, ria M 7,45 a. m. Express closes for Savannah and the North, train No. 8, No. 8 carries northern matter 11:00 a.m. Express closes for tho West No. 7, this train doos not toko matter for Uainbrldgo,Ga v 1:16 p.m. Express closes for Savannah and Florida, train No.c 5:00p.m Patrons of this Company please observe the above. J. E. REYNOLDS, Mgr. W-lm DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP. The firm of Mollcr & Hawthorn, of this city, photographers, has this day been dis solved by mutual consent. The business will be continued by Mr. A. W. Mollcr, and all accounts due by or to the late firm wilt be settled or recicvcd by him. Parties indebted to the firm of Mol lcr & Hawthorn are respectfully requested to settle their accounts before the 1st of Oct. next, to avoid having them placed into an Attorney’s hands for collection. A. W. HOLLER, JAS. HAWTHORN. Thomuvillr, Ga., Sept. 8th, 1890. DOWN WALL :-:PAPBR Jk. ROLL. Can be bought nowhere at this Price except from L. F. Thompson & Gel. Broad. Street. jaal-ly A Mutual Pleasure. Nothing pleases a business man so much as to please his patrons and friends. WE A1(E JUBILANT. Our Customers are Better Satisfied Our Sale Has Been An Immese Success. STACKS OF GOODS HAVE GONE. But we have plenty sticks left for our friends. €OME ROUND AND SEE ITS. We have bargains in all departments. Tho ladies will find a feast. Tho gentlemen a rich harvest. THINK OF IT, The best all round stock in the city tu choose from, and every thing at cast FOR SHARP CA8H. L. STBYEEMAN 3s BR0., Brimful of Bargains and Promoters of Popular Prices. ajanl-lyl AND Oold. Storage Company Ice Made From DistilledSWaler Pure and Sparkling. Delivered Anywhere in the City. Give orders to Wagons or mail direct to W. S. KEEFER, Pres, and Mang’r, ol y il