The Daily times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1925, October 15, 1890, Image 2

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THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE lohn Triplett, Editor and Manager. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15,1890. Oaiit Tims-E.vteepkisi M published every morning (Monday excepted.) f-.f IVkixlt Tmxa-EnTxnpBiM i» publisaed •rery Satarday morning. Subscription Rati*. Oaa.i Tiata-Eirmrun, . . • ‘•V iwlt “ ... $5 00 . 1 00 Daily Adtmtissu Ratbs. i'ran.irnt Ratal.—»1.00 per iquare for the drat inirrtion, and 50 cei ta for ca- n aubsc- jaent insertion. 0«a Square, one month, - • - - » 5 oo v’aa Square; two months - - - - • Squirt, three month i, ... 19 oo thre Square, «ix month!, - * * * *° ®® One Square, twalra monlM, - - - 35 00 Subject to ubanga by special arranf ement. i JO Hit TBIPI-BTT, Bin. Mnn. Notice to Advertiser!. Rube Burrows is dead—and buried Express mcsscugers will feel easier Bariium’s great show is in Georgia. We’ll put up with Robinson and John Lowlow, dow here. Porter continues to receive raps about the census. Very little confi dence is felt in many ot the figures. It is said that seasickness attacks the weak minded most viqjently. Then a good many people ought to never go to sea. Augusta is one of the coming cities of the South. And Thomasville hopes, ere long, to bo tied to her with bands of steel. The newspapers are still discussing the question whether Winnie Davis, the child ol the Confederacy, will mar ry Mr. Wilkinson or not. The state fair at Macon opens Oc tober aand. Thomasville and Thom-, as county should well .be represented there on the occasion. Remember that this .is Georgia’s fair. After a search of twenty six year® a New York woman has found her husband, and seems to think he wasn’t worth finding. Why, the best sort of a husband would spoil in that length of time.—News. Mount Carmel Ill’s has agreed to furnish a flying machine for the world's fair at Chicago. If the par ties come to time—of which fact there are very grave doubts—the flying ma chine will be the biggest thing there, RELATING TO QUANTRELL VJho Has ft Funerals, An Unfortunate Man Who I Lived a Life of Sorrow and Quantrell is dead! The popular bushwhacker has lit cut. For ihe fifteenth time in ten years this unfor tunate guerilla lias passed through death’s portals. Fifteen times he lias had a warm personal interview with Old Nick, reappearing time after time, only to pass away in some romantic manner, He has been a man of many identi ties. In Texas he has died three times, once as a tall, slender man with steel blue eyes and fierce red mus tache; twice as a bearded, burly man, weighing between aoo and 300 pounds, Mr. Quantrell has deftly given up the ghost in Missouri at least seven times, It is told of he and Mr. J. James, also of Missouri, that 'hey once made .a wager on who could die the ofiener in one week. The wager was won by Mr. Quantrell, he becoming a lemains nine times within that space, ,'hile Mr. J. James was killed only seven times, though seriously wounded twice, It is sad to think that these poor men, who only killed folks when they thought the population excessive, should have to pass through life as subjects for continual funerals. It is interesting to learn that the plank required to bury Mr. Quantrell, if laid in a straight line, would reach from Sheffield to Gum-chooch-on-the Yang- tse-Kiang. We might go on for centuries giv ing interesting statistics about Mr. Quantrell’s burial; we might say that if the excavating done on his many graves had been done in the DeLes- seps canal, the Isthmus of Panama would now be a legend. It grieves the local editor when he realizes that he isn’t the only one by some fifty who has written an obituary of Mr. Quantrell, and he feels a com passion lor the many poor newspaper men who have studied for hours trying to think of something good to say about the gentleman besides his bravery. The public may now rest assured that this strange character is bona fide "stiff.” If he died in Birmingham he’s all rght; he will stay dead. No man has ever died in Birmingham and come to life again,- - Sheffield Enterprise, G-EOi "W. FOEBESj 175 Broad Street, Masury Hotel Building. LARGE Carpets, Mattings . \ Ro Si RATTAN ROCKERS. BAMBOO EASLES, m Bed Room Suits>yJ-«"' WITH TOILET GLASS \ Curt a in Poles, Only $20.50; Worth $4 screens. Futures, MouldingSi Carriag^Si Portiere Curtains 2.65 per pair; worth 4.^0 jftc., Window Shades on Spring Rollers 35 cts. Sold elsewhere at 50 cts. as a special favor, tc WALL Watch this Corner for Low Prices. G-EO. -W\ POKBEIS, O Ft I 3STS tallmewts. CASH Ufll-dswly ESTABLISHED 1841 Use Pure Hogs Lard and Star Hams fi Is guaranteed to be made adsolutely of hog’a fat- No cotton seed oil or beef tallow. FIB3ST Ev£E3ID^.B-iS- At Cincinnati 1870-8L-72-73-74 75-76-79 80; Vienna, Austria; New Orleans 1884-1885; Ohio Valley and Central State Fair; Piedmont Exposition 1887-88-89, and nineteen others. More medals awarded to this lard than any other. STYLISH MILLINERY. The grand opening is over, and MISS LAURA JONES Is now ready to (how one of the hand somest lines of MILLINERY GOODS Ever seen in Thomasville. Every thing new and stylish. No trouble to show goods. Satisfaction guaranteed. Prices will compare with the lowest. B. D. FUDGE, At the wild Western town of Bodie, a few years ago, if we are to beiieve a San Francisco correspondent, when a man was shot the chances were he was allowed to lie just where he fell, to be muddled up by passing stages and stray mules. Now such is the improv ed tone of public opinion that even the most ignorant shooter hangs the corpse over some fence, where its friends can readily find it, and not a few even drop a "postal card to the widow. Thus doth civilization march forward in the Woolly West. Machen’s new Road. Madison, Ga., Oct. 8.—All is rail road talk in this city to-night. Col. Machen was in the city to.day, and laid a proposition before the mayor and council by which Madison may secure terminal rates and another line to the seacoast, a direct line to New York and open communication with the great West. Machen proposes to build from Newborn, on the Middle Georgia and Atlantic, to Madison, a distance of sixteen miles, with a prob ability of building on to Washington, Ga. Washington has already propos ed to Machen to raise $50,000 if he will build to that city, and Machen wants Morgan county to raise $10,000 as. her part. The Georgia Midland proposes to build to Newborn, which will give us direct communication with the great West. At Washington we strike the Au gusta ond Knoxville. The Plant sys tem will also build from some point inJSoutfi Carolina to Washington, and thus Madison will be placed in direct communication with New York. At lanta and Augusta will be brought fif teen miles closer together by this scheme, while Madison will be ten miles nearer Atlanta, and the distance between Savannah and Augusta sbor- tened. Dyeing Roses. It is said that the process of dyeing roses is becoming a remunerative branch 0/ industry with English hor ticulturists. Instead of growing new varieties of roses, which is. a process of years, they simply grow ordinary white roses and dip them in a chemi cal solution which in a single hour converts them into the most magnifi cent yellow tea roses, the rare scarlet red or the peculiar shade of bluish violet which has been one of the fa vorites of the season. In a similar way pink roses are turned into bios soms of the deepest red. Some years ago, before this branch of "floral chemistry” was developed, the first experiments were successfully mad* in France with the popular pink hor- ttnsia, which, by being watered with a solution ol iron, assumed a blue shade.—London Letter. 90 in the Shade- Cincinnati, Oct. 13.—Yesterday was an extraordinary day here. It seemed as if n hot cloud hovered about the city. The heat was op pressive and the thermometer regis tered 90 in%ie shade. Two pros trations from heat were reported dur ing the day. This high temperature is all the more remarkable from the fact that it has been so cold for the past fort night that fires were .indisputable. The beat disappeared in the afternoon as suddenly as it came. Much Suffering in Ireland. London, Oct. 13.—A newspaper correspondent, who bos just returned from a trip along the coast of Ireland, says there will be no famine but a poor crop of potatoes, and that there is much suffering to come. A Double Victim. In Justice Brodwell’s court the other day a woman was fined $15 for kissing a dtfde. Why sbonld she thna be punished twice?—Chicago News(Ind.) THOMASVILLE,IGA. duxes nr— HARDW^ TLE3 : STOVES, IRON, Buggy and Wagon Material Tin and Hollow Ware, Guns and Sporting Goods ot >11 kinds, snd age for King’s Powder Co. Thomasville ROLL Can be bought nowhere at this Price except from This Space Will he .Occupied BY WILLIAMSON & ROUX Watchmakers & Jewelers, wno WILL SHORTLY OPEN BUSINESS AT NO. J27 BROAD Street. 10 3 lm J. R. BURCH, -DEALER IN- • Mill located 8 miles north ot ThomasYille. I will deliver lumber any where in the city or on board cars at the VBRT LOWEST LIVING PRICES. Thanking my patrons for past favors, “I ask a continuance ol the same, promising fair, squirt. upright dealings in eTery par ticular. I guarantee prices and quality, and respectfully solicit a share ol the public patronage. J. B. BURCH, THOMASVILLE,{GEORGIA. o-sdftwtf NOTICE. Mr. R L Hicks having sold his Interest in the drug store of Hicks tc Peacock to Mr. 0 8 Bonlurant, the undersigned have formed a copartnership for carrying on the bnslneis at the same stand under the firm name of Bonduraht ft Peasock. The new firm will carryout aU the eontreets of the late firm of Hicks ft Psatock. The cash system and low- prices will oonNnne to be a ruling feature of the bnslnees. 0.8. Bosdcbant, J. W. Pusoex, Thomasville, 8a., Sept. 20,1890. 30d Jackson and Stephen Sts. a Monuments, Tablets and Headstones in Mat hie, American and Imported, and in Granite. Satisfaction Guaranteed- Aldrlcli & Morse, Proprietors. jane 18 lydftw. Janl-ly Broad Street. Ij. SCHMIDT, proprietor Thomasville tfotllinsj:-: Works, Manufacturer and Dispenser of SODA snd MINERAL WATERS, carbonated with NATURAL :-:I GAS imported from the Mineral Springs on the Rhine, Germany, ON DRAUGHT: COOA-OOLA, The Genuine “Ideal Brain Tonic.' Will relieve almost any headache in 10 to 15 minutes. The New Mexican Beverage, Non-Alcohoilo' Delicious, . “Frui-Miz!” Cooling. < Vitalizing. Ice Cream Parlor, Specially fitted op for thcjjaccommodation of Ladies. FRUITS AND CONFECTIONERIES, Fancy Goods, Cigars, Tobacco, ete. atisfaction Guaranteed. A. W. PALIN & BRO.'S Carriage Shops. Lower Broad Street, Thomasville, Ga. BVBRV DESCRIPTION OP CARRIAGE AND WAGON REPAIRING, HORSE SHOEING, ETC., Done at reasonable rates. Having recently purchased a number of labor-saving tools, and having tho Best Equipped Shops n Southwest Georgia, we are prepared tq do all kinds of work in our line with dis patch and neatness. ap!22dftwly AUCTION AND COMMISSION HOUSE. Jacuox St. mxt to Watt's Comm. I will bare regular sales every Saturday, and sell real estate and lire stock. I makes specialty of selling household and kitchen furniture, stores, carpets and merchandise of every description. Consignments solicit ed. Prompt returns and satisfaction guar anteed. 10 3 Cm L. A. Dbkyib. Although we have already one of the largest stocks to be found in South Georgia we are daily adding to it. and when completed it will be the most carefully selected in the city. We are now offering to the public a stock for inspection and purchase, such as Thomasville has never seen before, consist ing of all kinds of 3DBSBSS CKDOXDS, NOTIONS, CLOAKS, WRAPS, UNDER- WEAR, HOSIERY, BLANKETS and all kinds of domestics. Men’s find Boys Clothing For .the last ten years we have been handling Strauss Bro’s, the well known Baltimore clothiers, goods, which have been proved to be the best fitting clothes on the market. We also keep a complete stock of GENT’S FURNISHING GOODS. Everybody give us a call. L. STEYERMAN & BRO. . -AO Cold. Storage Company lee Made From Dlstilledj-Water PuregandCSparkling. Delivered Anywhere in the City. "’Give prders to Wagons or mail direct to W. S. KEEFER, Pres, and Mang’r. uly