The Daily times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1925, October 28, 1890, Image 2

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THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE .'ohn Tripled, Editor and Manager. Tt'KSDA Y, OCTOBER 28, 1890. Daily TiMtw-F.XTEiii-ais. i' pnl.lish.i] ifcrj morning {Monday excejited.) i '• Wiiilt TiiiES-EKT»arM*B •• piblisVd 'rory Satnrday morning. SriacnirTioN Rites. Il* i.i TiMKO-EsTKRrnisE |5 00 1 oar r “ 1 00 D*n.r Aotirtio no Rates. t mnsiont Rates.—$1.00 per square Dr the >•!« insertion, and SO certs for e» ii aubse- ...ent insertion. i.e Curare, one month, - - - . $ 5 00 • e Snar«, two months - - - - 0 00 ■ ae 3qiyifO, three month!, - - • 12 00 i tt* fcqnare, six months, ... - 2# 00 Mi» Square, twelre mantle, - - - 85 *0 Subject to change by special arranj ament. JOHN TRIPLETT, Hue. Itlua. Notice to Advertiser*, lo insure insertion, ail ebaogvs for standing advertisements must be hand ed in by noon of the day before. Quay’s silence continues to be beard in Pennsylvania. Prof. H. C. 'White has resigned as state chemist, lie is a loss to the state. Young Kusscll is making a splendid fight for the governorship of Massa chusetts. The first floor of the Atlanta Con stitution favors Gordon. Let the re form go upwards. Governor Hill, of New York, has been stirring up the menagerie, out West. Hill is a stirrer. Georgia is a great place: two mag nificent expositions are going on within her borders at the same time. The Boston Herald believes that if Abraham Lincoln were alive to day lie would be a Democrat.—Ex. One thing is certain: -‘Honest Abe” would not train with the corrupt party now in power. Rev. J. M. Rusliin, of Boston, who was at one lime urged by some alli- ancemen to run for congress, is an ar- , G G r ■ f- r r’ . ( C mm. i. o..it.ltlx..ls III thousands in his advocacy ol Gordon. John B. Gordon is a ncyophnntic old soldier, if one is to judge by his letters and speeches.—Early county News. Gordon was not called "sycophan tic” when he was leading ragged, foot-sore confederates into the jaws of death. It begins to look as if the alliance was not in a hurry to take up Smith, Hines, Gartrell, Norwood anil others, who have been bidding for their sup port by endorsing the sub treasury plan. Keep your eye on Livingston. Racing returns for this season show that August Belmont leads the list of winners with 8107,000 in purses. After him come Senator Hcarst to the comfortable tune of 8110,500, W. E. Scott at 809,000 and “Lucky” Baldwin at 859,000. The Dwyer brothers also win 805,000.—Ex. Mrs. Westend (who has tried to economize by slipping into a cheap seat at an opera)—Dear me! I didu t expect to see you here, Bridget. Bridget (Mrs. Westcnd’s servant) —Oi’m a great operygocr, mum. Generally Oi sits in the parkey, but secin’ you coinin’ up stairs Oi followed on t‘ keep ve compnuy.—New York Weekly. ' The Americus Times pertinently and appropriately says: All honor to Rev. James Stephen son, Episcopal rector in Fredrick county, Maryland. He has done a proper and ,'needed act. The Times cheerfully gives him honorable men tion tor making a public and formal protest against the marriage at the Frederick lair grounds, in the pres ence of a gaping crowd, of a young farmer’s daughter. Marriage is a thing too sacred to lie celebrated in this way. Tom Woolfolk will be hung at l’erry to-morrow—unless he cheats the gallows by committing suicide. He is being closely watched to pre vent any attempt to kill himself. Tom says he prefers death to longer confinement, and claims to have been forgiven for all his sins. He still asserts his innocensc of the crime for which lie is to hang. The hanging will draw an immense crowd. Public hangings are demoralizing, and sh' iild not be permitted. Donned to Disappointment. If the farmers place any hope in the sub-treasury bill we fear they are to he disappointed. It seems now like it will be ridden to death by broken down politicians before it can possibly become a law.—Oglethorpe Echo. Down With Gordon. (From the Augusta Chronicle.) He represents the past; lie and all the old rebs in the South. They arc- all playing out, and the longer the new South, die progressive South, tries to keep them to the fore in[oflicc, in honor and sweet memory, the lon ger she will anger and irritate the North. This is the age of hard cash. Gordon has had business reverses, and this absolves the people from any hith er allegiance to him. This is a day of new gods. The war was a failure, and is over, and this is a new country. Every C mfederale monument in the land ihou'd be demolished. The bio graphies o Lee and Jackson and Da vis should be excluded from our libra ries public and private. The law in this sta e making Memorial day and Lee’s birthday public holidays should be repealed, and so should the law pensioning maimed Confederate sol diers. Eel the past go to—the ba I. What •ve want now i • money, not sentiment. We want new men ; let the great men of the past be turned out to grass, as the farmer turns out bis fiithiul old horse. Gordon has been true to the South. All her soldiers were true to her, but we do not need them any lon ger. We need more money, and we must have it, even if we have to change the constitution to get it. We must hare it now, to-day, for to-mor row we die. What do we care for the past or future ? The present is ours, and let us make use ot it. It is to the eternal credit of the Norlh that she lias honored Grant, and continues to honor and worship Sher. man, notwithstanding his incendiar ism, and all her great generals, for they led her armies to victory. Iiut why should the South honor longer the men who led her to defeat ? She has worshipped at the shrine of failure too long already. The sub-treasury bill is the wisest financial scheme ever devis ed on earth. It is the thrilling inspi ration of the century—the climax of all wisdom. To talk about something better is nonsense ; there is and can be nothing better. When the temple was rebuilt, after the seventy years' captivity, the young Isaelites wept, be cause its glory was not as great as that of the former temple. Let the young men of to day tear down, with their own hands, the old •cm !•', and, with their own hands, rent a new tcni|>.i. UcOicatod to the .me spirit ut me age—Utilitarianism. Let the old men fashion a wisdom suited to the times. Defeat Gordon, and a new epoch in the history of the South will have dawned. The North will then begin to believe the South sincere in its professed allegiance to the Union. It is fitting that Georgia, the Empire state, should be first to repudiate the past, and first to enter the temple of a new religion and faith. The only opportunity which has offer ed, or which can offer, for the people of Georgia to unmistakably de lare repudiation of all in her past history which is distasteful lo the North, will eome to her in the approaching elec tion of a United States senator. Let her defeat him, and she will assert her freedom Irom shackles, she herself hath welded—welded, it is true, in the blood of her noblest sons—but by so doing, she will challenge the admira tion of her enemies. Down with Gor don I New South. Editor Walsh in his vigorous, trench ant style, comments on the above, as follows: “In the Chronicle of to-day will be found a communication headed “Down with Gordon,’’ and signed •‘New South.” It is a subtle expression of the mal ignant and ungrateful warfare made upon Gen. Gordon in his race for the senatorship. l’he satire will become a reality if Gen. Gordon is defeated. It represents fie utilitarian spirit of the day and the malignity of the op position to his election. It also rep resents the tyranny and senseless pre scription o! some of these who are fighting a man who, in war and in peace, has reflected the sentiment and chivalry of the South. His defeat will be construed as a re flection upon the dead in just cause, and as a rebuke lo the living who love the Old South and respect .her history and traditions. A people who forget their dead heroes deserve to be forgot ten themselves. A people who fail to honor the noblest living exemplar of the Confederacy deserve to be censur ed for their ingratitude and.character- ized as lost to til jse high and patriot ic sentiments and actions which have won for the Confederate chieftains and soldiers the admiration and homage of mankind. The name of Gordon will live in glory as long as the story ol the Contederate struggle for independ ence finds a place in history.” How the Joyful Knowledge Came. Youngly—How did you come to know that you were in love with me, dearie? Debutante r blusbingly)—I felt that I was an awful fool.—New York Sun. Tnmmatiy is on trial in New York again. Tammany lias been tried vory often; and the verdict lias gener ally been in its favor. a-rso. FOEBES 175 Broad .Street, Mutiny Hotel Building. Carpets, CAM HOO KASLES, Mattings, LARGS. \ "bilCloth ANTIQUE \ WA'-h I’AUEK \ SCREENS. Window Shades Bed Room Suits,\A ac ^';'i r e l r e^ s ’ WITH TOILET GLASS \ Curtain Poles. _ _ Pictures, Only ; Wm-ila Mouldings, Carriages. Etc, Pip Window Shades on Spring Rollers 35 cts. Sold ^ lc ’ elsewhere at 50 cts. as a special favor. Portiere Curtains 2.65 per pair; worth 4.50 Watch this Corner for Low Prices. 0-^0. “W- FOEEES, C -A. S IB O Urt X XT.S TALLMENTS. MpSl-dAwly JSSTA HUSHED 1841 Use Pure Hogs Lard and Star Hams Burckhardt’s Premium Leaf Lard Is guaranteed to bo iniulo aiLolutcly of hog’s fat. No cotton seed oil or beef tallow. P1EST MEDALS. At Cincinnati 1870-S1-72-7B-7-J75-7K.-79 80; Vienna, Austria; New Orleans 188-4-1885; Ohio Valley and Central State Fair; Piedmont Exposition 1887-88-89, and nineteen others. More medals awarded to this lard than any other. Swan’s Dowu Patent Hour is the best. SOUTHERN EXPOSITION MONTGOMERY. ALA. Opens Novombc-i--L, Closes Novemboi- 15, 1890. A mfiKiiirtcent exTiil.it of the worlds t.ruilmt; an.) manufactures. Attractions uncqualed • an}* other exposition. PAWNEE BILL, with liia great wild west ?li»w, v. ill give one complete performance every day, comment* ng at 11 o’clock and lasting until one. Startling wild west scenes will be shown by h is loo cowboys and Indian.'', giving a true and realistic picture of life on the plains. 3 Grand •s every day: We now number -fim- of the K*st horses on the American tnrf among our entries. Our display of poultry, live .-n , k. machinery and farm implements will be BALLOON AGOENSIOlSi S From among the clouds. A man will jump from a balloon and with his parachute will iand safely on the ground. T-.O’W BATES On ail railroads for both passengers and freights. J. C. Cheney, Gen’l Manager. II. C. Davidson, Secty. OPERA HOUSE iTJwmasville Marble Works, TUESDAY OCT 28, 18DC. | -CHARMING Hettie Bernard Chase Supported by a Fine Company of Dramatic Artists, and the famous Golden Gate Quartette, in her latest, best aud great play, UNGLE’SDARLING, A Romance of Alaska, l.v CTIAS. W. CHASE. ‘•True friends, like ivy dinging to the wall. Stand side by side, «*r both together fall.” Special Scenery for tluee entire acts! he Great Shipwreck Scene! The Wonder- il Ice Glacier Seme, with Grandly lllumi- uted Aurora llorenlis. Price 25, 50, 1.00. Seats on sale at IM-1 k Culpepper s. .J. I\ Me A 11 LEY- Private Lessons in Languages. A SC IK ST AM) Ml IDKR.V. Room in Rear of Library. Jackson and Stephen Sts. Those having the misfortune to uetd a Monument, Tablet or Headstone, either in marble or granite will save money by get ting our prices before purchasing. We are connected with the largest marble and gran ite dealers in the United States, and can fur nish your work at remarkable low prices, (kill and see us or w rite for prioes. Satis faction guaranteed in every icspeel Aldrich & Morse, Proprietors. june 18 lyd&w. 10 20tf IIOSPIIATE ROCKS — ANAI.YZKD BY— . N. ISON IIII KANT —AT— BONDURANT & PEACOCK’S CASH DRUG STORE. Terms reasonable. lo Hi lmd w iiiil BROKER IltE I NS U R ANCE AGEN T LIFE-INSURANCE AGENT ENTAL AND COLLECTION AGENT REMINGTON THOT,ITER AGENT. A nice selection of furnished and unfur- shed eottnprs for rent. Call on or address J. K. B- Love. 158 Broad street. 10-1 (Successor to Geo. Fearn) RESTAURANT. Amos Lester, for years with the Gulf nouse, will hereafter give his personal at tention to the Restaurant on Jackson street, next door to Carroll's. Meals served in lirst class style at all hours. Fish, game and oysters, day or night. Everything neat and clean. A good line of vegetables and fancy family gioceries kept constantly on hand. Would be glad to have the patronage cf tny white and colored friends. Fresh oysters, in any style, and all kinds of vegetables alw ays on hand. d 2w wlm. «F. €. MIMS. PRACTICAL AND AANLYTICAL CHEMIST, SAVANNAH, iGA. Analysis of Fertilizers, Soils, I’hos- pliasc Rock, etc. TERMS MODERATE* Currc-spondencejsolieiteil. O-.IO-tf P. D. HEADLY, JACKSON STREET. Practical! WatchmakeCand Jeweler, Alligator and’Fish Scale Jewelry —AM) OTHER— Florida Furiosities. Clocks Watcbfs’.and Jcselr* Repaired. 'J7lV AUCTION AND COMMISSION HOUSE. Jackson .St. next to Watt’s Corner. I will have regular sales every Saturday, and sell real estate and live stock. I make a specialty of selling household and kitchen furniture, stoves, carpets and merchandise of every description. Consignments lolieit- ed. Prompt returns and satisfaction guar anteed I. K hnEvrn. WALL :~:PAPBR Can be boughtjjnowhere .-it this Price except from Broad. Street. II! Although we have already one of the largest stocks to be found in South Georgia wc are daily adding to if, 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 ns Thomas vide lias never seen before, consist ing of all kinds of 3DISESS O-OOIDS, NOTIONS, CLOAKS, WRAPS, UNDER WEAR, HOSIERY, BLANKETS and all kinds of domestics. Men’s and Boys Clothing For the last ten years we have been handling Strauss Bro’s, the well known - - Baltimore clothiers, goods, which have been i 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. T AXD- ColcL Stoi “i°’e Company Ice Made From DislikedWater Piircgand'Siiarkling. Delivered Anywhere in the City. Give orders to Wagons or mail direct to W. S. KEEFER, Pres, and Mang’r,