The Daily times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1925, November 11, 1890, Image 2

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' V $5 00 1 00 THE DAILY TIMES-ENTERPRISE inhn Triplett, Editor and Manager, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1J, 18*0. Oailt Tiues-Kktibpk'** h published every marling (Monday sxcaptsd.). . fna Whh-tTiiho-Estcrpeih a piWubed or try Batirday morning. SnnscRimos Rat**. Dajct Tmn-Esmnrniir, . . W racLT “ • • • Daht ADTnnna.no Ratm. JSSSSaiTBatO*.—Ol.oo p«r ignaro for Hie tin uiortion, aid 10 cant* for e»:h eubsc- litiniertlpn. . . „ i, ona month, - - - - t B 00 , two months .... 8 00 , three montht, - - - 12 00 _ fin months, - - - - J# 00 1TT --e, twain montsi. - - - 85 00 fsbfce* to change by ipccial arranj *ment. JOHN TBiriKTT, Pp«. «"»»• Notice to Advertisers. To instire insertion, all changes for standing advertisement* must be hatid- a4 in by noon of the day befort Cleveland sowed the seeds in 1888, and the harvest is unprecedented. Blaine can smile at the defeat of his party; it puts him to the fore 1 Gov. Northen’s inaugural m;ssage is an able, statesman like document. The republicans will try and hedge on the tariff question. See if they don’t. t r~ There is said to be division in the counsels of the Constitution, on the Senatorial question. The senatorial race is on—and will be until Tuesday, the i8th. Then the agony will be over. Cannon’s mouth wont go off in the 52nd congress. The rebound, the last time it went off, knocked himself out. Blaino is again the central figure in the republican party. He can have the nomination in 1892 simply for the asking. $8,261,34°- the methods of Quay to 25,000 men _ Massachusetts who eudorsed the The losses are too heavy tor the re- pj uc ]j and statesmanship of Wm. E. publicans to recoup. Besides, they r ubsc h ; the 10,000 men in New will have to carry the McKinley tar- Thanksgiving Day. Washington, Nov. 8.— The follow ing was issued to-day. By the President of the United Statei.s A PROCLAMATION. By the grace and favor of Almighty God, the people of this nation have been led to the closing day of a pas sing year which has been full of the blessings of peace and the comforts of plenty. Bountiful compensation has come to us for the work of our minds and on the other hand in every depart ment of human industry. Now, there fore, I, Benjamin Ilartison, President of the Uhited States of America, do hereby appoint Thursday, the ayth day of the present month of Novem ber, to be observed as a day of pra/cr and thanksgiving, and I do invite ihe people upon that day to cease from their labors, to meet in their accus tomed houses of worship, and to join in rendering gratitude and praise to our beneficent Creator for the rich blessings he has given us as a nation, and in invoking a continuance of his protection and graces for the future. I commend to my fellow-citizens the privilege ol remembering the poor, the homeless and sorrowful. Let us en deavor to merit the promised recom pense of charity and the gracious ac ceptance ol our praise. In testimony whereof 1 have hcreun to set my hand and caused the seal of the United State? to be affixed. Done at the city of Washington, this eighth day of November, in the year ol our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety, and of the independeice of the United States the one hundred and fifteenth. Ben;. Harrison. By the President: James G. Blaine, Sec. of State. According to ,Gov. Gordon s final bondST debt'of the'^state^amounts to Pennsylvania who declined to endorse Men With Conscience in the North. One of the saving signs of the times is the largest number of voters in the Union which is not bound by party spirit so rigidly as to be enslaved by party policy. The 75,000 voters in Hampshire who protested against the Will nave to carry —j — xuiuipsuiru " nu —- iff, and that will break down the Republicanism of Blair and Wm. E. strongest party in existence. It is said that only 200 colored votes were polled in Jefferson county. Even the colored vote is no longer at the command of the republican party. It has forfeited that also. Northern and Western states fur nish a majority of democrats in the naxt house, without a vote from the gjuth. This is a revolution, indeed. The North hns, at last, repudiated the republican party From a reliable authority we hove it that the A. T. & G. railroad will at an early day put a large force of hands at work on their lino of road between this city and the point of the line the road has already been built to, and that within 90 days cars will be running into the city. Tallahassee will soon have trains over both the A T. & G. and the Tallahassee Northern running into the city.—Tallahossean Chandler; the 50,000 men in Ohio who refused to sanction such n sys tem of itemized robbery as the Mc Kinley bill, and the 130,000 men in Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin who have reversed their delegations in Congress, show the reserve power of tho people: The truth is the great body of the American people is politically honest. These people are not independent in a political sense, c - nes ^ for they believe in party organization P 0 ’ and party principle. But they are to throw off party yoke when bad men get control and when the party wanders from its real prin ciples.—Augusta Chronicle. Chronicle says the abundance of roate- The Augusta democrats have rial for 1892. There are Cleveland and Campbell and Cleveland and Palmer, and C'eve land and Vilas. Then we have Hill and Gray,or Hill and Bynum, or Hill and Peck. Or we have Palmer and Patti 6on or Russell and Willets. This makes a strong array; but Grover Cleveland, whose ringing tariff views have roused the whole country, will be apt to wear the honor The administration of President Harrison has been one of the most unpopular that the country has known. But it has been less an ob ject of animosity than of contempt, and- entered very little into the con sideration of the people at the late electing. Tho voters were interested in other and greater things, and there was hardly a member of Congress of any prominence at oil concerning whose election there was not a greater interest than how the result might , the political fortunes of the IittwTOan in the White House. He is the most insignificant figure in Am—4eai» politics to day.—Providence Journal, Ind. • FURN1T 175 BROAD STREET. MASURY HOTEL BUILDING. LARGE ANTIQUE OAK BEDROOM SUITE With two extra large French Glasses, for only #29.50; WOIl'TI #45 This pattern of suite can only be found at II Other styles in “Solid Oak” Suits for ^20.00 ©-aa-cL ££23-00- BETTER, A LITTLE i@UB OAK SUITE —FOR—> Priced elsewhere in these columns at $29.50 SEE THIS Improved Rocker with a rod which guarantees Rockers never to get loose. sei>21-iliwty BU CK1HBAT. a g >> m © r—I & Z % o CD O -i crq 5' 0) < -y C U Elegant Line Fine Roasted Coffees, STRAIGHT OR BLENDED. T- 3\ BALL, IBIEBO., Props. 11 6 d 5m Q-. W. FEERELI 107 BROAD STREET, Opposite Mitchell House. -DEALER IN- FURNITURE, Carpets, Matting. Rugs, Window Shades, Lace Curtains Curtain Poles, Pictures, Moulding,Child Carriages, Mattresses, Tho Reasons Boiled Down. New York World. None of the current explanations of the extraordinary political revolution on Tuesday will suffice. The result was not due to money. A whole nation cannot be corrupted. It was not due to deception. An en tire people cannot bo fooled at once. It was not due to superior manage ment on the part of tho democrats. The republican campaign was far su perior at all points. The overthrow of the republicans was the result of a popular uprising against higher taxes and higher prices, against a policy of force after twenty year’s of peace, against a recklessness in appropriations which has converted surplus iDto- a deficiency, against the encroachments of plutocracy in the government aud the buttressing of monopolies with law. The result is such as no party could achieve. It is the act of an in dignaut people, asserting their right and proclaiming tbeir will. Hon. Don Dickinson sent in this dispatch to bis old chief: Detroit, Mich., Nov. 5. The Hon. Grover Cleveland: Prospects more and more favorable We revolutionize the upper peninsula, carry the state and are still gai ting in congressmen. We willjhave at least seven out of the eleven. We are cheering for Democracy for you. Don M. Dickinson WALL PAPER AND FURNISH EXPERIENCED PAPER HANGER Sash, Doors and Blinds, Window and Plate Glass. WILL SAVE YOU MONEY If you give me a call. Low prices for cash or installments 111 tt ESTABLISHED 1841 Use Pure Hogs Lard and Star Hams _ ■ ■ ■ ■ n nv ■ ■ f I ■ SIDE BOARDS AND HAT RACKS AT COST. If you will bring money with you, we will S'-H you furniture at you own price. MATTINGS AND RUG 8 CHEAP. Our stock of Sash, Blinds, Doors. Paints, Oils and Glass cannot be equaled in the city. WALL PAPERSTILL AT 5c A ROLL L F. Thompson &. Go. janl-ly ** Is guaranteed to be made adsolutely of hog’s fat. No cotton seed oil or beef tallow. PIEST HMEEZD-A-LS. At Cincinnati 1870-81-72-73-74 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. Swan’s Down Patent flour is the best. HUSSAR’S BENEFIT. OPERA HOUSE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 12,1890. Magnificent Production of the Mas terpiece of Comedy Drama, THE CL1PPER.0R A CHILD’S SACRIFICE! —BY- E. J. SWARTZ, Introducing Everybody’s Favorite, j&.’&OrST : LISE I Supported by n strong dramatic company. New songs and dames, pathos and mirth, sensational scenes, startling mechanical ef fects. A play of sorrow and sunshine. De ceit and lore. I’riics 25, 50, $1.00. Seat* on sale at Reid k Culpepper’s. B. D. FUDGE, TIIOMASVILLE/.GA. DEALER IX— HARDWARE STOVES, IRON, Bujgy and Wagon Material Tin and Hollow Ware, Guns and Sporting Goods oi all kinds, and agent for King’s Powder Co. Tan Idly 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 ns Thomasville has never seen before, con*^. ing of all kinds of DBESS Q-OOZDS, NOTIONS, CLOAKS, raps ) UNDER WEAR, hosiery, Blankets and ail kinds of domestic^. 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 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. . STEYERMAN & iO. J. P. McAULEY- Private Lessons in • Languages. ANCIENT AND UODBRN. NIGHT SCHOOL T TO 8 P. H. Room In nMr of Library. it 2«tr —ANO- OolcL Storage Company Ice Made From Distilled Water Pure &Gd Sparkling. Delivered Anywhere in the City. Give orders to Wagons orjmail direct to W. S. KEEFER, Pres, and Mang’r, ■1* ~ * ’ KM