About The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1903)
Ncrth Carolina Corn Rye Whiskey at $2.00, 2.50, 3.00 and 3.50 per gallon. Direct to consumer, saving middle man’s profits. All Express Charges paid by me on packages of two gallons to the limit of Southern Express Company. TERMS—Cash with order. Send your order and write for descriptive circu lar of Wine and Brandies. Reference commercial agencies or any merchant here. J. H. WOOLLY, - Cherryville, N. C. “The Colorado,” armored orriiser is to be launched April 9, the largest Vessel of the United States navy to take the A little erime'is a dangerous thing. Fire murders Juake a degenerate and save the murderer from the noose. John D. Rockefeller has departed from Thomasville, but Rip Van Winkle Jef ferson continues- to judge oakewalkB at Palm Beach- says the Savannah Press. Mayor Howell, of Atlanta, wants to raise 950,000 for a Georgia exhibit at the St. Jsjuis Exposition. Hejhasjmked the other mayors in Georgia to help him. this staterof affairs as the mino. ity filibus tered during the dying days of the con gress and effecttudly blocked the wheels of progress. ' , ' / • 7 r .' •/-. . However, we should not say unkind things of the dead, and we trust that the special session will accomplish some thing. . . We Manufacture The Best | . A CEORGIA EXHIBIT. . Mayor Howell of Atlanta has taken the initiative iq. a movement to induce the legislature to appropriate a sufficient amount to have a creditable exhibit from the state of Georgia, at the St.'Louis Ex position next year. We commend Mr. Howell’s movement’ a3 being for the best interest of our state. From all accounts the St. Louis Exposi tion will be an affair of considerable magnitude. Already almost every state and many foreign counties have arrang ed for representation. . The Exposition will be largely attend ed by residents of-a section of the mid dle we*8t who know little or nothing about the advantages or resources of Georgia. They are intelligent, and if the matter were properly presented to them, large immigration—and immigra tion of the most desirable kind—would result. The movement is right in line with the “Greater Georgia” plas zzd we hope that it will be carried to a success ful conclusion; for its educational value, if nothing else. Back of the mere -"•****> al exhibit, however, comes *' that finds ejpri* yen resentation. This spirit is progress-and prosperity. - We ought- to prove the existence of such a spirit if we have it, and to culti vate it if we have it not. On the other hand, if selfishness, doth and self-satis faction possess us, we cannot hide the fact and to fall behind in a movement like this is to blazen the ugly factfabroad. Which shall it be? The Albany Herald exclaims, “Willie” Hearst? That's enough to kill any presidential boom that -ever, budded. Somebody ought to trot ont a an Algeron. Louisville Courier.Tnn m Let us have your Orders for Mili Supplies or Shop Work. Mallary Bros' Machinery Company. ; 3n^ m,pkr ”- Macon, Ga. _ Wherever; the face pf our rural people is set toward progress, wherever they desire to share in the comforts and conveniences tliat brighten modem life, they will see to it tliat the. roads are’ mended and kept in good condition. Where they prefer to wear out horses and wagons casting through mud and "over hills and hollows, wasting good money in a stu pid parsimony, prefer to traipse to town themselves for each trifling need and depend on the good offices of forgetful neighbors for their mail; they will do nothing. Greed for gold is a conspicuous evil of our time and country. We want money to bum;,wealth to squander. It appears as if some men, and women as well, vie with each other in thinking out original and striking ways in which to make tlieir wealth conspicuous. They imagine tliat they thus aggrandize themselves. It is something to be grateful for, that there is a growing sentiment in favor of saner living. There is a strong influence at work for greater simplicity and more genuine lives. There is gain in respect for the “plainer living and higher think ing” manner of life. By the truest standards, parade of wealth is esteemed vulgar- To^dress, to act, to order our households and our lives by how it looks, by the opinions of others and to make an impression betrays a shallow mind and a weak character.—Milwaukee Journal. FARMERS’ FRIEND QUESTION ANSWERED. Yes, August Flower still has the larg est sale of any medicine in the civilized world. Your mothers’ and granmoth- era’ never thought of using anything else for Indigestion or Biliousness. Doc tors were scarce-and they seldom lieaid of Appendicitis, NervousJProstrration cr Heart failure, eto. They used August Flower to clean ont the system and stop fermentation of undigested food, regu late the action of the liver, stimulate the the nervous and organic action of the system, and that is all they took when feeling dull and bad with headaches and other aches. Yon only need a few doses of Green’s August Flower, in liquid Horse-Power We make a specialty of 1, 2, 3 1-2 and 4 1-2 H.-B^Jasoline Engines for farm uses, such as grinding feed, pumping water, saw ing wood, running the grindstore or for any other purpose whatsoever requiring ama.il power. We guarantee satisfaction. NOSMOKE There was a notable meeting of ex- Confederates Friday night in the Con federacy’s capital, says the Columbia State, and some notable sentiments were expressed—sentiments that it is well _id be read aqd repeated. In this era of “reconciliation” and “unity” and all that, we of the South are too ready to accept the Northern suggestion that it is best for ns to have been defeat ed. It sounds so amicable and forgiv ing to remark that while the Sofith lias nqthihg to regret concerning her course in secession and the resulting war still we are glad to he barfs in the Union, tlias in rflany ways it is better so. In stead of accepting .this assertion as an evident truth it can easily he demonstra ted that had the Confederacy succeed ed the South would have prospered, in dustrially and politically,earlier than she hag done as part of the original Union. The point may not be worth arguing, since. it is an academic question, but the statement of the conviction can hut serve a good purpose in impressing upon the youth of the South that tlieir fathers were not rateh anarchists, as some would have it, nor yet blind, inconsiderate de votees of an empty theory* It should be known that in seceding from the Union the Southern people were] not only actuated byjrighteous resentment of the infringements of their constitu tional rights but that they also had in view a statesmanlike plan of procedure in the establishment of a seperate gov ernment. This is the spntiment expressed at the meeting to wliieh we' have re ferred: NO F?RE 1 NO DANGER j Yon can get this reliable remedy at J. W. Peacock’s. Price 26c and 76c. Wakeful Children. •For a long time the two year old child .ble rep- : f pride, Birmingham, of Mr. P. L. McPhersod, 69 N. Tenth St., Harrisburg, Pa., would sleep but two or three hours in the early part of the night, which made it very Dad for her parents. Her mother concluded tliat the child had stomach trouble, and gave her lialf of one of Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liv-' er Tablets, which quieted her stomach and she Slept the whole night tbmugh. Two boxes of these Tablets have effect ed a permanent cure and she is now well and strong. > For sale by J. W. Peacock. THE WHITE FRONT DRY GOODS HOUSE IS OPEN AGAIN. White Star Pressing Club All work promptly and well done. Work for ladies a specialty. Suits pressed, repaired and renovated in the best style. Satisfaction guaranteed in every instance, , Gsods sent for and delivered. ’Phone orders received at 78-5, D. E. Blanton, Over Quinn’s Store. imo 12-2 Jackson Street, Next to Watt’s Hardware Store. Rev. Thomas Dixon, author of “The Leopard’s Spots,’ going to stop handling clothing and what cloth- will go at a great sacrifice. is evidently suffering from a freckled or mflated'im agination when he predicts a race war, in which the negro will be annihilated, says the Houston Post. It seems to he no trouble at all for the Rev: Dixon to go ont and bathe his feet in Erie’s limpid lake an^ hand ont a few oracular utterances and lurid prognostications before breakfast. Such a war as Rev. Dixon predicts will notj come to pass because the people of his class are in the minority, both among the negroes and among the whites. The Post cheerfully admits that “The Leo pard’s Spota is a great story, a powerful, engrossing, vivid story of reconstruction days; but reconstruction days are histo- . ry. That he has .written of the past so ; well and prophesied so ill merely proves . that Mr. Dixon is tike the rest of us, his hindsight is better than his foresight. . Our line will be Dry Goods, Shoes and Gents’ Furnishings, of which we now have a very'pretty stock. It will/ pay you to come and look before you buy. Don’t Forget The Place.- White Front Dry Goods House E. L. Eubenstein, Manager. i Proverbs One Minute Cough Cure gives relief in one minute, .because it kills the microbe which tickles the mucous membrane, causing the cough; and at the same clears the phlegm, draws out the inflam- ation and heals the affected parts. One Minute cough Cure strengthens the lungs, watds off pneumonia and is a harmless and never failing cure in all curable cases of coughs, colds and cronp. It is pleasant to take, harmless and good alike to old and young. R. Tuomas, jr. “ When the butter won’t come put a penny in the churn,” is an old time-dairy proverb. It often seems to work though no one has ever told why. When mothers are worried because the children -do not gain strength an^ flesh we say give them Scott’s Emul-. sion. It is like the penny in the milk because it works and because there is somethirtg astonishin'g about it. Scott’s Emulsion is simply a milk of pure cod liver oil with some hypophosphites especially prepared for delicate stomachs. ' f Children take to it naturally ■because they like the taste ?nd -the remedy takes just as naturally to the children be cause it is so perfectly adapted to thteir wants. For all weak and pale and thin children Scott’s Emulsion is the most satisfactory, treat ment We will send you the penny, /. 'e., a sample free. Be sore that this picture In the form of a label is on the wrapper of every bottle of Emulsion you buy. . SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409 Pearl St., N. Y. ^A5oc.*nd,r.op; all druggists.. ESTABLISHED 1885. read- * [jp SAFE TRANSFER AND LUGGAGE SERVICE Landaus, Nice Close Carriages for Parties of Six. i-3adf Careful Handling, Prompt, Polite and The Milledgeville News: The Geor gia State Uniyersity should be nothing less than the finest and best school in America. • It would be the best possible advertisement for Greater, Georgia and insure a better class of citizenship in the future. Such a school would be cheap at any price to the Empire State of the South and we favor making it so, by taxation, or private subscription, or both. We hope to see the entire State press take up the cry of “Greatest Uni versity” with that of Greater Georgia. Edgar E. Clark, the representative of organized labor on the antliraoite coal strike commission, delivered an address indBoston last Wednesday upholding union labor and defending the use of the strilfb as a weapon with which to force the acceptance of jusfe’Jdemands ANY HOUR. DAY OR NIGHT. WESLEY. WILLIAMS, Proprietor. felephont;262. Corner Stephens SL THOriASVILL Jas. Grib ben A WOMAN HUNG „'S? n £?- her a«Jk and bagged him to telephone 2 aarille Chiropodist and have her twenty corns removed with r H r E ea <lache and blues vanished liko inist befor face became a sweet expression of peace and good will A BEAUTIFUL BTWsS.-If a m^Tta'tavo that’s ay# 1 -— "*”»£*«,““■ jmssgm Bunions, Ingrowing, Club, Gouty, Brittle Naha I will be glad to make contracts for or superintend all classes of buildings, pnb- lic or private, in either brick or wood Will furnish plans and specifications if required. If'you want, any buiHi; done call jon me and 1 will submit esti- mates,'^Kejther contract is awarded me or not. jjj|fer to the many buildings erected j$yInc in Thoma„v.ille, and to all parties whom I have wot keel. Shop on FletdBr street 3d.door from Broad. Foe tii i or drawing blood. [dw3r! THE GOLD cuff pins be.found in the fact that the evidence which proved most damaging to the miners and did most toweakenJtheir|po- sition as applicants for justice wasJTthe proof of lawlessness in the mining dig. tricts! ■ ^ - Knapp, the bigamist and wife mur derer, is a lady-killer iu very truth. Dainty /Manicure, Chiropody, Hair Dressing and Massage. Mrs. Georgia Waterman Williams. Phone ^2, corner Madison and Jerger Streets, Thomasville, Ga. 4mo t2-2