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THURSDAY MORNING.
Furniture and Bedding.
Don’t Trust to Luck.
JXT * - V' - ’ “■
ARTISTIC METAL BEDS.
(Graceful shapes, beautiful colorings handsqnm' finish. clmtn.u.tlvo
metal beds of today. The best, work of the most noted metal bed works
can be found on otir floors. There isno design so new : i. ennnot
tind it. here, while we have the roost inexpensive m 0... 1 that tan he
<a..eu “good.'’ Onr stock also embraces a gr> .* ice , t
moderate prices and front that on up to the finest beds lu.ute.
C. IVIeGARVEY,
316 Newcastle Street.
TRULY “A GRAND OLD WHISKEY”
, Is the famous i [D
CREAM GF KENTUCKY.
It 1 * pure and wholesome and sold cheaper than any other whiskey of its
hme, rank or quality. Sold in Brunswick only by
Douglas & Morgan,
I. TRAGER & CO., Distillers.
, Offices, Cincinnati, 0., U. 8. A- ~]
A. ARNHEITER,
• Wholesale and Retail Dealer In £ .
; Schwarzchild & Sulzberger Beef Co.'a ,
Western Beef,
1 fv-Wr Pork and Mutton.
"-iffr ;J * Fresh Poultry.
Fresh Vegetables, Fresh Groceries,
Fresh Eggs from the Country.
All goods sent out nice and cl ean. Tl# bes of everything for the
model housekeeper. ip vr jJ
207 Monk St. ’Phone 89
C. Downing, President. E. H. Mason, Vice President. E D.Walter, Cashier
rhe National Bank of Brunswick.
- BRUNSWICK, GA.
CAPITAL OF ONE HUNDRED AN I) FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS
and total KESOUKCEB In ttxeesw of ONE-HALF MILLION DOLLARS,
are devoted to the assistance of legitimate busiip-uu enterprise:..
DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS invited IroDi iudividm. is, linns and corpora
tions .
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT accounts hear interest, compeumlcd quar
serly. Interest bearing eefrifleates of dep Rt issued! on spixdal terms.
MONEY ORDERS of the "HANK ERS' MONEY ORDER ASSOCIA
ION” are cheaper and more convenient than poetolbco or express.
W. n. BOWEN,
Contractor and Builder of Stone,
Brick and Frame Buildings.
MA V I KACTI’RKR OK
BKMKNIT Tllilv A m AKTI TRIAL ST-ON K
J. M. BURNETT,
WHOLESALE
Grain and PrcvisioQS,
Horse, Cow and Chicken Feed.
EARLY CLOSING NOTICE.
The undersigned banks will close
at ONE o'clock p. in. SATURDAYS
between May 15 anil October 1.
The National Bank of Brunswick
E. D. Walter, Cashier.
'1 bo Brunswick Bam. & Trust Cos.,
11. W. Gala, Cashier.
LADIES, BEWARE!
You are particular folks. and should
'nave your dresses cleaned only by
Jim Carter, who doss good york.
Rhone 253.2. -
SWANS' DOWN FLOUR IS THE
BEST.
Typewriter Headquarters.
Do you wish to buy, sell or rent a
machine of any description? You
will find it to your interest to call on
me. Can sell you a typewwriter at
such a price and ori such tonns that
vou will not miss the money.
C. IL JEWETT.
Rob Roy flour suits the ladles.
Notice to Masters.
The News will publish ship notices
at $1.50. It is the only legal medium
through which these notice* can be
published. *
THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWS.
Daily Short Story
* OF THE
Brunswick News.
■J ■ 1 <
Many Men cf Matin Mitida.
In the northward cm prort of Chicago,
not fur east of the river, in a place of
silent streets and empty lots, stand
several large frame houses, with pick
et f.-nees, built before the tire. Tall
poplar ami cottonwood trees hang
clouds of pale, glimmering foliage over
ilm wooden sidewalks. An occasional
electric car with one or two passen
gers shrills past under the ruslling
simile, and cows are sometimes pas
tured on the frequent brown lots.
In one of the houses of this place
there lived two American gentlemen,
different as the poles, .fudge Amos
Parker and Mr. Paul Haviland. .fudge
Parker, tile house owner, an old set
tler, was a plain man, the father of a
large family.
His wife had died when the cltildren
were little. Ills sons were gone into
business in distant towns, and ids
daughters, combining pi.dy an.l flirta
tion in a neighboring church, had
sported actively through their rcsui-e
five courtships till they were all mar
ried and gone, and iheir father was
left alone with Edmi, the servant girl,
ami Nick, her brother, who had ae
eompanled the family when they
moved from Indiana forty years ago.
•fudge Parker was a ponderous, easy
going man. of tremendous legal infor
mation, with a long, white face and
almost no nerves. He scarcely per
ceived the loneliness of ids remote
house, and he did not miss ids. family
too sensitively, us when they were
" Uii him ho hud been only very slight
ly acquainted with them.
His taste was net for men as individ
uals, hut in bulk. He loved the public
nu.l public-life, and be would have pro •
ferred almost any discomfort out of
doors or in n ball to sitting In a parlor
through an evening.
Tile Judge could not for an instant,
bear exclusive society. Indeed, tins
only moment when lie experienced un
easiness was when he was forced Into
the presence of a group of people se-t
looted by a delicate social tact instead
of by the rude hand of chance or polit
ical organization. If he had no lecture,
no Republican rally or G. A. It. meet
log to attend, he would go out and sit
on tin; fence of Ids grass plot to smoke
and to talk to Nick or to any casual
loa for.
Paul Tlnvilnnd, on the other hand,,
enjoyed almost no society but that of
Ids betrothed, Margaret Alden, and a
literary friend, Richard Elliott.
He read law In the law office of
.fudge Parker's former law linn for
three winters, it. was during this time
that he lived with the iwi to gel far
away, he said, from the grime and sor
didness at' the city, and in the even
ings, while the Judge was off with the
public a, lb,, grime ami sordidness, he
sat in the old Parker house and wrote
long introspective letters to Margaret
Aldr-ii ami composed verses called.
“Retrospect,” “Pircumstance" or “if,”
wifi h gave its name to tds volume of
collected verse.
i !•’.
if I hud known—ball- liter" it Is!
.What floes it matter now?
Yet tills pressed spray of clematis i
Again reminds me how
But. new r mind- It’s gone ami past, r*
What eloes it matter now? *
I
lta.fl ecu tin! spoken or I not toyed j
There on the lawn with her
This elonifttiß had been, I vis,
A different me:-.,"tie r.
Perhaps--heigh ho! The play !c • done —
And you in Peshawijr.
It they had told me what was true i
<>!’ I had eyes to see, It ./
Earnest, been gone or it been you If ;
There on ttie lawn with mo-
Bah! What's lift odds? Or nice or ru)e—
What. In the odds to me?
Richard Elliott wrote a preface) al
j most entirely of margins (Mr the book,
[ commenting favorably on the re
i attaint, suggestiveness and per fect
good breeding of Mr. Haviland’s lines,
find Paul had great fun In his o tvn
way its writing them in (lie evenings,
while tin.' judge had great. fbn in iris
own way In seconding motions and in
troducing politicians in long, heavy
addresses at political clubs.
It was a curious circumstance of
Paul’s art that, while he himself was
.of a very sensitive and Impressible
nature, the attitude lie chose to assume
in Ids verse, one described by Richard
Elliott in a magazine article on “Hav
iland and Indifl'erentism,” was exactly
Judge Parker's attitude, and that gen
tleman might have asked with far
more sincerity:
Bah! AVhat's the odds? Or rose or rue—
What is the odds to rae?
In the spring of Paul Haviland’s
stay at the old Parker boose Margaret
Alden came to visit Chicago, and at
the time of her visit she and her lover
passed through a long period of mental
suffering.
Their trouble arose on the day of a
heavy spring rain. They were to have
met in the Art institute, and Paul
Haviland, supposing that Margaret
Alden would not keep her tryst, in the
worst storm of the year, had not kept
his.
He was overwhelmed with contrition
at Ids mistake when he visited her in
the evening.
But when he said, “It never occurred
to me that you would be there,” and
she replied, “Where there is a question
j always do the uiore_strenupu§ thing,”
, lie was wounded, lie disliked beltASi
( less strenuousithan any one, even than’l
•Margaret Alden. He did not enjoy
iplmself in her presence ns ho ordlna
rll v did, and he began thinking that
tin', Mind beauty of their feeling had
vnnis tied and wrote verses callod
"Tiie Lost Treasure,” “Ashes" and
“Dlstlin. donmont.”
Mennw Tile Margaret , wrote in her
diary: \
"April 14.
“Paul was 'fcßiv unlay,\lmt> not Hie
Paul of vester. Lay. SoraetAingMa gone
between us ju> * "ha* h rtimfpt say,
but something.
"He lias, of coi trso, lulled. me\and
can never lie again me wlt>f\hl‘ Aas
before his Ineonsidei m*h’n of to(iay>
"Ho I really love h kn .when i cAnnot
, any longer perfectly m Ymthe him..' Mu,st
question myself l’urthei ? onytlds point, N
“It is trim l am disil.Warned, but 1
feel it more dignified the whole to
keep our relations as* they have al
ways been. The w orld\ne.ed not know
"Tilts is not sincere, otf course, but I
am disturlied and in doubt.”''
Paul Haviland. too, jwns Vrtlsturhed
' and in doubt, mid it wns'Vvhi.V be was
1 tn Ibis mood that lie wcutApne (morning
1 to the law olths; and fonitil,jlVitli as-
I tonishmi'iil, that a blow bail*fai*Jen on
i Judge Parker.
i lie laid been responsible for it\ bvotli
, er living in \\ is< oinsln. a bank?cashier,
i who, after a long probity, /had ab
sconded with llie bnilk! funds;*l caving
■ behind enough debts to .ruin lite Ridge.
The men in the office' said ,'thht if
such a thing had to lie ] 'pi'll to some
one it; might: ns well happen* to'Judge
Parker, as lie never
luird.
Paul felt the incident, an instance of
the injustice of life, already- Pymbdi
ized to him in his own wrongs' He
mentioned hte friiTul’s disnsten to Mar
garet in tin: evening, eoiisideri'ng fit <ui
episode in keeping nvith the melons
elioly tone of tla-ir meeting, but\ they
talked very lltjle aiboot it, being')still
too • wen pled witii their own dolkmte,
moral*and lempe'.'/imental problems!.
However, wlieu U'uiil went: home tlutt
•night, and saw the judge ' itling on the
front steps with ills lint on the hack of
liis head talking to Nick as he had be
fore .his house was disgraced and his
fortunes ruined, lie felt among ids own
'troubles a sense of sympathy for a fel
low sufferer.
As lie passed he touched the judge’s
coat sleeve lightly, as a subtle sign of
regret, but ids intention was evidently
quite imperceptible to the judge, for
the next morning at breakfast he ob
served ruminalivcly with nil air of in
telligent, Judicial interest -
"Well. Paul, d'yoti hear about Broth
er WUIV”
Paul stared at his plate and then
said delicately, "In life we cannot al
ways account for everything.”
"That's what l lie hank directors
think,” returned the judge jocosely.
"Well, it’s a queer tiling—a mighty
queer lliiiig. I knew a man who did
something like It here—and lie resem
bled Brother Will too."
Tills was (lie only allusion the judge
ever made to the matter. Everything
in the old Parker house remained as it
was before Brother Will's lapse. The
judge had never been extravagant. He
was not obliged to change in any way
his domestic or social customs, and it
will lie seen that Ids spirits and life
had been Jcsa affected by his ruin than
had Paul Ilavlland's by the remotest
shadow of adverse criticism.
Perhaps this sketch will lie supposed
too decided in Us contrasts to be n
tiling of facts. On the other hand, it.
may be truthfully said that it is a very
moderate presentation of the vivid
variety of persons perhaps in the
world; certainly on the north side of
Chicago.
Plus In England.
England the ordinary domestic
pin jin and become in the fifteenth con
turytaa article of sufficient importance
to wtarranf. legislative notice. An act
of parliament passed in 1 IS.” prohibit
ed tiw: importation of plus. Asa ne
cessity of tile toilet pins were intro
duced Into England in the latter part
of the fifteenth century by Catherine
Howard, queen of Henry VIII., who
received them from Prance.
Very good pins of brass were made
at tin's period, but a large portion of
them were made of iron, which was
blanched and sold for brass pins. In
order to prevent this imposition upon
the good people of England parliament
In 154" passed an act providing {hat
“no person shall put to sale any pins
but m'li ns shall be double headed and
have the heads soldered fast to the
shanks of the pins, well smoothed, the
shanks well Biropen, the points well
rqjinded, filed, canted and sharpened.”
England continued to depend upon
France for its supply of pins till the
your 1020, when John Tilsby intro
duced the manufacture into Glouces
tershire. In 1030 the manufacture was
Introduced into Bristol and Birming
ham, the latter place ultimately be
coming Hie great center of the indus
try.
New Methods
Are always being adopted for the
benefit of customers at Jim Carter’s
ciothes-cleaning establishment. Ring
telephone it>32.
SMITH’S PHARMACY
Open from
6 a. m. to
10 p an.
MAKE YOU.TTOHET WITH BARGAINS.
If you will. Tin- choice rests wild you. \\ e oft-r a tuU line
Sundries at prices that a,re the lowest ot -he low. 1 hose
TOILET ARTICLES AND FANCY, GOOD., ETC.,
Arc not merely things of teporAry usefulness or beauty, but goods
, that are serviceable all the year around and for many years.
, v PETERMAN'S ROACH FOOD
, Entices cockroaches and walerbug* out of their breeding places.
TlbyT <‘t it and it. cremates them to a shell, and lias now become
j in K ,,, 1( rl use h.v housekeepers throughout the civilized world, prin
■il>a 11 y 'lo-.oq'gh l,l< ' recminneii.ation ol' one I another; also has with
-1 50,.1,1 till -,0,'r..V t , ''“ t tor 15 yrn among hotels, bakeries, cortfoc
rc‘stau rants hospitals, etc. Eleven thousand
f turneries hr-sv(r,t\’
voluntarily written by the above largest
\ strong letter of priii-ab
, . ~ , , . , ... uni England, who have used it with
failures in the United Sawos *,
, ...... , , enjoys a high reputation. Put
T textremo satisfaction, and is now
’ / lqi in 1- i )-2 ami 1 pound dee-orated tins.
SMITH’S PHARMACY,
r PHONE 222. ' " "
The Lodge
fli TaiJulahiFails,!
Under the manager:nnt of J. A. Newcomb, proprietor of the Hotel
Lanier. of Macon, Oa.
The -lost healthful climate. 2,imW feet elevation. Music by an excellent
orchestra; Dancing, Horseback Kiditfg. Driving. Fishing anil Bowling Alley.
Wonderful Mountain View, . Great Water 1 alls, It* st of all. ease of ac
ressfi lity, and an elegant new commodious Hotel wicn all modern con.
•venii : ■(Twenty five rooms wit I priv-,le porcelain baths, electric lights
and hells; Motor car line from Hotel to Falls. Special rate to families.
For further information address, J. A. NHWCOMI).
Tallulah Falls, Ga.
THE EORNADO SEASON
IS LPON US
STORM
INSURANCE
V Protects at Small Cost.
INSURE NOW. DON’I DELAY
J. A. MONTGOMERY & CO.
Tiie popular Realesiatc and insurance 1
agency.
Rhone 134-3. 302 Gloucester St.
Virulent Cancer Cured.
Startling proof of a wonderful ad
vauce In medicine is given by druggist
G W Roberts, of Elizabeth. W. Va.
An old man there had long suffered
with what good doctors pronounced
incurable cancer. They believed his
case 'oopeletis till he used Electric
Bitters and applied Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve, which treatment completely
cured him. When Electric Bitters are
used to expel bilious, kidney and mi
crobe poisons at the same time this
salve exerts its matchless healing
power, blood diseases, skin eruptions,
ulcers and sores vanish. Bitters 50e„
salve 2oc. at all druggists.
Notice is directed to the advertise
ment. ot A. Zelmenovitz in this issue.
This popular grocer can save you mon
ey. Try him on your next order.
AUGUST 14.
1 ,
| f t,CKET f
I free plumbing I
PLUMBING FREE
H un defects is the only cheap plumb
in;;. And only the plumber who is
free from the moss-grown traditions
o! the trade and who uses modern de
vices according to modern ideas can
install
PERFECT PLUMBING
Our free from defect workmanship
is al the service of anyone who is sat
isfied to pay a iair price.
Better communicate with us before
disease gets into the pipes.
A. H. BAKER,
205 Gloucester, Street.
E Street Lot.
Lot on E street next to corner ot
E. s2sb; one-half cash. Cheap, close
in, just the place for a small cottage.
BROBTON, FENDIG & CO.
t Si iS Morphine and Whiskey
S i sJ H 1 S £833 h 1 '!"!--' '"-lei v.-hlujut I'um
II I 111 Ilf I Or confinement, cureptmt
"># n 3UI ant-rd pt .Sanitarium or no
puy. B. H VHAL, M.in'gr T.ithi* Springs Cure
Cos., Drawer A. Auatell.Ga. sent
if preferred. Correspondence atrictly oeufideotial.
Clark, the well known colored bar
ber, is better fitted to serve the pub
lic than ever. Everything neat and
clean and up to date
Open from
6 a. m. to
10 p. m.