The Brunswick news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1906-2016, September 01, 1908, Image 4
THE BRUNSWICK NEWS
as:
PUBLISHED BY
THE NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
CLARENCE H. LEAVY,
President tnd Editor.
LOUIS J. LEAVY, JR.,
Vice-President and Manning Editor.
‘EVERY DAY EXCEPT MONDAY^
Etttared aj.-the Brunswick, Ga., Dust
Offices as ec<jotid class mall matter,
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and by mail free of charge to all parts
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TELEPHONES.
Business Office, Editorial Room ISB
The City Editor 340
The Editor ***
OFFICE 207 GLOUCESTER ST.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF
Glynn County.
City of Brunswick.
Glynn County Commissioners.
The United States Court o£
Bankruptcy for this district.
Correspondence solicited, hut to
rec-dvo attention, letters must be
accompanied by a responsible name
not for publication, but as a
guarantee of good faith.
Rejected communications will be
returned if accompanied by postage.
Remittance should be made by
postal note, check, money order or
registered letter.
, Address,
News Publishing C.,
Brunswick, Ga.
The democratic national committee
has made an open appeal to the dem
ocrats of the country for contributions
to the democratic campaign fund, and
has suggested that democratic news
papers act as solicitors and forward
ing agents in their respective locali
ties. Acting upon this suggestion,
THE NEWS will receive contributions
and will undertake to forward them
promptly to the treasurer of the dem
ocratic campaign committee. It re
quires a large sum of money to defray
the legitimate expenses of an active
and aggressive national campaign,
and the democratic committee lias to
rely upon the common people for as
sistance. The contributions of the
trusts and tariff protected classes wilt
all go to the republican party. Let
every true democrat contribute his
mite, however small it may be. Mr.
Bryan has expressed a desire that, if
possible, the democratic campaign
funds shall be made up entirely, or as
nearly as possible, by small subscrip
tlons from democrats generally and
not in large sums from wealthy per
sons or great corporations.
Ferdinand Pinney Earle’s soulmate
proposition did not last for twelve
months.
There is a woman in the cas- of
that Atlantic City shooting. Watch it
and see.
That seems to have been a genuine
sktddoo bill In the senate on the con
vict proposition.
Tampa has boat us to it. A o -tiu
ine sheath gown ha< turned up in the
south' Florida tnoio-.UM
And just to think with all of *
other tr ’.tides tluti North August-.i
bridge is washed away too.
Brunswick should t -ive.nl to An
gu; ta’s call for help. We have call -d
ourselves and it was n u in vain.
One' again our d’ .r friends of the
east are about, to beheld their dreams
of a broken s ,id south vanishing
away.
Let's ail go to work for vitrified
brick paving for Brunswick in
We can have them : f we proceed in
the right way.
This front porch campaign proposed
by Mr. Taft is broadening into one
of those old. time swing ar and the
circle affairs.
“How have the mighty fallen 1" Our
old friend and college companion
Agulnaldo is now a candidate for city
council in Manila.
It Is all settled now Harry Thaw is
no longer insane. Insane people do
not have sense enough tp travel the
bankrupt route.
Augusta has gone to work to recoup
and rebuild with admirable courage
and enterprise. The people of Geor
gia are proud of Augusta.
THE-EVERLASTING PROBLEM.
Ray. Standard Baker has been for
some years studying and Investigat
ing the negro problem and has just
finished a series of articles on the
subject in the American Magazine.
Mr. Baker traveled the entire country
j wherever the negro is to be found,
and minutely examined into his con
dition and relations to the people
Around him. In the main his Inves
j Ugation was as intelligent and thor
ough as could be made in the brief
time by a man who is a stranger to
the negro and to the section in which
the race mostly lives. He evidently
meant to be fair and judicial, and
be has approximated it quite credi
tably.
He has, it need hardly be stated,
found no solution for the negro prob
lem, but has reached the conclusion
long ago & talc'd by the press that the
best that can be done is for the ne
gro to adapt himself to the circum
stances which surround him, to build
a social fabric for himself, to be
h nest and industrious and sober, and
leave the rest to time. If he does
this he will live a comfortable and
enjoyable life, educate his children,
own his own home, have ail the. nec
essaries and most of the luxuries, will
maintain a healthy body and a sound
mind, and finally depart the world in
peace, leaving hi3 children to follow
in his footsteps.
’ This Is about as much as any while
man can do, when you come to think
about it, and when you consider that
tlu- negro was a rial barbarian a
century or two ago, a slave; only fifty
years since, it Is a mighty sight more
than any other race has ever achieved
in the same period of time. Lest you
might exaggerate the power <f tin
negro to achieve, it might lie just as
well to remember that most of bis
progress has been bestowed upon him.
11 - did not earn so much for him
self.
But dismissing the academic fea
tures of the ease, it is evident, as d
dared by tin- keenest and Ynost pains
taking investigator of th-se late days,
that the problem is no prcblcm at all.
ii is plain that the negro is here to
stay, and that if he is to stay in- peace
lie must and will accept th“ terms
upon which he may. There can be no
contact in the social relations with
the white race, but that aside h<- may
do for himself whatever any whit
man may do. Every g-’ n! citizen w-i
wish him success, for ids failure will
involve us ail in danger i rn*n. If
he succeeds, something will lie s -n
which never Iras occurred beft re in
tli,' history of the 'Vi rl-.l -two races
living alongside each other in peace
and harmony. \s the two races rep
j resent the extremes of the human
family, it may be so.
STUPID AND MALICIOUS.
The w! rd poor ge has been revived
again by republican speakers and
writers at the north In an attempt to
stigmatize the south. Ab ut ail the
so-called peonage ever shown in the
south was in cases where northern
deadbeats worked their pas. age to
this bettor dime on contracts to work
and pay for the advanced railroad
fare, and then jumped, it is ecu
fe- < and that it is n, t so easy here as in
the north for men to jump contracts
after vetting their pav but as b
,*
tween tv. charge of peonage and he
i; is possibly wise, and certainly tint
ural to choose the bad reputation.
The tinny caused by the floor .'vc-h
administrate a a year or two* age,
roused by the biased and ill-founded
repi i t of a f -male s;- -vial a/.eut. !•
died awn. for want of materia’.. The
admin’strat’ou was roado ridiculous,
the special investigating agents pock
eted their handsome salaries and ex
'piuses, deputy marshals revelled In
prot.-,rdde mileage, scores of honest
j citizens were plucked more cr less
completely to beggary and that was
the ingloriotuWsum of the whole ebul
lition. The man who now alludes to
| the south as a land of i peonage sim
ply exhibits his stupid ignorance and
malicious falsehood to even the dull
, est and most distant northern audi
ence.
It' Higsen would put some of John
Temple Graves' orations to ray-time
j fiddle music, it would prove a unique
way ef providing campaign funds.
The eyes of the politicians are fixed
on Vermont today. If that majority
for the republicans does the tobog
gan, then Bryan can feel real chesty.
Governor Fort says he is going to
establish the old blue laws in Atlantic
City. Perhaps so, but the chances
are that the officers will be color
blind.
THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWB. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER f, 1608.
BRUNSWICK :
ITS GREATEST OPPORTUNITY.
To the observer and student of
southern progress it must be evident
that with a return of prosperity there
must be a great Increase not only in
foreign exports but also in foreign
imports.
The south has reached a [>oint in
manufacturing development, especial
ly In textile and steel manufactures,
where she must have new markets.
Our Increases in exports, great as
they have been as shown in a previ
ous article, are not commensurate
with the advantages cur ports give
us.
The ports upon tha Atlantic coast
of the southern states have not kept
pace with the increase in exports of
the gulf ports, although greater the
advantage* of shipment through these
southern Atlantic ports over gulf
ports have not been sufficiently under
stood.
For a large and developing section
( of the country the gulf ports are the
I only ports, but for the entire grant-ry
section of the west the southern states
ports have great advantages;
as well as for all the mineral section
lof Tenness e and
Gecrgia.
As we realize and advertise then
advantages £ud increase our foreign
exports we shall increase our imports.
Brunswick is almost without imports
now. Imports are of at least five
times greater value to a port than ex
ports. Imports Increased through a
port by widening tlie range <f mar
kets, also creati s increased exports.
Certainly of both import and export
trade is created by established I ne
of steamships as well a.-; certainly of
increase of each.
.Mobil.- has many disadvantages to
contend with. Sixteen years ago
Brunswick was far ahead of her in
every thing which makes a prosperous
[put. For the twelve mouths ending
lune 30, 19u8, Mobile had -uter in the
.foreign trade of the port a little 1- ss
;tlmn seven times the tonnage entering
Brunswick in the same trad.’.
The opportunities open to us with
j the A., H. & A. road completed sur
pass those of Mobile in e. ry line
in foreign trade. We oug t sji edily
| to equal her in this great to I ! f en
deavor. We ought in the next twelve
years to fur aurpass her. ’Sh was
dead sixteen years ago—now she is
alive. C. P. Goodyear.
| Brunswick's "booze boat" obntinues
to attract the attention of sev -ral of
our North Georgia contemporaries.
What a pity it is that the Catoosa is
not navigable.
Treasurer Sheldon of the republican
'campaign committee, says he has
been (ljli.pt and to return some contri
buttons from corporations. We would
like to bo shown.
. <►
j Those Atlanta pap rs ought not to
Stick about the candidacy of i aneey
Carter as long as Willie H*'.trs: con
tinues to buy half-page announcements
of his candidate.
General P. Stewart, one of the
two surviving lieutenant generals oi
the Confederacy, answered- his lam
roll call guuday. One by one the,,
'old fellows are cue Eng in' 1 the Great
Si It rt Majority.
s-.' ' Y- j .f }l \%V * , i’oi - i'L r* AUD i > v .
j efisiac'---'-- ray*
; EARLY R iSRiSUL
Tke famous tittle pills.
puss This Su t You.
! E. C. Bruce, the enterprising drug
gist of Brunswick, is having such a
, largo run ott "llindipo,” the new Nerve
1 Tonic and Restorer, and hear it sc
1 highly praised that he now offers to
! guarantee it in every ea-_ to cure all
' forms of K'dney Troubles and Ner
Ivous Disorders. He pays f-r it if it
|does net give you entire satisfaction.
:lf you use it, it is his risk, net youys
IA 50-cent box, Blue Label Extra
Strength, SI.OO, will put life in ad ad
one. Sent by mail under positive
guarantee.
NO i ICE. *
All patties indebted to thp estate
of Dr. A. C. Blain, deceased, are hereby
notified that all debts remaining uu
paid on Sept. Ist, 1908, will be. placed
in suit. Make payment to 0. A. H.
Tennings. By order of
G. R. BRINSON.
Administrator A. C. Blain Estate.
This August 11th, 1908.
Valued Same as Gold.
B. G. Stewart, a merchant of Cedar
View, Miss., says: "I tell my custom
ers when they buy a box of Dr. King’s
New Life Pills they get the worth cf
that much gold in weight. If afflicted
with constipation, malaria or billions
ness.” Sold under guarantee at
Rose’s drug Sstwre. 25c.
ONE CENT A WORD
WANTED.
WANTED —To rent three rooms suit
able for light housekeeping. Apply
j “L-”, care News.
WANTED —Nice room and board by
1 young man. Address Box 503.
WANTED lnformation regarding
good patent; only inventor who
wishes to sell outright or on royal
ty basis, need answer. Give price
and brief description. L. D., Bex
984, Rochester, N. Y.
i
WANTED —Men to learn barber trade '
I —few weeks required; best paying
work within the reach of poor man;
c#n have shop with small capital !
Wages from sl2 to S2O weekly.
Wonderful demand for barbers. Cat
alogue mailed free. Moler Barber
College, Atlanta, Ga.
AGENTS WANTED in ev ry town an'd
city to sell high grade household spe
cialty; no talking needed; sells on
sight. Write today for free particu
lars. M. E. O'Neill A Cos., R. F. D.
No. 1, Tampa, Fla.
BOARDERS WANTED Boarders
wanted by the week, or month, with
or without rooms. Apply to Miss
Mallie Mershon. 401 G street.
FOR RENT.
FOR RENT —Two rcoms, furnished
or unfurnished. Apply to 708 Union
street. *
FOR RENT —Nice 5-roi m house. Rents
for SIO.OO. Apply 1207 F street.
FOR RENT—Furnished room, 142 G
Union street. Corner Gloucester.
Rales reasonable.
FOR RENT—House 1117 Lee sfr -t;
six rooms. Possession given Sep
tember 1. Apply to Mrs. J. M.
Young, 401 N. Union.
FOR RENT—Cottage, corner E and F
streets. Possession given at, once.
Apply to W. I! Ccok, or Geo. H.
Cook.
FOR RENT —Housekeeping apart
ment neatly furnished; adequately
lijjed up for small family, having
necessary cooking utensils, etc. In
quire at 40.> (l street, erner New
castle.
FOR Ri NT— One eight-ro: - i,.-
i on t toon w-th all modern eon\ ■ ni
[ dices. Apply TANARUS., cat ; < . New?
FOR REN I -Furnished roon - to g n
tlenn-n. A; 711 Vlban; ,-uv -t.
FOR RENT—Offices hi Glynn County
Bank building. Apply to I. L. Al-
Em, at Glynn County Bank.
FOR RENT —Nicely furnished rooms,
Cf-ol ami comfertabte, with or with
out meals, eonv dent to depot.
Rates reasonable. Apply to Mrs.
Gann, corner G and Newcastle sta.
FOR RENT—I.od.-o room, on Grant
street, Wt dre-vdy . 1 hursdav, Fri
day and Saturday nights. Apple
Joseph Feian, 13 1 S Bay street.
FOR SAcE.
Foil KALE O :,! K. It
ano good a ru V. .1. K-.-.-a!.
FOTt SALE 1! autiful lot. Wo offer
for sole two of the pretiie t jots In
Brunswick, forming a square ef iSe
xlSO feet, on the corner of one of
the best locations in the city. Al
bert Fendig & Cos.
FOR SALE CHEAP Rigkt-r >om
house in fine condition or, one of tile
l-t streets; lot I2.'x!'fi ft. For
sale at $J.i- Albert Fendig & e
r —•
’OR SALE—Second hat 1 buggy, in
fi' si-c'.a - ' cmdiiim. Apply to' Wil
liam Nightingale, Jr.
LOST.
LOST-—Ott 1 gold fr ui), brooch with
black center, ber.v-- :i Eniun st -t
and Richmond srr.et t.u Gcuse
street, vin dor n'eare return to
News office and receive reward.
M)ST—A red leather back pock.-t led
gcr. Return and receive reward.
G. A. H. Jennings.
FOUND.
POI ND—Bicycle. Owner can have
same by calling at city hail, identi
fying and paying fcr this ad.
MISCELLANEOUS.
LADIES Copy letters at home: spare
time: grod pay; cash weekly: send
stamp. 1 . S. Advertising" Agency,
447 Cisco building, Chicago.
TABLE BOARD —At $3.50. No. 1128
Richmond street.
THE ORIG.* XL LA- .r •. V :rsit S'.au-
&T£’
J. T. COWELL,
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR
AT LAW.
Bankrupt Law a Specialty,
Brunswick, Ga. "J
9(H>Dkops]
ANcgetable PreparationforAs I
i similatingltieFoodandßjguia-!
! ling the Stomachs and Bowels of |
iNFAN IS/ChILDKLN
I Promotes Digestion.Cheerful
j ness and Rest Contains neittier
Opium.Morphme nor>tincxal.
Not Narcotic.
VfjUJ3r.SMLT3.maaa
/\zrwJciH 'W” I
AlxSenna • |
fodulUSmU- I
Anise Jmd *■
ftEZZLa** l
Harm Sea J -
sag )
A perfect Remedy for Constipa
tion , Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
i Worms .Convulsions. Feveris
hness and Loss OF i-^EEP.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW YORK.
\Atb monlh> old
IJj 1) OSF s- J)C,I N 1 S
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
President
Suspenders
Vv ii
KE ■ VW
M .ialPr- ?. t Pro. • \\
Foxici'-w*,- >H. . Aritce .ii .'A I \i 1
■' • / | Sf /
cr by mill postpaid v - s-: j L-t j I
Lighter j l j Jf
C, A. EDGARTOft * .TG. CO. { V I
Bca 47 ohlilcy. M;v;% \ / '1
We Close at
COLSON H ROW ARE
COMPANY
FAIKEB-IEISELL
EHOiNEEIIiS G 9.
MACHINE, FOUNDRY, BOILER SHOPS
STEAM FORGE AND MARIK RAILWAY,
BRUNSWICK, % QA.
CAM
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the I t
Signature /%yv
r\
h\ r U S6
W For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TW* COMPANY. TOM OCTT