The Brunswick times. (Brunswick, Ga.) 189?-1900, October 03, 1891, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

2 THE TIMES. lateral at ms post oiHce In Brunswick as tenond-ciass mall matter. fH eY>aTIY T'M BB Published every morning except Monday. ShtwcripLonprice *5 a year; 50 cents a month. ADVKiiTISBKS may obtain rates d> applying at the business ofllce. corner ot Monk ana Ogle thorpe streets, Telephone Call .... - 31 all communications should be addressed to MoK. F. MCCOOK, Brunswick. Oa. Ouit advertisers must have their changes of advertisements in the ofllce by noon of the day before the date on which the change is to appear. Attention to this will greatly accommodate The Times ollloe. Stand by yonr town. It stands by you. Instead of waiting for something to turn up, it would be better to turn something up. The Georgia Midland railroad has bad a prosperous year according to the re port of the president. A scheme of finances which will take the control of money from Walt street is an imperative necessity. Fdowbb is not holding the New York democracy in that state of solidarity which assures unmistakably of victory for the democracy. The south baa never encountered a more trying period in its iudustiial de velopment than that of the last nine or ten months, but she has suffered as little as any other section. Thim has been a difficult year not only to business enterprises already inaugur ated, but the conditions have actually prevented many important ones in all parts of the country. The fellow who has been dreaming of wealth by finds of phosphate will doubt less decide, since the depression that has suddenly cotne to the Florida phosphate industry, that he is not in it. When one man can come within $200,- 000 of cornering the oorn crop of a great country like this, and such nyeur as this, ifria enough the people a fright. T’tytt is what Deacon White is saidjo hare done, The Savannah strike continues, though some laborers are going in, and there is prospeot of relief. The ’longshoremen, who are engaged in the strike, have been trying to extend the strike to other classes of laborers. It is a great misfortune to be possessed with a spirit of Oinsoriousness. After a while it will down the most gifted and make them an nfiliotion to their friends. Young man avoid such ft spirit like you wou'd deadly poison. ‘‘We are opposed to the free and un limited coinage of silver by our govern ment, independent of tbe action of other nations, and the dangerous silver legis lation enacted at the last session of con gress.”—Massachusetts Democratic Plat form. October is here. There will very naturally be a quickening of all the pulses of trade. Men will have a brisker step on tbe streets, greater activity in business, and life and energy of in creased intensity will mark the handling of business enterprises. Senator “Tom" Lamb has yielded to the solicitations of his friends, and will be a candidate for mayor of Bruoswick. This Is one time where the office has ran after the mau. There is no cleverer a gen tleman or one with more good oul-of doors sense than “Tom” Lamb, of Brunswick.- Tribune-of-Itome. Wukn tbe oombinatiou to Unole Sam’s vault iu Washington got out of order the other day and they sent for an expert to get into it whose servioe, by the way proved to be unnecessary, it is said that it contained only “ohange” that was wanted for immediate use. The amount of this change is said to have been only eighteen million dollars. How does that strike you as change, loose chauge, change wanted for immediate use, Tub manifest polioy and duty of the democratic party is to press the tariff question as the paramount one, and to hold the republicans to responsibility for their own work. It is purely a republi can measure, passed by that party with out any help from the democrats, but over the opposition of the solid demo cratic representation iu congress. The democrats of the whole country, from the Atlantio to the Pacific, and lrom the lakes to the gulf—from manufacturing Massachusetts to agricultural and stook raising Texas —are unanimous in their opposition to it. So are the alliances and the farmers’ organizations every where. The folly of the democrats per mitting this question to be subordinated to any other ia too plain for doubt or con cealment.—Atlanta Journal. United we stand, and divided we don’t amount to shucks. J. Piebbbpont Mobgan, one of the magnates of the Missonri and Central Paciflo roads, wanted big way about things. He wanted to declare another forced dividend, that If, au unearned dividend payable to-day. Jay Gould had his own ideas, and he, Sage and Dillon eotnblued and overruled Morgan. Now, the war is ou between Gould and Mor gan. Each has a long purse, and the betting is high. Gould, for the nonce, seems a bear ; Morgan is a ripping, snort ing bull. The fight has slightly dis turbed the stock market, but nothing serious can come of it; for these two, and two more like them, can no more nntral l/.e the enormous profits the roads are getting out of hauling the enormous erops to market than could Deacon White corner the mighty corn crop when the great Northwestern weather was “agin" him.—Chattanooga Times. If The Times may be allowed to sug gest, what Brunswick needs in the matter of municipal government next year is a vigorous business administration. The administration this year has been greatly embarrassed. It bas been impossible to raise money either by sale of bonds or by loans on notes according to tbe needs of the city. Tbo money expended on the surfaoe drainage account and whioh ought to be refunded by the sale of bonds, and which it was expected would be so re funded, has decreased the city funds available for general acoount. It is per haps true that tbe rigid economy in the reduction ot expenses has not been prac ticed that should have been done. Any way the administration has this year been embarrassed by tbe handling of a floating indebtedness which ought to have been bandied without trouble, if the times had been ordinarily good. To handle this indebtedness next year and to secure such reduction in expenses as the oity may need will require skilled business ability in tbe administration of tbe oity affairs. The suicide of General Boulanger at the grave of his mistress, while his wife was at Versailles, is said by the New York Sun to be a melodramatic close to a typical Gallic melodrama. The pre eminent quality of tbe man was vanity, and such a death was the culmination of over-weening vanity. He belonged by spirit not to the latter-day republi can, bourgeois era, but to tbe artificial, vain, showy, insincere period of the sec ond empire, and the tawdry, sentimen tality of biA (leatli, tSSUBm' I ife, is char acteristic of of Paul de Kook and Benja min Constant. He did as they would have done. His gallantry was the false gallantry that is so imposing to the Fronoh imagination, so intolerable to the Auglo-SaXon sincerity; a gallantry that used women as a means to bis own selfish purposes. His sense of honor was that characteristic honor noted in dis honor that saorilled everything and everybody to his own advancement. He was not a hero of romance, of the lusty, daredevil, brave school of “The Three Guardsmen,” but a victim of senti mental selfishness. And yet there will donbtless be fair hands enough to deok his grave, and mauy men" and women who will weep tears of sensibility over an idol whose head was of brass and his feet of olay. The progress of the spirit of confidence and hopefulness, and the return of the active and bustling prosperity of indus trial and commercial growth would be facilitated if the people would only re solve to quit complaining, resolve to feel better, and to strike out for good times. Many people have moved to the varions towns that have had a strong impulse of growth with strong expectations and ex oited ambitions for success, for special success. Snob hopes have been disap pointed in many cases. These people have found that the smile ot fortune is more difficult to win than they had fan cied it would be. The stringency oame and took away their speculative ohanoes, and they face the problem of life with - any of tbe glimonr that was around it before. Suoh people, instead of taking a proper view of the case, obarge tbe to tv ns in which they live,with their misfortunes or disappointments. There never was a town that had a strong impulse of prosperity which did not have in it those that oomplained that such towns were going too fast, and suoh like; and if a season comes which breaks the town’s momentum of prosperity, they aVe ready to charge it to ballooning and so on without having any intelligent idea of what tbe actual and potential causes are which effect suoh depressing results. Clark Howrll, Jr , is a young man to have attained the wide reputation whioh he enjoys both as a journalist and legis lator. At an age when most men are but fairly entering upon snoeessfui careers in the politioal or business world, he thinks of withdrawing himself trorn the pursuit of political honors and devoting his whole time to tbe great paper of which he is tbe managing editor. He will find it difficult to adhere to this determina tion, as the public will continue to call upon him for his services in the future as they have done in the past. His family is a marked one, and he belongs to, at least, the third generation of those THE DAILY TIMES: SATURDAY. OCTOBER 3 ism bearing tbe short and striking surname of Clarke. His grandfather was prominent in his day, his father is known in every town, hamlet and country place in the state, and in very many pUces out side of it, and now he himself proposes to retire from political life when hardly thirty years of age after having repre sented the richest and most numerous of Georgia constituencies for six years. Elevated by the suffrages of his fellow members to the highest position within their own membership, he has dis charged the duties of the position in such a manner as to fully justify the choice made and to reflect honor on him self and to further these intersts of the state of Georgia committed to the general assembly. IN LOW PRICES. Big Reduction in Price of ELGIN AND WALTHAM MOVEMENTS. And my customers always get the benefit of these drops. This reductions will enable me to sell you a fine stem-wind Gold Filled Watoh with either of the above named movements for only $13.60. These watoh"B are all guaranteed. Call on me for any kind of jewelry and I will please yon in both goods and prices. My repairing is still tiie best and when yonr Watches, Clocks or Jewelry are broken you will do well to come to me. Remem ber I give a written guarantee. KENNON MOTT, Watchmaker and Jeweler, 215 Newcastle Street. SIGN OF THE LABOR ELECTRIC CLOCK CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Advertisement* ot this nature will be pub llshed in The Times at the rate of One Cent per word, each insertion. For long time ad vertisements special rates may be obtained npon application at the counting room. _ WANTED. WANTED —HOARDERS—A few more ltcarU ora can find accommodation ~t 420 Newcas tle street. MKH. C. L. MAKHII AI.L. w-th-su WANTED— A POSITION—A mun thoroughly competent for general business desires employment. Addressoare 30-3 t \\f iu to )■. __ pF ag-tt FOR SALE. Fir SALE—lmproved Singer Machine, *ls. W. 11. MOORE, Pawnbroker, ilk Newcastle street. 30-tr Vf EITHER the captain, owners nor consignees il will lie responsible for any debts contracted by the crew of the Steamship Lancaster Capt. K. BRUCE, Master. 30-3 t SOCIETIES —MEETINGS. T> RUNSWICK KNCAMPMBNT ~ O. O. F , meets Urst and t hird Wednes days in each month, at lxiu Fallows’ Hall, New castle street, Dillon 01 >cK, iMp. m. Visiting brothers cordiuliy invited, K. K. HOPKINS, C. P. D. L, CLINCH, Scribe. ITNIGHTS OF FYTHIAS. lUtEbone Lodg# IV No. 48 meets every Monday night, at 7:30 o’clock in Knights of Pythias nafl, 202 New castle street. Visiting brethren cordially in vited, IVM. CROVATT. C. C. R. L. BRANHAM, K. of R. and 8. 2-S ly Rush loi>oe, no. 4s, i. o. b. f., meets every Friday evening at Odd Fellows’ Hall, Newcastle street, Dillon Block, 7 :45. Visiting brethren coidially Invited. H. M. BRANHAM, N. O. B*l4tf G. W. RUSH, R. . MISCELLANEOUS. PRICKLY HEAT Chafing cured and Mother, Boraeine will relieve the Baby. A highly perfumed superior Nursery 8 Powder. 28c at druggists. Try it. Bank Counters, Tyler System. Pert* able, Unequaled in Styles. , Cost and Finish. 10 Pt*l Catalogue of Ceaatere, Deeka ala., lUaotratod la Celers, Reeks, free rosUgs 1 Cota. Also Tyler’s Royal tSaßßaa Oltlcr* bests and Tyi*‘ BfecSliSk. " rl,,r CaMneti, *W J9jf||mpPo!PNk Styles. Best and cheap mmiarPlTTff. * st <>n earth, with great reduction In prices. 2ssiSSifi?sl bosks' i ssirs,' Tl.lm,**i",-.’k <* i-.i m.na I .M.SU, •!,., I. Blsrt. „ Special o-V in,da to order. TYLEE DEBK CO., St.AKmU. Me, t r.S.A. Sheriff’s Sales. Will be sold,before the court bouse door, in the City of Brunswick, Ulynn County, Georgia, during the legal hours of sale, on the first Tues day in November next, all that certain lot,.tract or parcel of land situate, lying and lielng in the County of Glynn, State of Georgia, and contain ing ninety-six acres of land, according to a sur vey of the same made by E. A. l’enniman,Coun ty Surveyor of said county of Glynn,on January Ist, 1889, Said land being known as tlie portion ol Fancy Itluff tract, lying south of the public road and being bounded oh the north by the public road and partly by Fancy Bluff creek, east by Fancy BlufT creek, on the west by lands granted to Sam Gray, and on the south by Fyles' land, John R. Doe flinger’s lands and Lewellen’s land and Reid's creek. Said lands hereby described being more fully described by reference to a pint or said survey made by said K. A. Pennlman, marked exhibit A and attached to the deed of conveyance con voying said real estate to Robert Bryce and re corded In book D.D. of general records of Glynn county. The above described land levied on and described as the property of Robert Bryce under and by virtue of an execution issued from Glynn superior court in favor of Eittlefleld and Comp my and against tlio said Robert Bryce for *635.21 prinoipal and $S9.3u interest to the 15th day of May, 1889, and further interest at seven per cent per annum and all cost. Notice given tenant in possession. Ootober2,lß9l. 2-sat4t W M. H. BEKRfE, Sheri if Glynn Cos. Ga. BEER AMD ICE. Macon Beer! What makes the Macon Brewing Company’s product so popular ? • i Its Purity, Quality and Appearance! Put up lor the trade in half, quarter and eighth barrels. “Private Stock,” “Light Ex port,” “Culmbacher” and “Patent Stopper” In bottles, for Saloon and Family Trade I Pure Extract of Dice! THE : GREAT TEMPERANCE DRINK. A WHOLESOME BEVERAGE. Macon Crewing Cn. Oh as. T. Holmes, Agent 416 BAY STREET, Brunswick, - - - Ga. SHORTER COLLEGE “ToRIMIS LADIES, 4 ROME, GEORGIA. Session Opens Sept. 30th. 1. A high and healthful situ ation. 2. Charming grounds and scenery. 3. Magnificent brick build ings. 4. Modern improvements, 5. 20 accomplished teachers and officers. 6. A splendid music depart ment. 7. A famous school of art. 8. A finely equipped depart ment of physical culture. 9. An unsurpassed school of Elocution. Moderate charges for these unrivalled advantages. Apply to DR. A. J. BATTLE, Or PRESIDENT. PROF. IVY W. DUGGAN. BUSINESS MANAGER. University of Georgia. NINETEENTH '/EAR. Session begins Wednesday, September 17th. _ . . Tuition free in all depaitf ments at Athens excepting Law. A. L. HULL, Secretary. THE TIMES JOB PRINTING |v _ | ~ DEPARTMENT ” This Department of the Times is made a specialty by the Times Publishing Company, and is, without exception,the best equipp ed Job Printing House in this part of the State. qpHE STYLE IN WHICH WE DO Better Heads, Note Heads, Bill HeadsT" lißl a 4 “ l Envelope Heads,. Statement Heads, And other Kinds of Heads Is Surprising; And THE PRICES AT WHICH WE DO Poste rs, Dodgers, Hand Hs, Receipt Books Business Cards, Circular Betters, Note Circulars, And all other Kinds of Work, Is Wonderful. If you want job print ing done you cannot do better than test our abili ty, and try us on prices. The Brunswick Times, Brunswick, Ga.