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The Brunswick Times.
Urunswick Publishing Company
Publishers:
OFFICE—In Oglethorpe Block, F Street.
lEUSPHONE NO 31.
Thr Brunswick Times has the largest and
most select circulation of any newspaper pub
lished In Geoigia South of Savannah.
The Bkcnswick Times will be delivered by
mail or by carrier at *5 per year or CO cents |ier
month, payable strictly in advance. It is for
sale on trains leaving Brunswick and at all
news stands.
Correspondence on live and clean subjects is
solicited. Address all communications to Tub
Mousing Times, Brunswick, Ga,
“WE PRINT THE NEWS.”
War with Spain would probably re
sult in a spirited attack upon our bu
reau of naval construction.
A Washington physician has SIOO
which he will exchange for a genuine
case of hyprophobia “in either man
or dog.”
McKinley will be sworn in today—
and inside of three months he will be
sworn at by a swarm of disappointed
ofllce-seekers.
Owing to a misunderstanding about
seats, Mark Hanna and his family
may have to stand during the inaugu
ration ceremonies today. What’s the
matter with sitting on his barrel? It’s
big enough.
This grand jury has “taken up” the
case ofyoungOtis Smith, the Atlanta
Hwindler whose dupes recently com
pounded his felony for revenue only.
Smith has also “taken up” his abode
in another state and can alFord to
smile at the explosion of such blank
cartridges as those the Fulton county
jury is discharging.
GONE GLIMMERING.
Our evening contemporary loses it
self in the labyrinth of its own logic
when it describes the course of the
county commissioners in demolishing
the old court house as contempt of
court and “the beginning of a politi
cal feudalism.” We are not at all clear
as to what meaning the word “feudal
ism” may convey to the mind of the
Advertiser, but we are quite certain
as to the tenor of the petition for an
injunction. The signers of that peti
tion sought to restrain the county
commissioners from selling or dis
posing of the court house. The build
ing has neither been sold nor disposed
of. It has been demolished. The
bone of contention lias been removed,
and we are justified in saying that the
motion for an injunction will fall to
the ground with the crazy structure
it was designed to preserve.
A KANSAS KICKER.
William Allen White, the Kansas
editor whose blunt brutality of speech
has recently made him known, has in
the March Forum a paper on “Kansas
Its Present and Future,” which is like
ly to attract attention, and which cer
tainly merits criticism.
In his analysis of socialism as seen
in the arid belt of Kansas, Mr. White
describes the picturesque Kansas pop
ulist, not as a “peculiar man,” but as a
man who has “merely lost his tem
per"—an “American on the wrong
tack,” and as a rebel against tne social
order “which makes every man re
sponsible for his own success,” and
who asks that be "be made by legisla
tion the mental or the financial equal
of other men.”
All this is picturesque, but inaccur
ate. To equalize men by legislation
is impossible; but to emphasize the
natural and inevitable inequalities of
life by legislation, or—what is the
same thing—by the lack of it, is quite
within the limits of possibility. That
it has been done in this country no
fair-minded man can deny; and that
any such practical repudiation of dem
ocratic principle is dangerous should
-be-equaWy-eJ#**,
The purpose of a democratic govern
ment is not to attempt the impossible
or to aggravate conditions already
sufficiently dangerous. It is our busi
ness to reduce as far as possible the
natural inequalities of society and to
render life more endurable to the
great mass of men. It is to them, and
not to the exceptionally gifted, that
the aocial and industrial order should
be adjusted. The latter are in the mi
nority; the former have an over
whelming majority; and why should
any such majority rule if not for its
own good?
<—* 1 ■'
THE NEW ADMINISTRATION.
No president has ever entered the
white bouse under less favorable cir
cumstances than Mr. McKinley, and
it is safe to say that he will arrive at
the end of his term with his laurels
in the sere and yellow leaf.
Burdened with a policy or indirect
taxation that may suggest prosperity,
but can never achieve it, the new ad
ministration will llnd it difficult to re
deem the pledges made during the
campaign. Taxing the masses for the
benefit of the classes upon the speci
ous plea of protection, is nothing new;
but it will prove a refreshing novelty
should the people at large extract any
profit from the process that has
skinned the south, milked the west
and enriched the east.
There can be no doubt that*Major
McKinley goes into ofllce saddled by
more than one invisible parasite of
the Hanna type; and, whatever may
he the nature of his dealings with the
people, it is clear that he will be
forced to redeem the pledges which
enabled him to distance his competi
tors in the republican party. The men
behind the throne are the men to be
feared. They are not there for their
health, and not the least interesting
feature of the new regime will be the
attempt to disintegrate the solid
south and the local democracy by
means of party pap and tempting tar
iffs on certain southern products.
The democratic party has always
been stronger in opposition than in
power. Defeat seems to restore its
mental equilibrium, and it is not at
all improbable that the next tour
years will give it abundant opportun
ity to reinstate itself in public confi
dence and to formulate a policy that
shall sweep the country in 1900. Ev
erything comes to him who waits,
and who has imbibed the wisdom of
the stanza:
"Grieve not that life is short
And less that art is long;
Success is in the silences,
Though fame is in the song.”
Many Came.
There was a good list of arrivals in
port yesterday. They were the Brit
ish steamship Scaw Fell, from Madeira,
tor Brunswick Terminal company;
Danish bark Hydra, from Havre, for
Downing company; Russian barken
tine Suomi, from Southampton, for
Downing oompany; Norwegian bark
India, from Buenos Ayres; American
schooner James E. Woodhouse, from
Berbice; American schooner Sylvia C.
Hall, from New Yora, for Hilton-
Dodge.
Harness made to order. Repairing
a specialty. A. J. Ingram, Monk St.
Don’t forget to call for Carstair’s
Monogram Whisky at the Arcade.
Nervous
People find just the help they so much
need, in Hood's Sarsaparilla. It fur
nishes the desired strength by puri
fying', vitalizing ami enriching the
blood, and thus builds up the nerves,
tones tho stomach and regulates the
whole system. Read this:
“I want to praise Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
My health run down, and I had the grip.
After that, my heart and nervous system
were badly affected, so that I could not do
my own work. Our physician gave me
some help, but did not cure. I decided
to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Soon I could
do all my own housework. I have taken
Cured
Hood’s Pills with Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
and they have done me much good. I
will not be without them. I have taken 13
bottiesof Hood’s Sarsaparilla,and through
the blessing of God, it has cured me.
I worked as hard as ever the past sum
mer, and I am thankful to say I am
well. Hood’s Pills when taken with
Hood’s Sarsaparilla help very much.”
Mrs. M. M. Messenger, Freehold, Penn.
This and many other cures prove Ahat.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Ts the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl.
Prepared only byC. I. Hood & Cos., Lowell, Mass.
r;i|_ act easily, promptly and
nOOLI S PillS effectively, 36 eenta. *
THE TIMES: BRUNSWICK, GA., MARCH 4, 1896.
J. M, Madden, a. H. Lane, w. B. cook. W. Nossbaum,
President. Vice-President. cashier. Asst. Cashier.
THE
MERCHANTS & TRADERSBANK
OF BRUNSWICK.
CAPITA!., *IOO,OGO. O SURPLUS, *IO,OOO.
DIRECTORS:
James U. Foster, J. B. Wrijrht, P. Ogg. -M. Raise’ - ,
Moses Isaac, A. H. Lane. J. M. Madaen, A. G. P. Llodge, jr.
. Accounts of All Solvent Institutions Are Solicited.
A Havings Department Is Maintained in This Bank
and Accounts of Women and Minors Are Solicited.
DOWNING, President. E. I). WALTt*. o*l itw. K. H. 11 i) { / tll
'Y'he ational J3ank of Brunswick
CASH CAPITA!. *'TO.OO.
Deals Liberally With Its Patrons and Friends
BURGLAR PROOF SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT.
SHORT WHEEL NOTES.
Connecticut boasts of having 80,000
Wheelmen.
At one of the cycle shows a practical
gas lamp was shown which makes use
of acetylene gas.
It is said that the New York cycle
show represents on the part of the trade
an aggregate expenditure of $1,000,000.
It is anticipated that among the
ipeedy men on the circuit this year will
bo Angus McLeod, the young Canadian,
who defeated the best men in the Do
minion.
George Ruppcrt, sen of the million
aire brewer and the crack rider of the
Columbia university team, has been so
riously ill. He will he unable to ride
for some time.
A street contractor has been made de
fendant with the city of Cincinnati in a
suit for damages brought by a wheel
man who fell and injured himself on a
street which had been too liberally
sprinkled.
The newest additions to woman’s
wheels are miniature looking glasses
fixed into the center of the handle bar.
These are known as the Argus retro
spect and are being taken up by many
fashionable riders.
William W. Massey is president of an
organization formed to build aud equip)
a bicycle clubhouse on the Coney Island
boulevard, Brooklyn, at a cost of SIOO,-
000, which it is expected will bo the
finest in the country.
CYCLING ACROSS THE SEA.
A British bicycle nmnufacturer gives
to every purchaser of a wheel an insur
ance policy against death or disable
ment or loss of wheel by'theft or fire.
John Foster Fraser and Frank Lowe,
who left England six months ago to
make a journey around the world on
their bicycles, have arrived at Teheran.
A company has been recently formed
in London to assume the business of the
Societe dcs Uycles Metropole in the
manufacture of a chainless bicycle. Its
capital stock is $1)00,000.
Cycle racing is going to the dogs 11
Australia. Betting is becoming rani
pant, bookmakers giving as much atten
tion to cycling as to liorso racing. Rac
ing men and their friends wager heavih
on all events, and dishonest practices
are becoming manifest.
Some fine performances were accom
plished recently at the Oatford sports
ground, England, by an electric tandem,
with two well known Coventry riders
up. The machine was geared to 122
inches. It ran one mile in 1:45 2-6 and
two miles in 8:29 8 5 from a flying
start,
Ih It Healthful?
In discussing the *Ts it healthful?”
question, as applied to cycling, a veteran
says: “My experience is extensive. It
embraces 18 years of active cycling, dnr
ing which period I have covered nearly
100,000 miles, riding mostly in coni
pany. Road raeing, path racing, fast
riding, pottering, pacing and tonring
wero all comprised in this mileage, and
of the people with whom I was brought
in contact during that period I can re
cord only one ease in which cycling did
not prove beneficial, and that was a ease
of overexertion on the part of a weak
rider, who had been frequently warned.
Then; is not one individual in every
100,000 for whom cycling is not good,
but there are many to whom excess is
likely to prove dangerous. Above all,
severe cycling when in an unfit condi
tion is risky. The person who gains the
greatest possible benefit from the pas
time is the one who rides regularly and
constantly. Those who indulge only in
an occasional ride should bo excessively
cautious, and any man who suffers from
exhaustion or insomnia, or who cannot
eat after riding, may be sure that he
has done too much. ’ ’—Philadelphia
Times.
A Hi.*.l fariug Improvement*
William Auberlin, an alderman of
Detroit, has just patented what seems
likely to bo an improvement in ball
bearings for bicycles. The inventor calls
it a bearing tube. With it the wheel
bearings can lx; cleaned without taking
out the balls. By removing cine of the
cranks and unscrewing the clamping
nut the bearing tube cap he .slipped--et
oT 'tEeframe tube, leaving the bearings
intact and on the axle. The bearing
tube is practically dustproof.—Ex
change.
To Relieve Sore Limbs.
For the purpose of relieving the limbs
of stiffness or soreness the cyclist is ad
vised that acetatod turpentine liniment,
with or without the addition of a little
ether, will be found exceedingly useful.
If an ointment is required, a mixture
of lanolino and vaseline is recommended
us an excellent thing.—New York Press.
it?si
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Celebrated for its great leavening
strength and healthfulness. Assures
the food against alum and all forms of
adulteration common to the cheap
brands.
Royal Baking Powder Company, New
York.
————————————————— >
f lint, Ga., f’eb. 7,1597. —“My health
has been poor for some time past. For
the last four months I have not been
able to get about to do my work. I
have been taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and am getting better, and today 1 am
able to attend to my business. I can
not recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla
too highly.” Noah Daniel.
Hood’s Pills become the favorite ca
thartic with everyone who tries them.
Brace un. Throw off that tired
feeling. There is life and health and
strength in the crimson tint of John
son’s tonic . The only recognized spe
cific for la grippe. Cures and pre
vents grip. Completes unfinished
cures. Try it. tf
“Nlathushek”
The Piano'for a’Lifetime.
Sold by us for a quaiier of a century—
since 1870.
The great southern fai orite. More Math
usheks in use south than of any otaer
one make.
Better than ever. More popular than
ever. Cheaper than ever.
We now own an interest in the great
Mathushck factory and Sell its pianos
for the United States.
I’ianos direct from factory to purchas
ers with but one protit.
Elegant new styles, SIOO cheaper than
ever before offered. WRITE US.
Sudden & Bates,
Savannah. Ga., and New York City.
N. B. -\\ here ao you buy your sheet
music? We sell all music at one half
price. Won’t it pay you to order from
us. TRY IT.
isMSFyc,
ANEW BAT.
Kye Whisky, 91.50 Per Gallon. No
Charge for Jugs or Bottles, , , ,
Kentucky and Tennsssss Whisky House.
S Marks - - Manager.
Cor, Monk and Bay Sts.
For" Sale 777
CELERY!
CELERY, IQ CENTS A STALK.
Delivered promptly to any
part of the city
M. W. CHURCHILL,
TELEPHONE N0.45A, PELIUANVILLE.
nF=a 6,000 Good Luck Baking Powder
Sold in Georgi ain 18 96
Against 2,900 in 1895. This is FIFTEEN CARLOADS of
400 caaeß t 0 the car - As there are 100 cans to a case, it
mounts to 600,000 cars,or equal to a third of the entire
'h P°P ulationof Georgia, which is 1,500,000. We will take
§j ©j?©@SJ TO® pleasure in furnishing proof of this statement any time.
iWU TjVlf ® It is used and recommended by Millions
ppP of intelligent housekeepers all over the
MFGCt For sale by lead ng wholesale and retail
grocers every where. Sand 10c cans.
W. W IF ARK, State Agent,
QUALITY. Atlanta, Ga.
ft® BIEWIDO fid...
—Macon, G-a.
American Queen...
Victoria.
Our Leading Brands.
WE SELL TO DEALERS ONLY.
R. V. Douglass, Agt...
THE
Bay Iron Works!
Repairing Work of all Kiwis.
“Ist- machinery. 3r
Water Tanks, Motors.
All kinds of Electrical Machinery.
Steamboat and Marine Work a Suecialtv
No charge for Estimating’on Jibs.
Expert orkmen! Satisfaction guaranteed!
689 BAY STREET.
You Want
Okarma will make you a pair as
cheap as any man on earth.
WHY IS IT
That you will pay $1 or $4 for a
pairof ready-made shoes when you
can have them made by Okarma
for the same price.
OKARMA & CO.
312 NEWCASTLE STREET.
Stock Wanted. iXMSISd®
W. R. Townsend & Cos.,
300 MONK STREET.
Atlas Engines
Portable and stationary boilers, shafting, pulleys,
belting, pipeing, injectors and fittings, sawdust and
coal-burning grates. Twenty carloads for quick
delivery. Get our prices. Come and see us.
Lombard Ii on-works and Supply Ca,
CAST EVERY MAY. + o
CAPACITY 300 HANDS. AllglD.ld,
___________
FOR
Fine Monumental Work
Hard-Wood Mantels, Grates,
Tiling, and Iron Fencing,
~ SEE US.,
BRUNSWICK MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS.
REED E. LaMANCE, Propriet” .