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The Brunswick Times-
Brunswick Publishing Company
Publishers:
OFFICE—In Oglethorpe Block, F Street.
lELGPHONB NO 31.
The Brunswick Times has the largest and
most select circulation of any newspaper pub
lished In Georgia south of Savannah.
The Brunswick Times will be delivered by
mail or by carrier at $5 per year or 60 cents per
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 The
Morning Times, Brunswick, Ga,
“WE PRINT THE NEWS.”
1 McKinley will have to toe the Mark.
llarky Edwards is said to have his
eye on the Macon postofllce. Harry is
certainly a man of letters.
The sugar trust claims that, with
protection, it could employ more men.
The great combine could not possibly
employ more gall.
The Savannah Press wants to know
if Boss Buck is going to Bre/.il. We
take it for granted that this Buck
is after the dough.
An esteemed exchange says that the
“inauguration has been successfully
pulled off.” Some way with McKin
ley’s leg—almost.
To judge from his published utter
ances on the political situation in
Georgia from a Republican standpoint,
W. R. Leaken, of .Savannah, is not
leaking much.
McKinley’s attitude toward con
gress is pleasantly described as “con
ciliatory and persuasive.” Something,
in short, like that of an up-to-date
wife working her husband for an Eas
ter bonnet.
Five columns of telegraphic matter,
not one line of which was over twelve
hours old, was the record of The
Times yesterday. We expect to in
definitely duplicate this splendid ser
vice-something, by the way, no other
paper in the city is in a position to do.
An Atlanta man has just been
awarded $1,175 damages in a case
against the Central railroad, the re
sult of which should be a lesson to
transportation men generally. The
case was one which turned upon the
refusal of a conductor to accept a re
turn coupon, properly made out and
signed, but which, through no fault
of the passenger, had not been “vali
dated.” The passenger was ignomin
iously dumped from the train, and the
damages awarded him were none too
large for the manner in which the
corporation violated its contract.
In discussing the comparative merit
of the English ai.d American maga
zines, the Atlanta Journal says:
“But before the English magazines
can hope to compete with ours they
will have to change their style materi
ally. There is not published in any
foreign country a magazine that iu
variety, general interest or the beauty
of its illustrations approaches Harp
er’s, the Century or Scribners’. We
are as far ahead of foreign competi
tion in our magazines as we are in our
newspapers.”
All this is true enough as far as it
goes, but at the same time there is no
where in these United States a news
paper that can compare with the Lon
don in Times in solidity of s'yle, ab
solute accuracy and enduring influ
ence. And when the field of week
ly journalism is surveyed where in
our country shall we find anything
that may fairly be ranked with such
scholarly and sprightly critical re
views as the Saturday Review, the
l’all Mall Gazette, the Academy, the
Spectator and the St. James Gazette?
A SPLENDID SECTION.
The Times-Union says of the Flor
ida winter visitor that he makes a
great mistake as to the length of his
stay in the state; and it may with
equal truth be said that the average
tourist makes a mistake when he ig
nores Soutli Georgia on his way to the
llowery peninsula.
Many of these who yearly visit Flor
ida in in search of health or recrea
tion find the state too warm for cjn
tinued comfort, and would be glad to I
And some intermediate point, where
the remainder of the winter season
might be passed. The early spring
months are among the most disagree
able and dangerous known to the
north, and it is during these months
that the temperature in South Florida
is apt to become oppressive.
For those who have had enough of
the extreme south, and who are yet
unprepared to return north, there is
no more attractive section than that of
which Brunswick is the centre. Al
most in the direct path of the return
ing tourist, it may easily be reached;
and when once seen its wide expanse
of land-locked waters and sheltered
isles of the sea, are sure to win for
themselves an abiding place in the af
fections of the traveling world. Jekyl,
St. Simon, Brunswick and Cumber
land—these are all points destined to
become more widely known as years
go on, and the extens’on of the tourist
season, which is one of the features of
Florida travel, draws to them the at
tention they certainly merit.
THE WHOLE STOCK
Of Jewelry, Watches, Diamonds and
Silverware Goes Cheap.
Mr, A. Rothschild, having purchased
the full stock of E. J. Allen, on New
castle street, has moved the stock to
314 Bay street, where he lias the “low
priced” jewelry stock of the city.
Every description of jewelry, clocks,
watches, rings, diamonds and silver
ware will be sold positively below
manufacturer’s cost.
This is one of the most remarkable
opportunities ever offered to theßruns
wick public.
Don’t forget number, 314 Bay
street.
A Pcint to Remember.
Is you wish to purify your blood
you should take a medicine that cures
blood diseases. The record of cures
by Hood’s Sarsaparilla proves that
this is the best medicine for the blood
ever produced. Hood’s Sarsaparilla
cures the most stubborn oases and it
is the medicine to take if your blood
is impure.
Hood’s Pills are the best after-din
ner pills; assist digestion, cure head
ache. 25 cents.
To Fitzgerald.
For the Grand Army Republic En
campment, Fitzgerald, Ga., March 11-
16th, 1S!)7, the Plant System will sell
round-trip tickets from Brunswick to
Fitzgerald, Ga., at rate of $5.95, limited
for continuous passage in both direc
tions. Tickets to be sold March 11
12 and 13, limited to return March 16,
1897. ,
To Albany.
For Georgia Chautauqua, Albany,
Ga., March 21,29,1897, the Plant Sys
tem will sell round tickets from
Brunswick to Albany and return at
rate of $6 84. Tickets to be sold
March 20 to 28, 1897, inclusive with
final limit three days from date of
sale.
Insist on your grocer furnishing
you with Ferguson’s breakfast bacon
and hams.
Nervous
People find just the help they so much
need, in Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It fur
nishes the desired strength by puri
fying, vitalizing and enriching the
blood, and thus builds up the nerves,
tones the stomach and regulates the
whole system. Head 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
Cu red
Hood’s Pills with Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
and they have done me much good. I
will not be without them. I have taken 13
bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and through
the blessing of God, it has cured me.
I worked as bard 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 that
Hoods
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Slood Purifier. All druggists. sl.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Cos., Lowell, Mass.
it .. ...... act easily, promptly and
£iOOu S rillS effectively. Jb aeuu. _
THE TIMES: BRUNSWICK. GA, MARCH 10, 1896.
A CONSERVATIVE
FARMER.
Mr. J. P. Utley, of Mt. Vernon, In
terviewed by a Reporter.
KE TELLS OF HIS SUFFERIM3S
WITH TROUBLE OF THE ST3HABH.
How He Fought it for Years—Physicians Tried to
Cure Him but Failed — Finally lie Discov
ers a Remedy and is Cured.
From the Sun, Mt. T 7 ernon. Tnd.
Mr. J. P. Utley, aged sixty-four years,
whose post-office uddress is Mt. Vernon, Ind.,
has been aresident of Posey County for forty
eight years, and is one of Posey County’s
most prominent and prosperous farmers. Mr.
Utley lives in Lynn township, about seven
miles northeast of this city, and he desires to
speak through the columns of the Sun a few
words in behalf of a famous remedy for dis
eases of the blood, so that his many friends
may profit by an experience which he had.
Said Mr. Utley a few days ago to a reporter:
" Several years ago I began to suffer with
some kind of stomach trouble. My food did
not seem to agree with me and I was unable
to do any farm work. Food that I ate at
'times caused severe pains and cramps in my
stomach and would cause it to swell. I at
first began to doctor with a physician who
was traveling through the country, but he
did me no good. I then went to Mt. Vernon
and consulted one of the best physicians in
the city who pronounced my case abscess of
the liver,and began to treat me by first blister
ing my right side and back. He then gave
me one or two different kinds of medicine all
of which afforded me but temporary relief.
After doctoring with him for five or six
months without receiving any permanent
benefit, I tried two other physicians with the
same result.
“A year ago last February, I was con
fined to my bed and suffered one of the
worst attacks I had ever had,, and while
doctoring with one of the aforesaid doctors,
I read in a paper of the wonderful cures that
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
were accomplishing and the testimonials of
people who had taken them and been re
stored to health, so I decided as soon as I
was able to get to town, I would buy a box
and try them.
' Indians at tlie Inauguration.
It is proposed to bring some blanket
Indians to Washington to take part in
the inauguration of the great father
March 4. The officers of the inaugural
committee are in consultation with the
secretary of the interior, and he will
probably consent to have representatives
of several tribes brought to Washington
for the purpose. If Secretary Francis
consents, an effort will be made to se
cure 40 or 50 Sioux, Apaches and Sho
shones. They will be brought to Wash
ington at the expense of the government
and after the inauguration ceremonies
will be returned to their reservations.
They will not dance at the inaugural
ball.
X Kays and Diamonds.
11l a recent lecture on the X rays in
London Professor Silvanus P. Thompson
remarked that the newly discovered
radiance would much more readily pen
etrate genuine diamonds and other jew
els than false ones, and therefore ren
der it possible easily to distinguish
between them. He exhibited a photo
graph of the hand of Lord Kelvin in
connection with this point and remarked
playfully that the audience would per
ceive that the diamond in the finger
ring was the real thing.
Sugar Growing In Florida.
A dispatch to The Manufacturers'
Record from Kissimmee, Fla., says that
the extensive St. UJoud sugar planta
tion, near that place, has been pur
chased by a syndicate of Cubans; that
the capacity of the sugar mill will be
doubled at once, and 2,000 acres of cane
Will be planted this fall. The St. Cloud
plantation was established by the late
Hamilton Disston of Philadelphia, who
undertook the development of sugar
growing in Florida on a large scale. He
invested $250,000. The Cubans will
take possession as soon as the convey
ance papers have been completed. The
purchase is regarded as the most impor
tant movement ever made iu Florida
locking to the development of the sugar
producing resources of that state.
May Mot Have Reached Fort Yet.
A recent advertisement in the London
Times read: “Information is wanted of
James Blair, who, on a voyage from
Leith to London, fell overboard. ” There
is plenty of humor in the British mind
—that is, of course, iu its solemnity.—
“"In a few weeks I was able *o go out and
accordingly went to W 11. Fogas’drug store
and procured a box of Pink Pills which I
took home. On my way home I begun to
study about taking the pills, and became
afraid to try them, as I had taken other
patent medicines and been doctoring with
first-class physicians, so 1 laid the box away
where it stayed until last September. I
then began to take one after each meal.
The third day after I had been taking them
food began to smell good to me. I began to
feel better and relish my food, and strange
to say it agreed with me which was some
thing I had not experienced during my three
years illness.
“After taking five boxes of the pills I now
feel entirely well and am not bothered with
my old trouble at all. my only trouble now
is, that my stomach is not big enough to hold
what I desire to eat. 1 am also able to do
as much work as any man of my age.
“Since I have received permanent relief
and believe myself cured I have recom
mended the Pills to a number of my friends.
This is the first proprietary medicine I ever
recommended in my life, but 1 am happy to
do it if it will help any sufferer to regain
health and bodily activity.
“ I occasionally take some of the pills, but
not regularly. It is said the pills are stimu
lating, but I cannot say that they give me
any such sensations that I am aware of.
They merelv cure and that is enough.
[Signed] “J. P. UTI.EY.”
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
Bth day of August, 1896.
John B. Davis,
Justice oj the Peace,
Tile Sad Condition of One of Indiana’.
Fair Voting Ladles.
From the News, Indianapolis. Incl
Probably one of the most direct, as well
as extraordinary cases where Dr. Williams 1
Pink Pills was the immediate cause of effect
ing a permanent cure of complete nervous
prostration, is that of Miss Pearl Hosier,
who lives in the country with her grand
mother, Mrs. Michael Crull, ten miles west
of Richmond, Ind.
Hearing of the case a reporter visited this
young lady a short time ago and learned the
following facts:
Miss Pearl is now in lier nineteenth year.
Up to the time that she was fifteen she was
well, stoutand very hearty. As she developed
into womanhood a slight twitching of the
nerves and museles of thp hands, arms and
face were noticed, and rapidly became worse
from day to day, and a disposition was shown
to avoid all company, and sl:e became mel
ancholy.
Tbe best medical advice was obtained and
she was treated by two physicians, both oi
whom failed in giving her any relief.
It was while the disease was at its worst
that her father came across a notice in one
of the papers of tbe curative powers oi
tbe Pink Pills for Pale People, and he at
once procured a box for his daughter and
had her brought home. The results were
almost immediately effectual to the great
joy of Miss Hosier’s friends and relatives
and the astonishment of everybody, all of
whom are happy in testifying to the same.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain all the
elements necessary to give new.life and rich
ness to the blood and restore shattered nerves.
They are for sale by all druggists, or may be
had by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y., for 50c. |>e;
box, or six boxes for i'J.dO,
im.
&AKlN<>
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Celebrated for its great leavening
strength and healthful Dess. Assures
the foe and against alum and all forms of
adulteiation common to the cheap
brands.
Royal Baking Powder Company, New
York.
Is it “overwork” that has Ailed this
country with nervous dyspeptics?—
that takes the flesh oil their bones, the
vitalityfrom their blood, and makes
them feeble, emaciated and inefficient?
No. It is bad cooking, overeating of
indigestible stuff, and other health
destroying habits.
The remedy is an artificially digested
food such as the Shaker Digestive Cor
dial. Instead of irritating the al
ready lnilamed stomach the cordial
gives it a chance to rest by nourish
ing the system itself and digesting
other food taken w'ith it. So flesh
and strength return. Is not the idea
rational? The Cordial is palatable
and relieves immediately. No money
risked to decide on its value. A 10
cent trial botttle does that.
Laxol is the best medicine for chil
dren. Doctors recommeud it in place
of Castor Oil.
10-pound sack of good buckwheat
for ouly 25c. Keauy & Bailey.
The Wise Grocer says:
“Oh, yes: there are baking - powders that I could buy for
2£c less on the case than GOOD luck, but 1 always in
tend to give my customers the best there is on the market
regardless of profit.”
me “Penny-wiseoodpooikiFoolisti”gum =
“Here’s something - just as good as the good luck.”
It is not true. He bought the something else for a little lea 0 than GOOD LUCK.
His cusl< mere decline his substitute and go where thev can get GOOD LU< K. tor the
Bkeof 25 cents he loses dollars. Other manufacturers have reduced the price of their
pov der to merchants. They have also reduced the s'ze of their cans. Their 5 cent
cot' holds 1 oz less then a 5 cent can of GOOD LU' 'K • their 10 cent can 2 ozs less than
alO cent can of GC OD LUCK. Honest methods and merit will prevail.
Millirnc of intelligent housekeepers use and recommend GOOD LUCK BAKING PoWDlCU—
litllillillo It comLii.es Quality and Qnautity.
For.sale by leading wholesale and retail grocers everywhere.
W. W. IPARK, State Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
Acme Brewing G 0...
- Ga.
American Queen...
Victoria.
Our Leading Brands.
WE SELL TO DEALERS ONLY.
R. V. Douglass, Agt...
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 lion-works and Supply Cos,
CAST EVEKY I)AY, a . „ A
CAPACITY 300 HANDS. iJLUgUSta, &
SEE HERE sn
R
Fine Monumental Work
Hard-Wood Mantels, Grates,
Tiling, and Iron Fencing,
~—SEE US.
BRUNSWICK MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS.
KEED E. LaMANCE, Propriet
THE
Bay Iron Works!
Repairing Work or all Kinds.
Sr MACHINERY.
Water Tanks, Motors.
All kinds of Electrical Machinery.
Steamboat and Marine Work a Snecialtv
No charge for Jibs.
Expert orkmen! Satisfaction guaranteed!
629 BAY STREET.
•
Stock Wanted. XSSffiM
W. R. Townsend & Cos.,
300 MONK STREET.
For Sale . . .
CELERY!
CELERY, 10 CENTS A STALK.
Delivered promptly to any
part of the city
M. W. CHURCHILL,'
TELEPHONE NQ.43A, PELICANVILLE.
|CHOONER sc<
ANEW BAR.
Bye Whisky, #l*o Per Gallon. No
Charge for Jugs or Bottles, . , ,
Kentucky and Tennessee Whisky House,
S* Marks - - Manager.
Cor. Monk and Bay Sts.