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The Brunswicg/fjjl
~Mtßffir
Block, F Street.
°3l
- Pr"fflTTflf-Tulirn hB tha largest aiul
most select circulation of any newspaper pub
lished In fiqqttfia s<u)th ofi Savannah.
-
Tbk Bkunl£'m4 Tfs£s delivered by
mail or by carrier at |5 per year oTHrflleAw'per
month, payable stricjtfyiiL.aiyiiney. It is for
saloon trains leaving 'Bntnffwwfc and at all
news stands.
Correspondence on live and /rtoaji aulijects is
solicited. Address all commuipcffliims to Tiie
Moaning Times, Brunswick, GA, f i
i—i— .. .
Sugar will be higher under the new
tariff.*' f S>liASr Cos. have always
beerrolff ftfr Ivrro,
Senator John H. Henderson, of
Florida, is a Georgia boy, which is
f* ne reaßon why the colonel
is feeling so buoyant just now.
(Contemporary refers to the pres
ident’s message as “short and sweet •”
There is certainly enough sugar in it
for the northern manufacturers.
The proposed bill to prohibit lobby
ing has all the absurdity of legislation
against the inevitable. As long as
men have strong desires they will em<
ploy strong measures to gratify them.
The New York Tribune recently
published a long article designed to
show that the intluence of the money
power was the determining factor in
European diplomacy. Nobody doubts
the truth of the Tribune’s dictum, or
that it would be the first to deny that
the same power exercised the same in
lluence in the conduct of affairs in this
country.
An English freight steamer now in
port has on board an object lesson in
economic conditions that is highly
suggestive. This big steamship is
manned by a crew of fifty Hindoos,
who are said to receive $5 a month and
live on nine cents worth of rice a day.
Now let somebody wonder why it is
the American merchant marine has
decayed, and why the hoarse bark of
the native sea dog is no longer heard
in the offing.
THE MESSAGE
Hanna’s heavy hoofprint is visible
all through President McKinley’s mes
sage, and it is evident that the Ohio
president means to preside permanent
ly over the prosperity of the little
clique of northern millionaires and
manufacturers to which he owes his
nomination and election.
The message—if it means anything
—means that the present standard of
profuse and reckless expenditure is to
be maintained as a permanent feature
of our political programme, to which
our system of taxation is to be ad
justed without the slightest reference
to the needs of the great masses of the
people who must pay the piper for all
this Dingley dancing.
At no point does this document
breathe that spirit of economy which
is one of the cardinal principles of
democracy, and in the fact that it
echoes with startling fidelity the as
pirations of the organized plunderers
of the producers, may be found the
keynote of the McKinley administra
AN ERRONEOUS VIEW.
It is some time now since anything
has been beard from the Kev. A. M.
Williams, of Savannah, in opposition
to the hospital and relief department
not long since organized by the Plant
System for the benefit of its employes;
and those interested may soon expect
to be edilied by some further critical
outbursts on the part of the reverend
gentleman.
Mr. Williams probably means well,
but we cannot say we admire the man
ner in which his benevolence manifests
itself. We think he is doing more harm
than good; we believe that bis point of
view is altogether mistaken, and we are
quite sure that he ig in the wrong if l.e
supposes the hospital and relief fund
to have been established for any other
purpose than the welfare of the em
ployes of the Plant System.
The fact that the insurance feature
is compulsory bears, in our judgment.
HOh Significance as that which Mr.
atns seems disposed to give it.
equal force object to
our entire system of civic taxation,
which taalwPiP compulsory, but which
is nong ttift less necessary and useful.
Thai'truth of the matter is that the
smalhihfontbly assessment made UDder
this hew method of railway insurance
on the Plant bystem is largely a mat
ter of convenience; the percentage is
(Stopped out of the employes’ wages in
the first place, instead of being paid
out and then repaid to the company;
and the new departure is too purely
co-operative in its nature—too obvi
ously beneficial—to merit any such
crude criticipm as that which has been
visited upon it by a clergyman who
sees without protest the same prin
ciple of compulsory taxation applied
in the social order of which ha is a
member.
If Mr. Williams means to practice
what he preaches, let him, when next
waited upon by the tax collector, re
pudiate his social obligations upon the
ground that the burdens involved have
been forced upon him without hiscon
sent. And if he means to preach what
he practices,' we would respectfully
suggest that he lose no time about it.
THE WHOLE STOCK
Of Jiwelry, 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 has 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.
Dou’t forget the number, 314 Bay
street.
The People Are Convinced
When they read the testimonials of
cures by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. They
are written by honest men and wo
men, and are plain, straightforward
statements of facts. The people have
confidence in Hood’s Sarsaparilla be
cause they know it actually and per
manently cures, even when other med
ioines-fail.
Hood’s Pills are the only pills to take
with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Easy and
yet efficient.
Insist on your grocer furnishing
you with Ferguson’s breakfast bacon
and hams.
A Summer Cruise.
The American steamship Ohio will
sail from New York June 26, XS97, for
a summer cruise, touching at Iceland,
North Cape, Norway, Sweden and
Russia. Opportunity will be allowed
for extensive side-trips, including a
visit to the great exposition at Stock
holm. Capt. O. Jabanneson is local
agent for the line, and will be pleased
to furnish rates and other information
to applicants.
I®,
&AKIH®
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Celebrated for its great leavening
strength and healthfulness. Assures
the food against alum and all forms of
adulteiation common to the cheap
brands. I^.
Royal Baking Powder Company, New
York.
Gail Borden
Eagle Brand
Condensed Milk.
B£ST INFANT FOOD.
The Rosy Freshness
And a velvety softness of the skin is inva
riably obtained by those who use Pozzoni’s
Complexion Powder.
The TIMES: BRUNSWICK, UA, MARCH 17, 1897.
DOCTORALDRIGHT
A BROAD MINDED PHYSICIAN
WITH PROGRESSIVE IDEAS.
Believes in Recommending Any Medicine That He
Knows Will Cure His Patients. Thinks
Dr. Williams Pink Pills a Great
Discovery. He Cites Some
Marvelous Cures.
Prom the Examiner, Lancaster, Pa.
“ Akron, Pa., April 24th, ’95.
Dr. Williams’ Medicine Cos. :
Gentlemen —While it is entirely contrary to
the custom of the medical profession to en
dorse or recommend any of the so-called pro
prietary preparations, I shall, nevertheless,
give you an account of some of my wonderful
experiences with your preparation, Dr. Wil
liams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. The fact
is well-known that medical practitioners do
not as a rule, recognize, much less, use pre
parations of this kind, consequently the body
of them have no definite knowledge of their
virtue or lack of it, but soundly condemn
them all without a trial. Such a course is
manifestly absurd and unjust, and I, for one,
propose to give my patients the best treatment
known to me, for the particular disease with
which they are suffering, no matter what it is,
where or how obtained. I was first brought
lo prescribe Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills about
two years ago, after having seen some remark
able results from their use. lleuben Hoover,
now of Reading, Pa., was a prominent con
tractor and builder. While superintending
the work of erecting a large building during
cold weather, he contracted what was thought
to be sciatica. He having first noticed it one
morning in not being able to arise from his
bed. After the usual treatment for this dis
ease he failed to improve, but on the contrary
grew rapidly worse, the case developing into
Ileuiiphlegia, or partial paralysis of the entire
right side of the body. Electricity, tonics
and massage, etc., were all given a trial, but
nothing gave any benefit, and the paralysis
continued. In despair he was compelled to
hear his physician announce that his case was
hopeless. About that tiiue his wife noticed
one of your advertisements and concluded to
try your Pink Pills.
“ He had given up hope and it required a
great deal of begging on the part of his wife
to persuade him to take them regularly.
“He, however, did as she desired, and if
appearances indicate health in this man, one
would think he was better than before his
paralysis.
4 Why,’ says he, ‘ I began to improve in two
days, and in four or five weeks I was entirely
well and at work.’
“Having seen these results I concluded
that such a remedy is surely worth a trial at
the hands of any physician, and consequently
when a short time later I was called upon to
treat a lady suffering with palpitation of the
Brace up. 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
The ladies know that Liberty Bell
Baking Powder makes tine bread.
Nervous
Feoplc 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. 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
bottles of 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. Mkss&xoek, Freehold, Penn.
This and many jther cures prove that
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
fs the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Cos.. Lowell, Mass.
• • p.... act easily, promptly aud
tlOOd S HIIIS effectively. 26 cnu.
heart and great nemos prostration, after the
usual remedies failed to relieve, I ordered Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills. The result was simply
astonishing. Her attacks beoam. less frequent
and also less in severity, until by their use for
a period of only two months, she was the
picture of health, rosy-cheeked and bright
eyed, as well as ever, and she has continued
so until to-day, more than one year since she
took any medicine. I have found these pills
a specific for chorea, or as more commonly
known, St. Vitus’ dance, as beneficial results
have in all cases marked their use. Asa
spring tonic any one who, from overwork or
nervous strain during a long winter has be
come pale and languid, the Pink Pills will do
wonders in brightening the countenance and
in buoying the spirits, bringing roses to the
pallid lips and renewing the fountain of youth.
Yours respectfully,
J. D. Albright, M. D."
LOCOMOTOR ATAXIA SUCCESSFULLY
TREATED.
From the Oswego, N. Y. Palladium.
T. D. McCarthy, of this place yesterday
told a Palladium reporter his experience with
Locomotor Ataxia. The account is of interest
because Locomotor Ataxia is supposed to be
incurable and yet Mr. McCarthy is cured.
He said:
“In October, 1892, I was working at my
trade,that of a machinist,in the Eames Vacuum
Brake Works, at Watertown, N. Y. I had
been sick several weeks before I gave up and
quit work. A tired feeling seemed to have
taken possession of me and rest as long and
as well as I might I could not get rid of it. I
took tonics and other medicines prescribed by
the physicians there but kept getting worse
all the time. Finally 1 became so baa that I
could only walk a short distance, and that
with the greatest exertion. My limbs Beemed
to me like so much lead, and there was a
hitch in my walk. While walking I couldn’t
think of anything, not even the name of an
acquaintance whom I might happen to meet
in the street. Dr. Stevens, of Watertown,
was my physician, and he it was who informed
me that I su fibred from locomotor ataxia, and
advised me to go to my home. In the spring
of 1892 I came to my father’s home, 89 Varick
Street, Oswego. I had about given up all
hope of ever living anything but a helpless
invalid. 1 couldn’t sleep at night, and the
physicians who attended dosed me with mor
phine and other opiates. Every day I tried
to walk, and every day I appeared to be less
able than the day before. I was about the
worst looking wreck of a young man that
you could imagine. It was in June, 1893,
that I began taking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pill3
for Pale People. I hadn’t used the first box
when I began to feel beneficial effects. My
limbs appeared to be stronger and better able
to sustain me. Gradually this feeling in
creased until finally I was able to lay aside
my crutch and cane. Now I can walk or run
as well as ever. I have for sometime past en
gaged myself in light work. I can’t say too
much for the Pink Pills. I hope every suf
ferer will try them.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
are now given to the public as an unfailing
blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all
forms of weakness arising from a watery con
dition of the blood or shattered nerves. The
pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent
post paid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box
or six boxes for $2.50 (they are never sold in
hulk or by the 100), by addressing Dr. Wil
liams’ Medicine Company. Schenectady, N.Y.
A Texas Gift to McKinley.
Among the presents that will he sent
to the incoming president is one that
will come from San Antonio, Tex. The
present is the gift of the prominent
stockman Dennis O’Connor, and it is
the head of a mammoth Texas steer su
perbly mounted and .very lifelike and
natural, with its broad, branching
horns. The animal in life was a bay
steer of heroic size and must have ex
cited the attention and admiration of
all beholders, as the trophy as now
adorned cannot fail to do.
The horns have been highly polished
mid the head aud neck made to appeal
as though the animal was still alive.
On one side in solid gold is the typical
lone star of Texas, and in the center oi
the forehead in large golden capitals
the letters “TO,” while on the othei
side is the buckeye, typical of the pres
ident elect’s own state, the signification
being, “Texas to Ohio.’’ Beyond is
wrought in gold the inscription, “Pre
sented to President McKinley of the
United States by Dennis O’Connor.”—
San Antonia Express.
Aa Out of Sight Steed.
A. R. Sligar, agent of the Panhandle
at Newcastle, lud., disposed of a horse
in a raffle to Conductor J. W. Finfrock
of the same road. The horse was blind
and very old. The chances were 60 cents
each, and Finfrock held the lucky num
ber, but had never seen the steed. Upon
learning of his luck he sent the follow
ing telegram: “Am offered S3O. Is
horse all right and will he do for my
wife to drive?’ ’ Sligar replied as fol
lows, “Horse is out of sight, and any
woman can drive him. ”
Finfrock did not road between the
lines aud refused the offer of S3O, think
ing he had found a good family driver.
He came for the animal and had to ao
knowledge that the joke was on hie,.—
India; polis Journal.
Voort.rr* Will Retire.
“I will retire from the senate on
March 4, 'said Senator Voorhees. “and,
if my h. alth permits, [ will resume the
practice cl law at my old home in Terre
Haute. The firm to which I belong has
a large practice, and I hope to share my
part of the burden. But my whole time
will not be devoted to the law. It is my
purpose to devote some of my remaining
years to lecturing. ” —New York Sun
The Wise Grocer „saysT~
“Oh, yes; there are baking powders' cbuKMUiiofjor
25c less on the case than good li jCK7T3iir+-always-iur_
tend to give my customers the best there is on th& juaijer
regardless of profit.” 11 ■! Oil
lte “Penny-wise and Mm” Grocer = u
“Here’s something just as good as the GOOD luck. s ’.
It is not true. He bought the something else for a little les ‘ than GOOD LUCK.
His customers decline hissubstitute and go where they can get GOOD UTi K. For the
s. ke of 25 cents he loses dollars. Other manulacturers have reduced the price of their
powder to merchants. They have also reduced the s’ze of their cans. Their 5 cent
can holds 1 oz less than a 5 cent can of GOOD i.U K • their 10 cent can 2 ozs less than
alO cent can of GOOD LUCK. Honest methods and merit will prevail.
Miltmnc intelligent: housekeepers use and recommend GOOD LUCK BAKING I’OWDEIt
IIIIIIIUIIO It combines Quality and Quantity.
For sale by leading wholesale and retail grocers everywhere.
W. W. IPATtK, State Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
Heme Bill G 0...
——Macon, Ga.
American Queen...
Victoria.
Our Leading Brands.
WE SELL TO HEALERS 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 Iron-works and Supply Cos,
CAST EVERY DAT, B ..
CAPACITY 300 HANDS. iLllgUSta, G
SEE HERE—
FOR
Fine Monumental Work
Hard-Wood Mantels, Grates,
Tiling, and Iron Fencing,
~—SEE US.
BRUNSWICK MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS.
REED E. LaMANCK, Propriet
THE —“
Bay Iron Works!
Repairing Work of all Kinds.
Sr MACHINERY. Sr
Water Tanks, - Motors.
All kinds of Electrical Machinery.
Steamboat and Marine Work a Snecialtv
No charge for Estimating?on J Ybs.
Expert orkmen! Satisfaction guaranteed!
629 BAY STREET.
Stock Wanted.
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 N0.40A. PELICANVILLE
| gf OOXER s|)i
A NEW BAR.
By© Whisky, *1.50 Per Gallon. No
Charge for Jugs or Bottles, , ,
Kentucky and Tennessee Whisky House,
S- Marks - - Manager.
Cor. Monk mid Bay Sts.