The Brunswick times. (Brunswick, Ga.) 189?-1900, March 27, 1897, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

The Brunswick Times. Brunswick Publishing Company Publishers: OFFICE—In Oglethorpe Block, F Street. lELEI'HOKE NO 31. The Brunswick Times lias 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 50 cents pel 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, Official Organ of the County of Glynn. “WE PEISI THE NEWS.” CITY OFFICIAL ORGAN. The following resolution was passed nnanimously at Thursday night’s meeting of council: “Be it, and it is hereby resolved, by tbe mayor and aldermen of tbe City of Brunswick, in council as sembled, tbat, from on and after tbe first Wednesday in April, 1897, Tbe Bruns wick Times, a newspaper having a general circula tion in said city, be and tbe same is hereby declared and made, until further ac tion to the contrary, the of ficial organ of the mayor and council of tbe city of Brunswick.” The railroads affected by the recent anti trust decision of the supreme court, are said by a conteruporay to be severing official ties. Tie cutting bas always been an important feature of railroad work. Whatever may be tbe result of Granny Hoar’s protest against the ex hibition of the kinetoscopic reproduc tions of tbe (Jorbett-Fitzsunmons scrap, the little Massachusetts moral ist may always be relied upon to make an exhibition of himself. It is probably asking too much to expect that the floods that are now spreading ruin and desolation through the south will impress upon the public mind the necessity of formulating some adequate scheme of forest con servation. It is much more probable tbat the south will continue to talk of “development” while it is being quietly stripped of its forests for the benefit of alien speculators, whose motto might well be “after us the del uge.” ____________ A NEW PHILANTHROPIST. At the meeting of the city council on Thursday night, a communication was "received from H. A. Wrench & Sons, proprietors of tlie Evening Advertiser, in which they oiler togive publicity to the marshal’s sales at a reduced rate. The object of this cut-ra’e proposition is announced to be the saving of money to the taxpayers in advertising costs. The Advertiser’s discovery that the taxpayers are in need of relief in this matter is very sudden —so sudden as to cause a shock of surprise to those who have observed the course of its propri etors iu the past. There is a wise old saying that as cribes to consistency the attributes of a jewel. It applies as fitly to the pro saic advertising-ledger of a newspaper as to higher and nobler things. The Times takes this opportunity of going back a brief space into munici pal history, that the public may prop erly consider this unexpected burst of benevolence on the part of the Adver tiser. lu the year 1593 the Times-Adver tiser, of which Mr. H. A. Wrench was manager and H. A. Wrench & Sons the sole beneficiaries, was—as some taxpay ers of that year are still painfully aware—the official organ of the city of Brunswick. It was necessary, owning to the prevalence of yellow fever on the day of the sale, to readvertise the unreturned property sales, thus doub lingthe costs to those who were unfor tunate enough to have their property levied on. Yet neither The Times nor the public has heard of one single in NODJESKA THE GRAND* Found Paine’s Celery Compound the Best ot Remedies For the Nervous Exhaustion Consequent Upon Her Ardu ous Work—The Remarkable Ar tiste Who Stands Pre-eminent ly at the Head of Her Profes sion. " The news of Modjeska’s recovery from the recent severe sickness that compelled her to leave the stage will be a source of congratulation to the whole world. Modjeska, in a letter to Wells, Rich ardson & Cos., says she has found (what Tvi\ cC thousands of people in every station of life have so often heartily testified) that Paine’s celery compound is the best of all remedies for nervous ex haustion. Joseph Haworth rightly calls Mod jeska “the peerless queen of artists.” Modjeska’s health is a matter of world-wide interest, and her testimo nial to the value of the great remedy which makes people well is of particu lar moment in the early spring, when from every quarter reports come of men, women and children who are taking Paine’s celery compound, and are gaining in nervous vigor, weight and every other indication of batter health. The thoughtful portion of the com munity knows the need of purifying the blood and regulating the ner vous and alimentary systems as spring comes on. There is the danger that in their stance where these kind-hearted pub lishers relinquished one cent of their, two-fold fee. The Jiound of flesh wad demanded and received. I And this was at a time when our peol pie labored under the worst afflictions! that w-ere ever wreaked upon n com-! inunity, their very food and raiment| coming as gifts from outside charity. Where then was the warm and pul sing sympathy that now gathers so closely to its tender heart the suffer ings of this oppressed, cost-burdened people? | Go further. In the next year, there was also financial stringency, the tax payers hampered by the results of the epidemic aud burdened with the necessity of making sewerage connec tions. From the sanctum of the offi cial organ there still came no offer of charity, and the delinquent taxpayer hoped for relief in vain. But now, what sudden reversal of leelingl What mighty motive has prompted the publishers of the Adver-| User to soften the iron heart and with- THE TIMES: BRUNSWICK, (iA., MARCH 27, 1897. eagerness to take a spring remedy a thoughtless person may carry home some bogus concoction prepared with only such a smattering of medical knowledge as can be picked up behind a counter. Paine’s celery compound is prepared in exact accordance with the prescrip- tion of Prof. Edward E. Phelps, M. D., LL. D, of Dartmouth college. Its curative effects have been closely watched by tbe ablest physicians of every school, and they are today agreed tbat it stands alone as the re liable remedy for building up a per son’s health in the spring. The most overwhelming testimony to the value of Paine’s celery com pbund that has recently appeared from men and women of national reputa tion : Hon. George B. Swift, mayor of Chi cago; Francis Murphy, the foremost apos tie of temperauoe in the world; Mrs. Matthew S. Quay, wife of Iha great republican senator from Penn sylvania ; Ex-President Cook of the National Teachers’ Association; Rev. Charles L. Thompson, D.D., the brilliant Presbyterian leader of New draw the grasping hand? Ynrk city; Elizabeth Cady Stanton; Secretary Carlisle’s private secre tary; State Treasurer Addisou 11. Colvin, of New York; John Graham, the foremost man in American athletics; i tie wife of Rev. Charles H. Purk huret, the famous preacher and re former, Mayor McShane of Montreal, Major General Birney, Judge Powers of Vermont, and a host more of prom inent men and women, including no lese than five United States congress men, are among tbe thousands of grateful people who have recently sent to the proprietors of this wonuerful remedy their expressions of its un equaled value —men and women who can well afford, and do command the highest medical advice in the country. And then also from tbe people in the ordinary walks of life there come thousands of honest, straightforward, heartfelt letters, telling how Paine’s celery compound has made them well. Their testimony simply gees to show what New England’s most vigorous editor so aptly said in a letter telling of the benefit Paine’s celery compound had been to a member of his family: “Paine’s celery compound is not a pat ent medicine; it is not a sarsaparilla; it is not a mere tonic; it is not a ner vine—it is as far beyond them all as the diamond is superior to cheap glass.” It makes people well. It is the only true specific recognized and prescribed today by eminent practitioners for diseases arising from a debilitated nervous system. Professor Phelps gave to his profession a positive cure for sleeplessness, wasting strength, dyspepsia, biliousness, liver com plaint, neuralgia, rheumatism, all ner vous diseases and kidney troubles. For all such complaints, Paine’s celery compound has succeeded again and again, where everything else has failed. When Morljeska in a letter published in Bos on said : “I have found Paine's celery compound the very best of all remedies for the nervous exhaustion consequent upon the arduous work of my profession,” she voiced the experi ence of every tired-out, run-down, ex hausted woman who ever went to this greatest of all spring remedies for re lief. No one ever yet failed to find strength and health returning who faithfully used nature’s true remedy — Paine’s celery compound. Rill i ' I||| &akinG POWDER Absolutely Pure. C elebrated for its great leavening strength and healthfulness. Assures cue food against alum and all forms of adulteration common to the cheap brands. R York Bak ‘ ng Powtler Company,'New [ Brace up. Throw off that tired Peeling. There is life and bealtli and rtrengtb in the crimson tint of John son s tonic . The only recognized spe-- r‘“ c f° r I.® grippe. Cures and pre- B’etits grip. Completes unllmshed fmres. try it. * t f |m||yi|ljji|ls Walk into any first class up-to-date grocery store, and right on the first section 1 of the shelves > ou ’ n see b,i 2 ht red cans. O' l the cans is the imprint of a horse shoe. Above and across the bottom of the shoe are the words, Good Luck Baking Powder. M f Millions of intelligent house keepers use and recommend ’"fSOimiERM HfSCij it. agCHMOND. j w.w. IPARK, State Agent, Atlanta, Ga. M Brewing 1.. Ga. American Queen... 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 li on-works and Supply Cu, CAST EVKFT |)AT, * ~ CAPA UITY 300 HANDS. iVlIgUSta, U&* THE CHANCE OF YOUR LIFE! A few slightly damaged Man tels at one-half price. COME QUICK. IRON FENCING. MONUMENTAL WORK. Brunswick Marble and Granite Works, REED E. LaMANCE, Proprietor. THE Bay Iron Works! Repairing Work of at! Kinds. 801 le Engines, M A PM f |\| f RV Mills, Oil Tanks, 111 rib IIIIV L 111 * Dynamos, Water Tanks, Motors. All kinds of Electrical Machinery. Steamboat and Marine Work a Snecialtv No charge for Estimating"on Jibs. 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: NU.4SA, pei.icanvilj.k SCHOONER Cfi Oil A NEW BAR. Eye Whisky, SI EO Per Gallon. No Charge for Jugs or Bottles, . . Kentucky and Tennessee Whisky House, S* Marks - - Manager. Cor. Monk and Bay Sts.