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The Brunswick Times.
EVERY MORNING, BUT MONDAY.
runswick Publishing Company, Pub
lishers and Managers,
ofkh'f 1 In Oglethorpe Block. F Street.
urrn,E j lELEPfIONK NO 31.
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Sunday Edition, 8 pages, per year 1 00
Ten per cent, discount on all subscriptions
when paid in advance.
Correspondence on live and clean subjects is
solicited. Address all communications to Tub
Mousing Times, Brunswick, Ga,
Official Organ of the County of Glynn. And
from on and after April 7, 1897, the official or
gan of the mayor and council of the city of
Brunswick.
TO SUBSCRIBERS:
Subscribers are requested to notify the office
when they fail to get any issue of Tub Times.
Attention to this matter will he appreciated by
the management.
Advertising rates will be furnished on ap
plication.
Orders to discontinue subscriptions and ad
vertisements must be in writing.
NOTICE.
Council Chamber,
Brunswick, Ga., April 1, 1897.
All council proceedings, orders, res
olutions, ordinances, notices, etc.,
emanating from the board of the hon
orable mayor and council, shall be
published, from and after the first
Wednesday in April, A. D. 1897, in
The Brunswick Times. The above
pursuant to a resolution passed and
adopted by the said mayor and coun
cil, in regular council assembled, on
the 18th day of March, A. D. 1&97,
making the said Brunswick Times its
official organ.
Laurence C. Bodkt,
Clerk of Council.
NOTICE.
City Marshal’s Office,
Brunswick, Ga., April 1,1597.
In accordance with a resolution,
passed and adopted by the honorable
mayor and council of the city of
Brunswick, Ga., in council duly as
sembled on the 18th day of March,
1897, alt legal tax and other notices
emanating from my office, shall be
published in The Brunswick Times
from and after the first Wednesday
in April, 1897.
Lewis W. Beach,
City Marshalj
NOTICE.
City Treasurer’s Office,
Brunswiok, Ga., April 1, 1857.
In compliance with a resolution
adopted by the honorable mayor and
council of the city of Brunswick, all
notices, etc., emanating from this of
fice from and after the first Wednes
day in April, 1897, shall be published
in The Brunswick Times.
11, 11. llarvey,
City Treasurer.
NOTICE.
City Clerk’s Office,
Brunswick, Ga., April 1, 1897.
In compliance with a resolution
adopted by the honorable mayor and
council, of the city of Brunswick,
all notices, etc., emanating from this
office, shall be published in The
Brunswick Times from and after the
first Wednesday in April, A. D., 1597.
L. C. Bodkt,
City Clerk.
As a performer on the public cre
dulity Coroner Jennings is equalled
by few and excelled by none.
The flood pictures in the Atlanta
Journal are enough to prejudice the
average man against water forever.
That Dingley & Cos. mean to observe
the eternal fitness of things is iudi
cated by their choice of All Fools’ day
as that on which the new tarifi' duties
shall take effect.
The amendment providing for a
tariff on Egyptian cotton has been
shipped from the house to the senate,
c. o. d.—which, in this case, signifies :
“Couldn’t oppose Dingley.”
As a “baby” farmer the Atlanta
Journal is a distinguished success.
Ti'a last interesting infant to die on
its hands had altogether too much
Constitution to live long, anyhow.
W lf Bobs Buck really has “his pick,”
s|)ii doesn’t he pick out his plum and
leave his country for Hanson’s good?
The latter would be plum satislied to
see him on the wing.
The editorial head of the Waynes
boro True Citizen is eminently and
beautifully level when it says: “Thk
Brunswick Times wants the governor
from the wiregrass next time, Why
not; there Is some magnificent timber
in the wiregrass we know, for a fact.”
And still they come. Hear the Way
cross Herald on the subject of seeding
down the capitol grounds with ma
terial drawn from the palpitating
heart of the wiregrass:
It didn’t take the Thomasville Times-
Enterprise long to reach this conclu
sion : “The wiregrass, the citadel cf
demooracy, should show a united front
in the next campaign. There is one
man upon whom it could unite for
governor, Fleming dußignon.”
The Macon Telegraph says it is
preaching the gospel of hope, as op
posed to the gospel of desperation.
The gospel of delusion would be nearer
the mark for a newspaper that one
day Bwoods with delight at the thought
of the farmers’ prosperity, and the
next preaches at him the sort of econ
omy that is generally prescribod for
the dead broke.
The Thomasville Times-Enterprise
in referring to the Lowry case, says
that “Brunswick is soon to have a
hanging, the first since the war. Un
less justice has been tardy, this speaks
well for the morals of Glynn.” We
hasten to assure our illustrious con
temporary that justice has never been
tardy in the couDty of Glynn, and
that in this particular instance, there
is even some reason to fear that she
has outstripped herself in her eager
ness to be in at the death.
In the April Forum, Senator Hoar
undertakes what he evidently imag
ines to be a defense of the United
States senate; but the plan upon
which he proceeds would enable a
special pleader to make out a good
case for almost any bad cause. Mr.
Hoar is careful to ignore the chief de
fect in the senate in the eyes of the
people, who long since accepted Amos
Cumming’s famous “convocation of
millionaires” as a correct description
of a body which has become a sort of
tawdry Olympus for men who have ac
quired money by means more or less
doubtful.
The action of the house in adopt
ing the amendment to make the duties
imposed by the Dingley bill operative
from the first of the month, while the
measure has yet to run the gauntlet of
the senate, is a piece of sharp practice
worthy of the source from which it
proceeded. The tariff bill is certain
to be amended in its passage through
the upper house, and the practical ef
fect of the amendment will be, in some
instances, at least, to saddle upon the
country two tariff bills; and to pre
vent importers from laying in a stock
of goods before the screws are put on
for the benefit of the trusts that elected
McKinley by the grace of Hanna.
How many young men and young
women are cut off just as the future
seems brightest and fullest of prom
ise! They are taken away by the dis
ease which causes over one-sixth of
all the deaths in the world—the dis
ease which doctors call consumption.
There is absolutely no reasou in the
world why consumption should be
fatal —why it should be even serious.
It is a disease of the blood and can be
cured absolutely and always by puri
fying and euriching the blood. The
only exception to this is the case where
the disease has been neglected or im
properly treated until it is stronger
than the body—until the body has be
come so weak as to have lost the abil
ity to recuperate. Dr. Pierce’s Golden
Medical Discovery will cure 98 per
cent, of all cases of consumption if
used according to directions. It also
cures all lingering coughs, bronchial
and throat affections.
Send 21 cents in one-cent stamps
to the W orld’s Dispensary Medical As
sociation, Buffalo. X. Y., and receive
Dr. Pierce’s 1008 page Common Sense
Medical Adviser, illustrated.
Brace up. Throw off that tired
feeling. There is life and health and
strength in the crimson tint of John
son’s tonio . The only recognized spe
cific for la grippe. Cures and pre
vents grip. Completes unfinished
cures. Try it. tf
We have the greatest variety of la
dies’ and misses’ new style shoes to
show you that can be found in Bruns
wick. Talmer’s Popular Shoe Store.
THE TIMES: BRUNSWICK, GA„ APRIL 2, 1896.
Ucomotor Ataxia
AN OLD SOLDIER’S HOT FIGHT FOR UFE
ANS HEALTH.
While in a Hospital a Physician Hands Him Some Pills, and Aftsi
a Few Doses He Feels His Health Returning—Asked for
the Name of the Pills, the Physician States they
were Pink Pills for Pale People.
— P —--i
THE PATIENT A WIDELY-KNOWN MAN.
From the News, Indianapolis, Ind.
Sol. Yewell of 96 Hill Ave., Indianapolis,
Ind., who is well known to the dramatic pro
fession when a boy seventeen years old en
listed in Company H, 13th Indiana Volun
teer Infantry, the first three years regiment
that marched to the front from the Tloosier
State. In the fall of 1862 ho was honor
ably discharged, because of disabilities con
tracted in the service. After a short time
spent at home he went to New York and
entered college. He was a bright young fel
low, a diligent student and a great future
seemed opening before him. But he again
heard the bugles and the fires of patriotism
were again aglow in his bosom. He enlisted
as a recruit in Company M of the Second
Harris Light Cavalry, Kilpatrick’s famous
old regiment, and was soon again at the
front. There was a great demand for cavalry
in Virginia, and the active young trooper
found plenty of fighting up and down the
Shenandoah Valley and in the various cam
paigns on the Potomac. In 1864 he attracted
the notice of the dashing and dauntless
Custer, and was selected as one of his famous
body guard, in which he served until the
close of the war.
After the war Mr. Yewell began to be
known as a skilled newspaper writer and
correspondent, and he was later in demand
as a theatrical writer and press agent, a pro
fession in which he achieved signal success.
He was a hero in private life as he had been
on the field and in the camp, and few of
those who know the genial and versatile*
Sol. Yewell had any idea that he was a
great sufferer from diseases and disabilities,
contracted during the war. Such, however,
was the fact. He suffered from rheumatism,
hemorrhoids and chronic tonsilitis for years.
“As if these were not enough,” said Mr.
Yewell the other day at the Marion Home,
relating his experience to the reporter, “ I
was doomed to fall a victim to the grip in
1890. This last fell monster accentuated all
my previous troubles and added, seemingly
half a dozen new ones. It was in November
of that year that I was compelled to give
up work and came to the Marion Home.
Creeping paralysis, or locomotor ataxia de
veloped, and in 1892 I went to the hospital
where I remained for several months. My
condition became so alarming that the sur
geons here, who are my very good friends,
were compelled to admit they could do noth
ing for me. My locomotor ataxia was at
tended with vertigo and I was liable to fall
at any unexpected moment. The surgeons
having nothing else in mind recommended
that last resort—a change of climate. So i
May, 1894, I went to Boston, Mass. I i,.ui
secured employment at the C-' '■> Thea
tre there as press writ' •, 1 was determined
to do something, i remained there two
seasons.
“My vertigo and paralysis continued to
distress me greatly. I consulted a number
of eminent physicians in Boston and became
a patient at the Harvard College clinic on
Bennett Street. The surgeons there appeared
to desire to make much of me as a patient
and I was willing. One day a doctor there
gave me a box of pills. The wrapper and
all identifying marks were gone, but the coat
ing of the pills was of a pink color.
“ I had scarcely used the box before much
to my surprise, I found that the locomotor
ataxia was leaving me. On the’ second box
the vertigo entirely disappeared, my para
lysis or locomotor ataxia was gone and I
began to have my old-time confidence in
myself. Yes, all these ailments under which
I had suffered were leaving me. I used
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
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 ssy I am
well. Hood’s Pills when taken with
Hood’s Sarsaparilla help very much.”
Mrs. M. M. Messenger, Freehold, Penn.
This and many uther cures prove that
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Cos., Lowell, Mass.
u li_ n .,. act easily, promptly and
Hood S PillS effectively, atteent*.
Gail Borden
Eagle Brand
Condensed Milk.
Best /nfant food.
about four boxes of these pills before I knew
what they were. At the close of the dram
atic season of 1895 I took a vacation, going up
into the White Mountains and into Northern
Vermont. I asked my doctor and insisted
upon knowing the name of the wonderful
pills that he had been giving me. He
laughed and said, ‘ I have been giving you
a remedy called Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
fot Pale People.’
“I said, ‘I think they are the best medi
cine I ever took, and I can directly trace to
them all the benefit that I have received. I
should have said that along with my other
afflictions I was at times seriously troubled
with a valvular affection of the heart, but
the pills have proven to he a splendid
remedy for that also. I certainly believe
they strengthen and correct the action ot that
organ.”
Air. Yewell has a clear, fresh complexion,
the hue of health, weighs two hundred and
twenty pounds, has a first-class appetite, and
to use his own words: “I sleep like a top.”
He is fifty-two years old, and while Williams’
Pink Pills have not made a young man of
him, they have certainly restored him so that
he bids fair to see many years of usefulness.
“I will leave here soon,” were his parting
words to the reporter, “as I have an offer to
go to Boston and take up my old theatrical
work. ”
Air. Yewell’s many friends in the news
paper and theatrical professions will he glad
to know that he is again in good health and
restored to the pursuit, which he so long
adorned.
Airs. Alary E. Aliller, of Alattoon, Illinois,
where enquiry has developed that 6he is a
lady well and favorably known in the com
munity in which she resides, sends the fol
lowing report of her sufferings from inflam
matory rheumatisni, and subsequent cure by
Dr. Williams’ treatment, when all other
remedies had failed.
Alattoon, 111., Aug. 29,1896.
“ Aly name is Alary E. Aliller, I am forty
four years of age and a resident of Alattoon,
Coles County,lllinois. About two years ago
I was attacked with inflammatory rheuma
tism of a severe type, and confined to my
bed for three months. Physicians, of whom
I had two, could not do me any good, and I
was getting worse instead of better. It was
then that I determined to try Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People, which I had seen
advertised so widely, and to this eud ob
tained a supply. In addition to the rheu
matism I was suffering greatly with nervous
debility, but after taking less than one box
the nervousness began to abate, and pre
sently the rheumatic pains grew less. By
ihe time two boxes had been taken I was
able to walk, which I had not done since I
was first attacked, my appetite returned, and
I soon regained my health, and am now as
strong as ever I was. I always keep Pink
Pills hy me and always shall, for to them I
j owe my health, under Providence, and I
! shall sound their praises whenever I can.
(Signed) “Mary E. Alii.lek.”
Witness: Cynthia H. Reynolds.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain in a con
densed form, all the elements necessary to give
new life and richness to the blood and restore
shattered nerves. They are an unfailing spe
cific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia,
partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica,
neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the
after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the heart,
pale and sallow complexions, all forms of
weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills
are sold hy all dealers, or will he sent post
paid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box. or
six boxes for $2.50 (they are nevei; sold in
[hulk or by the 100), by addressing Dr. Wij
! liams’Medicine Company,Schenectady, N.Y,
No More Turf Betting In England.
The subject which disturbs a large
class of Englishmen much more than
the crisis in the east is a decision of tho
full court of the queen’s bench to the
effect that the betting ring at race
tracks is “a place” within the meaning
of the antigambling law of 1853. This
is really a serious matter, compared
with which such trifles as the blockade
of Crete and the impending war be
tween Greece and Turkey are not be
considered. Nearly all the newspapers
in England condemn this monstrous de
cision of the appeal court, or rather the
law under which it was made. It means
a deathblow to turf betting in England,
and as this is one of the most sacred in
stitutions of the country the great popu
lar uprising is by no means surprising.
Too Smart In Court.
It is very probable that hereafter if
Andrew Nesbitt has occasion to be in a
police court he will disport himself
properly. Ho was arraigned recently in
Cleveland on the charge of intoxication
and was assessed $ 1 and costs. As he
was being led back to the bull pen he
turned around, and after calling the
judge names said the public prosecutor
would look very pretty with a cigarette
in his mouth. He was brought back into
the courtroom and received a fine of $5
and costs for contempt of court.—Cleve
land Plain Dealer.
Needless Anxiety.
A great many persons are anxious
over the prospects of the horse in case
the use of the motor car becomes gen
eral. These good souls are like the dear
old lady who, when gas was first invent
ed and the oil trade was threatened,
asked, ‘‘What will happen to the poor
whales?”—New York Evening Sun.
Only Wanted to Shake Hands.
August Schuster, a shoemaker of
Cleveland, was locked up at the police
station recently for safe keeping. Schus
ter stood in front of Heuck’s Opera
Houso and insisted on shaking hands
with every one who.paassed.
The Rosy Freshness
And a velvety softness of the skin is inva
riably obtained by those who use Pozzoni’s
Complexion Powder.
0011.111 Walk into any first class up-to-date
SgJBKSiSS grocery store, and right on the first section
of the shelves you’ll see bright red cans
On the cans is the imprint ot ajiorse shoe.
Above and across the bottom of the shoe
are the words, Good Luck Baking Powder.
lJm Millions of intelligent house
if* keepers use and recommend
State Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
ft® toil l
—Macon, 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
deliveiy. Get our prices Come and see us.
Lombard lion-works and Supply Cos,
oast every bay. * ~
CAPACITY 300 HANDS. AUgUStS, WtS.
THE CHANCE
OF YOUR LIFE!
A few slightly damaged A\an
tels at one-half price.
COME QUICK.
IRON FENCING.
MONUMENTAL WORK.
Brunswick Marble and Granite Works,
REED E. EaMANCE, Proprietor.
THE
Bay Iron Works!
Repairing Work of all Kinds.
ofSsr MACHINERY.
Water Tanks, Motors.
All kinds of Electric: .1 Machinery.
Steamboat and Marine Work a Soeeialtv
No charge for Estimatingfon J ibs.
Expert orkmen! Sasf action 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 N0.45A. PELICANVIf LE.
SCHOONER
DC.
A NEW BAR.
Eye Whisky, SI.CO Per Gallon. No
Charge for Jugs or Bottles, , ,
Kentucky and Tannes.ee Whisky Hem
3 Marks - - Manager
Cor. Monk and Bay Sts.