Newspaper Page Text
The Brunswick Times.
EVERY MORNIJSG, BUT MONDAY.
Brunswick Publishing Company, Pub
lishers and Managers.
ofpipf 1 In Oglethorpe Block, F Street.
U,l ‘ 1 lELEPHONE NO 31.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Delivered by Mail or Carrier.
One copy, one year ’. $5 CO
One copy, six months 2 50
One copy, three months 1 25
One copy, one month 50
One copy, one week. 15
Sunday Edition, 8 pages, per year 1 00
Ten per cent, discount on all subscriptions
when paid in advance.
• ■ ■ ■ 1
Correspondence on live and clean subjects is
solicited. Address all communications to Tub
Mihini.no Times, Brunswick, Ga,
Official Organ of the County of Glynn and
official organ of the mayor and council of the
city of Brunswick.
TO SUBSCRIBERS :
Subscribers arc re<iueated to notify the office
when they fail to get any issue of The Times.
Attention to this matter will be appreciated by
the management.
Advertising rates will be furnished on ap
plication.
Orders to discontinue subscriptions and ad
vertisements must be in writing.
NOTICE.
On and after May 1,1897, all notices
emanating from the office of the or
dinary of Glynn county will be pub
lished in The Brunswick Times.
Horace Dart,
Ordinary, Glynn County.
Is the Graeco-Turkish coDlliet to be
known in history as “The Two-Weeks’
War?”
In the organization of a civic dem
onstration, Gen. Floyd King has no
equals.
The Beardsleyan editor of The
Brunswick Times remarks that “Au
gusta and Savannah are fearfully
waiting to see the president put down
his intentions in black and white.”—
Augusta Herald.
From present indications, the whites
will be put out.
Brunswick is always glad to wel
come General Evans. As the com
mander of the brigade in which
Brunswick soldiers fought and died,
he has a special claim to the honcr
and respect of our citizens. May he
come again and often.
ATLANTA’S GREAT EVIL-
The frequent discovery that “model
young men” of Atlanta are in reality
high-handed thieves is the indirect re
sult of the royal way in which Atlanta
treats her grand rascals.
The instances are many. Will My
ers, there being no possibility of his
escape through the courts, is allowed
to go through the jail door; Ilarry Hill
steps from the penitentiary to a rail
road management; the gay Otis Smith
is conveniently permitted to disap
pear; Ilal hasn’t been found and isn’t
likely to be; Alex Carr, who shot a
prominent citizen down without
warning in the street, gets a soft
berth in the lunatic asylum. And now
young Cassin is about to go free with
out losing so much as an hour’s lib
erty.
Is there any wonder that the temp
tation is so great and the fear of pun
ishment so small? Indeed, if the gen
eral rule is not changed, the capital
city of Georgia will become noted as
a place where dishonesty is rated as
heroism; and we may soon hear of the
organization there of a “Society for
the Prevention of Punishment of
Criminals.”
THE CRIME OF THE CENTURY.
The evident result of the Graeco-
Turkish war is the crime of the oen
tury, in which all the Christian na
tions of the world are accessories be
fore the fact.
The spectacle of a little nation,
which, compared in size and strength
with its rival is as a toddling child to
Hercules, impaled on Ottoman swords
and, too proud to ask for help that is
not offered, suffering annihilation at
the hands of savage fanatics, is one
over which the angels indeed might
weep.
The Turks are impelled only by
what Coleridge aptly called “the mo
tive seeking of a motiveless /malig
nity.” But the powers wlu> stand by
and see committed this outrage upon
civilization have a meaner motive
than mere malice. With them, it is
solely the sordid self interest of gold.
What great international crimes are
due to the influence of the money
kings on the balance wheel of civiliza
tion, no history can fully tell. We see
its frequent instances in affairs like
this of Greece and Turkey—in which
the supine sufferance of an enlight
ened but greedy world allows the
infliction of barbarous murder on
Christian innocents. It is enough to
say, and the years have proved it, that
whenever diplomacy is measured in
dollars the right must suffer and the
wrong will rule.
And Russia, it is stated, is to perpe
tuate a hellish paradox by guarantee
ing the “integrity of Turkey,” while
the other powers are to agree to the
advantageous arrangement. In ex
exchange for this, Russia wiii gain
“important concessions,” and the
equilibrium of the bond market will
remain serenely undisturbed. Greece,
in the meantime, must nurse her
bleeding wounds, bury her slaught
ered heroes, retire within herself and
continue to exist on sympathy—know
ing full well that the merest effort to
retaliate for the repeated insults of
her Ottoman neighbors would, under
the great European agreement, be
promptly checked and summarily
punished.
It is an unfortunate condition,
truly; a condition made by nations
supposedly free, enleagued for the
protection of financial interests. But
it is a crime nevertheless, and the
greatest to which the record of this
century will testify.
Who does not know women and
young girls who are continually in
tears? Who always seethe dark side?
Who have frequent fits of melancholy
without any apparent cause? The
intelligent physician will know that
it is some derangement of the com
plicated and delicate feminine organs.
The young girl suffers, bodily and
mentally, in silence. There is undue
weariness, unexpected pain, unreason
able tears and fits of temper, Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Piescription exerts
a wotiderful power over woman’s deli
cate organism. It is an invigorating
tonic and is specific for the peculiar
weaknesses, irregularities and pain
ful derangements of women. Careless,
easy-going doctors frequently treat
their women patients for biliousness,
nervousness, dyspepsia, liver or kid
ney troubles, when the real sickness
is in the organs distinctly feminine,
and no help can come till they are
made perfectly strong by the use of
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
Send 21 cents in one-cent stamps to
World’s Dispensary Medical Associa
tion, Buffalo, N. Y., and receive Dr.
Pierce’s 1,008 page Common Sense
Medical Adviser, illustrated.
Pure Jersey milk in bottles at
Butts’and Adams’ soda fountains, 5c
per glass. Milk delivered in any
quantity. Telephone 16S. Jersey
Dairy, A. B. Rowe, Prop.
A course of Hood’s Sarsaparilla taken
now will build up the system and pre
vent serious illness later on. Get only
Hood’s.
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:
*‘l 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
bottlesof 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 that
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
f s the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl.
Prepared only by C. 1. Hood & Cos., Lowell, Mass.
u j, n .„ act easily, promptly and
{IOOUS FillS effectively, a&eenta. _
THE TIMES: BRUNSWICK. GA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 28, 1896.
SBOO IN GOLD DROWNS A MAN.
At the burning of a steamboat on
the Hudson river miny years ago,
many of the passengers were drowned.
Among the bodies brought up from
the bottom of the river by grappling
was that of a man known to have been
an excellent swimmer. Around liis
waist was a belt containing nearly
SBOO in gold. That told the story.
“In old and chronic cases of indiges
tion (dyspepsia or gastritis—it is all
the same) the sufferer develops a great
variety of symptoms and often dies—
poisoned by the products of his own
torpid and inflamed stomach. His
food, instead of being digested, and so
furnishing strength and physical sub
stance, ferments and putrefies witiiin
him. The chief process of life is ar
rested at a vital point. The more he
eats the worse off he is. And yet un
less he can be fed he must also perish.
People do so die,daily, by thousands,
but we doctors seldom have the cour
age to give the cause its true name
lest we should be laughed at for our
inability to cure so ‘simple’ a thing as
indigestion. Simple? Why, it is the
capstone of all complaints—and the
mother of most of them.” So writes
a samous English physician.
Some of the symptoms alluded to are
these : Loss of appetite, distress after
eating, heartburn and palpitation,
giddiness, foul taste in the mouth,
the rising of nauseous acids and gases
in the throat, furred tongue, spots be
fore the eyes, unaccountable weariness
and fatigue, sluggish circulation,
weakness and nervous prostration,
constipation or diarrhees, discolored
skin, etc.
The sufferer’s friends often advise
him to cheer up; to throw off his leth
argy and eat freely. Bad advice. He
knows better. ‘ No,” he answers, “I
cannot ; my food does me no good.”
He is right. Food now is gold in the
spent swimmer’s belt.
Take light nourishment, followed
immediately by a dose of Shaker Di
gestive Cordial—a new and radical
remedy discovered and prepared by
the Shakers of Mt. Lebanon, N. Y.—
the escence of medicinal herbs and
plants cultivated by them alone. Then
continue with it. Relieves at once
and soon cures. Pleasant to the pal
ate and adapted to all constitutions.
Trial bottles—which prove its mer
its—at ten cents. For sale by nearly
all druggists.
Notice.
Brunswick, Ga., April 1, 1597.
Taxpayers and property owners are
hereby duly notified that the books
for receiving tax returns of city prop
erty are, from this date, open. When
returning only a fractional part or
parcel of any lot, or acre, or particu
lar piece of property, said returns must
embody a full, clear and complete de
scription of said property, by portion
of town, lot number, metes and bounds
or other sufficient description, so as to
enable a lull identification thereof;
vague and indefinite returns shall not
be taken. In case of estates the re
turns must be made in the name or
names of the heir or beirs; adminis
trators, guardians, executors, etc,
must give the name or names of the
person or persons for whom they act
an the said capacities. All person or
persons claiming or owning personal
property of every and any nature or
sort, within the limit of said city, or
who are engaged in any sort of busi
ness must make such returns, together
with the value of the same under oath,
as prescribed by ordinance of the
mayor and council of the city of Bruns
wick, Ga. All returns must be made
on or before the first day of May, 1897.
When making returns state if prop
erty was arbitrated.
Laurence C. Bodet,
City Clerk.
Returns received daily from 9 a, m.
to 1 p. in., and from 2 :30 p. m, to 5 p. m.
Dissolution Notice
Of the firm of J. M. Madden Ado.,
Glynn county, Ga.
To all whom it may concern :
This is to notify all persons that the
co partnership heretofore existing un
der the firm name of “J. M. Madden
& C 0.,” and composed of A. H. Lane
and J. M. Madden, said firm having
been heretofore engaged in the busi
ness of plumbing and furnishing
plumbers’ materials in the city of
Brunswick, said county and state, has
been, by mutual consent ot the said
partners, dissolved. A. H. Lane has
retired from said firm and has severed
his connection therewith, and the said
business will hereafter be conducted,
owned and controlled by and in the
name of J. M. Madden, and all debts,
liabilities and obligations of the said
firm of J. M. Madden & Cos., and for
the payment of which the said firm is
legally bound are assumed and will be
paid by J. M. Madden, and all ac
counts due and owing to said firm will
be collected bv him. The retiring
partner bespeaks for the successor of
said firm the. continued patronage of
the public. This the 15th day of April,
1897. J. M. Madden,
A. 11. Lane.
To Wilmington.
For the Southern Baptist onven
tion, Wilmington, N. C., May 6to 14,
1897, the Plant System will sell round
trip tickets from Brunswick to Wil
mington, N. C , at rate of $13.60; tick
ets limited to continuous passage in
both directions; to be sold May 3 to 7
inclusive, with final limit to fifteen
days from date of sale. By depositing
tickets with agents of terminal lines
at Wilmington prior to May 15, an ad
ditional limit of fifteen days will be
allowed for return.
OLD CHUM Of GRANT.
A PRIEST WILL BE CONSPICUOUS AT
THE MEMORIAL EXERCISES.
lather l)esT:ou*s Picturesque Career— He
Boomed With Grant at West Point and
Fought Beside Him Afterward Bald
Down His Gun and Took Holy Orders.
A priest will be one of the most pic
turesque figures at the bier of the great
soldier.
Roommate of Grant at West Point
and his companion in arms in war, sol
dier while the laud was torn with strife
and missionary when the clamor of bat
tle was stilled, the Rev. Father Deshon
has been deemed worthy to receive a
special invitation to be present at the
dedication ceremony on April 27.
The somber garments of the warrior
priest will single him out among thb
wearers of bright uniforms and nodding
plumes who will march in honor of the
dead. His white thatched head will be
bent in mingled sorrow and pride that
will be as purely personal as the feel
ings of any among the tens of thousands
to cluster round the tomb of the nation’s
hero.
For the man w ho is now renowned as
a Paulist priest loved his friend, the
man who was to carve with his'sword a
fame far greater than his own. He was
one of the star members of Grant’s
class in the military academy, and the
two youths were the closest and most
confidential of friends.
They were the more drawn to each
other because they differed in tempera
ment. Grant was ever the man of ac
tion, Deshon the man of thought.
Grant, who early showed his genius for
the handling of great bodies of armed
men, was assigned to the infantry corps
after graduating. Deshon, who knew no
rival in the scientific branches of the
military curriculum, was commissioned
in the engineering corps, whence he
was afterward transferred to the ord
nance department.
Deshon’s career as a priest began
when his career us a soldier ended. But
whether as soldier or priest he retaiued
the love of the man whom his country
men had learned to adore.
Father Deshon is full of interesting
reminiscences of Grant’s life at West
Point. Whenever sorely troubled by
some difficult mathematical problem,
Graut always sought the assistance of
his chum, Deshon, and when the latter
could not master a technical military
question it was to Grant he went for aid.
Father Deshon joined the Paulist or
der shortly after resigning from the
army. Ho is now one of the oldest active
preachers in the society. He is a per
suasive talker, a man of great and va
ried executive ability and possesses as
wide an acquaintance as any priest in
the United States. He dislikes notoriety,
and only love for his dead classmate
would induce him to take the conspicu
ous part iu the coming military pageant
assigned to him as one of the four living
classmates of the dead military chief
tain.—New York Journal.
A Burglar of Seven.
It was suggested recently to James
Murray, a 7-year-old New Yorker, that
some oysters and clams might be ob
tained for nothing if he would climb
through the fanlight over the rear door
of Robert Vermylia’s fish market.
The suggestion was made by 12-year
old Robert Pendleton, and 12-year-old
Henry Stohl and Murray carried it out.
Unfortunately for the 7-year-old thief,
Policeman Anderson saw him filling his
pockets with oysters and arrested him.
The other boys were captured later, and
all were sent to the Gerry society rooms.
Said Heaven Sent Him.
A middle aged man was discovered
by a policeman in New York recently
outside a saloon throwing stones and
old tin cans against the door and yell
ing at the top of his voice.
“I am sent from heaven,” he said,
“to close up all the saloons in New
York, and was told to start on Grand
street.”
He gave his name as James Morris
and said he lived on the Bowery. In
the police court next morning he was
committed to have his sanity inquired
into.
One For Kansas.
“It won’t do to say too much against
Kansas,” said Jerry Simpson, comment
ing on the great floods along the Missis
sippi. “It is sometimes better to live in
a dry country than in a wet. There is
one thing I can say for Kansas, and
that is, we never wash people out of
their houses and homes there, even if a
cyclone does occasionally blow some
body away. ”
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
For many years the queen has made
it a practice to treasure up handker
chiefs worn by her upon special occa
sions as mementoes of these events.
Elle Scarlett, the elder sister of young
Lord Abinger and daughter of the for
mer Miss Magruderof the United States,
has begun to study surgery at the Lon
don hospital.
Louise Michel, the anarchist, is well
advanced in age and not particularly
prepossessing. She was carefully edu
cated as a girl, and might have become
famous as a pianist.
Paul Verlaine would have been sur
prised to know that his title to nobility
would rise to the level of a controversy
after his death. It appears, however,
that the author of “Sagesse” and
“Amour” came from the highest stock.
The De Verlaines were the heralds at
arms of the province of Liege. Their
creation dates from 1531.
Since the death of her son, Mrs. John
W. Mackay has been living in strict re
tirement, and has evinced no inclination
to resume the brilliant social career for
which she was at cne time famous.
Philadelphia Press.
Hyn ■gjj # Walk into any first class up-to-date
PjjHflHHf? 3 grocery store, and right on the first section
If °t the shelves voifj’l .st e bright red cans.
O' l the cans is tlffjprprint of a horse shoe.
Above and across the bottom of the shoe
are the words, Good Luck Baking Powder.
mv Millions of intelligent house
u keepers use and recommend
SteiEff M 0 N w. w. ip ark,
State Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
Me tew® k.
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
delivery. Get our prices. Come and see us.
Lombard lion-works and Supply Cos, .
CAST EVKRY BAY. *
CAPACITY 300 HANDS. AllgHSta, Ua.
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 forks.
REED E. laMANCE, Proprietor.
th£
Bay Iron Works!
Repairing Work of all Kinds,
1f MACHINERY. Sir
Water Tanks, Motors.
All kinds of Electrical Machinery.
Steamboat and Marine Work a Sneeialtv
No charge for Estimating'on J ''bs.
Expert orkmen! Saisfacti on guaranteed!
629 BAY STREET.
To the Grand Lodge.
For the accommodation of parties
desiring to attend grand lodge,
Knights of Pythias, Savannah,Ga.,May
18-20, the Southern railway has putou
a rate of one first-class limited fare for
the round-trip for parties of ten or
more Knights of Pythias traveling to
gether in uniform on one solid ticket,
and a rate of a fare and a third on the
certificate plan for individuals. Sched
ules : Leave Brunswick 9:45 a. m. and
7:45p. m , and arrive Savannah 12:18
p. m. and 11:10 p. m. respectively.
Shorthand.
Prof. Fry’s shorthand classes are
now running. Arrangements should
be made to enter before they advance
too far. For terms and particulars
write or call on him at Jeffers, Monk
and Union streets. His little book,
“What It Is and What It Does,” given
free.
Rob Roy flour is fine. Try it.
Gail Borden
Eagle Brand
Condensed Milk.
Best infant food.
La grippe may have left you weak
and run down. Johnson’s t hill and
Fever Tonic is more than its name im
plies. It is a great tonic. It gives
appetite, renews health and restores
vitality. tf
The Rosy Freshness
And a velvety softness of the skin is inva
riably obtained who use Pozzoni’s
Complexion Pot^Vr.