Newspaper Page Text
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The Brunswick Times.
EVERY MORNING BUT MONDAY.
Brunswick Publishing Company, Pub
lishers and Managers.
.iipirw'ir l In Oglethorpe Block, F Street.
OF* ILK J lELEFHONB NO 31.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
Delivered by Mail or Carrier.
One copy, one year $5 00
One copy, biz months 2 so
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.
Correspondence on live and clean subjects is
solicited. Address all communications to Tun
Mousing Timks, Brunswick, Oa,
Official Organ of fhe Cify of Bruns
wick and County of Glynn,
TO SUBSCRIBERS :
Subscribers are requested 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.
Subscribers to The Times wbo will
spend the summer or a portion of the
summer at St. Simon will have their
papers delivered to them or can buy
them daily at J. M. Blood worth’s store,
which will be the St. Simon depot of
The Times. Papers will also he on
sale on the St, Simon and Cumberland
boats and at the hotels.
Don’t forget the Oglethorpe bi-cen
tenmal.
The paragraphed may jeer at Greece
but history will do her justice.
Trot out, mayoralty candidates; get
into the opeu. The people want to see
you. .
A scientist has discovered that the
diet of the average individual is out of
balance. So are many of their hoard
bills.
With eighty-one colonels on his
staff, the governor ef Georgia will
never have a chance to complain of
loneliness.
James Gordon Bennett receives
SIO,OOO per week from the New York
Herald. It’s not all for glory with
some newspapers.
Mr. Stockton, of Florida, has eight
letters in his name, but there is an
other letter just now that is worrying
him a great deal more.
Tuk Waycross Journal says “Bruns
wick has lost her head.” Cities, how
ever, unlike human beings, having lost
oue head, can llnd others available for
use.
The Atlanta Commercial says that
President McKinley has not met the
measure of public expectation in re
gard to Cuba. And that’s no Arabiau
Night’s dream.
Tuk Rome Argus says that when
the time comes, it will be found that
the next governor lives somewhere in
North Georgia. The wiregrass can
look upon the Argus as an avowed
enemy from the jump.
The Rome Tribune is now publish
ing daily portraits of prominent Ro
uiaus who say nice things about the
Tribune. If the cuts speak truly,
Rome has some haudsome citizens—
but a series of the Roman girls would
be far more interesting.
The vindication, by the grand jury,
of the county commissioners in their
elforts to secure the erection of anew
court house, was nbtbing more than
could have been expected from a sen
sible anil public-spirited body. The
names of the few jurors who sought
to indict the commissioners would
make interesting reading.
Ik further evidence was needed to
prove that Russell Sage is the mean
est rnau alive, it has been furnished
by news reports of the death of his
cousin in an Illinois poorhouse. The
young man was brought to his unfor
tunate condition by the efforts of bis
father to pay Russell Sage a SSO loan,
for which the millionaire demanded a
mortgage on his relative’s home. The
family is on the verge of starvation,
and the marble-hearted Wall street
magnate has made no offer of help.
CHARGE THE LEGAL RATE-
Several newspapers that come to
this office have boasted that they got
the legal printing for a certain amount
“thereby saving the county from
being robbed by paying the full legal
rate,” Such newspapers are a dis
grace to their profession. In no state
in the union is the legal rate for offi
cial printing more than should be
charged. It is nowhere exorbitant.
Indeed in many cases it is absurdly
low. When a newspaper man cuts
below this rate to get the work he is
swindling himself.—Country Editor
HOW TO KILL A NEWSPAPER.
The following recipe is offered by a
western paper:
Just let the subscriptions go. It’s
only a dollar or two—the publisher
don’t need it.
If he asks for it get as mad as you
can and stop the paper—you never
need it anyhow. Then go and borrow
your neighbor’s.
When a reporter conies, always be
busy. Make him feel as if he was in
truding. When the advertising and
job man comes, tell him it doesn’t pay
you to advertise—everybody knows
you, and that youwilltrj togetalong
without any printed stationery—it is
too expensive; you must economise.-
Never drop in to see the editor un
less you want a free complimentary
notice or a lengthy obituary for a be
loved relative. Never recommend the
paper to anybody. When you do
speak of it say, “Yes, we have a little
sheet, but it don’t amount to much,”
Keep it up a year or two and you
will have a dead newspaper, a dead
set of merchants and a dead town.
SUNDAY THOUGHTS.
[Bishop Phillip Brookes’ “.More Abundant
Life.” |
Know ye not that to whom ye yield
yourselves to obey, his servants ye are
to whom ye obey.—Romans vi-10.
Let us glorify obedience. It is not
slavery, but mastery. He who obeys
is master of the master whom he
serves. He has his hand in the very
depths of hisniaster’B treasures. When
God said to His people, “Do this and
live,” He is not making a bargain; He
is declaring a necessary truth. “Son,
then art ever with me. and all that 1
iiave ie thine,” so speaks the Intlnite
God to the obedient child. But to the
disobedient the door is closed. What
ever wealth there may be is none of
his. Obedience means mastery and
wealth. Therefore let us glorify obe
dience, which is light of life, and dread
disobedience, which is darkness and
death. Find your true masters and
obey them. For only in obedience do
you enrich your live. Every deed is
part of one great drama through
which flows one great purpose by
union with which purpose alone does
any deed be strong. What folly it is
tobeselflsh! It is one wheel of the
vast engine unbelting itself from the
other wheels, saying, “I will spin my
own music; l will not be obedient,”
and lo! it whirls madly into spaoe a
minute and then drops into the sand
and dies. This is dissipation, ft is
what men sometimes call life. Blessed
is it when the poor, wretched, dissi
pated wheel is taken up by the kind
master of the engine, reforged in any
hot furnace of pain and set once more
in its true place from whence it flew.
That is blessed, but a thousand fold
more blessed is it for the wheel which
catches from the first the glory of ser
vice, makes every revolution a|delight
in responding to the throb and beat of
the central power, liuds every deed
dignified by the entire motion of the
whole, loses itself and so finds itself,
and lives by obedience, and lives ever
more and more abundantly.
Lord Jesus, grant me grace to come
to Thee in obedience and by constant
obedience to abide with Thee; that my
foundation may be upon the Rock of
Ages, and that underneath me may be
the Everlasting Arms. Hold me fast
that I may cleave unto Thee; embrace
me that I may cling to Thee. Amen.
THE TIMES: BRUNSWICK, GA, SUNDAY MORNING. MAY 30, 189?
CLOUD PICTURES.
Last night a strange,wierd influence
streamed from the moon, and spread
itself across the heavens where the
cloud wrack swept along. First I saw
cloud faces, upraised as they ever are,
but never one without the quiet look of
sleep—all placid, the unfathomable
mystery of death on every quiet fea
ture.
After that came a band of clinging
forms, swiftly moviDg, each in an at
titude of deepest woe. They had al
most passed my sight when the last
couple seemed to pause, and I saw
Paolo stoop to draw Francesca closer,
and I knew that I looked on that end
less circle of anguish unspeakable,
which Dante saw in the hell lie drew.
They drifted off and clearer light and
darker shadows allowed me mighty
shapes of men, grand and reposeful;
line flowing draperies wrapped them
here and there, and I felt that across
the dome of heaven Michael Angelo’s
finest masterpiece was spread out for
my view. A swift wind swept it down
the sky ; a white light poured from the
moon, and out of the shadows came a
dainty oar, drawn by sea horses, with
their webbed manes dashing the spray
and foara^ before them, while Tritons,
mounted on curling waves, strove to
climb into the car where Venus sat
enthroned. A heavy shadow crossed
the moon, took shape and soon a tre
mendous face appeared, black and de
moniac,the moou herself,the one Cyclo
pean eye, and in the glare of that most
baleful glance, I closed my window
and shut out the scene. F. duß.
The camel is a beast of great
strength and endurance. Nothing
hurts it until the proverbial “last
straw” is added to its burden. The
human digestive system is very much
like a camel. It is really astonishing
how much abuse it will stand. Some
times, however, something worse
than usual will be eaten, and will go
through the stomach into the bowels,
and there it will stick—that’s consti
pation. Nine-tenths of all human
sickness is due to constipation. Some
of the simplest symptoms are coated
tongue and foul breath, dizziness,
heartburn, flatulence, sallowness, dis
tress after eating, headaches and las
situde. A little thing will cause con
stipation, and a little thing will re
lieve it. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pel
lets are a certain cure for constipa
tion. They are tiny sugar-coated
granules, mild and natural in their
action. There is nothing injurious
about them. Sold by druggists.
Address with 21 cents in one cent
stamps, to cover cost df mailing, only,
World’s Dispensary Medical Associ
ation, Buffalo, N. Y., and get a free
copy of the “People’s Common Sense
Medical Adviser.”
To the Centennial.
The Southern railway will sell ex
cursion tickets at $12.60 Brunswick to
Nashville, Tenn., and return for the
Tennessee Centennial, May-November.
Rate of $12.60 limited to ten days from
date of sale, and other tickets on sale
w.ith any limitation desired. Elegant
Southern railway trains will be oper
ated in special service between Bruns
wick and Nashville. Travel via South
ern railway.
Families can hoard at the Ogle
thorpe this summer cheaper than they
can keep house. See Manager Aiken
for rates.
Nervous
People find just the help they so much
need, lu 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. Messunger, Freehold, Penn.
This and many other cureß prove that
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl.
Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Cos., Lowell. Mass.
u ~ act easily, promptly and
HOOd s Pills effectively, at esats. _
A PECULIAR FACT
Thousands of People Have Dyspepsia in
Its Worst Form and Do Not Know It.
A weak stomach is the cause of
about nine-tenths ef all disease, yet in
most cases the wrong thing is treated
and the true cause overlooked.
This is because a weak digestion
produces symptoms resembling nearly
every disease because it weakens and
disturbs the action of every nerve and
organ in the body; poor digestion
causes heart trouble, kidney troubles,
iung weakness and especially nervous
break down or nervous prostration,
the nerves cannot stand the wear and
tear unless generously fed by well di
gested, wholesome food.
Keep the digestion good and no one
need fear the approach of disease.
Mrs. H .M. Lee of Rochester, N. Y.,
writes: For the sake of suffering hu
manity I want to say that from a child
I had a very weak stomach, threw up
my food very often after eating and
after a few years nervous dyspepsia
resulted and for more than twenty
years I have suffered inexpressibly.
I tried many physicians and adver
tised remedies with only temporary
relief for nervous dyspepsia and not
until I commenced taking Stuart’s
Dyspepsia Tablets last September, six
months ago, have I been free from
suffering cansed by the condition of
my nerves and stomach; in short,
chronic dyspepsia.
I have recommended Stuart’s Dys
pepsia Tablets to many of my friends
and now I want in a public way to
say they are tne safest, pleasantest
and I believe surest cure for stomach
and nerve troubles. I write my hon
est opinion and I will gladly answer
any letter of inquiry at any time and
feel that I am, in my small way, help
ing on a good cause.
Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets is not a
patent medicine, but they contain
only the fruit salts, digestive acids
and peptones necessary to help the
weak stomaeb to promptly and thor
oughly digest food.
All druggists sell Stuart’s Dyspep
sia Tablets at 50 cents for full sized
package and anyone suffering from
nervous dyspepsia, sour stomach, head
aches, acidity, gases, belching, etc.,
will find them not only a quick relief
but a radical cure.
Send to Stuart Cos., Marshall, Mich
igan for little hook describing cause
and cure of stomach troubles giving
symptoms and treatment of the va
rious forms of indigestion •
WHAT IS THIS DISEASE GALLED
DYSPEPSIA ?
I,ike a thief at night, it steals in up
on us unawares. The patients have
pains about the chest and sides, and
sometimes in the back. They feel dull
and sleepy; the mouth has a bad taste,
especially in the morning. A sort of
sticky slime collects about the teeth.
The appetite is poor. There is feeling
like a heavy load on the stomach;
sometimes a faint, all-gone sensation
at the pit of the stomach which food
does not satisfy. Eyes are sunken, the
Lauds and l'eet become cold andTeei
clammy. After awhile a cough sets
in, at first dry, but after a few months
it is attended with a greenish colored
expectoration. The patient feels tired
all the while, and sleep does not seem
to afford any rest. After a time he
becomes nervous, irritable and gloomy,
and has evil forebodings. There is a
giddiness, a sort of whirling sensation
in the head when rising up suddenly.
The bowels become costive; the skin
is dry and hot at times; the blood be
comes thick and stagnant; the white
of the eyes become tinged with yellow;
the urine is scanty and high colored,
depositing a sediment after standing.
There is frequently a spitting up of
the food, sometimes with a sour taste
and sometimes with a sweetish taßte;
this is frequently attended with palpi
tation of the heart; the vision becomes
impaired with spots before the eyes;
there is a feeling of great prostration
and weakness. All of these symptoms
are in turn present. It is thought
that nearly one-third of our population
has this disease in some of its varied
forms. It has been found that medical
men have mistaken the nature of this
disease. Some have treated it for a
Liver Complaint, some for Dyspepsia ,
others for Kidney Disease, etc., etc.,
but none of the various kinds of treat
ment have been attended with success.
Now, the Shaker Digestive Cordial
causes the food eaten to be digested.
This will cause an appetite for more
food, and this being digested will re
sult in an increase of strength, an in
crease of tiesh and an increase of
nerve power.
The tired, weary feeling will give
way to vigor and courage. The pale
thin and emaciated will recover their
color and plumpness, because red blood
and fat are the result of properly di
gested food.
A ten cent trial bottle will produce
a result. Jts good effeot will be realiz
ed at once. You will not have to take
a dozen bottles to find out if it is do
ing you any good. Try it, and then
give praise to the Shakers of Mount
Lebanon, New York, for the relief
that you obtaiu. 1
INTERESTING, VERY' *
%
We have made it famous, economical ami best for yon to
supply your needs here, and this ever-growing store is the mark
ot your appreciation. Thank you, not for buying the goods, for
you don’t do that unless it’s the best policy to do so, hut thank ,
you for tinding us out and enjoying the money-saving oppor
tunities we offer. You are making better and better tilings pos
sible by giving us your confidence and your trade. Inviting and
giving full confidence, we ask for an examination of this week’s
offerings.
See Our Windows. They Exhibit
SURPRISING A Fine Tail .Slice for Alon, Cuin Toe, at $3.00
SALE OF A Fiat* Chocolate-Colored Shoo for Mon, ill. 3.00
MEN’S TAN A Fine Oxblood Colored Slice for Alen, nt 3.00
SHOES. -V Fine Chocolate Colored Yici Kill llitl Plain Too 4.00
We iiave these four shoes in all styles and
toes and will make a run on them this week.
Our new designs in gents’ line shirts can’t be seen in any
other store. The prices are $3.00 a dozen lower than-anyhody.
See Us for Gents’ Furnishing Goods.
PALMER’S POPULAR SHOE STORE.
Seasonable Advice.
And now a word about
REFRIGERATORS
Ours are of a high standard
of merit. There are several
different styles, in all sizes,
finished in hard wood, char
coal lined and so constructed
that there is a constant circu
lation of cold, dry air. Prices
ranging from
slo,°° Upward.
They are economical in the usejjf Jc£L___Xh£y—
-preserve food perfectly. They are odorless and free
from impure and musty air. Wood not exposed in
the interior. Zinc lined throughout. All of our
refrigerators are made of hard, seasoned oak, dry
kilned and perfectly matured. No soft wood, pine
or poplar, substitutes.
C. flcGarvey.
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,
KEKD £i LaMANCE, Proprietor*
A Summer Cruise.
The American steamship Ohio will
sail from New York June 26, 1897, 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. Jahanneson is local
agent for the line, and will be pleased
to furnish rates and other information
to applicants.
The Oglethorpe hotel will be lighted
throughout this summer with electric
lights, and with its beautiful lighted
arcade, parlors, ball room and large
rotundas and spacious verandas will
make a delightful place to spend the
summer.
Cxail Borden
Eagleßrand
Condensed Miek.
APerfect Substitute For Mother's Milk
800/r "INFANT HEALTH'Sent FREE
New root, condensed Milk Cos. N.Y
Manager Aiken, of the Oglethorpe,
is offeringspeciai inducements to fam
ilies and parties who desire to spend
the summer at the Oglethorpe. See
him for rates.