Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME 10; NO. 310
BROWN DRUG COMPANY
Cash Rebate
Druggists.
Painter's JNtterial and Supplies at
ACTUAL COST
To Close Out That Line.
*er Niu*t'tsuießg'Te*.rs.
Cheney's Expectorant acts quickly and
gently. Uis a spec!Ho for coughs, colds,
and croup. My family has not been
w ithout it since IHBO.
I. O. Medlock, Nashville, Tenn.
See the new Mack silk fringes at
the Bee Hive.
Doctors^—.
Reccommend Leibig’s Extract of
*
Malt, rt’s a great tonic and health
builder.
We have lots of it.
W J BUTTS, The |)|Uggist.
“On the Cornil'
Traok Caved in.
The track of the Plant System next
to the water’* edge, near the barrel
factory, for many feet yes
terday, Some seem to think that this
ctve-iu was due to the dredge work
ing the mud and soil frem the founda
tion.
A Success
Our Closing Out Sale has met with so much
success the past decided not
only to
LAITIES SKIRTS. CAPES.
JACKETS. COLLARETTES
At Cost, but to include all Silk and Flannel
g Waists, Underskirts, and Eiderdown Jaek
* ets.
We are determined to close them out and
some
Rare Bs^gains.
Can be secured in above lines-
LEW’S.
THE BRUNSWICK TIMES.
Planting Trees.
Along many of the principal streets,
such as Union, George. Riohmond end
others, strong young trees are being
planted out, which will afford shade
and shelter in a year or two.
FOR,SALE—Horse and buggy. Ad
dress 306 George street.
Mr. W. T. Cosby, traveling passen
ger atent of the Southern railwsy, is
<0
just back from Havana, where be bis
been organizing the business of the
Southern in that city.
Advertise in The Times.
IMMENSE CROWDS
HEAR QUAKER DOCTOR
He Provides Entertainment For
Everyone and Cures the
Afflicted.
SOMETHIfiG ABOUT HIS WORK
A Wi nder.'®! Ma Who IlasO mo Amosgit
Ihe I’oop’oof Brunswick to D liver Thom
From Many Il’s Flesh is Heir To.
The D.io’or drew the orusds
last right,
When the announcement was made
in yeeterdsy’s is- ue of The Tims* that
he would giv a g and free entertain
ment at the oorner of Newcastle and
Gloucester streets, rear Polbill’a
ular drugstore, there wejrj-ffiglny peo
ple titled with intense interest,
Tboj hud beard so much of this fa
uioue man that their minds were keen
ly alive to this first opportunity to see
him.
Aod they were out in great shape.
Crowds swayed and surged around*
his stand and vied with one another
jto get a ’sight of the mao who has
i much for sufferii g human
ity .
The fame achieved throughout the
length and breadth of this great coun
try had whetted the appetite of all for
a glimpse of him, and they tpw and
marvelled.
In appsaranoe be is a typical Qua
ker. Clad in the garb of that sect be
presented a handsome picture, as be
fore the immense uudienoe be stood
for a few brief moments and explain
ed to bis eager listeners tha object of
his visit here.
Kvery word wa listened to Intent
ly , end in the days to oome, when the
marvelous cures he told them or are
made, they will remember bia word*
of propnrcy and say that bia modeity
, made hiui ti II them less than be really
111 do, for it is cbaracUagtio of this
great healer that half wonderful
cures have not beeu written of Out
will go down in history to be revived
by*writers of future ages to illustrate
that this, the original, Quaker Doctor
lived ahead of his time and worked
wonders beyond the ken of man.
The Quaker D ctor was liberal with
his audience, and instead of following
the usubl custom, adopted by men on
the platform, of taxing the crowd’s
patience with long l'cfures be gave
to all a fi ee eate/taioment of the higl -
eat cla.s.
Tu*re was music and vaudeville,
sleight of hand and Punch and Judy,
and everything to make you laugh and
grow happy.
In fsoi, ’be Quaker and his compa
ny are worth goiog mike to to see,
and the world-famous Polyobrone is
Ib- most novel and entertaining in
strument on the universe. It playe,
and makes the blood tingle with new
life at its Inspiring music,
You must see and bear it to appre
ciate it, so do not forget that every
night now the place to assemble is at
the Quaker Doctor's stand, for there
you will llnd mir'h and music, health
and good cheer, and the entire per
formance costs you nothing.
Thera is nothing to sell —everything
is free. The Quaker is here to do good
for suffering humanity, and this after
all is mao’s best mission in life.
BRUNSWICK GA. SUNDAY MORNING JANUARY 14 1900
IN FIELDS OF
DRAMATIC ART
By out nit Nssi.it.
After being dark for a week, on
Monday night the Grand will again
turn on its bright eleotrio illumi
nation, >nd tbr.w its doors cpeo to
the theatre goers. Oo that oigbt the
Woodward-Warren Company wilf
give the premiere of its engagement.
This ecmpany is well spoken of by the
pr.ss of the oities visited by these
clever comedians and speoisl'ata
The prices of admiaaion are the low
est any Brunswiok audience ha, so
far, been asked to pay. If the euin
pany be a good one, at such rates the
house to whieh it will play should be
orowded. Gj aud see them the first
night ai y how.
New York Dramatic M rror
gives a fine notice to James Yeung
in its last who will start on hi*
tour from Norfolk, V#., on the l*th
Inst,, headed . ;ja way, for Manager
Wolffe has secured him for an early
datellls drama is entiled “Lord
J Bgron,” and is from the pen of Rida
Louisa JobnsoGh bia.leading woman.
Atlanta ia going wild ov.r the pros
pects of French Grand Opera for three
nights. The New Orleans French
Gr%pd Opera Company will play there
on tha 16th, 16tb, and 17tb, when
Faust, La Juive and Romeo and Juliet
will be produced. The seats foe the
parquet are only 82,60.
76.000 people pay their way into the
San Franoisco thPltfM-
The Examiner voicing the sentiment
of these playgoers says: “We get the
poorest attrectiooe of eny city or the
fume sue, being trained down to ae
ospt eny show that bat legs to get
hereon.”
The Savannah News oritic was
ralhet laboring under some Svengalian
hypnotio iilusjtta when be referred to
du Mturier’s master piece “Camilla.”
My, it is enough to make poor Dumas
turn in his sarcophagus in the P re
La Chaise. The quien of the demi-
Mondaines, la damelaux Cami llas, to
be confounded |for the barefooted
Trilby ?
Now that the bat off ordinance ta in
full force, I would like to make the
following suggeition,*and that'is that
| nioe crzy little place provided with
mirrors, combs and brushes be kept
by Jtme popular lady who would taka
oharge of the ladies’ wraps, bonnets
'--W'
and hate when they enter the opera
bonse, and at the concluairn of the
play, would, on the surrender of the
proper check,{issued for a nominal
suns, return the cloak or headgear,
and aesist the lady to put it oo prope--
ly, wb'. wish a parting gla.ce
at the looking glasses, would f el
prepared to meet the gaze of the male
admirers lining the sidewalk in front
of the theatre . Bioyoles, overcoats,
etc., could alto be checked for the cor
venienoe of the men.
“Take time by the forelook.” If
your blood is out of order, begin [tak
ing Hood’t [Sarsaparilla at onoe and
prevent serioea illness.
FOUND—Paokage of table linen.
Owner oan have same by oallmg at
this office, describing article and pay
ing for tbia ad
A DICTIONARY
JWAR READERS
lie More Difficult
Words That Are Daily
Printed
Dl REPORTS FROM THE OTHER SIDE.
They Are Beo-ming Very Familiar By
S'ght and Hearing—An Am-rio’n
Rams That is Equally So.
The following list will be found use
ful by readers of the war news. The
pronunciation of the more diflicplt
word* is given :
Aapies river (Arpies)—Runs t hrough
Pretoria into the Limpopo.
Afrikander—A white man born in
South Africa of Europen stock.
Berg—A mountain.
Betbulie (Bsth-ooly)-Town in the
Orange Free State.
Biltong—Boer provender. Dried
meat.
Boar—A peasant.
Burgher— Miles over .sixteen years
old possessing the franchise.
Commandant—Commander.
Commando—A body of Boere.
Commandeer -To mobilize; to req
uisition.
Donga—A water hole or deep diteb.
Dop—-Boer brandy. V
Dopper—Tift Puritanical Lutheran
g ; i . 'f/ftfZulu
’f t : , ; . ; *•>
%. -iff Resit. : / %|- ), ' . Her.
/Feld Cornet—A magistrate with
certain military powers.
0
Fontem—A apring.
Gaberones (Gab-ber-oons) —Very
important native town, ninety miles
north of Mafeking. ,
Geldenl)uis (Geld-den-hiss)—Form
erly a member of the Yolksraad ferf
Johannesburg.
Gnqualand West (Greek-a-land)-
Diatriot of Kimberly diamond mines.
Kantuor (Kantorr) Kooky minirg
valley near Babertnn, in Transvaal.
Klip—A stone,
Kloof—A ravine,
Komati Poort (Kc-msrty-poort)—
Bordertown, Transvaal and Portu
guese territory.
Kaj jr—A hillock .
Krsntz—A oleftbetween bill'.
Laager—A Boer camp.
Msaliea— Indian oorn ; staplbjood
of oatives, and much grown guild used,
by the Boere for bread, etdL
Nik —The saddle connecting two
mountains.
Oorlng—War.
Palapswe (P-1 larp-sway) Very
large native town in Bechuanalsnd.
Chief Khama’s headquarters.
Pan—A sheet of water.
Pont —A ferry.
Poort between or over tbe
mountain
Kamathlabama (Kay math - lay
barm-er) Near Mafekiug; British
oamp.
Roomek—Lilterally red nrck. Boer
term for English soldiers. ;
Bchuiu’a Hoogte (Sheins boog tay) -
Hill in Natal; just over the Transvaal
border. Battle In war of 1881.
Stuit— A dry ditch .
Spruit—a small stream.
Taal—Tbe Boer Low Dutch langu
age *
Trex—Traveling by ox vrago".
Uitlacdar—i nonburgber of the
Gut Glass—
D orflinger’s.
Name on Each Piece.
Brunswick
Book Cos.
Transvaal.
Velnt—The Month African prairie.
Veidt Cornet—See Held cornet.
Vereeniguig fF ur-seny-gi ug)—First
station on the Transvatl side of the
Vaalrivor, Custom house.
Vierkeur—The four (4, and lioer
re \ white blue a- <J ie, en.
Viei—A small lake.
Voorloop-r—The boy leading the
■*
Aril span of an oje team
Voortrekkor—The old generation of
Boers who took part rh the a eat
Trek of 1837.
Ztfrp—A sHtser policebji)". jggjjH
J t span!.- nw| -
vaitl . Higß^>,, ' 1 j %
PlVpajx M tniSi insurance—A I
name that is read every where; famil
iar to every one; writes the L. E. A.
Policy. An old reliable Cos., that is
suggested by reading war news and
accounts of death on the field. If you
KAISER BROS.
Annual Mark Down Sale
LADIES’JACKETS and CAPES
k . -.<•'* #■ ■
Beginning Monday, January
15th, and continuing until our
winter stock is disposed of.
Ladies" Jackets
From $18;00down to $ll.OO
From $15.00 down to $9.50
From $12.50 down to SB,OO
From sll-50 down to $7.50
From $8.50 down to $5.00
From $6.00 down to $3.75
From $"4.50 down to $2.50
KAISEfI BROS.;
THE OLD RELIABLES. -- „ Jj
PRICE FIVE CENTS
haven’t a policy in this company call
on or write J. E, Abrams, Gen. Agent,
Brunswick, Gs.
State of Ohio, City Toledo. Lucas county.
Frank J. Cheney akea oath that he Is senior
partner of the firm or. J. Cheaey A Cos., doing
business in the eit_ if Toledo, county and state
aforesaid, and tha aid firm will pay the sum o
ONE HUNDRED OLLAJtS for each and every
case of catarih that cannot be cared by Hall’s
Catari li Cure.
FRANK J. CHKNET.
Sworn to and subscribed before (me tbls nth
flto of December, 18SS.
vLmA ) a. W. liI.r.ASON,
' • M'.tarj MubUe, ■*<
Pills are the bast.
Good Jffave you seen
George Harper’s nioefneat, clean, up
to-date store, full of fine groceries?
Beat hurry.
We are taking stock. WaiH M
great special sale of WB||gi§B|
Bee Hive.
Ladies' Capes, #
From $ll.OO down
From $7.00 down
From $5.00 down
From $4OO
From $3.00 down to *ij
From $2.00 down to sl.3s|
From $1.50 down to SI M)