The Brunswick times. (Brunswick, Ga.) 189?-1900, January 16, 1900, Image 1

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VOLUME lftr. NO. 311 >ROWN DRUG COMPANY Cash Rebate ■■■§ Druggists. [Painter’s Material and Supplies at I ACTUAL COST ®*To Close Out That Line. Miking Many Fnsnds. ■ Kev . Thomas H. Thompson,the new * pastor of MpKendree Methodist is making many friends in He is an earnest, ener- SJetic worker, and will add greatly to MBthe popniarity of McKendree. Doctors^ Reccommend Leibig’s Extract of Malt. It’s a great tonic* and health builder. We have lots of it. W J BUTTS, The Druggist. “On the Corner.” John H. D’voanx 111. John H. Deveaux, the well known eolored politician, at present oollector of customs, -at it ill. His condition has been alarmiDg, but ia now somewhat improved. He is a (good man and bat been an influence A Success * Our Closing Out Sale has met with so much success the past weeK decided not only to sell LADIES SKIRTsTaPES, JACKETS. COLLARETTES At Cost, but to include all Silk and Flannel Waists, Underskirts, and Eiderdown .Jack- ets. * We are determined to close them out and some Rare Bargains. Can be secured in the above lines- LEVf S. THE BRUNSWICK TIMES. Hal tiie Crowds With Him. The Quaker Doctor has the crowds with him. Around his s>and near PolbiU’s drug store last night the streets were packed with people and be gave them all a good show. Advertise in The Times. for good among his people. As an of fice-holder in Brunswick he won ihe confidence and esteem of the people, find The Times voices the sentiments cif a large number in wishing for him an early and complete recovery. THE COMING OF JEKYL VISITORS Those Who Are On This Fa-* mous Island and To Come. PALACE TRAINS GO ON YESTERDAY From N w York to Jikyl and Florida Pdntr-Marj Gu#str Hava Waited For Thes’ to Bring Them. On Jekyl Island many members of the club will spend a pleasant winter. Those who have been there for several weeks past ar Mrs. C. S. Maurioe, of Athens, Ps,, in their pretty cottage; Mr. S’ruthers and family of Penney 1 vania, in their oottage; Mr. O. Bright and Dean and Mrs. HoHmao, of New York, at the club house. Among the guest who are exp°cted down ibis week are Mr. K. Hubbard and family, of Clayton, Conn., who will spend a month or two in the Fair bank oottage; Mr. Dunbar Wright and family, of New York, who will be at the club bouse for some time; Mr. A. [B. Chftln and family of Lakewood, N . J., who Will also be guests of the club Mr. N. K. Fairbank, of Chicago, who, with Ids family, have always been such popular me mbers of the club, arospend ing the winter in Egypt and their presence will be greatly missed from the social life of Jekyl. It is beamed wi'h pleasure that next season) they w.li resume their tbei.lsnd. The tGTrough speoial from .vewA'idiAii to Florida wka put on yesterday and leaves New York about noon, arriving here the following day at noon. This will bring the Jekyl visitors in numbers, many of whom have b’en waiting for this palaoe train,and from noMf on the island will have many vis itors. The Southern baa out a special Jekyl Island folder advertising this train over lheir route. A TOKEN OF ESTEEM. Retiring Trainmas’er Wright Pres<n'?d Watch > <] Chain. Wuyorogs, Ga., Jan . 15 . —(Sped*! to The Tiraea.J— Former Trainmaster W. If. Wright, of the Plant System, was to";day presented with a handsome watch charm and chain by his numer ous friends and former associates. On one side of the charm was designed a locomotive, anil on the locomotive was inscribed, “S., F. & \V. Ky.” 7be re vere aide of the charm bore the In scription, “W. If. Wright. From hie friends on the Sfcond Division cf the Plant System. Jan, Ist, 1900.” Chief Dispatcher Harville mcdi the presen tation speech, which was el*quently replied to by Mr. Wright. “Billie” Wright, as his friends delight to oall him, began his railroad career ae a flagman eighteen years ago. He has men successively to the position of Train Master, which he rdicquisbed a few days ago. He has more friends than there are cross-ties between Sa vannah and Jacksonville, and every friend wiebes him abundant euooess wherever he may oast his lor. A man of exceptional ability, be will not be allowed to remain long out of harness. Mr. M. J. Monahan, of Cinoya, W. Va., has a position as train dispatcher with the Plant System here.” BRUNSWICK GA. TUESDAY MORNING JANUARY 16 1900 PROBABLE CHANGE IN COMMANDING OFFICER Captain R. Ernest Dart To Retire From the Rifle men. WILL RON AGAINST DUNN FOR MAJOR Si Liegt. Jaok Styles of the Naval M li'ia to Be Named As Dart’s Suooesaor—This the Latest Move In Military Ciroles Military circles and the publ'o gen erally will be interested in learning that Cspt. K. Ernest Dart, the present oommander of ti e Brunewiok Kifl> men, will not tea candidate for re eleotion at the ooming election on February lat, but will be a candidate for major of the new battalion of ihe First regiment, which has been form ed of the B’atesboro and Brunswick oompanier. Asa contestant for the position of major of this new battalion Captain Dart will have Obtain Frank A. Dunn, the well %ni*n young military man who was recently tranefefltad at Colonel Law ton’s rrquest from Ihe Fourth to the First regiment. This wi 1 make the race a very pretty one. Capt. Dari has been the commanding t nicer of the K flemen five year*, and is now the senior officer of the new battalion. I i¥ li Not 111 '* for, we now announce the 2nd and 3rd prizes drawn by the judges. FIRST PRIZE ....2355- 4842. SECOND PR1ZE...3890—4674 JUDGES Howard Waff, Phil S. Far mer, Roland A. Mullins. If you have of these num bers call immediately, KENNON MOTT, D. 0. OPTICIAN ANDiJEWELER. 215 NEWCASTLE STREET. Timk by wire daily from Washington. Officla Inspector of watches for Southern Rail way. Capt, Dunn has been prominently mentioned for the place, and both have friends at work in their reap! - ive interests. p-~- - . With the retirement of Cap'. Dart the Riflemen will probably name ae his successor ex-Lieut. Jack C. Styles, one of the former oSoere of the Bruns wick Nayal Militia, and a very prom inent and popular looal military man. He would make an excellent com manding officer, and will probably ac cept the position which is almost cer tain to be teldered bun. “A Heart As Stu'dy As AN O k.”. But what about the blood wbicb the heart must pump at the rata of 70 times a minute? If the heart is to be sturdy and the nerves strong this blood must be rich and pure. Hood’ Sarsaparilla makes sturdy bear’s be cause U makes good blood. It gives to men aod woman strength, confi dence, courage and endurance. Hoods Pills are non-irritating and the only cathartic to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. LDCEY LAUBRIGHT, HOTEL CORRESPONDENT A Former Brunswickian Lands Easy in Sunny Florida Land. DESIGNATED BY TAMPA TRIBUNE. To “Do” the Plant System Resorts For the Season of 1900 —A Good Mania a Good Place and H ,w He Got There. The duties of special correspondent for the riant System hotels in Flor ida, with headquarters at the Tampa Bay, for the present season have been vested in the Tampa Tribune, and that paper has designated Mr. Edwin D. Lambright, ita associate editor, to this important work. Mr, Lambriglu, who is well known in Brunswick and ell over the South as one of the’beet wri ters of prose and poetry in the line of regular newspaper work, will furnish the press with newsy letters from the famous Plant Systerjn resorts during this season. Lambright is a rare geniu’, who was in a Bruns wick newspaper' cffloe, where he con tributed notes from the publio soho-ils here. Hr gradually expanded, and at the timd of his departure from Bruns wick /some mouths ago, wag correV spondent from Southeast Georgia for a nujnber of prominent Northern pa. and a regular contributor to Sev jHAwerklias and <.f j iforwaß made after'repeated overtures Tram th# head of Tampa’s live newspa per, ai <i In.- being named as corre epondent for the Plant Sjstem’s ho tels, Is but another evidence of his worth as a writer and geniality as a man. A speoial favorite of John Ken drick Bang’, Thomas Nelson Page, anJ a do7.“n other literary celebrities, Lambright has proven hisabili'y to’ hold his own in any field of literary endeavor, and the romances of sunny Florida will find no more able drlinea tor in proee or verse, than the young newspaper man from Brunswick. The people of his home city will watch hie career with much interest, and wish for him the suooesg that genius de serves. Death of Mrs. Beriaok. Brunswick friends of the family were pained to learn yesterday of the death of Mrs, Berlack, who formerly lived here, at, her home in Jackson ville. Mrs. Borlack was the mother of Mr. Abe and Mies Minnie Berlack, two popular young people who visit Brunswick often, and the sympathy of many frierde go out, to them in their sorrow. A Thonsand Tongues Could not exgresß the rapture ol Annie IC. Springer, of 1125 Howard street, Philadel phia, Pa., when ehe found that Dr. King’s New Discovery for consumption bad com pletely cured her of a hacking cough that for many years had made life a burden. All other remedies and doctors oould give her no help, but she says of this royal cure —“it soon removed the pain In my chest and I can now sleep soundly, something I can scarcely remember doing before. I feel like sounding its praises throughout the universe.” Bo will every one who tries Dr. King's New Discovery for any trouble of the throat, chest or lungs. Price soc and SI.OO. Trial bottle free at all drug tores, every bottle guaranteed. Cut Glass— Dorflinger’s. Name on Each Piece Brunswick Book Cos. Tampa Bay Hotel Open. I'tie Tampa Bay Hotel, one of the Plant Syi tern’s famous winter resort betels, is now opoa and ready for the reception if guests. Manager Dick ia one or the best known hotel men in the world, and hU management of Florida’s noted bostoly will prove far more successful this year than ever, vieilors from Brunswick ahd Jekyl wf 1 libd ; in him an ideal host and in InsikUcs a veritable pslaoe. Every Member of th- Household, rqjcvoisjire o( talking about .Cheney’a have given it to W jape wsfcoi. . r. *• -, jjp f Jwh will PkrftYemioFslplSmerltis. K. Booster, Richmond, Va. Lewis Dennis, Salem, lnd M saye, ‘‘Kodol Dyspepsia Cure did me mote go,id than anything I over took.” It digests what you eat and cannot help but cure dyspep sia and stomach troubles, W. J. Butts. KAISER BROS. Annual Mark Down Sale LADIES'JACKETS and CAPES Beginning Monday, January 15th, and continuing until our a winter stock is disposed of. Xadies’ Jackets- From $lB.OO down to $ll.OO From $15.00 down to $9.50 From $12.50 down to $B.OO From $ll-50 down to $7.50 From $8.50 down to $5.00 From $O.OO down to $3.75 From $4.50 down to $2.50 KAISER BROS.; THE OLD RELIABLES. jj* . PRICK FIVE CENTS A B'ekleei Headliner. Tbs headliner of the Savannah Pros™ is, to say the least, a reckless In dividual, In yaaterday’s issue heads a Wayoresi dispatoh r<2| tive to small pox ai if it cams from' Brunswick, and in other ways man* aged to oenvey a false impression at to the contents of the various appeMA login the paper. Editor Stovall ahoulcf oall bla young mao down. From Andrew Carnagie’s Town. Many of the employees in the fact Aje Cheney’s praise it higdPS tiamation of Joe Nfljßifrhttm, Fltu You never know what form oiß poison will follow constipation. Keefl liver clean by using DeWltt’s Kisers and you will arold trouble, are famous ltttle pills for cons^| I and liver and bowel trouble*. W. J.™ Ladies' Capes. J From $ll.OO down to s6.o(|: From $7.00 down to s4.2iP> From $5.00 down to $3.25 J From $4OO down to-S2.TSB From $3,00 down to $2.00* From $2.00 down to sl.3Ejh From $1.50 down to SI.OCUI