The Brunswick times-call. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1900-1902, August 18, 1900, Page 6, Image 6

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6 fhe Brunswick Times. Established 1889. The Brunswick Call. Established 1892. The Brunswick Times-CalL Published K/HRY MOANING EXCEPT MONDAY <ipirrr 1 it l in Oglethorpe Block, 211 FB ;reet i J IBLKI’HONK NO 3) ARTHUR H. LEAVY Editor ROLAND A. MULLINS, Business Manager TO SUBSCRIBERS: Subscribers are requested to notify tlie office when they fail to get any issue of Lite Tirnes- Call. Attention 10 this matter will be appre ciated by tbe publishers. The Times-thill will be Delivered by carrier or mail, per year $5.00; per week 15 cents Correspondence on live subjects solicited. Real name of writer should ac company same Subscriptions payable in sdvanae. Failure to receive paper should be reported to the bnsiness office. Address all c immunicalions to THE TIMES-CALL, Brunswick, Ga. Tho dove hunters are now having all kinds of fun, Ex-Senator Ingalls waß one of the smartest men of the a^e. Wonder what tho Sun will say about the race riot in New York. Li Hung Chang’s wife kaß over 1,000 gowns. She must change about fifty times daily. “It took war forty years ago to get our ministers into Pekin,” remarks the Columbus Eliquirer-Sun, “and it may take war to got them out.” The Augusta Cbroniole wants to know what has become of Admiral Dewey, and we would llko to ask tho same ques tion about our former minister to Spain, Mr. Stewart L. Woodford. Those who have boeu getting The Timks-Cai.i, gratis will now have to pay for the paper. It takes a large sum of money to operate this plant, and we see no reason why some should read our pa per free of charge. The Macon News thinks that the su preme court of Georgia is certainly ens titled to some relief It is not right that the judges should be required to work for iudcfiuite periods without any rest in orutbr to keep up with their dockets. The city council of Jersey City, N. Y., recently passed a resolution allowing the entire police of that city to appear in their shirt waist. There has been a notice given the city council of Bir mingham, Ala., that a resolution allow ing the policemen of that city to shuck their coats would he introduced. Senator Marion Butler, of North Car olina, says that he Is neither a democrat nor a republican, but that he is a popu list. He is for Mr. Bryan for presi dent, but wants the populists to nomi nate a candidate for vice-president. He says he was opposed to Mr. Steven son iu 1802, and he is opposed to him uow. In a speech at a Confederate reunion In Home some days ago, Congressman Mattox said: “The Confederate veter ans are the raosi exclusive set in the world. When the last Confederate vet eran dies then our order Is at an end. When we cease, it ceases. The Grand Army of the Republic may go on re cruiting its ranks forever, and from among our sons, but the confederate army Is at an end in ns.” AN INFAMOUS LIBEL. After months of effort the enemies of Col C. P. Goodyear have at last suc ceed in getting an organ through which to ventilate their animus towards Colonel Goodyear, the community, of which Brunswick Is a large part? Hon. William G. Brantley, congressman from the E eventh district, all the members of the Geor ! gia de egation in the National House ot Representatives, Senators Bacon snd ! Clay of Georgia, and Chairman Burton together with his associates on the River and Harbor Committee. The organ in question Is the Washington Mirror, a paper which the Times- Call is informed ranks in the District of Columbia about on a par with the standing of the old Looking Glass sheet formerly published in Atlanta and Sa vannah and which dca't In the salacious items of the day that pondered more to the dabased in humankind than the cultured or refined. While the item in ques- tion is a thoroughly libelous one and the publishers will be put lhrough the courts on the charge of criminal, libel there is also another side of the story; this side involves .1. Floyd King, former congressman from T.ouisianna, and now re puted to be a lobbyist of not altogether favorable renown in Washington City. Tho wording of the article in the Mirror is similar to that contained in recent communications sent through the mails by King and Ihe entire item reads as follows: “Let it be hoped that Congress at its next session will refuse to pay Col. C. P. Goodyear a single dollar for the alleged improvements he claims to have made in the harbor of Brunswick, Ga. The whole thing is a steal pure and simple. Colonel Goodyear’s former associate, William Gordon Biantley, a representative in Congross from Brunswick, knows it to be such, but for reasons —selfish reas ons—will aid Colonel Goodyear In making his unwarranted raid upon the treas- ury. More will bo glad about this infamous steal when Congress reconvenes in December. Theodore Burton, of Ohio, Chairman of the Committee on Kivers and Har bors, also knows that It is a steal- The Georgia delegation in Congress know it to be a steal and they are all.in favor of it. Colonel Goodyear may not be the only peißon who will he bonefitted should a bill pass Congress authorizing the payment to be made. Some congressman may get some of the Bwag.” The Infamous nature of the above quoted article and its implication by in sinuation of the entiro Georgia delegation and the direct charge agaiust Chair man Burton, Colonel Goodyear and Congressman Brantley will of course receive the just attention due it and the writer as well as the publisher, will be handled to the full extent of tho law that governs criminal libel. J. Floyd K : Dg, who is supposed to be bihind the attack has ondeavored unsuccessfully for a long time to get reputable correspondents to handle his charges in their news from Wash ington and has offered in a round about way through his agents here to pay local newspaper rmn to print some of his charges, but they haye always been turned down as time and work has demonstrated fully that the Goodyear bur work has boon accomplished successfully, and for two hundred and twenty thousand dol" lars the government has secured depths on tho Brunswick bar through Colonel Goodyear’s work that the government egineers estimated it would cost two mil lion seven hundred and elghtoen thousand dollars to get. It is also known here beyond any question of doubt and can be proven by oral and written testimony that J. Floyd King was for years a worker for Colonel Goodyear and participated in tho proceeds from the Goodyear tar work to a large extent, and finally settled all claims he might hive hud against Colonel Good- year for a cash consideration, und received a total of about $22,000. Colonel Brantley drew up the papers that closed King’s cannection with the Goodyear liar work and this is the basis of his animus against Colouel Goodyear. King has been repudiated in the press and by the public by tbe citizens of Brunswick, and the press ot his old home in Louisiana, and has suffered indignities upon his per son in the paat for pursuing towards others such a course as he has bjen following towards Colonul Goodyear. A notable instance of King’s treatment Irom those who kuow him is cited In the fact that during a controversy he brought on him self whi ehe was in Congress, he wa* given the lie, and was spat upon aB an oh jeet of contempt by the man who accused him of lying. The prominence of King at that time and the fact that he was the son of Honorable Thomas Butler King a gontlemae of the old school, made the incident a famous one, at that time and when King refused to resent the insult of having a man spit in his face, bis con stuuents refused to send him back to Congress and retired him to tbe walks of private life from which he emerged as a lobbyist and an alleged blackmailer. This is tho stripe of man that is now attacking Colonel Goodyear and the Geor gia delegation and his medium is a paper that ranks with that position held by the pnee notorious Looking Glass so that it is easy for tile average reader to un derstand wliat weight there is back of tbe charges tbus produced. The Atlanta Constitution thinks it is funny that China should have discover ed that the earth is a globe 2 000 years before the soca’led civilized nations ev suspected it. SHOULD NOT GO. Veterans Da Not Want Gen. Gordon to Attend Grand Army IGuoion. The Confederate Association of the Army of Tennessee, which inoiudes a large majority of the Confederate vet erans in New Orleans have protested against Gen. John B. Gordon attend ing the Graud Army of the Republic encampment at Chicago. As to the proposition that th Confederate Vet eran issue a circular reply to General THE BRUNSWICK TIMFS-CALL, AUGUST 18, 1900. Shaw’s remarks at Atlanta, General Chslaron, President, of the Associa tion, insisted that Shaw’s remarks should be treated with oonlemp’, but oontended that General Gordon should be censured for taking part in such meetings, and for having accepted an invitation to attend a similar meeting to take place. Cotton Mamet. New York, Aug. 17.—August 9.25, September S.GS, October 44, November 34. Yok*s s IfVer Will he roused to its natural duties and your biliousness, headache and col*sti Ration be cured if you take Hood’s Pitts Sold by all druggists. 25 cents. I*dm M Ictless. The consequences of a diseased condir tion of the stomach and digestive and nutritive system are most disastrous to the whole body. One by one every organ may become involved. The mis ery is maddening. The most extrema cases of "stomach trouble” and the evils resulting from it have been cured by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. It strengthens the stomach, purifies the blood and builds up the body with sound healthy flesh. "I was taken with severe headache,” write* Thomas A. Swarts, Box 103, Sub-Station C, Cos lurabus, Ohio, then cramps i|i the stomach, and my food would not digest, then kidney .anil liver trouble, and my back got weak so I could scarcely get around. I just gave money to the doctors whenever I thought they would do me any good, but the more I doctored the worse t got until six years passed. 1 had become s poorly I could only \v; '.k in the bouse by the aid of chair, ami 1 got so thin I had given up to die, thinking that 1 could not be cured. Then I saw one of my neighbor boy* and be said, "Take my advice and take Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and make anew man out of yourself.” The fir.it bottle helped me so T thought I would get another, a; - . ! after I had taken eight bottles in about six weeks I was weighed and found I had gained twenty-seven (??Y pounds. I have done more hat i work 111 the past eleven months than I did in two year- before, and I am an stout and healthy today, I think, as I ever was." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure biliousness. A RIFLE RANGE. Brunswick is to Have One Very Soon. It will only be a matter of a short time before Brunswick will ln.y ■ a first-class rifle range. The state 1 h .or at Savannah has caused the military of Georgia to take a great deal of in terest in rifle practice and a range will ba tbe result of this enthusiasm. Deafness Oannot Be Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining cl the Eus tachian Tube. When this tube gets in flamed, you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing; and when it is en tirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless ihe inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal con dition, hearing wi’l be destroyed forevt r. Nine cases out of ten are caused by ca tarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give Ono Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hail’s Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & Cos , Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pilts are the best. A Minister’s Good Work, “I had a severe attack of bilious colic, got a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, took two doses and was en tirely curtd,” soys Rev. A. A. Power, of Empo ria, Kan. u My neighbor across thest.eetwas sick for over a week, had twoor thiee loit:es o medicine from the doctor. He used them for three or four days without relief, then call, and in another doctor who treated him for some days and gave him no relief, so discharged him. I went over to see him the next morning, He said his bowels were in a terrible fix, that the} had been running off so long that it was almost bloody flux. I asked liim if he had tried Cham berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diurrhcea Remedy, and he said, *No.’ I went home and brought him niy bottle and gave him one dcse; told him to take another dose in fifteen or twenty min utes if he did not find relief, but lie took no more, and was entirely cured. I think it the best medicine I have ever tried.” For sale by Dr. Bishop’s drug store. It’s & doctor's business to study health. Doctors confidently recom mend HARPER Whiskey. Sold by T. NEWMAN, Brunswick, Gi . $47.50 Willi buy a Model 59 Columbia Chainless Bicycle. $37-50 Will buy a Model 51 Ladies Chainless Bicycle. $25.50 Will buy a Ladies Cushion Frame Bicycle. This is something nice. Try one —buy one! sls OO to $20.00 Will buy a good Ladies’ or Cents’ Bicycle, at the DOWNING CO. W. 11. BOWEN. J. N. BRADT. BOWEN & BRADT, ATsiO eUIL-OETRS Of Stone. IBrick and Frame Buildings Manufacturers of Cement, Tile aiul;Artilieial Stone. Wis#*r(St Summer k lAj 'T Bargains,. agpjflwMFumiturft A cleaiar.ee sa e io make room for new goods. I Parlor Suit, 5 pieces, worth S4O, now $29. 1 Oak Refrigerator, worth S2O now sls. . a 1 Oak B”d Room Suite, 3 pieces, worth $25, now $lB tied Lounges, worth sl6, now sl2. Centre Tables s') cents to SO. T Ice Cream Frtezers wor:h $2 .50 at $1 98 1 A large assortment of Stdeboarus, Cupboards Ilf 19 Prices Below the Market. feyt 0. McOSIVEY. paj, CHINESE RESTAURANT, ESTBLISHED 1889.1 ; CHUE HALL { Proprietor You can get the best the market affords by eating here 215 GRAN C ©T. EVERY BARREL has s’ood our quality test. Failure to come up to be required standard means failure to form part of our stock of Wines and Liquors. Only that which is good value for money is offered. FR. V. DOUGLAS, 206 Bav Street. WASHINGTON SEMINARY Macon ana banininrv rt uimu’s College. Primary, Academic, Music, Art, Elocution snd Business courses. Small classes. Individual work. New building. Horn* ‘ife. Pupils enter Vassar, Wellesley and Rsndi lph-Maocn on certificates. Next session begins September 6tb. For illustrated catalogu address Mrs. W.T. Chandler, Principal,Llewllyn D. Scott, Aseociate Princip