The Brunswick times-call. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1900-1902, August 19, 1900, Page 3, Image 3

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NEGRO ELICUTIONIST. Charles Winter Wood Will Gv Three Reoitals in ibis City, Chat. Winter Wood, the noted Negro E ooutionist and I mpereouator will give three reoltala in Brnoswiok this week; appearing Monday night, August 20, at St. Paul’s A M. E church, Tuesday night, August 21, a' Bryan Baptist ohurob and Wednerdaj night, August 22, at the First A. B. ohurob Prof. Wood is r o gn z and . a ore o< the greatest humorous and dramath entertainers of the day, F r the pas fifteen years be has lived in the oity o' Chicago aud is well known through out the Northwest. Hs is a graduate of Beloit Coll’ge, Wi.ooosio, anr while there aa a student, won the interstate ora'orioal contest. Recent ly Prof. Wood has given recitals ir Atlanta, Charleeton. Culumlu-, Au gusta and Stvannab. In each oi these oites he drew large crowds and received tbs most hearty endcr etnen of all who beard him. Brunswiok is fortunate iu having Charles Winter wood octne here and it is to be hoped that bis reoeptioD ir our city will not fall behind that givei him in the other ci’ies mentioner H,a testimonial! come from auoh men as Hon. Win. J. Bryan, Dr. T. W. Gunsaubue, of Chicago, Senator Wm. E Mason and Prof. Broker "^.Wasb- ingt.jp. The Atlanta Const itbtion and Atlan ta Journal hava both glvrn Prof. Wood unstinret prais". Praise from moh men and papers would not be given unless it was m rited, D’t the pubic hear Prof. Wood this week. Ample aocommoddation will be provided for both white and colored. Toe very best looal musical ass s ance will be furnished. Everybody is in vited to ail the reoitals. “I am a switchman,” writes A. J. Jennesse, of 9201 Butler StChicago “and am out id all kinds of weather. I took a odd which settled in my kid ney and was in very bad shape. ] tried eeveaal advertised medic nee with no benefit until 1 was recom mended to take Foley’s Kidney Cure. Two-thirds of a bo’tle cured me.” W. J. Butts. Keep the body healthy at this season by using Prickly Ash Bitters. It is a necessary oondition to successfully re sist malarial germs. W.J Butts. llcfling young man can mike S6O per month and expenses. Permanent position. Experience unnecessary. Write quick for particulars, Clark & Cos., 4th A (Locus Streets. Philadel phia, Pa. It costs only one dol'ar to S ivannab and return via South*-™ Railway every Sunday.’ Puttin - food into a diseased stomach is (ike putting moiey into a pocket with hole*. The money Is lost. All its value goes for nothing When the stomach is diseased, with the allieu organs of digestion and nutrition, the food which input into it is largely lost. The nutri ment is not extracted from it. The body is weak and the blood impoverished. Southern Railway announces rate of one dollar for round trip to Savan nah every Sunday tickets limited to date of sale. Notice is given that po baggage will be checked on excur sion tickets sold at rate of $1 for rund trip via Southern Railway: OABTOXIIA. the /) Thu Kind You Have Always Bought Tbe lack of energy you fe! the baokaobe and a run down condition generally, -all mean kidney disorder. Foley’s Kidney Cure wiil restore your strength and vigor by muki'g tbe kidneys well. Take no substitute. W. J. Butts. Tbe Dread of people with weak lunge who suffer with stubborn coughs is consumption. Foley’s Honey and Tar, if taken in time, cures tbe cold, berls the lungs and always cures incipient Consumption. W. J. Butts. IS CONTRADICTORY. This Report Says Allies Did Not Have To Fight. London, Aug. 18.—The Daily Tele graph’s second edition publiehea a Shanghai deapatob, stating that the allies entered Pekin without opposi tion, and Prinoe Ching reosived them in a most friendly manner. The court, according to this correspondence, left Pekin under the direotion of the pro vince of Snenai, August 11'b. In oon radiotian to this report that thei# was no fighting, a despatch to the Dsls’etb agenoy from Shanghai, says r be attaok on Pekin began Wednesday morning, Japanese and •molisbed Cba inian and Tongohi gates in svening, nd the other forces entered by Tong quin gate. It will surprise you to experience the benefl obtained by using the daiuty and famous little pills known as DeWitt’s Little Early Riser* W. J. Butts. The wolf in the fable pot on aheep’s clothing because if he traveled on his own reputation he couldn’t accomplish his purpose. Counter feiters of DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve couldn't sell their worthless salves on their merits, so they put them in boxes and wrappers like De- Witt’s, Look out for them. Take only De- Witt’s Witch Hazel Salve. It cures piles and all skin and iseases. W. J. Butts. Money loaned on personal property and real estate. Ap ply to J. W- Wat Kins. MITCHELL at THOMAS. Liverv, boarding and sale stables. Vineot turnouts in the citv. Tel. 97. Newcastle St. Cheap Rates Via Son'hern Railway. Chicago, 111. National Encampment G. A. R August 27-Bept. I Tickets will be sold August 23,26 and 27, with Anal limit Sept. 1, at rate of .5 for the round trip If yon wish to cure scrsfula or salt rtieum permanently, take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It ex pels all impurities from the blood. For Biadder Troubles use STUART'S GIN and BUOHU. Everything in the grocery line to ba found at W. H. DaVoe’s. W rite Dr. C. J. Moffett, St. Louis, Mo., for hia valuable UtUe Text hina Wash-List Book, free Among other canned vegetable*, you’d find Spinach, which Is batter I bao fresh. W. H. DaVoe. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Finest lina of groceries to be bad, at W. H. DeVoe’*. V. B Cpnklin, Bowersviiie, Q., says: “Ire, ceived more benefit from FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE than from months of treatment by phy sicians.” Take no substitute. W. J. Butts. Call at DeVo*’s when you are in need of something nice in the grooery line. FOji SALE—A floe,piece of prop erty, good business place right in tbe heart of the city, cbeap. Apply at 221 Newcastle street,Brunswick,Geor g>a CASTOniA. Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought There are no better 'pills made than De- Witt's Little Early Risers Always prompt and certain W. ,1, Butt's. Ring up phone 100 when in need of the finest goode. W. H. Dsvoe. S .me people fish for compliments with bated breatb. DeVoe can please you with tbe beet groceries to be had, THE BRUNSWICK TIMES-CALL, AUGUST 19. 1900' CASK IS NEVER EMPTY. Par Tear* Wine la Drawn From It to Celebrate Greut Events. All really excellent champagne Is the result of judicious blending. Time was when each big vineyard owner had his own cellar and his own brand. But It has been found advantageous to sell the raw wine to dealers, who make one district supply what another lacks. But there are still* a few provincial establishments that cling to the old ways—crowning with a wreath of flow ers the first tubful of ripe grapes and keeping “the bride of the cellar” full from year to year. The bride, be It understood, is a spe cial wine cask filled with the first run ning of tho press. More accurately It holds the juice which drips away be fore any pressure is applied. Wine from It is never sold, but used upon high days and holidays, passed about as a gift or devoted to the comfort of the sick and the poor. Something akin to the bride exists in the German free cities. Each of them has a wine cellar, and In each cellar there is a cask always yielding wine, but never empty. Any burgher Is entitled to demand a bottle of Its contents when he marries, iHien his first son is christened and also when the son Is 21. If the son Is adventurous or the burgher himself, for that matter, he gets another bottle from the cask when he comes home from far countries. But there Is an official specially charged to see that whenever a bottle ful Is drawn out another bottleful of as near as possible the same quality at once goes in. And thus It happens that the city cask is never empty.—Boston Globe. Deeded to tbe Lord. The most remarkable deed ever drawn may be seen on the private es tate of a resident of Worcester In Mas sachusetts. It Is chiseled on a rock on what Is known as Rattlesnake hill, situated near the boundary lino be tween Worcester and Leicester. Old Solomon Parsons, who was wide ly known in Worcester county as an eccentric character, and particularly as a crank on the subject of religion, paid William C. Hall $125 for a parcel of land, and directed Hall to convey It by deed to the Almighty. In order that the greatest possible publicity might be given to his disposition of the property Parsons had the deed of transfer cut Into the rock verbatim et literatim. During his lifetime Parsons is said to have made several attempts to have the deed recorded, but the register of deeds, who was aware of his eccen tricity, each time put him off with the explanation that no official record was required In the case of a transfer of real estate to the Almighty. Parsons died Intestate several years ago, and the administrator included the parcel of land on Rattlesnake hill In the Inventory of the old gentleman’s estate which he filed in the probate court. A wag of a lawyer raised the question of title, but the judge decided In the favor of the administrator.— New York Journal. Anecdotes of Colonel Ege. Colonel Ege was a famous character In the early days. Although living In Doniphan county, he was often in Atch ison, followed by a pack of hounds. He was a high toned southern gentle man, with a kind heart. One day while returning home from this city he came across a man whose wagon was stuck in the mud in Inde pendence creek bottom. Colonel Ege at once started in to help the man pry out his wagon with a fence rail. While both were working away Ege became angry and yelled to the man. “Lift, you son of a gun; you are not lifting a pound.” The man picked up the end gate of the wagon and split it over Ege’s head, laying him up for three weeks. Ege had his hat off when he was struck and was so bald before coming to Knnsas that he was known as the Bald Eagle of Maryland. Ege always carried a pistol and was always trying to shoot through some body’s hat without hitting him. One day, at the Independence creek ferry, he shot at a man, but aimed a little low and creased him- But Ege was always a gentleman; he took the man Into bis home and tenderly cared for him until he recovered.—Atchison Glohe. Like the Reit ot u. “George, dear,” she said a night or two before the wedding, “do you think it possible that our love and our mar ried life can become the commonplace, coldly practical love and life of the married people we see around us? Oh, George, my heart would break If 1 thought so!” "But it will not be so,” said George passionately. “We love each other toe tenderly, too fondly for that. Our love |g not of the ordinary kind, my darling, and our lives will not be so. Ah, no, no, my angel; that can never be!” And the other day she said: “I say, George, how would you like pork for dinner with apple sauce? You would? All right, then, and don’t you forget that feeding bottle for the baby or I’ll send you back after it, and mind that you don't keep dluner waiting.” And he, with a falling off of the passion of ten years ago, replied: "AH right, Lou, and I wish you’d sew a button on the back part of those strip ed trousers of mine. You’ll find them hanging over a chair in our room. Don’t have the pork as dry as last time, and you watch the baby’s cold. That watering of the eyes looks like measles to me. Goodby.’’—l’earsou’s Magazine i Seal Majicof. “What Is an exit, pa?" "Exit, Freddy? Well, It Is a Latin placard hung around on the walls In theaters and opera houses to keep peo ple from thinking they smell fire.”—ln dianapolis Journal. I Iflcknom,, of ,British Regiments. grenadier guards were nicknam ed “The Coalheavers" because they were at one time allowed to work In plain clothes at odd jobs for private employers. The Seventh foot were “The Elegant Extracts” because at one time all their officers “had been ebosen from other corps.” The Forty-sixth owed their name of “The Lacedemonians” to their colonel's stirring speech on the ancient Spartans. Like many other regiments. “The Gallant re- ceived several nicknames—“ The Blind Half Hundred,” from their ophthalmic troubles In Egypt, and “Tbe Dirty Half Hundred” because In their penin sular fights they wiped themselves with their black facings. The One Hun dredth regiment are “The Old Hun dred" and “The Centipedes.” The Twenty-eighth were called “The Fore and Afts” standing back to back, the/repelled a front and rear attack before Alexandria iu 1801. The Cheshire regiment has been christened , “The Lightning Conductors” because ! “In the Irish maneuvers of 1899 several ! men were struck by lightning during a ! night march.”—London News. The Rlng-luMa. The ring-kal does not disdain an In sect diet. Beetles, grasshoppers, lo custs and termites are all readily de voured, as well ns ticks nnd hots pick ed from the hides of cattle. I have sometimes amused myself by watching the bold yet cautious and gentle man ner In which one of these ravens will approach a reclining ox and, after a preliminary course of soothing caress- es, accompanied by a soft “cawing” note. Insert his head Into the ear and dexterously extract the ticks. These birds always seem to have a good un derstanding with the older aud more experienced oxen, who will, at a hint from one of them, lie down and place themselves In the most favorable posi tion for the extraction of their para sites—Stark’s Birds of South Africa. The neat Age For Men to Marry, Edward Bok, writing In The Ladies’ Home Journal on “A Boy For a Hus band,” contends that “no young man under 25 years of ago Is in any sense competent to take unto himself a wife. Before that age he is simply a boy who 1 has absolutely nothing which he can offer to a f 1 as a safe fundation for: life happiness. lie Is unformed in his character, unsettled In his ideus, ab solutely ignorant of the first essentials of what consideration or lore for a 1 woman means. He doesn’t know him self, let alone knowing a woman. He Is full of fancies, and It Is his boyish nature to tilt from one fancy to an other. “He Is incapable of the affection up on which love is based, because he has not lived long enough to know what the feeling or even the word means. He Is full of theories, each one of which, when he comes to put It Into practice, will fall. He Is a boy pure and simple, passing through that try ing period through which every boy must pass before he becomes a man. But that period Is not the marrying time. For as his opinions of life are to change, so are his fancies of the girl he esteems as the only girl In the world to make him happy. The man of 30 rarely weds the girl whom ho fancied when he was 20.” A Freak of lilKlitntnff. Lightning performed a strange feat, near Osceola, Pa., during the recent thunderstorm, says the Oil City Der rick. Three fine cows belonging to a farmer had been turned out to pasture In a field on which the new grass Is al ready quite high, and when the shower came on they gathered together In one corner under some trees. There is a wire fence running close by the spot where they were standing, and a bolt of lightning was attracted to It and ran along the slender wires until the cows were reached, when it glanced off, striking the animals and killing all three instantly. A T-ivelve Hour Dinner. They dined well. If not wisely, In the old days described by Sir Algernon West la his “Recollections.” He says: "Thanks to the Introduction of smok ing after dinner, wine drinking Is now over. What it was In old days ap pears most incredible. The late Lord Clanwilllam told me of one occasion when he had dined at a friend’s villa near Putney. The dinner was extraor dlnarily late for those days—at 8 o’clock. “When they at last rose from the table and went up to their rooms. Lord Clanwilllam flung open his window and saw the haymakers coming Into the field. “ ‘I wonder/ he thought, ‘what hour they begin work.’ And on consulting his watch he found It was B:3o—the haymaker* were returning to work from their breakfast.”—New York the ROCK that Xives-ylt brinflS in i,s ,ra,n b ° dllU Gvils^^^^ /that slowly bul surely destroy health, /strength and cheerfulness. _ . To RLMOVt this condition IAI\L n9A PR ICKLYan r n E> s ) \ Permanently CURES a constipated habit,, \ corrects trouble in.the digestion. Xthe blood, strenylhens the kidneys.^^M^p purs THE SYSItM IN PtHrtCl SOLD At Price* I W- J Butts, Special Agents. ‘INTERPRETATION. - We long for it peace that is lasting. We plead for a rapture that'a rare, Like fishermen ceaselessly casting Their nets in tho gulf of despair. , ’ We draw from deep waters of sorrow Dark wrecks of old failure aud fear. And out of sea silence we borrow The storm that will never come near. Faith speeds past the footsteps of duty And halts at the door of a tomb; Thought pierces the source of all beauty And retuma unto dust-'tis the doom Of each man child to strive and to wonder. To plan for some positive gain. And only find mysteries under All life, he it pleasure or pain. Lo. in realms of the mind there is treasure For toilers who dwell in content:' There is truth that no science cun measure. And the fearless are never forspent- There is light when earth shadows are' falling. There s reward for the deeds that are done Where envy crowned virtues are calling Ihroug’ faith is thy victory won!" —Charles \\. Stevenson In Chicago Record. j CAR FARES IN GERMANY. | T,le of Collection nail |„. spection Prevents Free Hides. Ihe chances of evading fat es on tho I street caw of G r.’v. are v j slight. When passenger steps on a - oar, the conductor immediately asks ! where he Is going and then prepares his ticket, which serves also as a re ceipt for the fare. The preparation of a ticket consists ouly In detaching it from a block and punching it or mark ing it with a pencil. ‘ This process Involves much more work than the simple process of ring ing up the fares, as conductors do In America, but the task Is lightened by the fact that- only a certain number of persons are permitted to ride on a car at the same time. The number of sit- ting and standing places is plaiuly marlted on each car. If a car is de signed to carry 30 persons, no more than 30 persons will be permitted on that car it the same time. When any thing In Germany is forbidden, it is settled once for all. In order that every person who rides shall get the prescribed ticket inspect ors are employed who spend their time In ascertaining whether tho conductors are doing their duty. Those Inspectors step Into the cars and ask the passen gers for their tickets. They note tho number of the tickets nnd whether they correspond with the stubs retained by the conductor. The clerk who gives out the blocks of tickets to the con ductors notes the number of tbe upper most ticket and at tbe return of each block collects from the conductor who returned It as many fares as there are tickets detached. The rate of faros varies from 2% cents to 5, according to tho distance* Small children are carried for one-half fare, and any one for the sum of $2.50 may secure a ticket which entitles him to ride as much as he wishes for oue month. When a car is full, the con ductor displays a placard bearing tho word “Occupied.”—Chicago Record. Wonderful Flail. Assuming tliat we are walking on the ocean bottom at the depth of over a mile, we move cautiously along in water icy cold and suddenly are con fronted with a blaze of light and find ourselves In a field of light givers. Imagine a cornfield with stalks from two to four feet in height, the tips gleaming with light and waving gently to and fro. Such an appearance the Helds of umbellularia present. Above this forest of living lights strange and weird tisli are passing which we recognize as forms that have been dredged from great depths by the Albatross, the Challenger and others. One, the chlastnodou, dashes by emit ting light from its own body, and, won der of wonders! we see it seize a tisli five times its own bulk and draw it self over it like a glove. Its jaws by a special arrangement separate, and the mouth is a cavern of india rubber like possibilities. A similar fish, mala costens, is of a rich black velvet line, and as it poises we see upon its head two large lights. One emits a golden light, the other throws out fitful green rays which have some hidden mean ing in the economy of nature. Some of the fish seem to lie literal mouths. Such Is the eurypharnyx, or pelican fish. The mouth is enormous, the bones of the Jaw being attached to the siniil by movable Joints, so that it has enor mous powers of distension. Professor Charles I<’. Holder. Does the man wtio worries about himself ever think that he Is worrying about n thing of which the world makes little note?—St. Louis Star. Whenever a mother’s attention is called to her children, she makes a dive at them and wipes thetr noses.— Atchison Globe. There is something wrbfuK'Wirtr the appetite of a small boy who can wait patiently for his dinner.—Chicago News. WOMEN 0010 i AT HOME. THE GREATEST OF SPECIALISTS OFFERS TO THE SUFFERING HIS SERVICES AND REMEDIES. tlia ? Lvonty-fivo years Dr. J. New- Hathaway has made a specialty of Female Diseases. During that time he has had among fids patients over ten thous -.ml women, suffering from all thoso many different com plaints peculiar to tho sex, and lias completely and perma nently cured more than so per cent, of the cases he has treated. - By his exclusive method, s which lie has perfected during -- .- the twenty-live years of hi* inrwt most extensive practice, lio Is enabled to cure all of those different diseases, including painful, profuse or suppressed menstruation, prolapsus! all ovarian trouble, tumors and ulcoratlon In' fact ovorv form of thoso diseases which make a bunion of lift, to tho ureat majority of women. Ho has so perfected this system of his that ho can treat these eases by mail, without any per sonal examination (to which every sensitive woman mitiirallywbjects) and without any oper ation, will Its .Cl pain and necessary danger. J His system of treatment Is taken In tho prl pisitivo 1,0 lomo ’ 11,0 CUl '° is Patels and it Is ONE LOW FEE. Write him a letter stating briefly your condl timi and lie will send you a blank to he tilled out. Ho will give your case his personal attention mul earn and make his too so moderate (including all medicines necessary) that you will not feel tho burden of the payment, and ho will guarantee you a positlvo euro. Address, J. NEWTON HATHAWAY, M. D. „ !>'■• Hathaway & Cos., Savannah, G, MltNl ION THIS PA I*Kit WHEN WRITING, '—WWW w V 7 V • , ALWAYS KEEP ON HAND 1 fFain-KcUevi j Thoro Is no kind of pain< or ache, Intornal or oxter- < Jnal, that Pain-Kilter will( ’ not relieve. . (LOOK OUT FOR IMITATIONS ANI) SUB- THE GENUINE . BEARS THE NAME, ( > PERRY DAVIS & SON. . 1 Bmltfasl Foods for lint Woaiiier. Breakfast is the most im portant meal of the day to many business men. The day etarts w>th it, and if tlnugs go wrong at, break fsst ihev are ant to go wrong ali day. Roy your breakfast foods here and .you will he sure of a good moil and a good temper. I have Cream of Wheat, Wheat Farina, Wheatina, Pettijohn’s Breakfast Food. THOMAS KFANY, FANCY GROCER. 1 312 Newcastle Street. NEWEST SHAPES; LATEST STYLES ofliiliiw (Ms Just iiniiii AT K. EAULES, 203 Newcastle St. Also a large aasorlment of children’s ini tsaml bonnets, laces, zephyrs, worst ed’ hair goods and switches made to order a specialty. Bloodworth &Jones New Livery Stables New Buggies Fine Horses Prompt attention given all orders. Drayage a spec ialty. Phone 24-3. E St. PEiFFER & COMPANY, Hay, Grain, and Provisions. Hay uear Man-Held St. 3