Newspaper Page Text
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[he Brunswick Times.
Established 1889.
The Brunswick Call.
Established 1892.
The Brunswick Times-Call.
I’ubllHbed
E7ERY MORNING EXCEPT MONDAY
„ I in Oglcthoriie 810ck,211 FStreet
OHIO* R I IKI.KI'HIW NO 81
ARTHUR H. LEAVY Editor
ROLAND A. MULLINS, Business Manager
TO SUBSCRIBERS:
Subscribe™ nro requested to notify the office
when they fall to get any Issue of the Times*
rail. Attention to this matter will bo appre
ciated by the publishers.
The Times-Call will be Delivered by
carrier or mail, per year. $6.00; per week 15
cents. Correspondence on live subjects
solicited. Real name of writer should ac
company same Subscriptions payable in
advance. Failure to receive paper should be
reported to the business office. Addross all
c immnnicutions to
THE TIMES-CALL,
Brunswick, Ua.
TEN PAG-ES
The hot wave continues.
With n solid South and a doubtful
north, wbftt’B tho matter with Bryan?
Atlanta 1b not lacking in mayorallly
candidates. Four are in the field now
Lillian Jowitt might take a trip to
New York to investigate that race ri;>t.
There are only two ways of making a
woman chase you; one is to love her
and the other is not to,
Governor Candler can do a graceful
act by appointing Mrs. W. Y. Atkinson
as state librarian,
And now Athens Is to have a struct
fair. The Times Call predicts success
for the classic city’B clloits.
The St. Louis Globe-Democrat is in
clined to think that Alabama “must be
Included in the list of doubtful states
Ibis year.”
The Macon Telegraph now issues an
eleven o’clock odit on. The Telegraph
is easily one of the b st new fpatters in
the sou'll,
Mr. McKinley is soon to send in his
letter of aaccptance After reading Bry
an's speech, the Major doubtless is com
pelled to do some hard studying.
General Miles spends ills entire time
now playiug golf. We are paying bis
salary just the tame. Miles has the
greatest snap of any pensioner.
The A mericus Recorder says: Those
Northern men who propose to forma
watermelon trust are worse enemies to
the negro than any Southern men could
be.
The Georgia state fair to be held iu
Valdosta this fall, should receive the
enthusiastic assistance of every person
interested in the future welfare of Wire
grass Georgia.
The Birmingham Age-Herald says
“.he German vote is the whole bakery
this year.” Our Alabama contempor
ary m glit have added, “tlic whole
brewery too,"
RELIEF OF PEKIN.
While Metropolitan newspapers were
getting out extras every few minutes
Friday, publishing suppositions ns to
the state of affairs at Pekin, the Times
Call was printed as usual and tho facts
were given not in a vegue manner, but
positively.
Our readers did not bare to gues as
to whether or not the allied army had
•ntered the beaelged city.
The reputation of the Times-Call
was at stake and if Pekin had not been
relieved the reader would have doubted
us in future.
But we have faith iu our news gath
ering facilities, and while the telegraph
editors of the large dailies were reading
between the lines of their despatches,
figuring and consulting, and then print
ing the matter and leaving their readers
to surmiso, wo had our foreman hunting
up box car letters to announce the en
ranee of our army into the city and the
saving of the ministers.
In funishing the great item sooner
than our great contemporaries we did
only our duty.
A newspaper should give the news
and the Times-Call is surely trying to
he a newspaper.
Friday morning the Times-Call did
not say that “it reported that Pekin hae
been entered by the allied army,” but
on the other hand said: “foreigners at
Pekin saved.”
A SERIOUS QUESTION.
Although some of the northern news
papeis have time and again solved the
race question in the south the trouble
between the white man and the black
continues, and we see no chance of an
early solving of this important ques
tion.
It is not tho belter class of either race
that causes trouble, hut all must suffer
for another’s wrong doing.
In the recent trouble at New Orleans
innocent negroes were killed for some
thing over which they had no control
and for which they could legally or mor
ally he held r< sponsible. It is a pity
that in this world of ours the innocent
have to suffer as well ar the guilty.
In Liberty county, this state, a few
days ago, the negroes burned four stores
anil several dwellings of white people
who weie in no way responsible for the
race trouble there. Thus it will he
seen that it is up one way and down the
other. Both races are rash.
The negro who always starts the dis
turbances is generally the one who be
lieves he ig as good as the white man.
He is not. The white man is his supe
rior in every way, and the sooner be re*
ati/.es this fact the better he will get
along in the south.
Since the repub lean administration
and tho appointment of negroes above
whito people tho two races have been
shedding more blood than at any previ
ous time in the history of tho white man
ami the negro. McKinley is directly
responsible for this, and as long as a
president of the Pnited States puts the
negro on an equal with tho whiles troub
le is going to come. First, because the
colored man begins to think be Is supe
rior, and second, mortification is tho
next step to anger, and the least little
spark ignites a Hume in the white man's
breast which is sure to break forth iu all
the fury of a proud people humiliated.
Asa general thiug the negro has no
cause for complaint here in the south.
They are treated in business just as the
other race Is. Here in Brunswick we
have coloretl barber shops which have
thrived iu the face of whito competi
tion. Not long since a white man came
here and opened a business of the kind
but the white people continued to pat
ronize the colored barber, and the white
man had to fo'd his teut and go. This
shows that the anglo-saxon race is
magnanimous, but with it they are
proud and brave.
Let the negro remain in his place and
we guarantee he will live, aud live as
well as anybody, but let him get to
thinking that he is as good as a white
man and he will get into trouble.
IS IT RETRIBUTIVE JUSTICE?
General Nelson A. Miles, though the
ranking officer and eommauder of the
L otted Status army, se.ms to be no more
than a buu p on a log in the military op
erations of the country. He draws his
THE BRUNSWICK TIMFS-CALL, AUGUST 19, 1900.
pay, but the administration at Washing
ton finds nothing for him to do. When
the war with Spain broke out he was
snubbed, and instead of being petmitted
to direct the invasion ot Cuba, pleg
matic old Shafter was put forward. For
eighteen months or more we have had
war going on in the Philippines, but
Gen. Miles has been given no part in it.
And now an American army has been
sent to China. The other countries who
are sending armies there are sending
their b'ggest generals, but our only
lieutenant general is kept at home in
practical retirement. lie is said to he
yearning for glory iu the Celest'al king
dom, but he is ignored, snubbed Really,
it would seem that Gen. Miles iB being
badly treated. But who cares? We
don’t. Indeed, we are beginning to
look upon his prolonged humiliation as
retributive justice long delayed. The
Boldier who had the iron manacles
placed upon Jefferson Davis while the
latter, an emaciated old man, was being
held as a prisoner of war at Fortre s
Monroe, doesn’t deserve anything de
cent. That’s not why Miles is being so
persistently ignored and snubbed by the
present bead of the war department at
Washington, but it’s why we don't care
how despitefully he may be used, The
manacling of Jefferson Davis at Fortress
Monroe is the one of yankee hatred and
vindictivcnoss which we can never for
get nor forgive, and General Miles is
the man whom the truth of history has
made responsible for it. —Albany Her-
ald.
The capture of Pekin is liable to
throw Commander Walyerse out of a
job.
SUNDAY THOUGHTS.
( Henry Drummond.)
Any man wbo watches his life from
day to day, and especially if he is trying
to steer it towards a cur ain moral mark
which he has made in his mind, has
abundant and humiliating evidence that
the power of sin is busily working in
his life. He finds that this power is
workiog against him in his life, defeat
ing him at every turn, and persistently
trying to oppose all the good he tries to
do. He finds that his natural bias is to
break away from God and good. Then
he is clearly conscious that there is an
acting ingredient tn his foul which not
only neutralizes tho inclination to fol
low the path which he knows to be
straightest and best, but works continu
ally and consistently against his better
self, and urges bis life onward towards
a broader path which loads to destruct
ion. Now it was this road that the
Psalmist David had In his mind when he
thanked God that his lile had been re-
deemed er kept back from destruction.
It was a beaten traek, we maybe sure,
in those days, as it is today, and David
knew perfectly well when he penned
those words that God's hand had inevi
tably saved him from ending his life
along that road. God has done more
for him than to simply forgive him—He
has redeemed his life from destruction;
He has sav.d him from the omnipotent
power of sm. What that power was,
what it might have become, how it
would have broken and wrecked him a
thousand times over, let those remem
ber who have read his life. David s
salvation was a much more wonderful
thing than sav, the dyi g thief's salva
tion,
David cast grace for more than the
dying thief; the latter only needed dy
ing grace, David needed living grace.
The thief only needed forgiving grace;
David needed forgiving grace, and re
straining grace. He needed grace to
keep it from running away into sin, but
the thief heeded no restraining grace,
the time for that was past. His life
had run away. His wild oats were
sown, and the harvest was bitter and
heavy. Destruction had come to him
In a hundred forms. He had had no
BSfp R.iß ERCE 1 slip
OAVO H E IT
1 | FOUNTAIN 1
antidote to the power of sin, which
runs so fiercly in human veins, and had
destroyed himself. His character was
ruined, his soul honsy-combed thr ugh
and through with Bin. He could not
have joined In David’s psalm that his
life was saved from destruction. His
death was, and the wreck of his soul
was, but Ids life was lost to God, to the
world, and to himself. II s life had
neter been redeemed as David was; so
David was the greater debtor to God s
grace, and few men have had g-eater
reas n than he to praise God In old age
for redeeming their life from des’ruc
lion,
Deafness G&nnot Be Cured
by local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of‘he e.r
There is only ore way to cure deafness,
and that is by constituticcal remedies.
Deafness is caused by aD inflamed con
dition of the mucous lining t i 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 he result, and
unless the inflammation can be taken out
and this tube restored to its noimal con
dition, hearing wi’i be destroyed foreytr.
Nine cases out of ten are caused by ca.
tarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed
condition of the .uucous surfaces.
AVe will give One Hundred Do Jars for
any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh)
that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. CHENEY & Cos , Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pitts are the best.
A dry goods clerk dt files a o unter
lrritmt as a woman who insists upon
examining tfce entire (took, and does
not buy auything,
A Minister’s Good Work.
“I ba t a severe attack of bilious colic, got a
bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhccs Remedy, took two doses and was en
tirely cured,” says Rov. A. A. Power, of Empo
ria, Kan. "My neighbor across the st eet was
sick for ever a week, bad twoor three bottles o
medicine from the doctor. He used them for
three or four days without relief, then call and in
another do tor who tr, ated 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 tn a terrible flx, that they
had been running off so long that it was almost
bloody flux. I asked him If he had tried Cham
berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,
and he said. ‘No.’ I went home and brought
him my bottle and gave him one dose; told him
to take another dose in fifteen or twenty min
utes if he did not find relief, hut he took no
more, and was entirely enred. I think it the
best medicine I have ever tried.” For sale by
Dr. Bishop's drug store.
It’s a doctor’s busioess 'to study
bealtb. 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 Chain less Bicycle.
$25.50
Will buy a Ladies Cushion Frame Bicycle- This is
something nice- Try one—buy one!
sls 00 to $20.00
ill buy a good Ladies’ or Gents’ Bicycle, at the
downing co.
W. H. BOWEN. J, N. 13RADT,
BOWEN & BFLADT,
CONTRACTORS
I'sJ L3 E3 LJ i L-. CD —I F=? S
Of Stone. Brick and Frame Buildings
Manufacturers of Cement. Tile and;Artificial Stone.
tortßlfokr fit Summer
Sgjh Bargains in
re,
A clearance saV to make room for new goods.
I Parlor Suit, 5 pie.-es, worth S4O, now $29.
1 Oak R-frigt-raror, worth s:’o now sls. r -
1 Osk B-d Room Suttp, 3 piece", worth $25, now $lB
tied Lounges, worth sl6, now sl2.
Centre Tables 5 ) cents ro SO.
ice Cream Freezers wor.ti $2.50 at $| 98 1
A large assortment of Sideboards, Cupboards BP jlf
and Chairs. JjjK . I j
Prices Below the Market, fiiaer
c, imisvey. p£.
CHINESE RESTAURANT,
ESTBLISHED 1889.
CHUE HALL, Proprietor
You can get the best the market affords by eating here
215 GRANT ST.
s j br _fP l J DR. MOFFETT'S £ Allays Irritation, Aids Digestion,
P’ • “■ fIITI"TII 111 /! Regulates the Bowels,
111! HIN/| asa;as
\£y‘-'Y BAFf'ic _JL_ (Teething Powders) .i_JL TEETHINA Relieves the Bow*
Costs only 25cents at Druggists,
ormail 2o cents to C.J. MOFFETT, M.D.. ST. LOUlS.fr'
EVERY BARRKL SELECTED has s’ood our quality test. Failure to come
op to the required standard means failure to form part of our stock of Wines and
Liquors. Only that which is good value for money is off red.
FR. V. DOU3L.AS,
206 Bav Street,
iiiifflidf
Macor. ana Baltimore Woman’s College. Primary, Academic, Music, Art,
Elocution and Business courses. Small classes, individual work. New
building. Home life. Pupils enter Vassar, Wellesley and Randolpb-Macon
„n certificates. Next; session begins September 6th. For illustrated catalogu
ddreas Mrs.TV. I. Chandler, Principal,Llewllyn D.Scott, Aesooiate Prinoip