The Brunswick times-call. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1900-1902, August 28, 1900, Page 4, Image 4

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4 Tlte llrunswirk Times. Established 1889. The Brunswick Call. Established 1892. The Brunswick Times-Cal! CONSOLIDATED 1800. Published E /KEY MORN (Mi EXCEPT MONDAY ART HUH H. LEAVY Editor ROLAND A. MULLINS, Business Manager tiwuuu t inOgletUoipeßlook,2llFStreet urriv-B. f ikLKFHONK NO 81 TO SUBSCRIBERS: Subscribers are requested to notify the office when they fall to get any Issue of the Times- Call. Attention to this matter will be appre ciated by the ptibliaheis. The Times-Cull will bo Delivered by carrier or mail, per year. *5.00; per week 16 cents Correspondence on live snbjects solicued. Beal name of writer should ac company same Subscriptions payable in advance. Failure to receive paper should be reported to the business office. Address all communications to THE TIME.S-CALBBfc. Ilrunawlck, Ga. Labor Day promise ito be a big event 4i Brunswick. A New England editor wants to send •'Teddy to China to talk the boxers to death." The New To-k Journal culls Senator H >ar “Ike ancient fungwliang of Massa chusetts ” '‘Distance lends eucharrimint.” This iine.slates clearly the love the northern re: has for the negro. The shirt waist man and the net waist girl are attracting the attention of the public right about now. Atlanta’s mayor lias been "full” again. Georgia's big oity is having a great deal Of trouble with the chief executive. The Tampa police authorities have passed an order allowing the officers to J.O on duty coat less. This is quite a sen sible move. Mr. Hanna says that McKintey will win, yet ho begs Kir money and activity. His action and his argument need a iittle drawing togeth- r. The Sultap of Turkey spends five thousand dollais a day for living ex pends He might cut that a little and pay up some of Ids hack debts. Three race riots in one week north of Mason and Dixon’s line is not calcula ted to impress tlie negro that the north is such a fro u 1 to their race a'ter all. •'Hure isn’t,” says the Memphis Bclmita , “political sentiment enough in Tennessee this year to -start a drop of perspiration on tne warmest blood and partisan.” Secretary of State Cook says that he has received a number of letters from South Georgia during the past week, from the farmers of that section, and a number of them reported negro labor very scarce. Cottou is opening rapidly, and few negroes can ho found who will pick it. COULD NOT Bt SO. The tetHirt gain and (pound some days ago t'at Mr, Ai.drtw Carnegie would Bluntly c.oss the pond for the purpose of stumping tue iouhtful state.- in tin interest of Bi i.. ,t ut thus -v,! o stopped and tu-iug.il u m to cairn to the con elusion that the rumor was untrue, and now we Mr. farm. ie denier i!. Why should t 1 i goverenun: blood suck er antagonize t i Vclv nU-y a '.minis’ra lion when it suits os nionopt y so well;• A government wldi-h will pay Mr. Cur ing c's pi ice is just what he wants and ust what t e puts up enormous amounts for tha Uaaaa coriupt fund for. UNTRUE AND UNJUST. In view of a recent publication emi* nating from a sheet issued under a Brunswick date line and for the infor mation of that large body qf public citi zens who are subscribers To the Times- Calm, the editor of this paper desires to stato that he alone Is responsible for tin editorial utterances that appear in these columns and for the general policy of this paper. As the publication re erred to has taken the liberty of referring to Col. John E, dußignou and alluded to that gentleman in terms that perhaps might he construed as seeking to convey tne impression that be not only controls the policy of the Times-Cali., hut is also inclined to straddle questions of a local political nature, the editor desires to state that the imputation sought to be conveyed is as false in one way as it is far fetched in the other. Col, dußignon has lived in Brunswick too long for any one to attempt to impute his motives in anyway. Politically, he is uncompro misingly a democrat, and in local poll tics he has always stood for the interests of the taxpayers and citizens generally, lie has unswervingly lent his aid at all times to the.cause that he thought was right, and it ill behooves anyone at this day to challenge in the slightest Jdegree either his democracy or his allegiance to any cau c that tends to benefit the citi zens of Glynn county or of the munici pi ity of Bruns." iek. While in times past it has been the fortune of the edl or to entertain politi- cal views, on local matters, that were in opposition to those hold by Col. du Big non, there has never been any question of the fact that he believed he w as right and now that he is so unjustly referred to, and an eflort is being made to bring his name into matters of which he has no concern, we unhesitatingly denounce the attempt as malicious, based upon unworthy motives and actuated by a de sire to ease the turnings of a diseased mind that has reached a stago which prevents a proper conception of the du tics of an editor, in so far as that duty el ales to telling the truth. The Times-Cali, stands on its own bottom, responsible for the articles contained in its columns, and there art no words fit to express the contempt felt for the pjblica'iou refer red to and tire one who penned it. AN ENGLISH FORECAST. The London Morning Chronicle of July 30 has a long communication from its Washington coirespondent in which he calm'y discusses the present political situation iu this country and the proba ble outcome in the coming election. From his connection with one of the leading English dailies It may reasons bly be supposed that he is in close touch with the leaders of the republican part , and therefore his conclusions are. oi more than ordinary interest The polio ieal mathematician, he says, sets down -4 states as certain for Bryan, with a to tal electoral veto of 194, ami IT states a certain for McKinley, with a total vote of 181. Among tluse IT he includes California, Illinois, Kansas, Ohio anil \Y isconsin, all of which dunccrats Iv in ye hey enu cany. Kansas went for Bryan four years ago. - The fol owing states the correspond* cut sets down ns doubtful: Colored , India a ~Vlc!i . ui, N \v Yortr, with an elector.,| vote of 09. In commenting on i. 1 t i :. " i.t. -; "if SfcKin e; i to win he must carry all of the sinks which 1 give him as certain, plus Now Yor* and a' lost cm; other state, while Bryan, if my cdcttla ions urc correct, hi.: unarm onry New Y ik to mar.-U w tir unnhsuucted path to th > While house. He men ions many thiugs in favor of 31cKini. v, including unlimited tr. r.sy and the yast army of federal employes, but adds: "And yet, after giving all the e things their proper vatu* 1 . tb*e THE BRUNSWICK TIMES-CALL, AUGUST 28, 1900. still remains the unknown and deter mining factor—the republican vote of fotfr years ago, which this year will vote for Bryan and rebuke imperialism ” THE NEGRO IN THE NORTH. X The following is from the Macon Tel egraph ; “Oacs&r Fambro, a negro lineman in the employ of the Western Union Tele graph Company, has received a letter from his nephew, Henry Barnett, who is now in New York in a hospital be cause of an attack made on him while going to his work at one of the theatres in New Yoik. Barnett formerly lived in Macon, and his letter stated that he wished he was hack home; that the negroes were meet ing with small consideration in New York, as they were associated with the laboring class*s who hated them worse than any other race. Barnett is employed at one of the the atres, and was pulled from a car while on hie way down town the second night of the riot and badly beaten. He was carried to the police station in an ambu lance and afterwards transferred to the hospital,” The above only goes to show that the time is coming when it will be almost impossible for a negro to reside north of the Mason and Dixon line. The sooner the black man realizes that the southern white man is bis friend the better off he will be. CONVICT LABOR. Convict labor seems to be a problem difficult of solution. Louisiina has passed an act abolishing the leasing of herjconvicts to contractors. This prac tice has been in vogue since 1868. The Creole State now proposes to em ploy one-third of her convicts on public works, particularly roads and levees, and the remaining two thirds on cotton snd sugar plantations, to be owned and operated by the state. This is exporimentrl, and it is doubt ful whether it will prove satisfactory. Three proposit'ons seem to be gener ally agreed upon regarding convict la bor: Convicts should not be kept in idle ness. Convict iabor should not come in com petition whh free labor. Leasing convict labor to contractors is wrong and should be abolished. If Louisiana shou and employ all her convicts instead of only one-third, on her roads and levees, H would probably solve this vexatious problem once and for all. IT 13 ADVERTISING TIME. A prominent merchant of a New York town, who made a big success of hit bus iness, says lie would just as soou dis charge half of his cleiks as discontinue his advertising during any season. When it is dull always increase my advertising space, said the merchant. 7 his is just what we are trying to get at. 7 hose who have studied advertising say that spasmodic advertisers do not reap as much ben il, iu proportion to the money spent us those who remain 'continually in the home paper. If a Brunswick business mau failv il Is no body's fault but his own. ’ihe Times 'Cali, has more tenders than any utvv pwu. iv. r ; ub lehr cl in this city and the advertising rates ate very low PARTED APTER THIRTY YEARS. _ 11 i or YYiii c, vho lias been conduct* in ; ; a r \ MonL a. Ala., pa.ls ctv,; i. VVtjceitir aflur a it .i t’r vtj-llv*:- years. T? c **Wo rt;> t 0;..: k Genera! Joe j Wheeler has detv. led from the fai.h of :. :! pr t cij let of hi- party, in wanting to convert this crest eonntrv into a military oamp We nave follow ad him for thlrtyyflvc years, cut here we no •*V'>***•'•*•'•* f T ~ a Who! IS if? A man who has been running a race with steam and electricity for years, finds himself suddenly stopped". It seems as if a cold hand clutched his heart. His brain whirls; he can hardly see. What is it ?” he asks himself as the attack passes. _ If his question meets a right an swer, he'll be told l that his seizure is Ajrk a warning to pay more attention to his stomach, which is already deranged /Uwaflx by irregular meals ; and rich foods. SSjiajifi&MMM Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Ifrffijjrtjfflßl Discovery cures I diseases of the stomach and or gans of digestion and nutrition. It eliminates from the £®/W.- SSvSaBI blood disease breeding poisons. fiiM* ? It makes the blood ffTij 16/ rich and pure, and SgSgSßr furnishes a found- Vil.'iil ation for sound, Hi ml physical health. RV'jll “About ten years RWUjf ajgo I began to have Ml?.? S Uuvll trouble with my |U>! stomach.” writes Mr. [[Jin Wm. Connolly, of 535 LiMli Walnut Street, Lorain, Ohio, “It got so bad that I had to lay oft quite often—two r.r.d tnree days in a wed:. I have been treated by the best doctors in this city, but got no help. Some said I had cancer of tlie stomach, others catarrh, others dyspepsia. Then I wrote to you for advice. You advised the use of your 1 Golden Medical Discovery ’ and * Pleasant Pel lets.’ These medicines I have taken as directed. I commenced to get better from the start, and have not lost a day this summer on account of my stomadh. I feel tip-top, and better than 1 have for ten years.” Keep the bowels healthy by using Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. They don’t gripe. China and die on that battlefield for McKinley we shall ende ivo: to retrain our tears.” WILL BENEFIT BRUNSWICK. The Brunswick Timei and Brnnsv :ck Call, an evening and morning pa er, have consolidated, and now appear in eight-page form as the Brunswick Times Cam,. The improvement thus formed will benefit the City by the Sea. —Doug'ass Breeze. Tne “AieeUle*. Eye.’' A lady writes to me and asks what is really meant by the "needle's eye” in the parable of the rich man. I re member reading somewhere that it was the smallest gate that gave entrance to the walled city of Jerusalem and that a loaded camel had to be stripped of its burden and bend its knees to squeeze through. And so a rich man had to give up his riches and come to his knees before lie could enter heaven, it was just one of the thou sand proverbs that adorned the moral teachings of the Jews and the eastern nations. The writings of Job and Solo mon and Confucius and Mohammed abound in them. In the Koran is found this proverb, "The impious man will find the gates of heaven shut, and he can no more en ter than a camel cau pass through a needle's eye.” There is another in tlie Koran which says, "You wilt never see a palm tree of gold nor an elephant pass through a needle's eye.” Thtse proverbs simply meant that it was im possible. Strange to say, the world has long since quit making proverbs. Ail proverbs have come down to 11s. even such as “A rolling stone gathers uo moss.” “Poor Richard” left us a few, such as “A penny saved is two pence gained.”—Bill Arp iu Atlanta Constitution. Does the man who worries about himself ever think that he is worrying about a 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 their noses.— Atchison Globe. There is something wrong with the appetite of a small boy who can wait patiently for his dinner.—Chicago News. Dasftrsss Oannct Bs Cured by local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the e r There is only one way to cure deafne-s, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caus and by an in darned enrt diliotr of the mucous lining oi the Eus tachian Tube. When this tube gets in thunea, you have a rumbling r.o nil or imperfect herein.; and nil u it is cn tirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation eau be taken ou : and this tube restored to is uonoal <■ -n --dl'lon, hearing will be destroyed forev. r. Nine cases out of ten .arc caused by ca tarrh, which is nothing but an inf! m 1 condition of tic aruc .us -urfav s. We will give Out Hundred iM.larsfoi any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) Tt--' camar he rn-n! be , nr.-'; vouce. brciiCl .or ci,ea.a.s, i, F. J. CB EN E Y & Cos , Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, TCc. TT.-.H’a $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- Th'sis something nice. Try one—buy one! sls OO to $20.00 Will buy a good Ladies’ or Gents’ Bicycle, at the DOWNING CO. W. H. BOWEN. ' y J. N. BRADT, BOWEN & BRADT, £3 t_J ! L__ CD £~;I 23 Of Stone. Brick and Frame Buildings Manufacturers of Cement, Tile and Artificial Stone. Summer A>£l Bargains ™ Furniture, A clearance sa : e to make room for new goods. 1 Parlor mi', 5 piece., worth S4O, now $29. 1 Oak Krfrig-iaii,r, wiulhs2o t-uw sls. 1 Ouk B;d Rflfrn Suit*-, 3 piece., wurili $25, cow $lB Bed Lourg , nr'h $lO, "o sl2. OeDtre Tal e• 5 i>. $6. t loe Cream Fom rs worn s2.soat $] 9S ' A largo assortment, of Sideboard.-, Cupboards Ip Prices B@l(iwiiliß Msikst. CHINESE RESTAURANT, ESTBLISHEI) 1889. CHUE HAL!., Proprietor You can get the best the market affords bj eating here i 3 C 4" 'l' jf-s T. jiFVjh - r P nn Dll MOFFETT'S § Allays irritation, Aids Digestion, m U 'FTTSSIBS m a, ® Qj r Irl I l$P #'K Sm ugihcns -he Child, ... | jy Butin n Eisiti t-jS Makes 1 eetiiiog Easy. Vs#' BAB aFiC‘i -JL (Teething Powders) TEETHINA Relieves the Bow* -A-t Costs only 25 cents at Druggists, *"*SBS?B£-' • or " iail2semtiito C. 4. MOFFETT, RR.D..ST. LDUlg,?' 11 I p” "■ a KMp fSZ^s) [/////fhiv;- y iM Lt EHY AivFi CL bi.! ECTED ha- s cod c.'. u" . v u-t. J-'uiiure to come "P '> he required tau-. ant u eu'.s failure lo form pat ot our st ck of V.iEes and Liquor: O,y ibat which it g< od value for money is offered. F? - N/ - CD l_! CB L-, XX , 200 Bav Street 11/fiojiU’/IT M tirUßifinV ; ,INOU iiAVI -l-k, ATi.iHTA, ga. hs-tjrii " \j'|*]fcHK{ ■" ' ”-•' • I '• - iUm-uii fci.u Jininmor- uU'tU i liuitu), dOKui'Uiiu, iUuo.u, Elocurioi) f. ;i(i Busjlpm: ''insl; .• ruli vidual v- < rk. New building, Ilomr itV. Pupi.'e poipt Yh.s i r, WcClnsiev ?.:*(! K n<3; Iph-Mnoon cu eertitlraf-Next res-:on bekitis SepUmr-rr Oh. For i.i’usiraled catalogue