The Brunswick times-call. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1900-1902, September 06, 1900, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

Site: 1 iCh wmm i m ' Vi/ i *TF> K-vnJ'.^, V 4 ** ’ PPiilf /I, ! \ r%ii '; - -J||| .I.—• - SYRUPoFiGS Actrf/easM//y andfivmpt/y. Cleanses the System Gently and Effectually when bilious or costive. /resents in the most acceptable form the lajrative principles of plants Jtnown to act most beneficially. TO GET ITS BUY THE GENUINE MANFD. BY CALIFORNIA FIG STRUPCO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. LOUISVILLE , KY, NEW YORK. N.Y. _ For safe by - price SO/ prr bonte, You don’t need the doctor for every little (rouble, but you do need in the house e trusty remedy for times of danger. Thousands are saved by having at hand & DR. J. H. MCLEAN’S LIVER and KIDNEY BALM a certain cure for disorders of the Liver, Kidneys and Blad der. Use It at once for lame furred tongue, lost ap petite and changes In urine or bowels. $1 • bottle, at druopUU. IMS OH. 4. H. MCLEAN MEDICINE CO.. (T. UMM. MO. VWSA<V> FOR BALE BY AMWW BUTTS, The Druggist.' Wall Paper —at the— PAINT STORE, 502 Honk St. W.H. LYTLE PROPRIETOR. ffflAT IS BECOMING Can be found in cur display Trimmed hats, or quickly developed in our work rooms from the large and beautiful assortment of M llinery (jpiods in our atnok. Milliners of artistic tastes and deft Angers produce hats which equal in style and attractiveness many of the high priced imported models. Our prices are not the least pleasing part of our offerings. MISS KATE SLATER. .'O4 GIfctJCESTKB ST„ a KOYAL ROMANCE. °~ -—o Almost like How Servia’, Kin* the heroine in . , the old fash- Married a Poor but ioned novel j, Ueauttfui widow. the new queen 0 of Servia, 0 From a poor out beautiful court attendant she has become mistress of a kingdom. But they do queer things in the Balkans, uud tlie exploit of young King Alex ander of ben ia in defying all royal conventions, flouting an irate father and an incensed nobility by marrying a widow of humble birth is only what might have been expected. All this happens on top of a brief career, that has been the most exciting and turbulent in Europe. When ho was a baby, Alexander was alternately kidnaped by his wicked father and his beautiful mother. At 14 lie was ac customed to throw grown men out of the window. At 17 he personally kicked his regents out of the palace and took the government into ills owu hands. At 19 he was wrecking horne.s. At 21 he was drinking himself. t death. At 24 lie had forsaken alcohol and devoted himself to romance. “ I The cause of this romance is Queen Drags, formerly known as Mine. Mas chin. She is very beautiful. Her fea tures have a purity of outline that is classically Greek. Her hair is black qtIKKN DKAUA OF SFIiVIA. and her skin Is as white ns alabaster. Her eyes are a deep, dark violet. Her figure Is superb. Mine. Maschtn was the (laughter of a minor official and was married early in life to nu engineers- who has since died. Her life has been unhappy, fteautlful women are always unhappy. The young king, after his return from his fruitless quest of a royal wife, was riding sadly along a country road near the royal castle when be caught sight of the beautiful Muie. Muschln. She electrified him. 11c hod known her before, when bis mother lived at the court, but lie had never realized how beautiful she was. When he did, lie promptly Felt in love with her. Now they 1 are married and all Europe it waiting to see what will happen. SlakliiK Barrels. “Cooperage is oue of the trades that ffi one thought of Improving until with in recent years,” said a manufacturer, “but then the Inventors and expert ma chinists started in with sueli a rush that it takes a good deal of our time keeping abreast of the improvements that are coming into the market every day. “The work used to be done entirely by hand, and the coopers often had to buy their hoops from a lirm that made nothing else. The coopers were not well enough equipped to make all the different parts of a barrel themselves, and often they bought everything out; side and nu- ely put the burn.-!* n,c-tip cr. It usoif.to take five or six men 10 do the work properly, and an hour’s time would perhaps turn out ten bar rels. “As tli<? system Is now, all the dlifer ent parts are tnuile by one machine, and only one man is needed to attend It. After the wood is Cushioned into staves and hoops and braces by It the pieces are run through another section of It and come out aituost immediately a finished barrel, ready lo be loaded and shipped to our customers. “On u regular average about 30 bar rels can be turned out in uu hour. You can see what the saving is over the old way. Employing six men for one hour, is they used to do, we can get 100 bar rels, where by the old system they were only able to get ten.”—Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. Oae or the Ollier. "Doctor, what ails my daughter?” "Before 1 answer that question let me ask if you have reason to think she has had a love disappointment of any kind?" “1 know she lias not." “Then, madam, your daughter has the grip.”—Chicago Tribune. t * Moncof. “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 dlanapolls Journal. THE BRUNSWICK TIMES-UALL, SEPTEMBER 6. 1%0, CASK IS NEVER EMPTY. For Tear. Wine la Drawn From It to Celebrate Great Event.. 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 deSlers, who make one district supply what another lacks. But there are still a fpw provincial establishments that cling to the old wars crowning with a wreath of flow ers the first tubful of ripe grapes and keeping ‘‘the bride of the cellar” full front year to year. The bride, be It understood, is a spe cial wine cask filled with the first run ning of the press. More accurately it holds the juice which drips away be fore any pressure Is applied. Wine from It is never sold, but used uppn high days and holidays, parsed ahout 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 lias a wine cellar, and In each cellar there Is a cask Vlwilys,yielding wine, hut never empty. Any burgher Is entitled to demand a bottle of Its contents when lie marries, when his first son Is christened and also when tbe son Is 21. If, the son is adventurqus or the burgher himself, for that matter, he gets another bottle from the cask when he comes home from far c6uutrles. But there Is an official specially' charged to sec that whenever a bottle* 1 fttl Is, drawft 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 the Lord. The most remarkable deed ever drawn imtj 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 Battlesnake hill, situated near the bomulary line be tween Worcester and Leicester. Old Solomon Parsons, who waß wide, i ly known In Worcester county as oB eccentric character, and particularly as a crank on the subject of religion, paid William C. Hall $125 for a parcel of kind, 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 Pursous 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 wus 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 ou Rattlesnake hill In the inventory of the old gentleman’s estate which he filed in the probate court. A wag of a law ter raised the question of title, but the judge decided In the favor of the administrator.— New York Journal.. Anycilotos f I 1 Jonel Kit*. Colonel Ege was a famous character in tlie early days. Although living In Doniphau county, lie was often in Atcli- Isou, followed by a pack of hounds, lie was a high toned southern gentle man, with a kind heart. One day while returning home from this city lie enme across a man whose wagon was stuck in, the mud In Inde pendence creek lidtom. Colonel Ege at once started In to help the man pry out his wagon with a fence rail. While both were working away Ege liecame 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 spilt It over Ege’s head, laying him up for three weeks. Ege had his hat off when lie vas struck and was so bald before coining to Kansas that lie was known as the Bald Eagle of Maryland. Ege always carried a pistol and was always trying to shoot through some body's bat without hitting Idm. One day. at the Independence creek ferry, be shot at a man, hut aimed a little low and creased him. But Ego was always a gentleman; he took the man Into his home and tenderly cared for him until lie recovered.—Atchison Globe. Tlmti liniiic I mi f lon. A commercial traveler, whose wife Is one of those women who borrow trou ble indiscriminately, had occasion lo make a trip east. Ills wife was very anxious about him and felt certain that he would fail a victim to smallpox, which was reported to be prevalent In the city to which he was going. She begged him to carry a little lump of asofetida !r Ids pocket to ward uIT contagion. Naturally he objected and positively refused to be made the permanent abode of such a persistent odor. When he came home from his trip, [ he said to his wife: i “ii is wonderful, the power of the - imagination. Why. don’t you know, 1 Imagined that I smelled usafetlda the whole time 1 was gone.” • Ji wasn't Imagination at all,” quiet ly replied the wily little woman. "I sewed a bit of asafetidn In the cor ner of vour coat before you went away!”—Memphis Scimitar. || 1;.,’ j 1 a fine effervescence and rich ( cr^ a V 1 Y Leant; combining perfect I Vil;.; brilliancy with rare keeping quale ■ IjP a most excellent hop I ■ Kgplf^■P i *7smd aroma— 1 aPili i ft ||l (ffOHBMIAN Nik mm K "King of at! Bottled Beers'* i — l has proven a benediction alike to I buddin S y° u< h and declining age, 1 and a rcvelation to every critical a taste. To hundreds of thousands of j H families it has become a household I I necessity. o,<wr„ m HjpgflH V Brunswick Wholesale Wine & Liquor Cos. Linlon'l llubber' Bathtub. General Lawton made It a habit of his life to take a cold water bath ev ery. morning before breakfast', ami while campaigning h*carried with him a rubber tub. it made no difference where he was, lm always ordered tlie tubful of cold Water to ills ip-arters every morning, a—* Id following the Apaches lie reached a mountain, lie knew that the In Jlnns had fled there, and before pursu lug them farther lie left his rubber -tuW and other tent equipments ut the base of the mountains in charge of an old and faithful sergeant to guard carefully until he Returned, it was an old trick with that tribe of Indians when being pursued to circle around and return to the exact point wheuce they started. The general left the tub and started outsaftcr the India 11s.^ *They circled around, covering a wide territory, and beat General Lawton back to the base of (he mountain. When he got there, he found that the old sergeant and his six men had "been killed and that his tub had been carried off by the In tllans. The Apaches evidently learned how highly the general prized the rub ber tub, for they placed great store by it after they had captured it and guard ed It as closely as they did their own lives.—Louisville Courier-Journal. Memories of m Walts. p “Did you ever' try to dunce with a foreigner'/” asked a Louisville gentle man who had been traveling abroad. “I did once," he continued, “and that Fxperienre wns more than enough for me. It happened at a hall at Musta phia, at the Hotel St. Georges. I asked an Austrian waltz, and wli’on we started I supposed we would dance In the leisurely American fash ion. The countess hud a different idea In lier head. She preferred to whirl madly like a dervish on a space that could lie covered with a parasol, and on account of her superior strength I clung to her, and we began to spin. “Finally, when It seemed to me that we were performing our antics on the cellnig with our heads hanging down, I could stand It no longer and, gasp ing for breath, suggested that we sit down. I saw two chairs galloping around tlie room and prepared to catch them on the next lap. We steered for them. I clinging helplessly to the ath letic lady, arid then we sank down. I sat dazed and almost insensible until I was aroused by the countess saying: “‘Excuse me, but we are sitting on the same chair.’’’—Detroit Free Press Wlml Tie Won 1,1 Have Sulit. In a complicated criminal case an old land surveyor was Snlm<enned to give his professional opiniontn the matter. As the proceedings Wore about to be gin be asked permission to say a few words, but was called to order sternly by the judge, who told him lo wait till ho was questioned. The case then pro ceeded. A host of witnesses were ex amined. an.l even the prisoner fre quently was called upon to crake a statement. After a couple of hours the judge said to the old surveyor, “Now, sir, we shall be glad to hear what you have to say ou the whole case.” Tlio witness stood tip and replied: “I only Wished to remark awhile ago that 1 am quit© deaf In my left ear and rather hard of hearing in the right. I was merely going to ask ff I might be allowed to sit Immediately In front of the witnesses and the prisoner. Up to now l have not heard a single word of the proceedings.”—London Telegraph. Foote Coaid Be Caustic. One of the best repartees on record Is that of Foote, the actor. Dining with some friends, a heated dispute arose between blmself and a young nobleman. The latter sotiglit to dis parage Foote by asking litm what his fntlier was, “A tradesman,” said Foote. “Then, sjr, It Is a pity he did not make you one.” “And pray, let me ask, what wra your father, my lord?” “My father. Sir. Fd<*t?>, was a gentle “Then, tny lord, It’s a pity be 410 not make yo* one." —Collier's Weekly. ~Ttie “Needle's Eye.” A lady writes to me and asks what Is really meant by the “needle’s eye” lu the parable of tlie rich man. I re member reading somewhere that it was the smallest gate that gave entrance to tlie Availed 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 he could enter heaven. It was Just one of tlie thou sand proverbs that adorned tin 1 moral teachings of the Jews and the eastern nations. The writings of Job and Solo mon and Confucius and Molmmmed abound in them. . , In tlio Koran is found tills prove, u, “The impious man will find the gate* of heaven shut, and lie can 110 more en ter than a camel can pass through a needle's eye.” There Is another in the-Koran which says, “You will never see a palm tree of gold nor an elephant pass through a needle’s eye.” These proverbs simply that it was im possible. say, the world has long since quit making proverbs. All proverbs have come down to 11a, even such as “A rolling stone gathers no moss.” “Toor Richard” left us a few, sueli ns “A penny saved is two pence gained.”—Bill Arp in Atlanta Constitution. QUESTIONS ANWERED. Yes, August Flower still has the largest sale of any medicine In the civ ilized world. Your mothers and grand mothers uever thought of using any thing else for Indigestion or bilious ness. Doctors were scarce and they seldom heard of apendlcitU, nervous prostration, heart failure, etc. They used August Flower to clean, out the system and stop fermentation of ondl> Rested food, regulate the action of the liver, stimulate the action of the per vous and organic system, and that it all they took when feeling dull and bad with hi adache and other aches. You only need a few doses of Green's Au gust Flower, In liquid form, to make you satisfied there is. nothing serlour the matter with you Sample bottles at Baits drugstore or Brown Drug C Should he In every household mede ftiae obesfc. It affords certain relief Russell’s Chill and Fever Tonic is acknowledged to be the Rest on the market, every cottle guaranteed. For sale by all druggists. DOES IT FAY TO BUY CHAMP A cheap remedy for coughs and colds is all tight, tut you wur.l some thing that wij believe and cure the n ast severe and dangerous results n lbroat and lucg trouble, What tbs do? ,Go to a waimer snd more regula climate? Yee, If possible ; if ret jo Bible for you; tbtn in either rate tak the only remedy that bas been intn luced In all clvilived countries with success In sore throat and lungtroub’of Boschee’s German Syrup. It not onlj stimulates the tissues to destroy the, germ disease, but allays lnflamatioi and causes expectoration, gives a good night’s rest and cures the patient Try one qottle Recommended man> years by all druggists fn the work Sample bottles at W. J. Butts ard Brown Drunt <V> SHAKE INTO YOOR SHOES. Allen’s Foot-Kime, s powger. It cures painful, smarting, nervous feet aSCI Ingrowing nails...iel nutuntly tsKes the etingmtt rft cons and I tin lon*, it’s toe greatest eomfyrt discovery el the uxe. Allen's Foot - Ease makes tlgpt' dr new shops feel i nap. ‘ft faa eeriuin sort: for direst ing. callout, and It tetlrei!, aching ieel, ./Try it today. Si.Pi by. ail druggisi- n,i 4v. o 'stores ■By mail tor site in stumps. Trial package Krdc. .Aflrese Alfa s.Oliwicad.ke Key, !fcJY. , | STORES REPAIRED. i tUce, Uu4 atb.ve doctor... repairs ai kinds or cook stoves and ranges, bnj and sells second hand stores, 414 Ba treat. MEXICAN MIXTURE Pop Men. For Nervousness, TJaek-Ache, Despondency lneomania, Sexual Impotency, and all diseases resulting from Early Errors and Later Excesses Over-Work and Worry, which if neglected, com pletely undermine the system, often resulting in INSANITY and DEATH. If you have any of the Above symptoms MEXICAN MIXTURE WILL CURE YOU IT.HAS NO EQUAL. Develops Youthful Strength and Vigor to over* part of the body. Avoid quack doctors. Refuse substitutes. Get MEXICAN MIXTURE. Im mediate effects. -Permanent results. Recent discovery. Phenomenal euceesS. Hundreds testimonials. SI.OO per box. (1 for $5.00. Posi tive guarantee with every $5,00 order to refund' the money if euro is not effected. It is not a stimulant, but a rebuilder. Tvyitand be con vinced, Send stamp tor pamphlt.dA ederss Brown Drug Cos., Sole Agts Brunswick, Georgia. at JJESSLER’S Wr. Monk and Grant Sts OEVARIS & LEVADAS, Gocerics, Country Produce <-4?—Vegetables etc. Also Confectionery. MONK BTREET. BRUNSWICK, GA $ V; Real Estate for Sale. We have lot number 176 on A street nine lots ouWoU Street, for sale cheap & Cos. bl - Kodol Dyspepsia Cure yr-jests what you eat. licially digests the food and aids PSturc. in strengthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive or gans. It, is the latest discovered digest ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Sick Headache,Gastralgia,Cramps, and ill other results of imperfeetdigestioo. Preoared by E. C. DeWltt ft Cos.. Chicago. , Vi J. Butts, the Druggist. 13. J- OLEWINK, B, levies Soiling, Renting, Repairing, Messenger Service.’’ We sell Cleveland, Monarch, Crawford, Eagle. Elk, Dixie. Best of Wheels for the Least Money. ELI ZISSIMATO, 30‘2i Newcastle St. RMi::.. :.:. Met is CIGARS ANp.TOBA£CO ise ’Cream Fresh Everr Bit, Iffijuljj ▲ll of Candy. 7