The Brunswick times-call. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1900-1902, September 30, 1900, Image 3

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THE BRUNSWICK TIMES-CALL. VOLUME XI. NUMBER 39. 11 TERMS Ml® Operators Offer a Basis for Uii Sittloieat. REPLY IS EXPECTED SOON. If Terms Are Accepted Miners Will 6c to Work Tomorrow. It is Believed That End Is in Sight. Wilkeabarre, Sept, 29.—The looal president of the United Mine Work fira' Union said this morning that nothing official has been received from the operators, but from the general appearances, the; judged that the companies would make some kind of a proposition today. Some men are in clined to think they would not meet the expectations, but said if it was nearly fair, the concessions would be accepted by the union and the strike ’ -red off. inclined to thins that the operatora were trying to win public sentiment by feigning acquiesenoe to some demands, know at the same time that the conces sions would be immediately rejeoted by the miners. Retur-ing ;to Work. Sbamokin, Sept. 29.—More men re ported for work today at the Midvale colliery. Ninety per cant, of the men were out at one time, but have been returning gradually. This morning DO per cent, were working. Sent Terms to Strikers; jik New York, Sept. 29.—1 t wal ac knowledged by officials of the Lebigb Valley railroad this afternoon that terms of settlement had been seDt to the strikers, and a reply is expected today. Otherwise, the strike situation will remain unchanged. More Bloodshed. Pitteon, Sept. 29.—One man was fa tally stabbed and rovers! others hurt, more or less, io a riot near the mines Of the Lebign Valley company this morning. LORD MAYOR Prank Gieeo Elected in London eMm and Great Cheering. London, Sept 29.—Frank Green was elected Lord Mayor of London today amid great pomp end solemnity at a meetm£ Hall Trac^Pktrild. § THEY TAKE A TOWN. Paris, Sept. 29.—A cable from Taku received here states that bat talion of marines on its way from Pe kin occupied and took possession of the towns of Lou-Kou-Cblao and Chan Sin- Tisn, thus obtairang mueh longed-for coal storage. m GERMANY BACKS DOWN. Won’t Insist On Carrying Out Original Chinese Policy London, i?ept. 26.—Germany has re treated from her unt,nable position re garding China. The Par s correspond ent of the Morning Post says: "An agreement on the Chinese ques tion has been arranged be ween France, Germany and Kussia. It will be sub mitted to the o her powers within a few days. The action recommended will be milder than Germany’s proposal orig inally made, and It is expected that all the powers will accept the program.’' SOUK NEW BOOKS. Tha Libraiy Association Has Ordered a Long List. Follow ng Is a list of books recently ordered by the Brunswick Library As sociation, to arrive shortly and be put in circulation among the subscribers. One week only will be allowed to any one subscriber on the new books, as they are well selected and very popular and the demand for them will be great, Subscribers are urged to keep this list as a catalogue until a more complete one ca^ejirejyared: A Man of Bis Age Drummond Beign of Law Allen Unleavened Bread Grant Boy Corelli A Friend of Caesar Davis Tha Green Flag Doyle Micah Clarke . Dcylo Love of Parson Lord. Mary E. Wilklos Bath Comedy Egorton Castle The Light of Searthey.. Egertou Castle ■ "t ■ - Biography of a Grizzly Ernest Thompson Grip of Honor..C. T. Ilrady For the Freedom of tho Sea Brady Red Blood and 81ue..... H. Robertson The Sword ot the King Knight of the King’s Guard tfhe Cardinal's Snuffbox Ilartland The Colonel's Opera Cloak Robert Tournay William Sage Redemption of David Corson Goss From Sandhill to Pine Bret Harte Resurrection Leon Tolstoi Bob, Son of Ba tie Oliphaut Caleb Weai F. Hopkins >a Smith Eagle Heart flamliu Garland Isle of Unrest Henry H. Meir.mm Billy Baxter’s Letti ra Philip Winwood The Other Fellow Voice of tbo People Glasgow OPPOSITION TO BRANTLEY. Republ icane Name a Canaidate for Con gress at Waycrose. The republicans of the eleventh con gressional district met at Waycrose yestrday and mined a candidate, W. H. Marston, of Erwin, to oppose Con greseman Bt antley In November. The republicans have been figuring on putting out a candidate for some time, and a convention wan called for yesterday at W /cross to decide tho matter. 1 hey haie named the Candi da e and that will betbout all. PLAGUE IN GLASGOW. Glasgow, Sept, 29.—The bubonic plague claimed today two more victims. Two deaths being the day’s record. BRUNSWICK, GA., SUN D IN(i, SEPTEMBER 30, 1900. i ph an 11111 l MMm Foist to o Big Enrollment. 10 THE TEACHERS ART The Graduating Class Thiß Year Promises to Be An Unusally Large One, Tomorrow the pnblio schools of tbs oity open their doors onoe again, after the lung vacation, and the obildren enter the familiar scenes onoe more. The total enrollment for the whites will be abont 400, and forXhe colored* about the same. The grades will be taught as follows: PRIMARY. Ist A—Miss Lizzie Deming. Ist B—Miss Constanoe Butt*, 2nd-Miss Julia Wilder. 3rd-Miss Bettie Alexander. ORAMMAK SCHOOL. I it Grade—Mies May Bingham. 2nd Grade—Miss Rita MoKinnon. 3rd Grade—Miss Alloa Wrench. 4th Grade—Miss Rowena Griffin. hioh sc WOOL. lit Grade—Miss Katie O’Conor. 2nd Grade—Miss Lula Colesberry. 3rd afld 4>h Grades—Mrs. Parker and Mr. Griffith, Mr. Griffith will do supervisory work in the Gramar sohool and teaob in tha High sohool. Mrs. Parker Is principal of the High school, and Miss Bettie Alexander of the Preparatory. There will be a large graduating clast this year, probably as mauy as twenty pupils being in that class. The prize of $25.00 in gold tyill be quite an inducement for them to work. The oounty Bobools are also ready to open in the morning. The enrollment of new pupils (s the largest, except one, fn the history of the schools, so Ur as records have been kept. All children should be in plaoe to morrow, and get ready for regular work the tf&t day. We ought to imke it the biggest enrollment on record. 11,500 PEOPLE. This Is the Number the Census of 1900 Will Give Us. The Timbs-Call has it Irom very good authority that the new census will give Brunswick 11,600 people, or some where in that neighborhood. This was told to us by a gentleman wbo is in position to know, bpt cannot give the name. The Timbs-Cali. pub lishes it for what it is worth. REV KEILEY TO PREACH. Benj. J Keiley. D. D., bishop of Sa vannah, will preach at the Catholic church today—in the morning at 10, and at night at 7:30. II PUB. Ifll SPURT Republicans Trrins ioßlect a Senator. DEMOCRATS, MUST IE Registrars Finished Their Work Yesterday—White OutnunD ber BlacKS 3 to 1. The registrars of Glynn county— Messrs. F. D. Aiken, E. C. Butts and W. B, Cook, tluielied revising the vot era’ list yesterday and some changes in the registration have occurred. Very W. n?ar 800 n gross have been dropped from the list since snow the white voters outnumber the negroes three to one. This makes a considerable change in the situation since that time, when the negroes outnumbered the whites. The total registration in the county for the election Wednesday is abont 1,46*2. Of this number over 1,000 are whites, therefore the democrats of this county do not lear for thesafe yof their ticket. They have, however, become aroused over the proposition issued by the Charl ton oounty republican senatorial candi date of this district to the colored re publicans, in which he promises to place the nogrdcs in the lead in the three counties should he be elected. It is thought that the republican can didate has worked his scheme well in Cbar ton and Camden conntlcs, and he will doubtless receive a majority oyer Upchurch, the democratic candidate, in those counties, therefore it is seen that his el(j. Y_> rejia pretty much on the democrmrhf Glynn. We have enough registered to overcome any majority that the republican candidate may receive in those two counties, but a large number of the democratic voters In Glynn coun ty are not aware of this scheme, and it may be some difficulty to get the full vole out. A big democratic meeting will be held at the city hall on Tue day night under the auspices of the Bryan and Stevenson club, at which Congressman Brantley will be the star speaker, and it is im portant that every democrat who can possibly do so, should turn out. The local leaders are now hard at work and will do all In their power to get a big vole polled Tuesday. r ANOTHER LETTER. Tbs Republicans Are Hard at Work For Tuesday's Election. The letter of the Cbarltr&p county senatorial candidate, which was un earthed and published in yesterday’s Timbb-Cali., created somewhat of stir among the democrats, and they were all busy yesterday notifying voters of the laot, and urging thm to turn out and vo*e on Tuesday. Yesterday another letter was discov- ered, written by A. G. Guwen,. of Chariton, which is further evidence of the scheme to defeat the democrats. The letter is as follows: "To the Chairman, Secretary, and M-mbers of the Republican Meeting, to be Convened at Traders’ Hill, Ga., August 13th, 1900: "I am in receipt of a communica tion from yonr seoretary, John Mathis, requesting a contribution ifund for oampaign purposes from all those can didates you may indorse for oounty officers. I like plain talk, for lam a plain man. You understand that 1 do not claim to be a republican, but my position is to try and do right; If I know it, to vote against any and all rascalities, from whatever souroe. But, to return to the matter in hand: There are other candidates to be endorsed. Are they to be taxed also? Then, lam willing to oontribute my pro rata share. Understand, this is no bribe from me to you, but simply to help on theoause of reform in oounty matters; aniff would suggest that you put the motion, that the republicans support no one who refuses to oontribute some thing, even after he is endorsed. I answer as to my oandidaoy for or dinary, 1 am in the field to stay, until my friends say oome down. A. G, Gowbn, Traders’ Hill, Charlton county, Ga, FIGHT la CAMDEN. Democratic Candidate For the Legis lature in Danger. The democrats of Camden oounty have got a very hard fight on their hands to eleot their candidate for the legislature. The republicans, most of whom are negroes, have put a negro oandi£‘ i against Mr. E, J. Stafford, and it will require the vote of every demoorat in the oounty to eieot their man. FOR MAJOR. Captain Frank A. Dunn Says He is In The Raoe. Capt. Frank A. Py.Eof the BrunV wiok Riflemen, ie io the raoe for MajW of Third battalion of tbe First Georgia regiment, to euooeed Major R. Ernest Dart, wbo has tendered hie resignation to Co'. Lawton. Captain Dunu ie a military man in every sense of the word. He has been connected with tbo companies of this oily for a number of years. He served aa a lieutenant in the First Georgia regiment during tbe Spanish war, and made an exoellent record. He was eleoted oaptain of the Riflemen last February, and - since that time has greatly built the oompany up. He ie the ranking oaptain of the Third bat talion, First regiment, and stand* an exoellent showing for tbe position to whioh be aspires. ANOTHER GERMAN LOAN. New York, Sept. 29. German treas ury notes amounting to 170,000,000 marks ma'urc tomorrow. If T •){ the extensions sawnc w ji[ t,e renewed .National City Bank. Mr. A. B, Vance has returned to his home in Jacksonville, , PRICE FIVE CENTS. Hi NOW - WARNS HOLLAND Won Permit Kroger to Cam Off Goli. Dili DON’T [IKE THREAI Indignation Meetings Held in Brus sels Over the News, Which the Hollanders Declare Impertinent. London, Sept. 29 —Great Britain has sent . a note to the Du’eh government, according to a dispatch from Amster dam to the Daily Mail, which contains a warning that if Kruger is allowed to carry bullion or state archives on board the Dutch warship which is to bring him to Europe, it will bo regarded as a breach of neutrality on the part of the Netherlands. Du ch Are Indignant,’ Brussels, Sept, 28.—The news that Great Britain would hold Holland re sponsible if a Dutch warship carried ex- President Kruger and his gold bullion from Lorenzo Marquez to a port in Hol land, has created intense Indignation all oyer Holland. In Brussels several mass ■meetings have beeu held, at which Eng land’s action has been denounced as an impertinence. The newspaper press of Hi. roundly abases what it calls British 4risfcance. To-Keep t. Plans. Pretoria, Sept, 29.—News has been received here from the North to the ef feot that Barend Voretoo, who was one of the most influential member* of the Vulksraad of tpe South African Re publio, constituting himself as the Boer government, that he proposes to up the struggle to the bitter ead, and is now devising plans with that object in view. The Joint Decrees. Washington, Sept. 29.—Consul Gen eral Goodnow informs tbe State de partment that Viceroy Sheng banded him tbe joint decrees of tbe Emperor and Empress, at Taignan, on the twenty-fifth, tbe gist of same being a virtual acknowledgment tkat their ministers were to blame for encour aging tbe boxers in their recent out rages. MANY WILL GO. Crowds of Brunswiokians will taka advantage of the SI.OO excursion to Savannah over tbe Southern today. Tbe rate has been on during tbe sum mer, and baa proven to be very popu lar. On every Sunday, crowds from both oittee would take the trip, Thia ia the last day tbe obeap rate will be on. Mr. Louie Fendig, -of Reunaalaer, Ind,, will arrive next week on a visit to hie brother, Mr. Albert Fendig,