The Brunswick times-call. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1900-1902, October 03, 1900, Page 4, Image 4

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4 The Brunswick Times. Established 18*9. The Brunswick Call. Established im Tic Brunswick Times-Call, CONSOLIDATED IHOO. ' Fublifehed KVIEKY MOBNING EXCEPT MONDAY. AETHUB H. LEAVE Editor WJLAHD A. HOLLIES, Busmen Manager oitu'k } TO SUBSCRIBERS: Subscribers are requested to notify the office Mm they fall to get any issue of the Tlmcs- GaU. Attention to this matter will be appro- Mated by the publishers. The Time*-Call will be ‘ Delivered by earrler or mail, per year. CS.OO; per week IS cents. Correspondence on lire subjects solicited. Beal name of writer should ac eempany tamo. Subscriptions payable in adranoe. Failure to receive paper ehonld be ..reported to the basinets office. Address all communications to THE TIMES-CALL, Brunswick, Ga. VOTE TODAY, Every democrat should go to the polls and vote lor the ncmluees of the parly today, because it Is a duty and should be performed. Whether a party nominee is a friend or not it makes no difference, because every man who voted in the primary pledged himself to support the choice of the majority. Do not remain away and say “they do not need my vote,’’ because they do and you should cast it, AT LAST. The meeting at the city hall yesterday was enough to make the average Btuua wickian have convulsions. The people are actually getting to gether. Ob, its no joke. Its the truth. Our leading citizens met yesterday in • common cause—Brunswick—and the meeting was harmonious Again we tell you this is really so. The two huedred who signed as char* ter members of the Chamber of Corn* me ice will now become members of the Board of Trade, and this heretofore sleeping organization prnmitt&B l prove a blessing to this city and^WSty. The business men of Brunswick have reached the conclusion that a united ef fort is their hope, and that effort is now to be made. A GOOD RECORD. JL The cotton exports from the port of Now Orleans on Sopt 29 smashed all prrvioas Septi mber records, held by any seaport of the American continent. They amounted to (15,000 bales of cot to*s The Crescent City proudly crows flvet this unprecedented record. When ft'is considered ibat New Or leans is 130 miles from the Mississippi delta, snd that navigation through the paasce is only maintained by the perpet ual dredging of the Eads Jetties, this phenomenal record of cotton exports is the more wonderful. Why is it that Brunswick, with its tne harbor and deep wat r over its bar, cannot roach out and snatch from the gTat southern metropolis her righlfu ahare of this cotton export business? JUD6E OF THE CITY COURT. The Timis-Call notes the action of '.he county commissi m rrgarJ to the oily court judge’* '•alary. The county fa'hers d'eided to ask the Glynn county l.p-es >utatlve to in troduce a bill cutting the salary from •IK to tTS per month. We underlined that another bill nil) he presented asking the legislature to_ retire our city court judge from hi* profession by compelling him to d’s continue the practice of law and in the event both these bills pass, the judge must be satisfied with 175 per month as his only source of income. This is too low, and we are sure those who have been urging a cut in salary will now reach the conclusion that a “good man must be paid a good price.” With the reappearance on the streets of small children going to and from school with a load of books and pencil pads has come a revival of the old dis cussion as to whether it la just to lay out a coarse of study in the public schools which makes necessary studies in the homes at night. It is practically impos sible for any child, however bright, to prepare the lessons demanded within the study hoars given in the schools. If parents shall ever be aroused to tbo point of refusing to allow their children to study at home, the boards which con trol our public schools will find them selves confronted with the necessity of ohooslng between lengthening of the time spent daily la the school rooms by the children, or a reduction in the num ber of studies allotted to each grade. The choice will probably be a reduction in the number of studies. It may be some years yet before a de cided and united protest is made against the “cramming” now generally InwofHe, but the tendency of public sentiment is steadily in the direction of an opposi tion to the system which makes it nec essary for children of 7, -9 and 0 years to spend nearly or quite a'l of their time in the evening poring over their books. It is generally accepted as a fact that the increase in disorders of'the eye is large ly duo to this cause. The Board of Trade with Us new bicod, promises to do its S great deal of good. ‘ Dont sty “my voto is net needed. ” Go out and cast yonr ballot. Vote today! SAVE MONEY—By having the (fid clothes dyed. Jim Carter is the man to do the work. CHANG* QF SCHEDULE SYSTEM. Tram 97 leaven Brunswick at $ a. in. Train 89 leayes Brunswick 3.45 p m Train 90 arrives Bruo.wiek 10 s. ui. Train 88 arrives Brunswick Op. m. Tbs most dainty ana efrsctlvo pins madv u<i Of Witt's Little Karly liisor* Ttiev ai# one quale.l for all liver ana towel troubles. Never jprlpe. W. J Butts. Stops the Couflh and works off the Cold. l.aaatiVo 6mmo;Qlnlu* Tablet* oure a cold In one day. No Cure. Ko ray. Trie* S3 ce.'.s A SMALL OVERCOAT SALE. The Brunswick merchant will sell but very few overcosts this year. The sound thinking man has found that there is muoh economy in having the old coat relined, cleaned and pressed, or a rew collar put on. by Jim Carter at the Brunswick Cleaning and Press ing Cos., 504 Monk street. 1 FOR SALE. Hi • One tract of land contafng 6 scree, 5 1-2 acres in line cultivation with four room dwe'licg, good stablos hne fruit trees and grape vines, situated.,on Gib son creek, known aa the Metis place This Is a tine place for truck farming; also for fisting and datchiog and raising terrapin. It la a most* pleasant snd h< althy pl*oe to live and is projected from all storms. Also one tract of 15 acres fine land wth about 800 cords of wood and piling on it, situated on the old Darien r. ad 4 1-2 miles from Brunswick, a hne fora dwelling- and a mus profit able plac. for ihe wtßHfsnd that are on It; land good See me CTL. Pakkkb, Cor. E and J sts. Brunswick, Ga. Headache ~ Btliuaeneas. sour sl.xt --. tpa tiou and all Uvor :!il wt b Hood’® PfflM?** ' The notvirritiumg <i u. .. • :t :~i - * THE BRUNSWICK TIMES-CALL, OCTOBER 3, 1900. BABY PULL-BACKS It is strange that babies get on so well as they do; there are so many pull-backs! But Scott’s emulsion of cod-liver oil is a wonderful help. Begin with a little. Too much will upset the stomach. Increase, but keep under the limit The liniflkis upsetting the stomach. It rests a tired digestion; it does not tax the stomach at all; it’lets it play—little stomachs like to play. We’ll send you a little to try, If you Iflce. SCUTr & BOWNK, 409,Peaurl street, New York. STEEL WOOL. A Onrtooe HMtriel Deed mm A Safc stltnte For Snudpnpes. B*eel wool is a machine produced ma terial that la need as a substitute tor sandpaper. It te composed of sharp edged threads of steel, which curl up together like wool, or somewhat aa tbo .wood fibers of the familiar material known as excelsior curl up together, though the steel wool la very much fioer>,sbe finest of It being not much ttan the coarsest of natural: *teel wool is put up In package* containing dj* pound each* These are something like rolls of coV ton bitting, b§t smaller, a pound of* steel wool, loosely pocked, making; rolled in paper and open at tbe ends, a package perhaps 15 Inches long *lsd‘ two or three Inches in diameter. Made in various degrees of coarse ness, steel wool is put to a variety of uses, the finer wools for polishing sfeod and metal, and tbe coarser for rub bing down paint and varnish. It Is often used on special parts of work, while, for example, on tbe fiat surfaces of a door a man would use sandpaper with a block beck of It; for ths mold ings he would use steel wool, which fits Into the crevices and conforms Itself to irregular shapes. Such work can be done with steel wool far more readi ly and quickly* than with sandpaper, and It la used with like advantage on t|Tegqtar and small surfaces and' on the steel wool there Is a obfifscr material of the same kind call ed oel (havings, which Is put to vari ous uses, as in taking off old palot or varnish and Tn polishing wood before > : painting, and It is used op bowling al leys and on Boors for smoothing and k Cleaning Ybern. Sandpaper (flogs In use, steel wool breaks down. The wool ,1a commonly Mised with gloves to keep {pe ends from sticking Into the fingers.—New York Sun- ' *’ *'*■ A ■ ***’/ r ~ Kmttfm* ntUKard. “when a reel ' Kansas blixMrd •tarts,” sapi a na||ve of the state; "ths snow at first Is usually soft gad fine and comes down with an quilnou* quiet. Tpeh it luereas'ea wHPolutns, and a wild wind hurls It along. It is blinding and enveloping, and, aside from being freezing cold, one cannot but lose his way. Xhs' storm some times lasts two or three days; When one of these blizzards comes up, the farmer who warns to get from his farmhouse to the stable of mUkbous* takes a cord and starts for the stable or uillkbonse, as It may be. even if It is only 50 yards off. He seldom makes it the first time, and the cord is to keep him from getting lost and wandering in the snow. Sometimes the people stand in the door and beat a tin can for a signal to auy one who may b out in the storm, but this is of little uae. as the noise of the wind Is so great that It drov.ns almost every oth er sound. V, “I knot? of a esse of a man who got lost going from bis stable to the house, so swiftly hud blindingly did the storm whirl down upon him. He stumbled over entrance to a cyclone cellar snd crawled in there and dropped the door after him to keep out the snow. The snow fell faster and faster and BliHed the door so deeply that whon It was all ended and be tried to open ft he found Tl Impossible, hj* family searched the country around for bitq and it was not until tha snow had melt ed and gone and someone happened to go Into the cyclone cellar that he was found there."—New Tork Tttbuue. He Css For Hlo. “No,” said the practical politician, “we don’t want him figuring In the campaign." “Hut he Is exceedingly vrell Inform ed." - "I doubt JL lie- has'put in all his time BUsMEPCbs tnrfff and finance and the United Plates Constitution. He doesn't kuow. anything about politics," —Washington Star. '**• *&• et Hastings. A. D. um. the weapons being swords snd battlesxys, COQ f e fatally wno^^ MttitanMHHßi^lers. oar First Foetal Rates. The first law of congress fixing rates of postage went Into effect on June L, 1792, with rates as follow* ‘ Not exceeding 30 miles, cents. Over 30 and not exceeding 60 miles, S cents. Over 60 and not exceeding 100 miles. 10 cents. /f ■ . ■ Over 100 and not exceeding 150 miles, 12% cents. Over 150 and not -exceeding 200 tulles, 15 cents. . ' Over 200 and no* exceeding 250 miles, 17 cent a' Over 250 and not exceeding 350 miles, 20 cents. Over 350 and not exceeding 450 milts, 22 cents. Over 450 miles, 25 cents. It would seem that postmasters of that day must have been greatly per plexed in adjusting tbe rates on each tetter under such a diversified schedule as the above. Tbe weight limit was one ounce (single), but a single letter Was a single sheet, two sheets double, three sheets triple, four sheets a quad tuple letter, even if the whole four did not exceed an ounce. FOUR INJURED. .' * ' * "-A * . : _ - ' - Brooklyn, Oct. 2.—A disastrous plosloo of a gasoline-furnace occurred here today. Farr peesofia were fat-By Injured. ... , ? ..W: .... * ■-•/’■■Vk •- NERVITA PILLS Restore Vitality, Lost Vigor and Manhood ■Night Emits tons. Loss of Mote. and indiscretion. Tndlder.*°Brinp ink glow to pale g?f% i and 7 restores the OVJ f youth. By mail CTS sr (ant. 6 boxes for*-— ~ -S2i. bankabla gaarantee to car* loney paid. Bend for circular innkable guarantee bomb fjflryjfn Tphlofo EXTRA STRENGTH - - Immediate Results tWttwte gea ran trad cure far. Loss of Power; JSMoqilteKmidiMMaaßyii' fifcwmkeu Organs jypHSRa, teKtoniiJkOjAASßstoewerToUß Prostrn- Jtya*N-la, Ffjte and the ptelllsuufEx.--!iv* l.'— ROpsheeco, Opium oe Liquow By mail fomlofe"package. *I.OO a I*,*. 6 for $6.00 wftfi ohr bankable guar oj-jteji^bond^to^StSs*^ days or refund ““nervjta medical CO. CBnton&4ckson sts„OftcACO, ILL. fo* sjie hf Bro&§ Drug aCpisW&. (iu. Southern Kailwfy Cos. 1 For Savannah, WpKlngton and New York. Lv Bmnawicfe..',.. 440 am 9os pm ArPevsnnah .40team 18Mom A r Washington 788 am. (M*pm Ar New York.,,, , lOH pm .6 Xiaiq For aaeksooTille. l.v Brunswick, :-dß,*hi ft li pm (lOS.ptii vj ybr Macon. ACanthi <Lra|t|)}e and Cipcianatt. tv Urnnstyick ?.,',V~..'■W4Cam. fits pm ar-Maco*,. 1 ..&,*"sou am Aratiaiuu .. - *sraam ArJ.ouisvdle . j. jfc SP pin At Cmclttati ~ ..fa. W ”40 pm FrmWNew York, aouJii.v^ep. Lv New York..*.atm pft' . ins m Lv Wo-hineron.. t 'ff-pin HU am". . ' I,v Savauuah ~ ,> pm ‘ # anr * Trt* SOT Ar Brumwiv* r n uv -■>!> aw. -3Apn Kroarc?win Vilic. . ' - Lv JaekaooKUtc.',. iSt poo- r AWfcugswfejt.'. 6nap,til irutn Cincinnati, f.ouirttlle, Atlanta and I-vClnirtOTartt -Woai sM’pto .Lv imßisVtUs . taiam ?is pm (I.V AbDt4 , ~ .lutSpsi , nrnpm - -SSSS Wall Paper PAINT STORE, 502 Monk St. W.H. LYTLE PROPRIETOR. mneemro Csu be louud m no, display THIMMED HATS, or quickly developed in our work rooms from the large snd beautiful assortment of Millinery Goods incur stock. Milliners of srtistie teste, and deft finger, produoe hats which equal In style snd sursotiveress many of the high priced imported models. Our prioessrenot the least pleasing part of our offerings. m KATE SLATER, |fcw.(.iC('Et>TEK ST., wine: of cardui How a Woman Suffers.—J Botiu, Iro., Mot. M- T I will alwgyg pri-WinßofC*rdul. It / . f\\ j] fcae done me more good than 1I ihe medl- / I fI l II clnee I have erer taken in my life. Please / 111 Wsssli •end a book about female dlteas& to the / t I \ H ladles whose namee I eneloee.* \.. . 1, J 11 Mrs. MLSNIB BTODI3HICI,. • • VWltatf' It Isn't necessary for a woman to give partiife; ~ * |bher she says she has “female troubles”, other women knowlPr%hat means. It means days and nights of endless suffering, it means headaches which no tongue can describe. It means that terrible bearing and dragging down in the lower abdomen. It means agonizing backache, arid, shoulder ache, and arm ache, and aches in the lower limbs. It means nerves on blues— despondency and loss of hope. It means debilitating drains that the doctors call fcucorrhcea. It means martyrdom—some timereven death seems preferable. And stiU Wine of Cardui will utterly , - . put those diseases and pains to rout iMKrawimisiMaTwav/] K has cured thousands of cases roi rice in wi running medal when nothing else on earth would. : budding woman, to the nuHcmtu., cbnunnooga, Xenn. bride, to the wife, to the expectant ——- w4 mother, to those going through the Change of Life, this Vegetable Wine is a blessing. Druggists Sell Large Bottles for $l.OO. WINE OF CARDUI Advertisers lways PPRECIA'p: fIEAPIJUG KiCH ' IfftWffiNS ArvJCD TANARUS"l —iAT IS3 T I —l |=l REGULAR * KETURNS By Advertisers Who Use These Colujb6. . > vy - t am * JiiAfititj ard Jaultj of Cinalaiios g-ivss jaastitj and (aaliij to Umtim And We Give Both WittmagL-,. c ■ ■ ajgssararsaaa -aw WE ALSO—. GUARANTEE TO GIVE SATISFACTION IN JOB WORK. DON’T SEND AWAY FOR # ENVELOPES, LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS, SHIPPING TAGS ETC., When you can get them at home for the same price and besides you save the cost of freight and drayage. % t OUR PHONE IS 31, and a message will receive prompt attention. e don’t mind calling and talking the over with you and giving you our estimates. and if we fail to get your order that is our fault, not yours. ALL WE WANT IS A TRIAL^ TimesGf|||j||y| £oy,‘‘. 2iloii-i