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Times. MOKM.NG BUT MONDAY. Bkk Publishing Company, Pub wiers and Managers. t’4 ' i Vli-t !i"i ]'<■ !■'" 1.. I' ‘'lri'il, HBBBHH I i i.> i ii< •m- no 31. , 1 . < r ; ® SCR I pTI °N RATES. l>y Mail or Carrier. w copy, one year $5 CO One copy, BIX months 2 50 One copy, three months 125 One copy, one month 50 One copy, One week 15 Sunday Edition, 8 pages, per year 1 00 Ten per cent, discount on all subscriptions when puid in advance. *■ Correspondence on live and clean subjects is solicited. Address all communications to Tut: Morning Times, Brunswick, (Ja, .....t, Official Organ of the City of Bruns wick and County of Glynn, TO SUBSCRIBERS: Subscribers are requested to notify the office vyhen they fail to get any issue of THU Times. Attention to ibis matter will be appreciated by the management. Advertising rates will be furnished on ap plication. Orders to discontinue subscriptions and .ad vertisements must lie in writing. |pgi| fSSI Wfisipfli i WE a IXJUAIA My b amiCHl MP4 m it mm win wm vt[mmm §> #lnf Have you sent Tins Times’ Mideum mer Issue to all of your friends? The Times will have another sur prise for its readers next Sunday. John L. Sullivan has lost fifteen pounds. Tlie people who back him against Fitzsimmons will lose more than that. Anout the surest proof of a man’s insanity these blistering days is to see him exerting every muscle in his body to propel a bicycle at a “scorch ing” rate; One of the most interesting politi cal fights of the decade will be that one about to begin between Johnny McLean and llanna for the Ohio sen atorship. Two more resourceful poli ticians were never pitted against each other. This Ceorgia Republicans are re ported to be dissatirlied over the tar diness of 'lie tenders at the pie coun ter. Lyons is said to he utterly dis couraged, Pledgor disgusted, and “Pink” Morton grown pale from hope deferred. Jin, Boiki was rather slow in reach ing a state of mental equilibrium on the money question. 11 is energetic canvas for the last presidential nomi nation, knowing that the p'atform would he unqualifiedly for free silver, gives to his present altitude the dis credit of insincerity. Perhaps Mr. Boies scents a good job from afar. . 'iiiß headless trunk of a human body, perforated with dagger wounds, was found Sunday by a roadside near the northern extremity of Manhattan island. The day before another por tion of the same body had been found floating in the river near the southern extremity of the city. This was car rying a crime a little too far. The \\ ay cross Herald comes out in colors for its Trade I'ay edition. The Waycross Journal did the same thing a few dajs ago. The Times is pleased to note that the use of the color plates is being adopted generally throughout the state for newspaper embellish ment. It is no small matter of pride to The Times that it was the first paper in the state to use the color plates successfully on its own press. IF THE WOMEN RULED- Gaylord, Kansas, which came to the front a year ago by reason of the fact that all male citizens stepped aside and allowed their wives, sisters, mothers and sweethearts to be elected to all the city offices, does not appear to be any the worse for the experiment. The Herald reports that the municipal business was conducted under the pet ticoat regime in an able,impartial and progressive manner, that many im provements were made in streets, public buildings, etc., and that, so sat isfied were the male citizens with the female administration, that they urged the ladies to accept re-election. This, however, was declined, and the lords of Gaylord have resumed con trol, while their wives, mothers, sis ters, sweethearts, etc., have returmd to the humbler sphere of domesticity. This bit of political history suggests to The Times the possible results of a similar experiment in Brunswick. Should the government of this city he turned over to the women, one year would no doubt witness many remark able changes and not a few improve ments. We would, at any rate, have the city clock at once, an.d Mason park would soon blossom as the rose, regardless of ttie public treasury. Feminine aestheticism would not bear the out-of-plumhness of the alarm tower—it would have to be straight ened or torn down. There would he lovely flower gardens in all the public squares, and anew office would he created—that of city gardener. The dilapidated street cars that offend every sense of taste and fitness, would have to be moved at once,or Her Honor, sitting in judicial robes in the police court room would soon know why and wherefore. The debris of the old court house would have to 6hare this fate. A government of ladies would suffer nothing so unhandsome. Another city eyesore that would probably fall a victim to the feminine regime is the miserable little hovel used as a lunch stand near the union depot. The un sightly debris of L’Arioso opera house which has been inexcusably allowed to offend the vision of citizens for so long a time, would have to he cleared away. In fact, the reign of the wo men would soon manifest itself in many ways. Although it is not probable that a female administration will ever he in stalled in Brunswick, would it not be well for the male directors of the city to adopt some of the improvements that would be certain should they be displaced by the gentler sex? Sometimes the most careful women are the most careless. Many a woman bundles herself up. to keep out sick ness —when she is neglecting the very worst sickness that can come to a wo man. She allows a slight disorder to become worse, to slowly sap her vital ity. The little pain and the other slight indications of trouble seem to her unimportant. She goes on with increasing suffering, until life itself becomes a drag. Nervousness, “sink ing spells,” digestive disturbances, and fifty other complications may arise from the derangement of the organs distinctly feminine. Over thir ty years sgo, the need for a reliable remedy for so-called “female com plaints” was recognized- by Dr. K. V. Pierce, then, as now, duet consulting physician to the World’s Dispensary and Invalids’ Hotel at Buffalo, N. Y. He prepared I)r. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription, the most wonderfully ef . fective remedy that has ever been used for such maladies. Send 21 cents in one-cent stamps and receive Or. Pierce’s 100S page“Cominon Sense Medical Adviser,” illustrated. A complete assortment of imported and domestic wines or. hand at I), L. Kellar’s, 301 Monk street. Telephone No. 170. For the best 5-eent cigar in (hecity, call on D. L. kellar, 301 Monk street. Why take Johnson’s Chill and Fever Tonic? Because it cures the most stubborn case o ! Fever in ONE DAY. If you want shoes go to 11. E. Tay lor & Co’s. i THE TIMES: BRUNSWICK, GA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 30, 1397. SOOIETY FOR THE PREVENTION! OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS. Within tha next two weeks those who are most interested in the re-es tablishment of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in Brunswick will begin the work of soliciting membership. One oan hardly imagine the neces sity for any solicitation in this mat ter, as it may be considered a privi lege to anyone to belong to a body regularly aj pointed, organized, and officered for the noble work of pro tecting the helpless dumb creatures, for whose welfare so little real thought is taken. Perhaps it is also a privilege in these days of extreme business de pression and scarcity of money to be permitted to embark in an undertak ing which calls for no large pecuniary outlay. While it is not warranted to “pay” it, dollars and cents, the broad humanity and mercifulness which every member invests in the general fund will bring them a generous return, ennobling their lives and raising them to a higher level, and at the same time re lieving the sufferings of God’s dumb creatures. In view tlin of the fact that the yearly du s are small, and that the principal outlay in the mat ter is sympathy for suffering and a de termination to relieve it, the writer earnestly hones the interest will he general when the society is once again established, and Brunswick will rise responsive to the appeal for mem bership. F. du B. “For three years we haye never been without Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in the house,” says A. H. Patter, with E. C. Atkir-s & Cos., Indianapolis, Ind., “and my wife would as soon think of being without (lour as a bottle of this Remedy in the summer season. We have used it with all three of our children and it has never failed to cure—not simply stop pain, but cure absolutely. It is ail right, and anyone who tries it will find it so.” For sale by druggists. To Nashville. Tfis Southern railway announces a rate of $11.3.5 from Brunswick to Nashville, Term., and return for ac count ot seventh annual reunion United Confederate veterans. Irre proachable service. Schedules un equaled. See that your tickets read by way of Southern railway. John Calhoun, Stults’ AAAA and Satisfaction are among the famous brands of tobacco handled by IX. L. Kellar. 301 M"iik street. Telephone No. 176. Quinine and other fever medicines take from 5 tc 10 days to cure fever Johnson's Chili and Feve Tonic cures in ONE DAY. A liberal price will be paid at this office for the delivery of any or all of the folio wing issues of The Times: June 23; August 6, 8,24; September 13, 23, 20; October 2,4, 5, 27, 29, 1896, and April 14, 1897. The most bread for the money at the Vienna Bakery. W. 1,. Speer. Nervous People find just the help they so much need, In Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It fur nishes the desired strength by puri fying, vitalizing and enriching the blood, and thus builds up the nerves, tones the 6tomach and regulates the whole system, Itead this: “I want to praise Hood’s Sarsaparilla. My health run down, and I had the grip. After that, my heart and nervous system were badly affected, so that I could not do my own work. Our physician gave me some help, but did not cure. I decided to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Soon I could do all my own housework. I have taken Cured Hood’s Pills with Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and they have done me much good. I will not be without them. I have taken 13 bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and through the blessing of God, it has cured me. I worked as hard as ever the past sum mer, and I am thankful to say I am well. Hood’s Pill* when taken with Hood’s Sarsaparilla help very much.” Mbs. M. M. Messenger, Freehold, Penn. This and many jther cures prove that Hood’s Sarsaparilla fs the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. sl. Prepared only byC. I. Hood & Cos.. Lowell, Mass. •_ ~ act easily, promptly and Hood S Pills effect**, asaeuu. CROP PROSPECTS GOOD. An Abundant Harvest Now Asgurod Throughout the Kntire West. In a recent issue of the New York Snn the following communication from. Eli Perkins appeared: The east can prepare to rejoice. You would rejoice now if you could see the wonderful crop of corn and grain which |s now waving over a drought region which has missed crops for two or three years. Copious rains have come all over the far west from San Antonio up through the Texas panhandle and on through Kansas and Nebraska to Dakota. West ern Nebraska and Kansas are soaked with water clear up to the Colorado border, and the people are wild with joy. I have passed over this entire country. They have already harvested 30,000,- 000 bushels of wheat iu western Texas, and now the reapers in southern and western Kansas are running in wheat fields loaded with grain. Everywhere wheat, ooru. oats and rye could not look better. For three years western Kansas and Nebraska have lost their crops. Ne braska stood the drought from Colorado to Lincoln for two years, and then part ed with her hogs and cattle. Last year she had superb corn again, but no hogs or cuttle to feed it to. Miles of corn bins line the railroads. Corn is selling for 12 cents a bushel and not a hog in sight. Last year’s crop is still in the bins. They are waiting for the pigs !o grow By fall the pigs will be here>nd then two crops of coru will bo turned into pork. The reason sugar is going all over California is because beets do not free/ ' in the winter there, and they oau use less machinery/and feed out ail the beets to stock after the sugar has been extracted. In Nebraska the beets have to be harvested and treated before the frost comos. Ten thousand dollars' worth of machinery in California will manufacture as much sugar as ifuO, (100 worth will in Nebraska. Still Nebraska is doubling her acreage of beets and chicory. There is one chicory farm at O’Neil, Neb., covering 2,500 acres. The prosperity which the big crops will bring to the west will make rail roads pay dividends, set the 80,000 idle railroad men west of the Mississippi to work, make the farmer rich and happy and kill Bryan’s silverism as prosperity once killed Weaver’s greenback craze. ELEGANT PRIVATE CARS. Huilt In Tliiti Country For President Diaz and Cecil Rhodes, The Pullman Palace Car company has just taken a contract to construct for General Porflrio Diaz, president of the Mexican republic, the fiuest train that ever was drawn over Mexican soil. It will consist of hut two cars, but they will bo tho best that money can buy. They will contain all the latest im provements, and, according to the plans, Mexico’s president and his friends will be as comfortablo when traveling as yv’hen in President Diaz’s own charm ing mansion in the City of Mexico. This train is to be constructed at the expense of the Mexican republic. The contract calls for two cars, which will cost when complete $250,000 each. The first of these will be the president’s private car. It will he a third longer than the longest Pullman coach, and just as wide as it is possible for a rail road car to he constructed and be eligi ble to passage over the ordinary trucks. Another flue car built by the Pullman Palace Car company goes to South Af rica. It is for the Hon. Cecil Rhodes aud was completed, boxed up in sec tions and sent to South Africa a short time ago. With the car went a compe tent constructor, who is to put it togeth er upon its arrival in Cape Town. There are uo broad gauge railroads in and so this car is of the narrow gauge type. It is 45 feet 11 inches long pver sills and 53 feet long over all.— Exchange. Put a Living; Snake In Her lied. Putting a live snake in his wife’s bed was one of the charges on which R. S. Cunningham, a Slippery Rock farmer, was recently arrested and en tered bail at New Castle, Pa. On an other occasion she says he put a live toad in the bed, and later on some salty stuff in her coffee. Sho is afraid he will kill her. Cunningham about a year ago adver tised in a Pittsburg newspaper for a housekeeper. The advertisement stated that she was wanted more as a compan ion than-anything else. A pretty widow of Pittsburg answered the advertise ment and came to live at the Cunning ham home. Mrs. Cunningham did not like this arrangement, and on account of the attention bestowed upon the wid ow by her husband family trouble fol lowed. Cunningham wanted his wife to leave, it is said, but she refused. Fi nally matters resulted in the pretty Widow going back to Pittsburg. Cun niugliam subsequently sued for divorce on the ground of cruel and barbarous treatment, but couldn’t prove liis charge and the case was dismissed. Injurious to Woman Suffrage, A serious blow to the cause of wom an suffrage has been struck at James town, Kan. The women put up candi dates for mayor and council at the spring election and won. But, alas, pnder the new administration rumsell ing, eoekfigbting, crap shooting and poker playing are frequent. The town Las arisen in its might. The men de mand reform. Everybody thought af fairs would be different when feminin ity had its way. Residents of Jeffersou street, Topeka, have been victims of a trained or per verted dog which stole their newspapers and took them to its master. At Norfolk a plant has been establish ed, with capacity for live tons of pea nuts daily, for the manufacture of pea nut oil, peanut dour and stock feed. iJfP§4! KFCCD- WORKS. Founders, Machinists Fuileiirkers and Blacksmiths. Saw Mills, Locomotives, Boilers, Engines, Printing Presses, Dynamos, Mo tors, and all kinds of Electrical Machinery neatly and promptly repaired. We will respond to calls on Marine Work At Ail Times-Night or Day. 4Ve will furnish all kinds of supplies and materials for the trade at lowest prices. All our work will lie done by first-class mechanics. Satisfaction Guaranteed. (129 Bay St. Agents for the Celebrated Rirtgway Rrnnvunrlr LiU Engines and Dynamos. DrimSWICK, VJd. D|pT[j j) | Made to order. Largest and most |,, , ; , J complete line of blank books and Hi, AM LS school books SI-. 11. T. DUNN, 219 Newcastle sweet. California Restaurant' CHUE HALL, Manager. BEST IN BRUNSWICK BORDERS TAKEN FOR O K. LAUNDRY- Coney & Parker, -DEALERS IN COAL AND WOOD, Rosendale and Portland Cements, C ( asmon and Facing Brick, Rock Limp, Plaster, Hair. Shingles snd Laths, Sewer Pipe, Chimney Flue Pipe and Fittings, lire Brink and Fre Clay! Telephone 18. RAY” SS'P ItlOCX' Atlas Engines _ Portable and stationary boilers, shafting, pulleys, belting, pipeing, injectors and fittings, sawdust and ccal-burmng grates Twenty carloads for quick deliveiy. Get our prices ome and see us. Lombard lion-works and Supply Cos, CAST EVERY HAY. * . _ ca;>v ii v 300 hands. Augusta, Ga 4 Mr. Isaac Homer, proprietor of the Burton llousp, Burton, \V. Va., and one of the most widely-kt.own men in I lie state, was cured of rheumatism after three years of suffering. He says: “1 have not sufficient com mand of language to convey any idea of what I suffered ; my physicians told tue that nothing could be done for me, and my friends were convinced that nothing but death would relieve me of suffering, In June, I.VJJ, Mr. Evans, (hen salesman for the Wheeling Drug Cos., recommended Chamberlain's Pain Balm. At this time my foot and limb wers swollen to more than double their normal size and it seemed to me my leg would burst, but soon after I be gan using Pain Halm, the swelling began to decrease, ttie pain to leave and now I consider that i am ertirely cured. For sale by druggists. GOOD LUCK BAKING POWDER a_?-r. -TA-iMzasMtjunareM*w ■ iiiniwn; THE BEST It in not a scheme goods. No needles, pins, spoons or forks are offered lo induce people to buy it. W hen you purchase a can of GOOD I,rule you get the worth of your money ill the highest quality of Baking Powder. MILLIONS OF INTELLIGENT HOUSEKFfPERS USE AND RECOMMEND IT. For sale by leading wholesale and retail grocers everywhere. W. W. IPARK, State Agent, Atlanta, (). To the Centennial, '1 be Southern railway will sell ex cursion tickets at $12.(j0 Brunswick to Nashville, Term., and return for the Tennessee Centennial, May-Noveffyber. Bate of $12.(80 limited to ten days from date of sale, and other tickets on sale with any limitation desired. Elegant Southern railway trains will be oper ated in special service between Bruns wick and Nashville. Travel via South ern railway. Quinine and other fever medicines take from 5 to 10 days to cure fever. Johnson’s Ghill arid Feyer Tonic cures in ONE DAY. u./OD OOOKIN MAKES GOOD EATING. MEATS SERVED lO ORDER. GRANT ST.