Brunswick advertiser. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1875-1881, July 03, 1880, Image 1

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TheBrunitffck Advertiser, ptratButo E^it >' SATURDAY MORNING At sauesvrcs. aeoaou* n 2. a. STACT. OrriCK, Corner Fewcatlit and Monk SMmtt. ^▼•rilslng Ratcsi Per #qu*r#. tea Hum *yoda, flnt iusortion. $1 00 Pat squaw, web *«tetq treat urewtion. 80 *9* Special raitt to yearly andlfrpe nJrtrtitert *fc* Advertisemontsjfrom responaiblfl parties will published until ordered out, when the time is aot specified, end payment exacted accordingly. Communications for individual benefit, < personal character, charged a* advortisumen t Marriages and obituary notices not exceeding four lines, solicted for publication. When ex Deeding that space, charged as advertisements. All letters and communications should be ad drwsed to the undersigned. T. G. STACY, Brunswick, Georgia. vttttMrtrH VOL. 5, NO. 52. BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1880. $2 00 A YEAR. OCR PUBLIC SCHOOL. City Directory. Major- J. F Aldermen- J. M. Couper. T. G. Btacy, J. It Cook. J. P. Harvey. A. T. Putnam, W. W. Wat kins. J. J. .spears end D. T. I)unn. Clerk tt Treasurer—Janies Houston. Cki'/Mankal AnuUint Martha! -J L. Beach lUieempn—W S. Pittman. fort ntytifian—J. H. Bisl City Pkhyricia * * " •torMoUtt tieian—J. R. Itobins. M. D. Jotter—Matthew Hh: Port H’erdnu—Burr Wiutui M. I>. s. M. Ii 'hanuon. Town ooifMojia—Speara, Putnam and Htacy. Habhob— Harvey, C *— • — • Railroad*-< . r,k. and reading good books- the books 0UU HOME PRODUCTIONS—GE0R- of the great masters of English prose and poetry. To form in the young tho habit CIA’S RESOURCES. Turpentine and Rosin. JOSE”- "‘i: fection under his use of it. Address of the Principal, C. W. Hut- son,Esq. At the Closing Exercises. I laud love of reading is nu immense It is impossible to set too high a J step gained. Hence, tho impos-si- h. a. Helper m Aiiany s, value on education. It has been j bility of a good teacher's hearing a Every manufacturer encouraged tho strong, yet keen and flexible,! lesson said by rote. Study must *** ^ country ninkoH juirt ot a mar tool of progress in all ages. The he enforced, but there should nl-: kot for provisions within ourselves measure of civilization which we | ways he time taken or made to il- j al ’d saves so much money to the enjoy could never have been won j lustrate points in the lesson by ad- [ country as must otherwise be ex- without it. Every step of human ditionnl oral instruction which ported for the manufactures lie advancements every conquest of mi- j shall help to fix those points in the j supplies. This is a patent fact to ture, every mastery of those wide j mind, and to bring out bv judi- every one who will, for n moment, laws of generalization which have cious questioning the degree in think of the relation betw P u t man on a yet higher and high-1 which tho pupil has taken in the er plane of superiority to the brute j truth taught and made it fairly a creation and tho lower tribes of his; part of bis mind, own race, lias been owed to his in- It is the part of the teacher, too, creasing command of this mighty to lead the mind of the pupil by instrument, and to its growing per- J every possible means to acquire the TTxtkin*. Uemxtkriex- Putnam, Harvey ail J C Public uuilmno*— W Atkin*. S|>e«r* ?en cftpi- tal and labor. To a close observer in this coun try of the immense strides made in Georgia during the lost ten years in the development of the manufactures and mercantile re sources, and the rapidly increasing A Girls Composition on Hoys. Boys arc not like girls; they are different. A hoy likes to spin a lop. il.V a kite, or rule ahorse, or go a fishing; hut if you call it work, then they won’t unless they are whipped. I don’t think it would be full to go fishing and fall in tho creek ami not get out, and drown, and have your mother say you had been in swimming, though I ex pect they can swim ns well as boys, if they know how. A turtlo can The Thin Partition Between Life and Death. \Y hen we walk near the power ful machinery, wo know that one single misstep and those mighty engines would tear us to ribbons with their flying wheels, or grind us to powder with their jionderous jaws. So, when we are thundering across the land in a rail-car, ami there is nothing but half an inch of iron flange to hold lis upon the track. So, when we arc at sea ill swim fluster than a boy, but a dog-j" 1 ' “ , “ 1 th . er ° n ° 1 lhl "8 but the fish can heat them both. Dog fish-1 ‘“f k " "..° f a blanlc bct " r «' n es are not wood to . dog H,*•»«*. We imagine that Fiiue DEPAUrMBiri'—Dunu. Harvey *u<l I’utnin. UNITED STATES OFFICERS. Collector of Custom*—John T. Collin*. Deputy—II. T. Dnun. Collector Internal Revenue—1>. T. Dunn. Deputy Marshal—Jamr* M. Couper. habit of expressing itself in pure j and simple English. Simplicity is __ I vnlue every form of it. No better in great help to truth, and truth is, trailo, it must he a matter of satis-1 f 1 ,""' , 1..,. . ... A..,!... - ,r i .. . . llOlSOI es are not good to eat, hut a uug i . , ,.. , ,, „ ’ . 8 ,see how close we are to the edge of can hito better than n fish. ,, , . , 8 'the precipice, but wo do not see it. Whgthor on the sea or on the land, the partition that divides us from Boys like to go with girls; when they don’t go with them, it is be cause they don’f want to, not be cause they can't. Boys like to kiss I believe, then, in education, and and simple English. Simplicity is! number of her various branches of I ‘ 1 -..a I. iJirn.m l. i I K ,rls - One kissed me once; I see than to lose no opportunity of Or.ce train a mind to think aright ! Kr»«dng stability of tho State of , , ’ 1 . .. *■[ mu , !!t ,lot 1,11 learning anything that by remotest in straightforward lines of thought, | Georgia in commercial independ- ° " e ’ won ‘ 81 >y now j possibility may sonic day he use- through simple and direct forms of e,lt ' c and dignity. Bd for all knowledge has its uses, j language, and all the scionco in the J ^ hat the people of Georgia now Yet knowledge is not education, world that may be put before it in desire is to make their State one and I fear that this truth is too of- alter years will he taken in with j among the first manufacturing j ten lost sig.it of in nu age like ours, j ten times the case, on account of! Pintos of the Union, and events are when knowledge is so multiplied the great brotherhood of truth, looking to that end. Georgia, in of the earth, and the which makes a clear mind appro' her natural advantage., and resoitrc- sub-divisions of the sciences are so ■ bend the thousand relations of one j es for manufacturing, is quite the , i. ?•.,»«.. ins. M«r. ii *. iwn. j numerous, that to pretend to a ! science to another with a readiness ; equal of the New England States watrh i aaaM highly axtiafartory and aqnxi hi were smattering of tncin nil wotiM aim naturalness wholly inecmccivn-j '* not the superiorm theadvantngi label"*«“rii IT in uune. *w! *?L»iu!' ! ®<*t a man the study of a lifetime, hie to one who has been taught to of many articles of manufacturing, tm ssDiui |, rl l aw« i ^°° lnucb d'nc is wasted in many regard every study as standing all [skill and art. 2Sut« J "*"I!r.tn"!*»ii l n'rtbi :o ^ our ‘“dilutions of learning over to itself, mid whose thought has Poatmaxter—Lluua North. £ DITOItS A NUN E VV S P A l»K K MEN of the country, aiidorae Jam km Horn’ Patent Gold Watch C’abm Aa a proof, read tho following; Baltimore, Md.. March H. lMSu. It givax me pleanuru to inform you that thn Jamea Bow Watch Caa* I have carried, haa given I on # |, p f. l( . perfect aasiafacu jn. It wear* beautifttlly. I J.T. Kinoooij), Ed. and Prop’t Telnjrum . Ind . March «. jhho. l the JamcM Boat w**t.h ch... nod rhwrtniij jiaj.th.t it r.nnott>r '■* wwihuk uvn i w iikii, imu iviiosc uiougnv nas j 11 has fallen within our province u *"“ lu “■> "*>• r,|„.r f "Eft'll | tbe acquisition of the rudiments ol! been stifled and overloaded with during the past two months to no- saur J "’ tts.tiss?' tA. and Prop’t Imqmh Co. lime* •an. Wla., March 10. 1WW. es IBS Pnljcffb!!-! .//“Jrtv a dozen or so sciences. The mere I bundles of study of the technical names and scientific odds and ends, divisions of biology and zoology, entomology and coi.chology, min- ernlogy and botany, herpetology and ornithology, and the like, may «a iu bj haaiiradi of (? r! d‘fy a love for display and for JR2±i„r'“"“ j b 'B wor '*' , i bul cannot greatly ad- ““^”bT T .r vanco tbc ri ' a * vBucution of the pu- at:. pil. Not that I undervalue these studies:—they are all admirable in their place, and some of them may of j lice and expatiate upon the prog ress which the present state of trade Science is good, languages are displays in favor of our commercial gooJ, art is good, but for a public sciiool like this, where the forma tive stage of education is nll-in-nl!, our first and almost our last effort should he to teach English thor oughly. Ten at least, out of twelve years of the pupil’s schooling, should he devoted to this, and the growth and prosperity in the man ufacture of certain branches of home industry, and our task in volved in the direction of gathering statistics is by no moans exhausted, hut, on the contrary, wo find that we hut enter upon it, having yet much to learn and remark concern Somebody in this town told me it was no fun to kiss a girl when her mother was looking I said, “ Did you ever try it?” he said, “ Yes.” When boys get married, they generally marry a girl; though I have known some old boys who marry a girl’s mother. I guess that was because the mother was wil ling and the girl wasn’t. If I hadn’t been a girl, I gupss I d been a hoy. If I was u b<>y I would like the girls. My ma calls me a tomboy sometimes, but tom boys don ’t like the girls. That's all I know about boys. P AIIH^Al! I ht ‘ir place, and some of them may pupil ought, at the end of such n j ing the prosperity of individual I llll II11,1 fitly enough (ind a place oven in a course of training, to think, speak concerns. VVIItf VVUIIIVI scheme lor the education of young and write ns pure English as any-j The turpentine business through- A-r jkwklry 3T0UK or children. I body, if, only, our efforts are prop- out the State is one of great im|ior- But it is not so much what they erly supported at home by a free | tance, on account of its character Cllas. J. Doerflincer, ! e * rn they learn that is theUupply of the best books. Then, [and tho extent of the operations.— n j important thing in the training of and not till then, it will lie in placi | the young. They are first to be to give some solid instruction ii More Truth Than Poetry. Old man—‘‘Johnny, take this five dollar bill and catch the colt and ride over to town and tell Brown to send me a gallon of the best whiskey, same ns I got week before last. And stop into Smith's and.n-ll him to send me a dollar’s worth of good tobacco, and if you w ant to, you can get four bits worth of chew ing gum; and tell Smith to pick mo out two good axe helves and a set of shoes to fit the colt.— eternity is something thinner than tho oak plank or half an inch of iron flange. The machinery of life and death is within us. The tis sues Hint hold these beating flow ers in their places arc often thinner thnn a piece of pnfier, and if that thin partition were pierced or rup tured, it would be just the Bame with us as if a rnnnon-hnll hod struck us. Death is inseparably hound up with life in the very structure of our Imdics. Struggle ns wo will to widen the space, no ,n *n can at any time go further from death than the thickness of n sheet of paper. The New Boy. He was a brand new office boy young, pretty-faced, with golden ringlets nnd blue eyes, just out of his little trundlc-bod in the mid die of the night and transported beyond the stars. Tho first day he glanced over the library in the ed itorinl room, became acquainted with everybody,knew all the prin turs, and went homo in the evening ns happy and ns cheery as a sun beam. The next day he appeared, leaned out of the back window, tied the cat up by the tail in the hall way, bail four fights with another boy, borrowed two dollars from an aipiiut of the building,.saying ON BAY STREET. C ALL and axaiutna my j-<aiif Counter, i tb* multitude ot thing*, too uuunr dimuMob, that law offering at ONLY FIVE CENTS A-PIKCE. AUCTION COMMISSION D. James Dillon. Auction Days Every Weilnes day and Saturday, Krgiii nlng at II O'clock a m. J. M. DEXTER, Banker and Broker, Exchange bought and soli Insura nee a Heal Estate Agent. ,0r r “ r> »» k *' >»l« H.rria, . JlO&ifta. c. r. ooodteae. | I r- ■ B ,.„~ GOODYEAR 4 HARRIS, Attorneys at Law, Pncsawicx, Gcoaou. O FFICE—Ob Olouraater a tree t, next door tu MD-helaon’a, up etaira. Pi artlca in all muntlea of the Bruaa«k'k Cir cuit and lb# city w f Daru-u, Ga. uo 1-ly, r|Y) all whom It may concern Be It known that 1. neither tb# owner of the at. Au.er Florence, nor the obarter-partv. nor th« cun«ignaa«, will b«. raaponetble for any bill* or debt* contracted by *ny of the crew of the ateamar Florence, without Brubawtck, <»*., Sept J. Meat, r of Steamer rioranc*. R. ROBINS, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON, O FFERS Ua j.rofaaaluna! aerrleea to tbe people of Rruuawlck anl vi -inlty offlea at Mad dtn * drug atore. lUaiden-c ob Mouk air ret ot-ar M«rbwdiat .bux.L | taught to think, and they cannot he taught that excellent discipline of the mind, which is the true heart of education, until they are taught the proper uso of language. It is essential that they should learn to use their native language aright— in the case of the children of our English-speaking race, to speak and write clean, pure, simple English. For language is the grand instru ment of thought, nnd for thought to be right and true, the language in which it is couched must he right nnd true. And just here, let me confess for myself and those of my profession, is the great puzzle of teachers. We get at the result we aim for some times, but we hnvo to try a variety of ways. No ono way of teaching the English language, perfect nnd infallible, has yet been reached We are in despair over tho gram mars. They aro ono And all unsat isfactory to the most advanced stu dents of the great science of lan guage; and, if they were really good from a linguistic point of view, they are most arduous and painful instruments for the minds of the young to use. The grammar of any language is a complex and thoroughly abstract study, one of the lost thnt the picture-loving mind of childhood can be brought to cope with heartily. The English grammar, then, is n poor make shift when we seek to equip the minds and memories of the young with store of choice English. How shall we go about our task then? The answer is, by giving such charm to even the primary studies, arithmetic, geography .read ing, history and the tike, that the Then come by Thompson’s and tell. _ . _ The business is one of great iiiagni- him to lend me his paper if it bus b ^* mother was dead, collected his in! tude. Besides supplying the want-; come. I want something to read! •'Vo-days’ pay from the cashier, hit some one or two scientific studies, of this country, there is an ciior j so bad I don't know what to do;l tbc j ai ‘Bor with a broomstick, pawned a coat belonging to one of the editorial stuff, wrenched the knobs off the doors, upset the ice- eooler, pied throe galleys of ty|io and tmished his finger in the small press. On the third day n note was received, saying: “My mother do not want I to work in such a lull place. She says I Would make a Good preacher, so do I.— my finger is Bcttei; gone fishin Yours.” in French, or German, or Italian, J motis trade carried on in the Old | K°1 Ho w ay to amuse myself at my or Spanish, or in the study of art. J World, South America and the ■ no,m resting hut killing (lies. I Wife—“What docs that paper cost, husband ?” Old man—“ Fifty cents a year, postage paid." Wife—“ Then why don’t yon subscribe for it nnd not be eternally r on the south and the Tar river borrowing?” on tho north. Up to 1832, the getting of tur pentine wrs confined to a space be- None of these are really out of place West Indies, in a public school, any more tlijin j Previous to the year 1820, the are the principles of book-keeping production of turpentine was ex- or bunking. At the entrance into ceedingly small, being confined to the great arena of life, some useful the region of North Carolina, ein- and practical study can surely not braced between the Cape Fear riv- bc amiss. But if Latin or Greek he set down ns a desirable part of tho course of study, all experience teaches that the pupil should begin early. Nor j tween the two above named rivers, would such study be ut all in tho the supply being barely sufficient way of that earnest effort to acquire good English which 1 have set down as tho true niui of all early teaching, for no hotter or more sub tly suggestive aid in the study of one language can be found than that comparison and contrast which the study of another silently and yet powerfully enforces And now, as a practical admoni tion in enforcement of these views, let me, in conclusion, urge you, children, (passing now for a time from undei our care), to spend your vacation profitable—not in study, for amusement is your right during that pleasant season—hut in de voting a fair part of your time of leisure to reading, and to the effort to keep your speech pure, through some carefulness in your reading. Give thought to your reading, and draw thought from it, and try to profit by it in training your tongues to the use of such sweet and simple English as sha gfaee to your lightest word Wonder if the sailor lads ever swing with the girls on tho navi gate. for the consumption of this coun try. The production of spirits of tur pentine and rosin for tho crop of 1876 in tho United States is put down in round numbers nt about 300.000 casks of spirits turpentine 1.500.000 barrels of rosin, which would have netted in round num- liera $6,600,000. It has been estimated that the annual product of Georgia in the rosin and turpentine trade is 200,. 000 barrels ot turpentine, anif 300,- 000 barrels of rosin, which would give to the State of Georgia alone for this one industry !3,000,00ft.— Nearly half as much as was pro duced by the whole country in 1876. Below we give a few figures ob tained from twelve representative turpentine men in Georgia—the to tal amount of capacity, yield, acres under cultivation, the number of distilleries and stills, with the num ber of hands employed; this re capitulation being only submitted Old man—“ Times is too hard to pay for piqiers, can’t spare the money.” A sad looking young man went into a drug store. “Can you give me," he asked, “something that will drive from my mind the thoughts of sorrow and bitter recollections?" The druggist maided, and put him up n little dose ot quinine and wormwood nnd rhubarb and ep- sotn salts and a dash of castor oil and gave him, nnd for six months the man couldn’t think of anything ill the world except new schemes for getting the taste out of his mouth. It is said that nothing succeeds like success. Just put a hoy in conjunction with a watermelon nnd if ha don’t suck seed more than success then we miss our guess. Baton Rouge has lately increased her police to three men and n dog. The dog is defiendcd on to stand guard over the officers while they sleep. 8hould he iiqtielcliod. Adam and Eve’s east pupil may git n love for reading jin the appleste court hoard Emma—The only point of resem blance between flowers and women that we are aware of, is that they great industry in our mi-lst Total number of crops 325 Number of ncres 76.0(0 Number of boxes 3,3-16,000 ,K ’ th shot up when they sleep Yield per year $459,000 j Halids employed 820- Distilleries Stills Tlie good mother nnd accessible There aro two classes of humor ists in this country that ought to he sat down on emphatically. Ono is the funny man who points an empty gun around indiscriminate ly, and the other is the genial indi vidual that rocks a row boat to scare the inmates. The boat-rock- or looms up the grandest when there are some womon in the boat. It shows off liis great bravery and indicates that ho cares very little for marine dangers. His smiling self-assurance as he rocks the little craft from side to side, stands out strongly against their terror-strick en demeanor os they cling to the boat. The remedy for this sort of business is to pick up the nearest oar and knock the humorist into the bottom of the boat. Don’t bo afraid of hitting him too hard, his head is thick. Argue the cose after words when he lice in tho bottom of the lioat. Then show him firm ly, hut kindly, theerrorof his ways, and if he attempts to dispute w ith you, have tho oar handy. Investigatiig Earthquake*. The work of the 8win Earth quake Commission will be watched with much interest just now, on account of the great number of earthquakes, some very destructive, that havo disturbed different porta of tho earth within the lost few months. The Commissioner hava districted Switzerland for the pur pose of observation, and each dis trict has a chief observer assigned to it, whose business it is to make tho inhabitants serve as his assist ants by distributing among them a pamphlet describing the phenome na of earthquakes nnd the beat means of observing them, and blank forms containing a series of questions, carefully prepared, and intended to form a skeleton histo ry of every earthquake that is ob served. Instruments for measur ing the force, direction, duration and so on, of all earthquake shocks, are to be placed in the hands of skilled observers nt certain stations. The First National Convention of the present Republican party was held in Philadelphia, June 17, 1856, when John C. Fremont was nominated for Presidenton the Aral ballot; in 1860, nt Chicago, Abra ham Lincoln on the third ballot; in 1864, at Baltimore, AbrahAm Lincoln on the first ballot; in 1868, Grant on the first ballot; in 187' at Philadelphia, Grant on the fi ballot; in 1876, at Cincinnati, R. Hayes on the seventh ballot, in 1880, at Chicago, James a field on the thirty-sixth ball* Adam was driven from during the night, ofcou certainly after the. fall Old bachelors who isn’t any fun in courti get a little gal-an-try. A good name is hett-O cious ointment—on the bank note. The two honey bees that wpp into the nrk, lodged in the arc-hivea. Is lcnq^g n friend a wash dish showing him basin gratitude? Bnchu Has Long been used by the Hottentots io a vari ety of discuses. From those nuts practjoioiii is tho remedy was borrowed by the reeidcnt English and Dutch physibinns, by whose recoinroendotion it Was employed iu Europe, and baa since come luto genera] use. Coin- uimd with Juniper nnd other desira ble ingredients, as in tiie preparation of Unukiu’s Compound Fluid Extract of llnehn and Jnniper, il proves a moat ruliuUlt* remedy for Non•rutoutioa or Incontinence of Urine. Irritation, In- n.oniuntjon or Ulceration of the Plad- der and Kidneys, Stone in the Bind- 0 ™ v > > Kriok Dust Deposit, Milky DiMolmrgi 1 .* and all dimwi of the Bladder or Kidneys aud Dropsies) Swelling in man. woman or child prepared only by Huut, Rankin A Laiinar, Atlautu, (la., an ‘ Joerger, Brunswick Qa. and sold by F. Read What Qcn. 0. T. (Tige) Ander son Suya Messrs. Hukkimn if Bro.: Gentle men I have I wen a great snffenrr from neuralgia—the attacks Luting fog lays. I bull tried every known reme dy without being relieved. In my lust attack I tried yonr " .Neuralpine,” md in a short time was perfectly ured. It is a cousolation to know that I have at last a remedy that con trols this painful disease, and I can cheerfully recommend it |o ell who sullei as I do. O. T. Andzkson, Atlanta, April 18, 1879. Chid f’ulioe For sale by F. Joerger, Brunswick. re M ac 2?- °*Tnov. 1. 1879. Dr C. J. norm—Dear Sir—Wo have beau handling Teethinefori al years, and the demand it the article becomes intrude known. Our aales average from Isa m » iof mom iudiapeiumblo article, for <a ne iashiacs furs U /niled togiett. No oomplaint hue ever been ___ us, hunoe we conclude Iket it dasa ail yon claim for it. Merit it bound lm me- cecl. Hoxt, Rasxik A Lamar D’g’sta For sale by F. Joerger, BVwnswsak janelS-la O*. Dxoatur December 10. !8T9. I was so troubled with Bed-bugs that 1 could not sleep, auil used tbe Rex Exterminator, and have not I jelo-Im EONOBA MoNEAL. Are you Sick? If a If yuu drink lake water at Cleve- .50 »lil»per always tnnke n spanking 1 land, you are sure to get the Erie- .17 team. I sip-alas! , go to yonr nearest ilyyggist or Store, nnd buy a bo* of Dr. Glider's ■ 1 r Fills, t hey »DI core job. You liu.l them iu any a lore. Tnmkle, twinkle little stars the way of yonder pedeetrins nearent drug store to boy e (Janssen's Lightning rant Ida rhciim.itism.Umelaick. 50 omit* For sde by all