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The Advertiser and Appeal,
13 PtTBLUHiP. EVERY SATURDAY, AX [
BRUNSWICK, - Q-EGRGIAi
^ 1 : vi
T. €»■ &&AXrsr.
taerlytlon Bales.
gubeerlytlou
One oopj one jmt,. I
One copy «U month*...
AdvcrtiacmenU from responsible pi
Communications for individual benefit, or
tour Ilnee. sollcted fbr publication. When ex-
"ceding that apace, charged as advertisements.
All letters and communication* ihould be aft.
dressed to the undersigned.
T. a. STACY,
Brnnstrick, Georgia.
BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA, SATUR»AYv.FE^tU^.^Wai!^»«'t»i m -<
si? ,«<,;»I b iieia aa jtiiiaticSsd
=r. n rrr:i if ■.>! ■swrfw
m s&ottehantetB
CITY OFFICERS.
aVaj ur-M. J. CoUou.
Airmen- J. J. Spears, J.P. Harvey, F. J. Door*
Huger, 8. C. Littlellolil, J. M. Coupor, J. WUder,
W.W. Hardy, J.R. Coo*. * f
Ckrk d Treasurer—iamva Huoaton.
Chief Marshal—J. E. Lambright.
PolicaucA—D. B. Goodbrcad, W. H. Rainey, 0. B,
Moure, C. W. Byrd.
K'qtr ij Guard Mouse and Clark qj Market—D. A.
Mo^re.
i\)rt physician—J. 8. Blaia.
City physician— J. R. Robins.
i>>xton White Cemetery—U. Q. Mooro.
S**ton Colored Cemetery— Jackie White.
Uarbor Mailer—Matthow Shannon.
V, #r.*r.2era—Thcs 0*Cc&&GF, A. S. WatUni,
DeXtcl. r> *■ ; . ..
mtanding co.>i.Mnrf.Ks or council.
Littleflold. 1 '
Xiw.n coMM<>f*—-liarvuy, Hurd/af.'!
! Spuare.
IliBDon—Hardy, Cook and Litl
Public mtildinoh—Ilarvcy, Couper and Wiidur.
um—Wilder, Spcursaud Hardy,
os—Cook, Conper and Wilder.
Speara, Ilarrey and Cook.
Kirk dki'auxmkkT—Doofflingur, Hardy and Spears,
lick Wilder, Cook and Harvey.
UNITED STATES OFFICERS.
Collector ofCuBtotna—John T. Collins.
lMmty~!l. T. Dunn.
Collector Internal Revenue—D. T. Dunn. )
ivputy Marshal—T. W. Dexter.
PuMtniaster—Linus North. •
Comuiiswiojutr—C. H. Box tor
Shipping CommiHHioner—G. J. Hall.
E A PORT LODGE, Xo. OS. I. 0. 0. P..
Meets every Tuesday ni^ht^*
J.T. LAMB RIGHT, V. G.
AS. E. LAMBRIGHT, F. * R. Secretary.
BAY PTRBErr,
RUNSWICK, - GA.
uMiient to Bu.siueu.s, the
Hailroads and the Sfeamboals.
'mature New, Table Good
Y.E.BECXtrCO,,
PROPRIETORS.
iluit
iMm <*
TjPQflfclfn .ffabaraaaU IB DOV DI6A0h<
Ir^lUUIE .U* rllB** “
! ^068, 48 tern-
and op
a rocent occasion considered profane
swearing, from the test, “ Curse God
;Wp. : the follow
extracts:
iarnett louse,
iFORMKBLY PLANTERS' HOTEL),
«t ^inare,
Savinoah, (la.
L. HAKNETT & 00,
PROPBIBTOR8,
■TES,
$2.00 PER DAY.
!' ' ,,or itf farallr Hotel, under It, new manag*.
. J’ meoieinended for the .Xvellaao* of its
avA?®' comturt*. l'*i»SKT ATT0.
1 and moderate RATES. aprim-l,
w. h. parsons;
PAINTER.
5USE AND SION
PAINTIN(J.
haTiNG KtLS0MININ6,FfiESCGtNG&GRAININB
•Jtnptly exeente d In th« latest atylea
l The habit grows in the community
from the fret tbptyoang people think
it.nHmlyh> £! fVl?«,i:;Ieittfc children,
hardly , ^ *ft, ,^h 8fr«igl4 oa ths
street, yet having enough distinctness
of utterance to let you know that they
are damning their own soak or damn-
ingihe soak of others. It is an aw
friji thing the frmt time little feet ore
lifted to have them set down on.the
burning pavement of bell i Between
sixteen and twenty years of age there
k,apt to come a time when a young
man k as mnch ashamed of not being
abk to swear gracefully os be is of
the dizziness of his first cigar. He
has his hat, his boot and his coat up
to the right pattern, and now, if ho
can only swear without awkwardness,
and ns well os hk comrades, he be
lieves he is in the fashion. There are
young men who walk in the atmos
phere of imprecation—oaths on their
lips, under their tongues, nesting in
their shock of hair. They abstain
from it in the elc^gftnt, drawing room
b,n^ the etrept and the club-house ring
with their, profanities. They have no
regard for God, altboagh they have
great regard fo|j„ the ladies. My
young brother, there is no manliness
in that. The most nngentlemanly
■hing a man can do is to swear. Fa
thers foster tfie crime. There are pa
rents who are very cautions not to
swear in the presence of their chil
dren. In n moment of sudden unger
they look around to see if the children
are present, and then they indulge in
this habit. Do you not know, O, fa
ther, that your child is aware of the
fact that you swear? He overheard
you from the next room, or some oue
has informed him of your habit. He
is practicing now. In teu years he
will swear as well as you do. Do not,
O, father, be under the delusion that
you may swear and your son not
know it. It is an awful thing to start
the habit in a family. The father to
be profane, and then to hnve the echo
of bis example come back from other
generations, so that generations after
generations curse the Lord.
I'Uii.' * T ' * , . . T A *
i Tie habit comes abo from the pro
fuse use of by-words. The : transition
from a by-word «mi may Be perfect
ly harmless to imprecation and pro
fantty k not a very large transition
It is "my starsfshd “mercy on mo!
and "good graeions!” and “byGeorgef
and “by Jove T and yOu go'with that
a little wtib; and then y6a swear.—
iniese words, perfectly harmless in
themselves, sre the next door to im-
oation and blasphemy. A profnse
of by-words always ends fa pro-
■. The habit k oreSping into the
itteA 'ittks of society. Women
no tditience With fiat and nnvar-
ofanity. They will order a
ft,nn ont of the' parlor indulging fa
blasphemy', and yet yon will sometimes
findjtbein, with fairy fan to the lip and
under cbaudUkrs which bring no
blnsb to tbeir cheek, taking on their
lips the holiest of namesjin otter triv
iality. Why, my friends, the English
langMC* k eompnhensive and oapa-
blo of expressing Ml shades of feeling
and every degree of energy. Are yon
happy ? Noah Webster will give yon
ten thousand words with which to ex
press yonr exhilaration. Are you
I V» TO .--HjiiBV
wwbolojcr^
righteone vocabulary—whole armories
of denunciation, and scorn, and SMv
9W«n, and iroa^, afl4
some meanness, or bypoorlfy. Jn all
the oaths that ever, 8»Qited. nfi,, froip
the pit, and. I will come right on after
yon, and give a thousand fold moro
eppjiasis of denunciation,^^ same
meanness and the same hypocrisy in
words across which no slime has ever
trailed, and into which the firps of
hell have never shot, their forked
tongues—the, pure, innocent, God-
honored Anglo-Saxon, in whioh Mil-
ton sang, and John Banyan dreamed,
and Shakespeare dramatized.
* , * * * * *
If yon would get rid of thk habit,
I want yon, my friend^, to dwell upon
the uselessness of it. Did a volley of
oaths ever start a heavy load ? Did
they ever extirpate , meanness from a
customer? Did they ever collect a
bad debt ? Did they ever cure a
toothache ? Did they ever stop the
twinge of tbo rheumatism ? Did they
evor help you forward one step in the
right direction ? Gome now, tell me,
ye who have had the most experience
in this habit, how much have you
made out of it ? Five thousand dol
lars ? No. One thousand dollars ?
No. One hundred ? No. One dollar ?
No. One cent?. No. If the habit
be so utterly useless, away with it,!
Bat you say, “I have straggled to.
overcome the habit for a long time,
but have not been successful.” You
to kuow-tfiat'fdl thoee ^oloeb of : 4ihe
fag, tq.ljp,beared. -jfenwl&itffANi
poiras iofi Chxiat’a Goopek islfpofagefa
be saved! and thk crime, thk
and ,Mfth^ pther iniquities Will. 11
before ethe rising of Ihe sun, of
eouaness upon anation. ,. »,i„a oWi
».;! lo qa
“Sf',') mil
tYkaf .Vaccine 1
It is taken froto the
» d koose
ia,”ftnd lo hen06 the, tertn “bovfae vil
rns.” It is from this, also; that "vac
cination” derives its name.’ 1 During
the latter jia^t of the eighteenth cen
tury Dr, Jenner observed .that certain
milk maids did not: take smallpox
when the epidemic was prevalent He
set about investigating the Cause, and
found that in milking; cows which
were diseased with vaccina; the! mat
ter from their udders and teats got
into the fingers of tho maids agd pro
duced littfq, s^res similar ,to tbpse
caused by vaccination, alter! which
they wore Bafe from the contagion of
smallpox. To test the troth'of his
discovery he .collected some of. thk
matter, and by making incisions in
tho skin, infused some of it, and the
result was entirely satisfactory. Vac
cination has been used eVer sih'ce as
a picventivo of tho loathsome
Natural virus, however,, from thb scab
of one who has been vaccinated is
preferable to bovine virus, on account
of its freshness, ,pnr|ty andjgjhjpihe-
uess. Before thk discovery “inocula
tion” was resorted to as a safeguard
struggled in-your own strength; my 'agaiiBk' smiillpux "4hat ~iaf' ipntter
brother. If ever a man wants God,
it is in snch a crisis of his history.—
God alone by His grace can emanci
pate yon from that trouble. Call up
on hire day and night, that you may
be deliveued from this crime. Re
member also in the care of this habit
that it arouses God's indignation.—
The Bible reiterates from chapter to
chapter and in verse after verso tho
fact that it is accursed for this life,
and that it makes a man miserable for
eternity.
O! my brother, you begin to swear
and there is nothing impossible ba
you in the wrong direction. Who is
this God whoso name you are using
in swearing ? Who is he ? Is he a
tyrant? Has he pursued you all yonr
life long ? Has he starved you, fro
zen you, tyrauized over you ? No. He
has loved you, He has sheltered you.
He watched yon last night. He wants
to help yon, wants to save yon, wants
to comfort yon. He woe yonr father’s
God and yonr mother’s God. He has
housed them, saved them from the
blast, and be wants to shelter you.
Will you spit in hk face by impreca
tion ? Will yon ever throat him back
by an oath ? Who k thk Jeans whose
name I heard in the imprecation?
Has be pursued yon all yonr life long ?
What vile thing has be done to yon
that yon should so dishonor hk name ?
Why, be was the lamb whose blood
simmered in the fires of sacrifice for
yon. He k the brother that took oil
hk crown that yon might pnt it on.
He has panned yon all yonr life long
with mercy. He wants you to love
Him, wants yon to serve Him. He
comes with streaming eyes and bro
ken heart and blistered feet to save
you. On the craft oi our doomed hu
manity he pushed ont into the sea to
take you off the wreck. Where is the
hand that will ever be lifted to impre
cation again ? Let that hand, now
blood-tipped, be lifted that I may see
it Where is the voice that will over
be uttered in dishonoring the name
of that Christ ? Let it speak now.—
Not one. Not one. Ob! I am glad
from the disease itself was used in
stead of vacciue virus. This produced
a typo of smallpox, though less vio
lent and less dangerous in its results.
Besides, another a lvantago was thiit
the physicians knew exuetly how and
when to begin treatment.
———*•«•*
A Project to Pipe Gan T%vo IIundr<*d
•ud Fifty inIIcm.
f NUMBER 31. -
. .7 (1 iieng u • > /I .bo
= =--■ -■ ...
-ffl'icgCP :*■■■•.«*
i : 1^- -BiM-HfiP*-*«.»' -
And on th* 1m 1*7 low—
IJ - POT T upon thl»'4*7 do die,
- • Hjou.0 So* *•!*>.”
No tall-Ule Alan doe# a ho shr ahow.
n?/ i.’i.!
While he hie mad pleas plies—
The tesvdfbpe that do downward flow V
loo €
HIP,
vm
io
feu
Scientific American.
A uotnpftuy of well-known capital-
ists huvo organized the “Gas Light
Transportation Company," to mine
coni and manufacture gas in Pennsyl
vania and pipe the gas to Eastern
cities. A director of the company re
cently said that they proposo to erect
gns works that will manufacture 40,-
000,000 feet of gns per day. This
would require 1,100,000 tons of coal
annually. The coal can be bonght
at the mines for 55 cents per ton, but
the gas companies pay $4.62 per ton
for it They save something by the
sale qf coke, tar, and ammoniacol li
quor, so that their coal oost them $3.
14 per ton, or 32 cents a thousand
onbic feet of gas m&nafactured. /. Ouo
great saving expected by, tho new
company is jn the coat of coal and in
the transportation. Another saving
will come, they think, from the fresh
ness of the coal, since coal newly
mined produces more, a#d bet ten go*
than coal which hah boon exposed to
the weather. The : cost of pqmpipg
the gas is offset to the value of< the
coko. Tho deterioration of gas in ilk
long pipe thoy expect to conntefbal-
ance by making the gas extra rich,at
first The pipek to be.of irofi. aix
feet in diameter, laid in hydraulic ce
ment. :9, ‘ 1 *'•* 1
X
Iu the public schook at Port Hu
ron, Michigan, leather straps “a foot
long, two inches wide and very tbibk M
are used iu punishing children. If
the committee will call around again
we will duplicate our subscription for
the Michigan sufferers.
Nellie Grant Sartoris startled the
ladies at a recent Washington party
by wearing bright red kid gloves.
th. w»yw.w»r!
Do joti not, Sae, **y.>o ?”
Ho liiig««l on kOM nigli, nor _ .. j
For IUVW know *oiq.' *
HU& was a 1 He was a big-
ger’man'than Graht, but could "noi
Tho milk of human’ kindness welis
from the hnmsn heart, but cow's
k eomos from an ’ufidir place.l‘ i ’ 1
Utri Kinlin, of Sin Fnihckco, mifrt
ried Miss Wotid. Tbe marriage no
tice was beadedi .‘‘Kinlin—-Wood."
New York men about town appear
in full dress after 6 p. m. Fall dress
in New York oonakts of four fingers
of brandy and a five-cont cigar.
Old Deaoon Dodson always boasted
that he was “prepared for the worst,"
and the neighbors think he got it
when he married bis second wife.'
A Norristown second-hand furniture
dealer has a toy said to have been
made by George Washington. And a
Philadelphia dealer in bri-'-a-brachos
a soap bubble blown by George when
be was nine years old. „
-The mother had ent the little
daughter’s hair to make ‘ bangs:?.
Surveying her own work, she said:
“Bessie, yesterday yon looked an il
yon had no sense. Torday you look
>16. if your mother had none.”
. Johnny came homo from sdboolthe
other day VOnrereited;* - “What do
you think, pa, Johnny Steward, one
of the big boys, had an argument with
the teacher about a question in gram
mar !” “ What position did John
take ?” “ His last position was across
a chair with bis bead down.”
For Yonns men lo Remember,
That clothes don’t make the man.
Thnt their fathors know more than
they do.
That if they onoo get into debtjthey
may never get ont of it.
Thnt they will need something more
substantial than cigars and a cane to
start to housekeeping with.
That an employer who hears of a
clerk living in style a good ways abovo
his salary, is very apt to show him the
door when he leasts expeots it
That they can’t reckon on their fath
er’s fortune alone to bring them
through life. Fortunes are slippery
things—better have something be
sides to fall baok on~ > -u i , m -
TAM a girt who deeki herself fa th»
latest thing oak and parades the
streets while her mbther does the fam- :
fly washing, isn’t worth wasting much 1
lose ? i">s aavt » i
That a fellow WbO deliberately pro
poses matrimony to'll young lady
when he can’t support himself is ei
ther a first-class fraud or a fooL
That if the^ fall stark fa love with"’
a gill because she U| pro^ they
". * - ' T 41 - TV*. "TJ *
ought to bo a|iro how muoh powder
and paint therq may be fa t be qnes*
hnd fignre up?n if. accordingly.
'•lilt
From Rev. Mr. Cleveland, pastor
Presbyterian church, Gainesville, Ga.;
1 I have tried yonr Neurotic for indi
gestion, and found it a most excellent
remedy, and most heartily recommend
it. Taos. P. Cleveland. .
Neuralgia, Colic, Cold*, Etc.
From G. G. Smith, pastor Metho
dist chnrcb, Gainesville, Ga.:
I have used Neurotic in my family
with great satisfaction. Have found
it a specific in early stages of cold, a
teaspoonfnl is of great benefit, and Ik
gives.great relief fa neuralgia and
toothache. I like it very much.
jan!5-lm Geo. G. Smith.