Newspaper Page Text
-■ ■ ■ • ~ , ' T -’ . F-
BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18,1882.
V*
i\W
.volume m
NUMBER 33.
The Advertiser and Appeal,
Ifl PUBLISHED HVHBY SATURDAY, AT
BRUNSWICK, • GEORGIA,
•p. O* OT
IntHriptfo* Rates,
iLdrertUemenU from responsible parties-arm
be published until ordered out, whentheUmslji
3< Commnnlce»ione for lndMdual benellt, or
personal character, charged a* adrertiseme
1 Marriages and obituary notices not exceol _
lour lines, toileted tor publication. When o-
dresa*l to the undersigned^^ „
Brnneviek, Georgia.
CITY OFFICKR8.
Mayor- U. J. Colson.
Aldermen- J. J. Spears, J. P. Barrey, F. J. Doer
dialer,C. UtUeflAA J. H. Couper, J. Wilder,
W c5* <t Trtarlrer—lames Houston.
CkUfMarikal—i. E. Lambrttot.
PMenaon—V ~
—D. B. Goodbread, W. H. Balnoy, C. B.
^°Ktcpir \f OwL^Uotue and Clark oj Market—D. A.
H %5'«w«ea-J. B. Blaln
Ctty
'. ft. Robins.
C. G. Moores
Bcsloa Colored Cttwtary—Jackie Whits.
Sartor Welter—Matthew Shannon.
Port Wordsaa—Thoe O’Connor, A. E. Wattles, J.
M. Dexter.
RAxpmo ooxarrTazs or cooxcit.
Fisauon—'Wilder. Cook and 8pears.
Bruns, Darns ABsnxaa—Harrsy.Hardy and
Littlefleld.
r. Hardy and Spears.
I, DoerOinger and Hardy.
Llttlsneld.
Hannon—Hardy; Cook and LIUh.,.., ,
Pcauo sglLUiiis*-a»rTey. Jougertttid Wilder. *
kjJ towtiottatiftatiMnoEBS: .
t dBMghe*i—* Ummt0Wa&
tSffissaaagigsftr; •; *
JhiMi«w4—gdwiotar dweiWwj h wum
OCEANLOJ»J? No- 214.FAJ4.
• .!' !•« •liaskiid !o jiiUa.v >dl
j, ■ .,j, {.K.JtoJ .ftgtjfru oil l>»;fai.'.laJ
.toiii.i'J li on .'.iuNRV jcsgidtoo *>jtk
SEAPORT LODGE, No. 68; 1 L 0. Oi P..
hiiafi eAL^Jini c.i ebbs «
Meet, erery
J. T. DAMBR10UT. V. O,
JAB. E. LAMBRIOHT, P. A B. Secretary.
1
BAY STREET,
BRUNSWICK, - GA.
t; v i e o e c j j c yl \8
Convenient to Business, the
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Railroads and the Steamboats.
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SOIETHfilWr
SPECIALTY!
tsjsmeiisjin uriT «—r
lemellhe Stranee
Washington Star.
The popular reprobation of Gni-
teau’s crime is still manifested in dif
ferent ways. The common mode of
expressing the feeling against the as
sassin ia to Bend a rope suggestively
xL These ropes began to come
by mail and express before the trial,
and are still coming in. They have
been sent to the district attorney, to
Mr. Scoville, to the warden of the
pul, and to the assassin himself. A
little room at the jail is strewn with
ropes received from various parts of
the country. Some of them are ropes
such as are generally used in execu
tions, with conventional hangman’s
nooeoa skillfully made. Many other
little reminders.of the fate that awaits
him come in the mail of the assassin,
bnt the warden, as a rale, keeps them
from his eyes. Cheap comic valen
tines, representing the gallows, with
a dangling victim, are also sent to the
assassin.
In every nook in the district attor
ney’s office can bo found some testi
monial of popular feeling respecting
the assassin. Many of the ^hjngs^e-
eefW^hdVe bheii destroyed. In one
horheir of &Tr. CorkhiH’s private office
IVa Httfe teap of ’ropes. A Dondle of
vOr OEftmau from
fclgfflH^A riW^n^tiaceblA, Iowh,
ia 6Wef' ! tb ’ ! th«tify this%eling in a
unique way, invested $6.6dlh a pair
Ot wtitejJM^slatodlirfiriw whrte.eatin
iie,rthfrtipe$(:which be •••ram - i •.
alJ ylU DTEDiftWODftBP. v/l i -i
He sent with theS6 the roqneet that
they bo worn by Guitean on the scaf
fold, the red mark*, to typify the in
nocent blood of his victim. They
now form a part of the district attor-
uey e museum. From Ohio cauie a
little wyoden box opened on one side
It contained n miniature scaffold on
whieh a paper image of a man was
hanging, while a score of paper wo
men were hauling on the rope. These
were, according to the inscription ou
the box, “the womeu of Ohio.” Among
other curiosities saved by the district
attorney is a miniature scaffold and
coffin very neatly constructed, and a
gallows tree with an effigy six or sev
en inches long snspeuded upon it.—r
There is also a little coffin, the open
lid of whiok exposes a death’s bead.
Tbe coAn is inscribed, “Straogulatus
Fro Diabolo, 1882.” All sorts of pio-
tures, cartoons and letters have been
received ftnd destroyed. Daring the
early part of the trial a great many
gags of various patterns, the common
form being a corn cob, with strings
tied at-Mbn‘end, take received, with
a reqaam tliat they be applied to the
priCOAer,. . Some i of these ihav» been
samples brtneir wares,
£hat he ilnee
tnansyi io betarned ove^ to the
I Itave just opened, in flora ot Memira. Moore k
McCrary, % handsome line oi above goods, which I
propoie felling at prlcet -
Never Before Known!
. J. B. WRIGHT.
nom-ly
e l rssrivsd-fvom mAP- Wstkrford,
naihiiMkiBisari ftomartpa I alafcar,
wiiihmad fca ntaJu Sog.. Ika ttlMliD A
nd. ^him and bloe rope, ont of silk,
or uiy other material the district at-
torney might select One of the most
ghastly enriosities in the museum is
a black cap, sent by a&‘ unknown
friend xrf jostiae., A papsa printed in
Italian, received by the district attor
ney yesterday, contained a portrait of
that official, with a sketch of his ca
reer over the title “II Colonello Gior
gio B. CorkhilL”
How War Does a Dollar Do t
The New York Public has supple
mented ita recent admirable discus
sion of prioes now and before the war
by a comparative statement of the
amount needed to bay an equal quan
tity of the staple commodities now, in
the past four years, and in 1860. This
is a practical answer to the question
in domestic economy, asked probably
oftener than any other, whether a giv
en salary goes as far now as it did at
some past date. The tables of the
Public meet this question fairly, and
a careful study indicates that they ex
clude nearly every element of aberra
tion but two—first, the wider radios
of consumption about cities, due to
improved transportation, and second
the leveling np in comfort. The latter
no tables of price can show, unless
they indioate the share of articles not
necessaries which average families of
different grades use, and the first af
fects the accuracy of the tablos very
slightly.
Taking the Public tables as they
stand, it appears that if a man earn
ing $1,040 a year now, or exactly $20
a week, had tried to,live in 1861 ex
actly as he is living now—in fact, he
would have been satisfied with living
much poorer—be could have done it
on $18.10 a week, or $997 » year, and
in 1(878 he,jQoqld,have lived on $15.40
a .week, if he could have, gotten it in
the dullest of^ the r 4hU times. If a
tot gfqdpg..4k lt ^lrui.«i|iv ap<*
works twenty-six days io a mouth,
be c^buy as much tor bjp /^mily as
he could if he knocked off an after
noon every month in4861, working
a*, the same price, or pat in twenty
working days a month'at the same
price in 1878. 4* a matter of fact he
would have found it hard to get work
at any price in 1878; in 1861 he would
have been glad to work for $1.00 to
$1.15, and be gets uow from $1.50 to
$2.00. At eurreut wages, working
just as hard, be can fill twice os many
mouths as in 1861. The clerk is not
so much better off, but even the worth
of bis work has risen more than the
price of bis broad.
Importation of Air.
To discourage the introduction of
American canned meats into Germany
the austoms officers have contrived a
three-fold duty upon snob commodi
ties. The meat is taxed for itself; the
can is taxed os fine iron waro; and
the labels are compelled to pay an
other high duty as chromo-litho
graphs. Apparently to justify the
customs charge upon the covering of
imported goods, a Berlin paper re
lates bow. Alexander von Humboldt
once took advantage of the exemption
from, duty ot the covering of article*
free hsm.dttty, formerly if not bo*
the rule in France. laths year 1805
be and Gay-Lussac were in Paris en
gaged in. their experiments on
ipreeaion of sfc.HTb*^
found themselves in need of a large
number of glass tubes. This article
was exceedingly dear id 'PranCe iff the
timSrSud tberaU at importupod im
ported glass tubes was something
How many pleasant raoollsotio&e
are called into being by that one
word f Home t That sweet word has
caused teare to flow unbidden to the
•yen at a hardened erimbmh cwbwi
Lis grosser passions. ’Tie the one ha
ven of earthly rest. Should the out
side world bnffet one around, if he
has a home—now I must bo under
stood to moan a home where there is
unison and sympathy among the in-
yiatee, not a mere place to eat, drink
and sleep—heart-sore and weary from
his contact with the world, how soon
he will be refreshed 1 Hie spirits will
be reanimated; he will feel, let come
what may, that he may retire to the
bosom of bis family and there find
rest and contentment.
Cannot one toil manfully all day
with his hard duties, if he has a home
in view ? Will he not feel abundantly
repaid for all his perseveranoe, to
meet, on returning home, his wife or
sister, who is waiting and watohing
for him? Ah! how sweet to him will
be the tender smile and loving kiss of
welcome! They will be doubly sweet
to him i}pw v an4 he mjljttywfe iypayeu
for WkifW W|i£»&?*
| 121*0 OK’ r. '■/ jfntff
How, to,make home atfyeouve uud
cheerful is Womaih’s work. No'home
can be a homo unless- woman’s pres
ence can be discerned ih the'neatness
and cozipess of eveiything arpuni—
Some femaleernay.r^ve.ftbpfttBobtjcs
011 »ooh ^<1
have their, .way they WOtUd Dnf them
selves where.God, Almighty never in
tended they ever should be piaeed.
’Tw. man’s dntytogofprtbiend bat
tle with the world, and woman’s work
to govern tbat.realm of blies—home.
When woman is raving about femaie
suffrage, does she think she; iii wiser
than man? No; she does not think
any such thing. She is one of those
masculine women who are too indo
lent and hardened to have a soft spot
left in her bosom for snob duties as
nre required to be done for “home,
sweet home.” Some women should
not be allowed to invade the sanctum
of those lovable women who rightly
appreciate domestic felicity.
A modest, sensitive woman will find
her heart expanding around the fam
ily hearth, instead of growing con
tracted like those of worldly-minded
women who think they have a: call to
go forth and govern tbftoutside world,
and let her own little world i be gov
erned by servants or by ebanoe. Now,
as home should be the dearest place
on earth, it is the duty of every mem.-:
bar of tb$ family to. wake borne
agreeable as powible, eo tbat each, of
the inmates of that loved, ptsm. Mtyi
say with the weffi**-^. ““
•• Bo It (Tor to humblo, Uioro’o no pUeo liko homo.'
PSUHedmun iniu'iiuii]
iiimj<\w ovneif Wo
wasn t sayi— —
■fsr
to Gennafty for ; the needed articles,
and gave directions that the manu
facturer should seal up the tabes at
both end*, aud put a label upon each
tube with the words Dcuttche Lufl,
(German air). The air of Germany
i an article upon wbiuii there was
no duty, and the tubes were passed
by the customs officers without any
demand, and arrived free of daty in
the hands of the experimenters.
Love can excuse everything except
a missing shirt button.
I?
Sle—
He—" Because Ttevenge ir l
She—“ Certainly you may,
ed, though,jfon will let me'
He—"Any why would you call toe
Vengeance r
She—" BecauseVengoance is mine."
. I flViiOi;'
“Abundance, like want/ 1! rains
many;” however, let ns risk it on the
abundance.”
HaabanAand Wife In Daw.
The wife has been much advanced
by the general tenor of the legislation
of late years in respect to her own
property. She has acquired a pretty
independent position as to title, con
trol and disposition, but this relates
to her property, not to his. The law
has not yet raised her to the station
of 8nperintendent of her husband’s
contracts, and probably never wiiL—
He is bound to snpport her and the
children whieh she bean to him, and
in order to fulfill this obligation he
ought to have as much freedom in the
management of his business affairs of
the world as unmarried men are al
lowed to exercise.
In taking a wife a man does not
put himself under an overseer. He
ia not a subordinate in his own faul
ty, but the head of it The law as
signs him this position, not for his
own advantage alone, but as much for
the real good of bis wife and children,
aud somewhat for the general inter
est of society. A husband left free to
lend and govern his own family is the
most useful husband to all who may
be concerned in the results of,his con
duct The exceptions to this rule
that may be pointed ont ia no objec
tion t opr disproof of the rale., itself.
Huiunue institutions are all more, or
less imperfect, and their ooinplSte ef
ficiency jin practical working cannot
be expeoted in.j«ry instance. It is
enoqgb> that they prodnee benoficehce
toAheigreat men and in thegtoat ma
jority of eases. A subjugated husband
is u less pleasing ftnit less energetic
member of society than one who keeps
bis true plaoe, yet knows bow to tem
per authority with affectibn. The law
does not disooarOge Sdhjilgal’ HbiiUS-
tntions or free and voluntary co-oper
ation in all franaactiob which affects
or may eflhft the welfare of the' fami
ly. The law docs not undertake
to secure this delightful harmony by
coercion, but leaves it to issue spon
taneously from the holy relation of
matrimony.—Georgia Supreme Couit.
lllrls, Don’t Elope.
Among variouf kiddy of logic that
compete for a lnnatio asylum cell for
their expository there is hone as com
plete in itself, as far ns it goes, as
that‘wtiieh justifies Ioyfng couples in
:.T?ey love;$6 anoth^ and
sigh for. m4ngiQny; a arahl perfnt
objects; they’know 1 Uttagjmpg! will
a we
bride’s, I
hter after she had become a wife.
who Will
, -PditoSa Wu W>>hing. paiticor
1 Iw* /OMf
gM«*ho
"HI not
W. totofrmfrsn* ,tp,p boa-
# 4mvm
u tbif.iapot thftkind
..... %m
miF MWflWWty oonseqnennps of
marnegy^j^jy^^^j^, f...
j,’Never be at your plaoe of business
When a person wants to borrow mon
ey of you, because if you ate to yon
frill be out, but if you are ont yon
rifllbein. m ■■■! ■ <•
" Have a plaice for everything and
everything in its place.” Sdmehow
pk other this won't work; we have a
big place for oar wealth, bnt well be
banged if we can put it there—we
haven’t it—Ex.