Advertiser and appeal. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1882-188?, August 19, 1882, Image 1

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TlieAflvi is published eveey Saturday, at BRUNSWICK/GEORGIA, o) ti-ii-.jia |jyii list i . ..x.ir.U. In-Li UM •V. Gr. STACY. Subscription llalos, Z till r^ n r tu.v.v.S Advertlstmenu from reapoulble JMwtfoswfll be published until ordered out, when tliollme is s publish' a ot specified, and . .. „— ^HirrUgee end obitusrr notjoee not exceeding lour lines, aolloted for pnblicstloB. When ex- ■SffiSfia. dreorf to tb. turtle* ^ Brnntwlok, Georgia. Mayor- M. J. Colson, Aldemen- oni OFFICERS. J. J. Spears, J. P. Harvey, F. J. Doer- ' i- J. J. Spears, J. F. Harvey, F. J. Doer- rtioger, S. 0. Littlefield. J. M. Couper, J. Wilder, W &KA£«bHmfrton m o. B. Moore, C. W. Byrd. ‘ Keeper qf Guard Houu and Clark qf Jforfcrf—D. A. Moore. , Pnrt Fkyticia+~J.JB» < Blain. ■- Salon irMe n CeneUr^tl] D a. Moore. Salon Colored Cemetery—Jackie Wblto. Harbor lAufen-Mstthe# Shannon. Pori iParcieiu—Thpe O'Connor, A. E. Wattles, J, X. Dexter. 1 “ ” S ™ ..juduxe coxkjtxsu or coturcn. Mtimw Hardy end Littlefield,.... 1. . -Lao-. X town ooxnoxs—Hartey, Hardy and Spears, Cinnxnixs—Littlefield, Doerflinger end Herdy. Habbos—Hardy, Cook find Littlefield, Pi-blio BOttDiBoe—Hervey, Couper end Wilder. Bulboads—'Wilder, Spews end Hardy. EocciXton—Cook, Couper end Wilder, Csabitt—Spears, Harvey end Cook. Fins DxnnmoXT—DoerfllMer, flamy and Spears, Poucs—Wilder, Cook and Harvey. UNITED STATES OFFICEltS. '>1 Collector of Customs—H. P» Fallow. Dei " Col Deputy Marshi Raar. Thsn be lt so, and let us pert, Stnie love like mine haul fell'd to move time. But do not think this oonslan t heart, , Cm ever cease lugrete to love thee. , Vo. spite of all thy cold disdain, I’U bless the hour when first I met thee, find rather bear whole years of pain i limn even for'one short boor forget tliee. 1 P “ Fotget thee, Never! Tei, I have lived to view that day. To mourn my pass’d destructive blindness, To see now turn’d wtyb scorn away Those eyes once fill'd wlth answering kindness. But go, ftrrwell, and be thou Mem'd’, If thoughts of what I feel will let thee. Though thy Image kill my rest Twere greater anguish to forget thee. Forget thee, Sever! eetor Internal Revenue—D-.T.^lunn. mtv Marshal—T.w. Dexter. Regular com the first and th ° VUlttug‘£d an brttlirMUi good standing are fra- tern^fovlt^y Ge £• FLANDERS, Wall. SEAPORT L0D6E, -Nb. 4*. L 0. 0.' F„ Meets every Tuesday nljht^at .. B. HT IAS. E. LAMBBIOHT, Pa* B. MILLINERY! Miss HETTIE WILLIAMS 'IS NOW RECEIVING A LARGE AND WELIrBE- LEOTED STOCK OF Millinery & Fancy Goods, LACES OP ALL DESCRIPTIONS, Pattern Bonnet® in all ths latest stories.jntt^from New Fork. 0oUarett»8/Ladies’tfnderwear Dress-Making ft„ Specialty* In all ths most mwiiiemnnWwH'iCit.Tiii fin UHtJgHm A SPjjWULT* ' Oents’Furnifrtihi£Oi^i§ MK5r»ry Propose selling at prices Never Before Known! Csll on mo and sco my stock. Which waa bought “tprewbLy lor this market. ,T. R WRIGHT. uorivij LOROFELLOW’I RAINY DAY. The dey Is cold and dark and drsary. It rains and the wind le never weery; The vine etlll dings to the mouldering wall, find at every gust the deed le*vee fall— The dey le dark and dreary. . , . lly life ie oold end dark and dreuy, It raina and the wind la never weary; My thoughta still ding to the mouldering past. While the hopee of youth fall thick on the blast— My ltfo Is dark and dreary, Ba still, sad heart, and cease repining, H: Behind the-clonde lathe sun etlllehlnlng; > Thy fate U the common fote of all, Into' each life some rain must foil— Some days musi'be dark and dretry. =r The Young Wen or tho South, From the Detroit Free Freee. 2 no who has visited the principle a anil towns of Alabama, Georgia, South and North Carolina, musthaye a fair idea of what the young men * giro doing. According to some north- ern papers, they spend their time in drinking, card playing, Horse racing, anc! loafiDg. Let me say that in. At lanta, Augusta, Macon,, Charleston, Savannah, Montgomery, oto., the number of young men in stores, shops and law offices, is fnlly eqnal to the number in any northern city yon cab name, taking population into ac count. In > four weeks trip in the South I did not see one single yonng man drank. I did not see a game of 'cards or horse race, I did not hear a dispute. I found them everywhere— I talked with hundreds—and in every caSo I fon ml them studying law or inedicine—keeping books—behind Counters—out in the field with their floats off. They not only work, bnt they are ambitious. The young men of the South are not ouly dniiig fully as well os the young men of the North, bnt in many cases they are doing for better. I found scores of .them making money hand over hand by their own nnaided efforts,anil scores more with bright prospects ahead. He who asserts that they shirk labor wrong them. He who asserts that they drink or gamble more than the same number of yonng mep* of the North, is reck less of facts. Thera may be black ■beep among them, but, taken as a whole, they are genteel, conrtoQU, hard workiug, and are anxious to se cure places of high standing It is said that formerly in one of the remote mining settlements of Wyoming n single copy of a religions paper containing a t sermon by the Rev. Mr. Talmage made its appear ance weekly, and. that evey Saturday evening the men of the community diet to determine by a game of "seven op” who should read the ser mon in pnblio on the following day. A young man was killed by light ning while sitting alone under a tree in New Orleans, La.,^hree or four days ago, and it was some time before any, mark could be found on his body to establish the oanse of death. Fin ally, after close scrutiny, the hair on the left side of his head was fonnd to be singed, and jnst below the hair were two black dots like powder | burns. BY A COUNTRY PARSON. “I never sa,«y snoh a pesky critter. I tell yo she was sired in tophot. Look at the brute!” Deacon Frink was in bis backboard, and the gorrel mare was having one of her taptrums. “If a body gets belated and ipust go, she won’t budge an inoh. It was the eve ning of the fegular W|Wkly prayer meeting at Freeville. The {deacon had done'a hard day’s. planing, and was later than usual. He. was one of the stand-bys, always there, always ready to take part And here the animal stood, her ears laid back,, switoLing her tail vioionsly, and lpoking ont of the corners of her eyes wiokedly at the deacon. j. , , “Josiah, does she want water?” asked his wife from the doorway.— She was ready to go with Him. T wish she had the hoi) pond atop of her,” shouted the hosbppd. That was the third time that week she bad had the damps, and the good man was getting siok of it, She was an excellent animal, strong and true, and save these periods of unpleasant ness, was an exceedingly valuable an- imal. ' j “Mdriab, human nature 'can’t bear everything: the devil is iff this beast and he’s got to come ont^.JThe dea con got a long pole as thick as his wrist and his wrist wa® , ‘^fr^, for he was bnllt on an'ainple plab. It was the small end of the hop^pOle, and he got in behind the anindia!? 1 “Now, ye yarihint get 'tip,” and tftS pole de- descended. The, deacon bad been long-suffering. He never hadstraok the mare before, and she was pro foundly astonished. Bnt he made tborongh work now. He stood up, and the pole came down with force.— The mare at first braced herself, and looked at the deacon. Then she be gan to eirele about the yard, thread ening every moment to wreok the ve hicle. The good man was so fleshy it was becoming violent exercise—a sort of Indian dab movement in the air. The deacon woald give a blow, then a grunt, while the horse.ploDged and jumped, perfectly frantic. “Josiah Frink, what will folks say of ye, a deacon of the church?” screamed his wife. “Say I’m an old fool to give up iny horse,” yelled the pillar of the Free ville church; “Til convert this mare or translate her. Now get in, Mari- riab, and we’ll go to meeting.” After some remonstrance she got in, and it is safe to say that no par ties ever passed over that road in quicker time. The mare flew, and Mari ah hang to her hasband and held her breath. The deacon sang with unction tbat night— “What various lilnilrancaB wa meet In comlnf to to tho merer Mot.'' Tire First Campaign Skillet. OoviagtosSter. , . . ,, : We were shown on last Friday, by Mr. James M. Levy, of Covington, a beautiful miniature silver skil let; which he had made for the pur pose of sending to Stephens. The bowl of the skillet was made of a genuine silver half dollar, while the handle and legs were made of separate pieces. The workmanship was perfect, and the amount of silver in it was about one dollar. It was m perfect specimen of the common skil let, while the workmanship displayed the touches of a skilltnl artist It has been forwarded to the old Com moner by mail, and we have no donbt it will be duly appreciated by him. Alabama has bad her state election and gone strongly democratic. I r IW OTHBBMOT. i, 'A well-known humorist has some thing to say ou a much-vexed 'ques tion wbiobotfUttoffail 4b* ladiSs, who' must be tirhd of 1 being lectured on their uselessness !l a* wives! Ob, yes, I know all that, my son.— I have heard mdeh of that before; Yon monrn and grieve over the look of true womanhood among the giris of yonr acquaintance. Mere butterflies of fashion, yon say, who can rattle the keys of a grand piano, dance like fai ries, ohatter nonSense and society nothings by the hour, and for their lives cannot bake a loaf of bread; roast a turkey or make a : shirt. You say yon demand the noblest type of womanhood in yonr wife, and yon wan) to know Where yon oan find the wife yon want Well, I wilh tell yon, my dear boy. - If that is 1 the: sort of a woman you want, marry i N6ra Mulli gan, yonr laundress' daughter. She wears cowhide shoes, is guiltless of corsets, never had a sick day. in her life, takes in washing, goes'onthonse- eleaning, and cooks for a family of seven obildren, her mother' and three men who board with 1 her. I don’t think she Would marry you, because Con Began, the track-walker, is her A Cmrfeme Torpedo. , .. . , Tin's latest offspring of Australian 1 ' : hgennity promises to be cess. Its motive power is hot compressed air, neither'is it contained in the body of the torpedo. To jprepsf the weapon tbrongh the water- at. a speed of from .16 to 20 knots ap honr for1,000 yards, a sep arata engine, or at least a special con nection with an existing one, is nec essary. yfiia ^engilte drives two drains, about three feet in diameter, style of a man. is the useful at firet eight it would seem iis if haul- sort of a woman yofl appeslr to want, bnt I don’t think she’d look at yon twice. Can yon shoulder a sack of floor and carry it into the house? Can yon saw and split ten coTds of hioKo- ry wood is the fal^-'so as to have ready fbel intirt'hotiiseaU winter?- Can yon spade nj> half an acre of gronnd for ■ kitohsn garden? Do yon know what ; will take the limy taste ont of the new oistern?— And can yon patch the little leak in the kitchen roof? What would yon do if t he chimney,, got choked np—if the front door binds at the top ?— What if a lock gets ont of order? If an extra shelf is wanted in the pantry ? Can you bring' home pane of glass ind a, wafl of putty and repair damages in the sit ting room window? Can. yon. bang some ebeap paper on the ' kitchen ? Can yon, in short, do anything about the house that Con Regan can ? My dear boy, yon see why Nora Mulligan will have none of yon ; she wants a higher type of true manhood. You expect to hire men ! to dp all the man’s work about thehbnse, but you want your wife to do everything that any woman can do. BelieVernC, my deer' sou, nine-tenths of the girls who play the piano and sing so charmingly, whom yon in yonr limited knowledge set down as “mere butterflies of fash ion,” are better fitted for wives than yon are for a hasband. The girls know more abont three than yon do. If you watt to nUfr};. % flfit- class cook and experience^ house keeper, do yonr eonriiqg w the intel ligence office. But if you Want • wife, marry the girl yon love, with dimpled hands and a face liku the sunlight, and her love will help ybp.to risk the The English ironclad 'inflexible" has a tonnage of 11,406 tons, 8,00ft brew power efigiflW Hid*an armor ranging, from 16 tH 24 inches in fbiok- ness. ' She carries fonr 81-ton gone, which will scud a 1,700 pound shot nine miles. Yet she ouly cost about $4,000,000. If Robeson bad have bad the building of her it jls safe to say ebe would have ooet not less than doable that sum. . It you would bring up a child in the way he should go, parents should be careful and not let the lad see the way they go themselves. with a 100 feet per second. peripheries of eir duty js to .wind, in two fine steel wires, No. 18 gauge, of tho same sorb as that used in the d^ep-sea rounding apparatus of Sir William Thomson. -The rapid un coiling-of these wires from two small corresponding reels in tho tidily of the fish imparts to them, as may read ily be conceived, ah extremely high velocity. The reels are ooupeoted with the sbafta of the two propeilers which drive the torpedo through the water. The propellers work, as has long been known to be necessary to insure straight running, in opposite direetions and both in one line, the shaft of one being - hollow and con taining the. shaft-of the other.' Now ing a torpedo backward-by two wires waa.frjoarioiiA waj :«ft4iiviBg-4 tinfoil : speed ahead«-Hhbit4a fofiind ifi ptrao- tico that the amohfit'Sf “4rai{” is so small, ; a8 compa^ with .he power gether. Of course it is at onoe seen that this method of propulsion does away with the neqgsyt^ for air-oom- ' pressing engfoeoAndjrewiivaiiSprhs*- edeto 1 AKhiMmds tfSbetatiOAlieb, which, hoifovier, carefully constructed, 'most always involve a certain element trolled and stopped by : complicated, though exquisite, mechanism, , ( xen qaired. Bqt, ttjfl® idViiiifNfiBS, great as they may be; 4re naught com pared ivitb the power possessed by the uses of the Bronn-tii tiirpedb to guide and govern its <«mrse nod movement^ 1 ^ .Many experiments htive' (men re cently unde at Wool wii:l i, and more, especially at <3HHtH*(u« mid there seems little donbti -sa fHr aaean be seen at preseot, that the new torpedo will prove- most valuable for the de- feue offaarboaaia 74i u.-i*»»aa o.- i f —-— bcooght the. telephone into a new use. It is the tranmisrion of the result of the jriaqqs to thefgsid$|<£*-oftthtfembe- f»*»o are wilting to-pay a Ptf fahto* tHfli jnfpvgtatioP- A cor respondent says: “On real hot days fore purchased bis pool tickets.— There ho awaits the jingle of the bell which announces the winners of the races, one after another, the second horses, an'd the amounts,puidby the pools. They say that the i-oin puny that u engaged in furnishing this mation is doing an excel- Tf Jtal/lSe fpet that the Hold er of a five-dollar tioket. recently won $1,06S with it has given an impetus to DHttifi^. ’ Sven the women am thro#ing their pin-money info tho When a man is honest simply be cause it is policy to be so, he is al ready saving up money with which to buy his ticket to the penitentiary.