Advertiser and appeal. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1882-188?, September 23, 1882, Image 2

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^dvqtiner mtd THE WAR IB OVER. The war in 1 . come to an SATURDAY HOHMHO. SEPTEMBH* *, judge L. P D- Warren, of Albany, is dead. Tlie Hill memorial fond continues to prow. Warren Lott and T. J. Ivey want to go to the Legislature from Ware county. George I. Soney has given $1,000 to educate ten girls at Lucy Cobb Insti tute, Athens, Ga. Three Georgia editors are striving for Legislative honors in the ap proaching elections. The Southern Express Companv, with their wonted liberality, will transport, free of charge, all donations for the Pensacola sufferers. The State has received from the broken bank of Rome an aggregate >f $25,809,50, leaving a balance of $20,854.93 still due the State. The Supreme Court of Florida has rendered a decision ip regard to tax on railroads, which will add $5,000,- (100 to the revenue of the State. Our next Governor! Just hear him speaking of Dr. Felton. He says • When he leaves his party and joins the Republican administration be will find as much in me to abuse as he will any good Democrat in Georgia.” Mrs. Melville, wife of the recently returned Arctic explorer hns been so <>ver-joyed ami excited by the demon strations consequent upon the return ■f her husband, that she has lost her mental balance. rity of m Editor Ac bertiser and AppeaL An exchange saya: “The next Legis lature will be composed largely of the young men of the State.” If that means more talent and more learuiug, we shall say, amen ! provided it does not say more trickery and more wire pulling. A man threw a cigar stump'iutothe river at Rending, Pa. The river was covered with benzine from the gas works. The surfaco of the water dashed into a blaze, and several par ties in boats were seriously burned The subscription list of $10,000 for the E. T. V. A G. R.R., to secure the location of tlie shops iu Atlanta has boon turned over to Maj. McCracken the Superintendent, who states that tho work will be pushed promptly forward. Cbas. Wcssolowski, of Albany, has announced himself an independent candidate for Congress in the Second District, and has been indorsed by the Republican Convention. He is spoken of as a Republican about election times and the rest of the time a pret ty fair Democrat. The education that is to wear well can only begniued by self-denial, hard work, self-control, concentration. The friendship that is worth having, de mands unwearied kindness, self-sac rifice, though*fulness, loyalty. The work of hand or head, that is to lost, mnst bo performed with patience, in dustry, energy and zeal. Tbe wealth that is to be a permanent blessing, mast have been gained by honorable exertion and expended wltbbenificent wisdom. Jacksonville, Fla., hns a conscien tions mavor, although a Jew and elect ed under no promises so to do be has made that city a Sabbath-observing city. He began on the liquor dealers aDd ended up with the small fry, ami ’tis said tlmt yon can't even buy a ci gar or anything else mi Sunday in that city. When remonstrated with he said that he was a Jew and as such observed Saturday, Imt tlmt having been elected to the lugh position of mayor of Jacksonville he was honor and duty bourn) to enforce the ordi nances of tlie i.<»w, and he him done it in this respect right royally. Let others imitate his example. buti — d accoutrements to tbe 4 tbe English. Of course a great deal of excite ment existing, but peace and quiet is gradually being restored. Arabi is now held ns a prisoner of war.— It is as yet unknown and muoh con jecturing is indulged in as to the fate of Arabi and bis supporters. The surrender took place on tbe 15th insb, the date on which Sir Garnet Wolse- ley, tbe commander of the English forces, remarked that he would dine in England, having finished his work and returned home. He missed it a few days, however. TELEGRAMS. Alexandria, September 19.—Ab dallah Pasha telegraphed to-day, stating that be never intended to dis obey the orders of the Khedive, and intimating bis readiness to surrender. He says be awaits the Khedive’s or ders. From 10 o’clock Monday morning until late in the afternoon bodies of infantry, cavulry and artillery contin ued to pour iu from Abonkir and surrender their arms. There are many more to come. The ir6pc!ads Minatour, Sultan, Inconstant and Achilles, and the gunboats Falcon and Condor sailed eastward the morning, and are now unebored off Aboukir. The forts there will be oc cupied by sailors and marines. Al together 23,000 men from -various parts have made submission at Kafr el Dwar. The telegraphic censor ship has been abolished. The troops of the Indian cavalry will leave Cairo to-day for the purpose of escorting the Khedive from Alexandria to Cairo on Thursday. TWIN COMETS. Prof. E. E. Barnard, of Nashville, Tenu., on the 14th inst. discovered a new comet located near tbe star Lambda, in the constellation of tbe twins. His discovery was unnounced by telegraph, to Mr. H. H. Warner at the Warner Observatory, Rochester, N. Y., and almost at tbe same moment Prof. Lewis Swift, Director of the Warner Observatory, received intelli gence that a large, naked eye comet Imd been discovered iu Rio Janeiro, South America. Prof. Barnard is the first person the present year to receive the Warner price of $200. The fact that these two comets came into view at- tbe same time is exut-ediugly sig nificant. « » — Rogers Alberton, colored, of Cum berland Islnnd, met an untimely death in Feruaudinu on Sunday morning last, on this wise: Ar he sailed up to a wharf in Fernandinu, his boat struck the wharf and set in motion a piece of scantling thnt was resting on a skid just above him, and which, sliding down, struck the poor fellow on tho neck and killed him in stantly. ’His son, who was in the boat with him nud saw him fall iut» the water, reached down and raised him up, but seeing life extiuct, becam frightened and let go his hold, aud the body sank to bottom. His body was afterwards secured. Rogers is said to have been n verv faithful la borer nod his death is mourned by all the good citizens of the Island, white and colored. What next? An exchange says: “Sugar made out of old shirts, che mises itnd linen underwear is being successfully manipulated iu Germany The process is simple enough: the rags nre first treated with sulphuric ucid and transformed into dextrin.— This product, after being cleared and whitenened by lime, is subjected to second hath of Bulphuric acid more strongly concentrated than the first. This transforms it into glucose; nud it enters thereafter into tlm composition of jellies, confectioneries aud table sugar. Grittiu Sun: Don't go West, hut go to tbe country ; start n bar room, and plant a little patch of corn and cotton, and you are solid. Wo are in formed that in an > ijoining county, last year, a fellow had a cross-roads bar l oom, about 8x12 feet square ; hud a fourteen acre field of cotton, with six rows of corn across tbe field. He didn't buy auy corn or seed cot ton : oh no, never; be wouldn’t think of siit-li a thing. Mut he sold fifty- eignt tiales of co:tuu and ninety bushels of corn. 8TONE MOUNTAIN. Stone Mountain City, Sept 16, ’82. ia: We-are enjoying ft am- have BUSY NEW YORK. New York, Sept 15,1882. We wish,, M£ Editor, you opold tjoarn,in the moaui This is a beautiful city with a popula tion of about 1,000, situated on Moun tain creek about sixteen miles from Atlanta. The citizens display much taste in the erection of cottages aud public buildings, and are noted for their energy and thrift They have two academies, many schools, six churches, grists mills, floor mills, saw mills, cotton gins, a large distillery and a quarry are in operation Most of the houses are Luilt of stone or brick. About a mile distant is the rock or Stone mountain, which is one of tbe grandest and most interesting feat ures in tbe State. A few days since, in company with a party from South Georgia, we visited this curiostiy.— Two-thirds of our party remaining at its base, only one lady and two gen tlemen succeeded in reaching its sum mit, where the view is indescribably grand—eighteen hundred aud sixty- eight feet above tbe level of the sea. Atlanta, sixteen miles off, is distinctly seen with the naked eye. A little more than half way up, the remains of a wall or stone fence is to be seen No one knows by whom built, but it is tbe belief of some that after DeSo- to’s men were defeated by the Indi ans, they sought refuge by retreating to this mountain and building this wall as breastworks. Upon its top to-day are found pieces of pottery, but the most wonderful feature of the moontaiu is a strata of quartz from one-balf to two inches in width, ex tending through tbe whole side of the mountain, which causes much thought to geologists. On one side this great curiosity is six hundred feet perpen dicularly. The storm of last Sabbath raged most furiously on its top. Trees were struck by lightning and several blown down. Unless one visits and sees for himself, it is hard to realize how trees can grow on a stone mountain. By actnnl measurement the mountain is just seven miles around. In ante bellniu days the owner of this moun tain had a tower of rock built upou the highest point. This tower was seventy-five feet high. At the hnse the grnnd «old hotel remains. It is four stories high, with its chimneys six to eight feet in diameter, and .the feuce is a solid brick wall. The curb of the well is all of rock. This house now bus but one small family as occu pants. The mountain bus changed bands, its owner, wbo bought it for $1,000, selling it for $40,000. The supply of rock is inexhaustible and would build more than ten thousand cities the size of Savannah. The last company who bought it have built a railroad from fbe State Road, and are blasting rock which, when shipped, meets with ready sale. Thu chestnut and chinquapin crop is quite abundant and old as well as young folks enjoy the fan of gather ing them. Corn and cotton have been much injured by the wind and storm of lost Sabbath. The latter traveled at the rate of forty-five miles per hour. In old Gwinnett, the ad joining county, the damage has been much greater, and aDless she does better next year, she will lose her rep utation as the banner corn county of tbe State. B.— W.— fitting beside ns dgriil i a bjjtel parlor windo The Macon Telegraph says: “It seeniR to be very hard for Gov. Col- quirt to learn thnt he is not the Dem ocratic part y of Georgia. The scales will drop from his eyes some bright morning, and then be will know how Adam felt when he galloped off into the thicket in search of his fig leaf uniform. As bees breed no poison, though they extract the deadliest juices, so the noble mind, though forced to drink the cup of misery, can yield lint generous thoughts and noble deeds. The turpentine farms in eastern Decatur was so badly damaged bv tbe recent storm that many of them may have to !>d abandoned. Bro$dwfty£ New Yojtk. We your eyes would begin to ache by this time if yon tried to watch the ever changing kaleidoscope before ns. We won’t pretend to tell of the thousands and thousands of people on foot, of the hundreds upon hundreds of ve hicles of every description to be seen. White Broadway coaches, street cars, hacks, private •carriages and drays,' loaded with every imaginable article. Everybody seems to befin a burry. Wo would like to put a quantity of yonr townspeople, who never move out of a snail’s pace, here and see if the en ergy manifested could penetrate them. Most every one seems well dressed and contented, but you know “every heart knoweth its own bitterness," so perhaps all are not so happy as ap pearances indicate. Tbe styles of ladies’ dresses ore something wonderful. On the oppo site side of the street conies a lady dressed all in black with orange col ored kid gloves, who carries a bright red parasol. Green, bine, yellow, red and all other colors of tbe rainbow, and many that cannot be found in it, are being worn in ladies’ suits and nearly every ladies’ head is surmount ed by a large bat, literally covered with ostrich plumes. We can easily imagine you say, O, dear! at some of them. Black suits nre also very much worn. It does one good to see tbe delicious fruits for sale, and eat the luscious steaks and other good things. We think any one in search of health had better take a*trip to New York, especially if Brunswick is the starting poiDt. It certainly is a suffi cient and radical change. Second Time. EXTRACT FROM SPEECH OK MR. STEPHENS AT MACON. O A “How are we to compete with this centralizing party,, now organized in our State? I tell yon, only by organ ization, my friends, Democrats, wher ever yon may be! [Greatapplause.] Our situation now in the South is very mnch like that of the states of Greece. As long as the Grecian states stood shoulder to shoulder, all organized, all acting together, ten thousand at Marathon stood firm to more than one hundred thousand Medes aud Persians. And afterwards, when they remained firm and shoul der to shoulder, when Xerxes came with his millions, Greece standing firm, all together, repelled his hosts and drove them over the Hellespont. [Applause.] Did it last? How did fortunes turn? Before Alexander’s conquest of the East, Philip, his fath er, made no inroad, as his predecessor had done, in Greece, but suddenly resolved to divide ond conquer. How then goes that party at the North, who nud seen the prosperity of this country. The Democratic party standing together, from one extent of the country to the other, never could bo moved in changing the govern ment—in transforming it into u mon archy. They came insidiously; the present administration at Washing ton divided and conquered. How did Philip divide? It was by temptation iu Greece to get office. It was by grand ullurements that he held out. It was then that tbe corrupt taint got into Greece. It was then that all tlie powerful eloquence of Demosthenes could not arouse tbe Greeks. The tempter came, they were corrupted, and tbe libei ties of Greece succumbed to tho arts of Philip. My country men, Georgians, if yon permit your selves to be divided now on these questions, if you permit men c-mute- iinnced by you, who come iu by uunli- itou, or any other device, and join the leaders of this centralizing party, a corrupt people will carry yonr elec tions, and the duys of your liliei'ly will be numbered with those Greece. [Applause.] An exchange says : The fi Dance , of Thomas county are well admin* •M* '‘he intelligent economy ", missiouers. It ls tb any size in the Stall k of only thirty cents anneal dollars f or co nnt ® - . i^Thn^axes—State, count* and municipal all combined—amount to less than one dollar on the him dred dollars. D ‘ — .4. _ Worth County Star; A five-year- old grand daughter of Mr. Bern Ontz, of Albany, heard Mr. Stephens mention in his speech w Saturday that he had been imprison ed flye months in Fort Warren. Af ter studying the matter seriously f or awhile she said : Grandpa I wonldnft vote for Mr. Stephens, ’canse he’s a bad man and they had to nnt him in jail.” 1 Mayor’s Office, Leesburg, Va., April 19,1879. Messrs. Hutchinson & Bro.: It af fords me pleasure to testify to the great virtues of your “Neuralgine" for the oure of neuralgia and sick head ache. It is the best remedy for these most dstressing complains I have ev er need. It should be in every family in the country. Yours truly, Geo. R. Head, Mayor of Leesburg, Va HUTCHINSON & BRO., Proprie tors, Atlanta, Ga. Sold by all druggists. augl5-3m HOSHUElft &imR S That terrible scourge fever and ague, and its congener, billions remittant, betides af fections of the stomach, liver and bowels. 11 rod need by miasmatic air and water, are both eradicated and prevented by the use of Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, a purely vege table elixir, indorsed by physicians, and more extensively used as a remedy for tlie above clast of disorders, as well as for mosy others, than any medicine of tlie age. For sale by all Druggists and Dealers v • generally. REMOVED of Ciipt. John Smith, of Brooklyn. N. Y., Inis purchased a large tr.n i of litnd.iu St. Johns county, near Or ange Dale, on which he is establish ing a colony. He hns already sold forty acres to Pool A Son, recently oil merchants of Brooklyn, and twen ty-five acres to Mr. Madison W. Bel cher, a wealthy retired merchant, of Brooklyn, who intend to build line residences nud spend their winters in Florida. The colony will be called Smithville. INTENSE HE AI ON THE MORNING OF THE l?»h INST. TO Judge Dillon’s Old Stand, On Newcastle Street, where yon cau secure BARGAINS! HATS from 6c to $10, PRINTS 0c per yard, BUNTINGS at 16o, worth 20e to 25c. DRESS GOODS 10c to 12)*c, worth 16c to 30c, DRESS LINEN 15c to 30c. worth 35c to 35c, PANTS LINEN lJ‘jc, worth lHc. TABLE DAMASK 3Ac to 76c, worth 45c to Wc, PRICES OF OTHER GOODS IN PROPORTION, For Gash Only - V V v W4-* « 0 J. J. SPEARS. AN ORDINANCE, To repeal nn ordinance entitled “na ordinance to secure tbe cleanliness and to promote and preserve tlie healthfnlness of the city of Bruns wick, prescribe penalties for a vio lation of tbe same, and for otbi t purposes therein mentioned,” pass'-' in Conned on the 8th day M«. v - 1882, exe'epl sect Kius «ev*‘ii ilel t' :l of the said ordinance. Siurriox 1. The Mayor and Council of the city • Rruuawick, iu Council .-nmetnbled, do hereby **r«u that ihe above recited ordinaucen, except *o*vciit. aad tenth nectiona of the *aiu«, be and the Dam* hereby repealed. Sec. 2. And be it further ordained. That allI > nance* aud part* of oMmuncea In conflict with ordinance be and the Kamo are hereby repealed. Pa**ed in Council on the tfth day of Sept., l^-* Atte-t: M. •?, CO I .SON, May r 4 AH. HOUSTON, Clerk of Council. Hardware, Steves, Plows DOCKET AND TABLE CUTLER!'. TINWARE. DOCKS. HASH. GLASS, HUMPS. CROCKERY. LAMPS AN1> LAMP FIXTURES. KEROSIXF. AND LARD OIL. FOli RALE BV £. D. HOYT & Co.