Advertiser and appeal. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1882-188?, November 04, 1882, Image 1

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Tub Advertiser and Appeal, - T - 0E ° RQIA ’? CASH B0X * H rraLt-HED EVERT HATOBD.II, AT BRUNSWICK. - GEORG-IA, —- T. O. STACY. ANNUAL VEFORT OP THE TRBAN- IIBEH OF THE STATA Receipts and Pl»bnreea«ent»—The fly iiane'al Condltlfilitfr tbo State—Tlio State’s Properly—Public Debt. rabserlptlon Hates. One eopr one yeer ... W 00 One copy els months * 00 t lreetteementa from responsible parties-»1I1 be published until ordered odt, when the lime is Sofspo&ed.|na pWeNgreHctM' saeoeeinfly, ^WiSlciiMe^lSfTiaust beaob otofs persons! character, charted u adrertlsements. Ns*rls*essndoWt<Ary notices not Mcesdln, tour lines, solloted for pnbltcstlon. When ex- eeodtnj that apace, chanted as advertisements. Aluo.ters and communications should be ad dreatea to theunderalyned.^ llrnnawlck. Georgia. C.lT OFFICERS. II ay or- M. J. Colson _ . _ Aldermen- 13. dpesrs, 3. P. Harvey, F. d. Doer dinger. 8. a Littlefield. J. M. Cooper, 3. Wilier, W. W. Hardy, 3. B. Coox. Clerk <S JVeawjr-Jimee Honaton. Okie,'MeurehoirS. E. Lambright. Wfaisss-P. B. Ooodbresd, W. H. Rainey, 0. *'*><pero/OiKird Houle and Clerk of Market—V. Moor*. Port Pkytieian-3. B Blaln. 0ityPk»ncia»-3. h. Robine. Sexton WtuU Cemetery—*}. O. Moore. Sexton Colored Cemetery—deckle White. llaroer Foster—Ma'thew shannon. Per. Warden*— Thoe O’Connor, A. E. WatUee, M. Doxtcr. reirono oosurrrsse of oooscil. risaios^-wildef, Oook and 8pe*.'<. STaxCTs, Daunt A Bninoia—hsrvsy. Hardy and Littlefield. , _ Tows oossose—Ilarvev ” -rd y and Bpeare. C surra Rise—Littlefiald, -oerlUngarand Hardy. Habsoj—Hardy. Cork and Littlefield, Public »viLni»Q*—H«rr«7.^on|*r mw Wlldtr. Bxilboad#—WUder» BpBBTBBnd Hwdy. Education— Cook. CJouper »nd WildBr# Chabitt—Spean. Hsrvsy end Cook. tmx Dsrasrsssrr—Doetflingev, Haray and 8poar». Poucs—Wilder, Coot end Harvey. UNITED STATES OFFICERS. Collector ofCustoms—H. P. Farrow. Cofiocfor hitarnSBevenne-D.». Dunn. Deputy Marshal—T. W. Dexter. PoNtmAJt«r—lions North. CommUAioner—0. H. Dwter. Shipping JommlBBloner—O. J» HaII. OCEAN LODGE No- 214,PAM A ltegnlar eommnntcaUona of Ihl.Lodfeere held on the lint and third Mondays In each month, st TM ° Vtutiiu? and all breth renin good a tending are tre tern ally Invited to attend. J.4.8PEAB8, Secretary. 0. a FLANDERS, w.it. SBAPOftT LODGE, No. 68. L 0. 0. F. Meet.every Tnndaynijhtm^ht^cloc^ ^ q B. H1BSCH. V. O. LS. e. L AM BRIGHT, r. a B. HecreUrr. JLETlklM’E LODGE. NO. 24 -K. OF P. Meets every Weeusedey night at sight o’clock. Visiting and ail brttnreu in good suudlug art steruaily invited to atund. n 0>a MAX RICE, V. 0. A. E. WATTLXS, K. 01 it. and g. MILLINERY! Miss HETTIE WILLIAMS IS NOW 11E3EIVINO A LAKOE AND WELL-SE LECTED STOCK OF Millinery & Fancy Goods f / LACES <fF ALL DESCRIPTIONS, '• Atlanta ConsUtJt'on. The annual report of State Treatm- rer Sjieer whs issued yrnterday. It is ,a compact pamp'ilct, composed prin cipally of talitilaleil sfatainrnts, and shows at at a glance the condition »f the Stute’s-fiuancoB. The balance in the treasury on October 7th, 1881, was $794,547 61. The atnonnt re ceived ro the treisnry from . October 7th, 1381, to September 80,1882, was $1,609,432 10, or a total of $2,403,- 978 61. The-disbnrsements from Oc tober 7,1881, ttt September 30, #882, were $1,713*606 47, leaving balance in treasury on October 1, 1882, of $699472 15. . Tbis balance is not a cash' balance, lint largely consists of State of Georgia and United States bonds, received on account of the sec ond payment from the purchasers of the Macon & Brunswick Railroad, and the suspended balance due from tbe Citizens’ Burnt nod the Bank oi Rome (State depositories) viz: 8Ute of Georg 1 * bondff $115,000.00 United States registered bonds 160,000.00 Balance doe from Citizens' Dank 93.218.51 Balance doe from the Dank of Borne 22,206.23 Making an amonnft (unavailable) of $380,434.74 Which, deducted from tbe stated balance of $690,472.15, will show tbe cash balance on hand on tbe first day of October, 1882, to be $310,047.41. RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS. An interesting table is given show ing the receipts and disbursements.— Tbe general tax for 1881 was $738,- 920.41, Tbe larger items given are as follows: Rent of Western & Atlan tic railroads, $300,000; railroad tax, $21,453.83, for 1881. Liqnor tax for 1882, $33,504.25; liqnor tax for 1881, $22,673.83; fees of inspectors, $59,- ; insurance tax, $12,904, inter est on snle of Macon & Brunswick Railroad, $25,000; second payment on gale of Macou & Brunswick Railroad, $250,000; hire of convicts in 1881, $24,871.00. Thera are various other smaller sums which swell the total re ceipts to $1,609,432.10, which, added to the balance brought forward for the previous year, makes $2,403,979.61.— The larger sums disbursed are aa fol lows: Public debt, 1882, $68G,773.00 and public debt 1881, $286,264.00; Legislative pay roll 1881, $100,416.35; sobool fnnd 1881, $195,137.36;lunatio asylum 1882, $96,002.05; lunatio asy lum 1881, $35,386.85; special appro priations, $41,397.1(4; civil establish ment, $42,775.00 for 1882, and $29,- 170.74 for 1881. Six hundred and fifteen dollars is tbo amount expend ed for artificial Italp. ^be usual ap propriations of $6,000 each tp the Pattern Bonnets a JL * * in All the littiAt ityloB* Just from Now York. A full Uue of CoilarettesJja3ies’ Onderwear CIIILUliK-V-l Vlt KviK-H, Etf. Dress-Making ft Specialty, lu all tbe moat faitblonahle »tyle*, order* prompt ly Ulled. *_» __2_; _ aprW ’z i,/, C*QV*TT, attorney at. law, BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA. oiUco n.TttuA»ysim.E»»»P ArrxiLbnlWng ln\ E. Smith Harris A Smith, Attorneys and Ci anaors at law. Will practice In all the roniU 0, ’ h ? ft 1 !; cult, uid In McIntosh county of ttsjWWv* , all. sod in ills V. 8. Courts. Offlcc onJIcwcxHU nreet, near the Advxxtuxs s»o Arrest-omoc. Brunswick Oeorgli. 1 * burseinents rnn up to $1,713,507.46, leaving a balance of $690,475.15. ! Tlie amount of the public debt not yet due iR put at $9,624,135.00, on which interest will accumulate to tbe umonut of $645,440. The public debt with tbe iutereat added will fall due as follows: 1883, $108,000; 1884,$108,- 000; 1885, $108,000; 1886, $4,278,000; 1890, $2,244,860; 1892, $329,025; 189o[ $579,940; 1899, $2,435,880; 1900, $78,660; 1902, $3,210. Georgia’s assets and liabilities. Tbe amount yet due on tbe Macon »v Brou* w * c ^ R ailr0iul ' 8 “bout $700,- 000. Tbe State is endorser for the South Georgia and Florida Railroad to tbo extent of $464,000, and on the Northeastern to tbe amount of $260. The State is secured in each instants bj first liens. To set off these liabil ities the 6ftaie bus the following prop erty: Western and Atlantia railroad, 138 milel—lease 9 years to run—annual rental $390,000. Macon and Bruns wick Railroad, 195 miles—sold for$l,- 125,OOP, of which about $700,000 ia yet dun. Bonds of M"rietta & North Georgia Railroad, $66-,233.62. South Georgia & Florida Railroad, 58 miles (eoutiugfiit)—has never defaulted iu paying interest. Bank State of Geor gia—1,833 shares of no value. Bank of Augusta—800 shares of do value. 186 shares Georgia Railroad A Bank ing Company, $20,000. Atlantic & Gnlf Railroad, 10,000 ebares—par $1,- 000,000 (no market value). Southern and Atlantic Telegraph, guaranteed by Western Union Ti-legrah Co—440 shares—$10,000. Publio buildings— not estimated. There are forty-nine iDsurano - companies that bave de posited tbe $25,000 each with the Treasurer, as required by law, before doing busiuess in tbe State. Tbe Treasurer estimates tbe receipts for the yenr 1883 at $1,361,317.14. The report is comprehensive and interest ing. How lo be Handsome. Most people would like to be hand some. Nobody denies the great pow er which any ptrson may bave who is handsome, and attracts yon by good looks, even before a word has been spoken. And we see all sorts of de vices in men and women to improve tbeir looks. Now, all cannot have good features—they are as God made them—bat almost any one can look well, especially with good health. It fs hard to give in a very short space, bnt in brief these will do: Keep clean—wash freely. All the skin wants is leave to act freely, and it takes care of itself. Its thousands of air holes mast not be closed. Eat regnlarly, and sleep enongh— not too mneb. Tbe stomach can no more work oil tbe time, night and day, than a borae. It mast have reg ular work and real. Good teeth are a help to good looks. Brush them with a soft brush, espe cially at night. Go to bed with cleansed teeth. Of course to bave white teeth it is needful to let tobacco •lone. All women know that. Wash es for the teeth should be very sim ple. Acid may whiten the teeth, but it takes off tbe enamel and injures them. Sleep in • cool room in pure air.— No one can have a c.ennly skin wbo breathes bad air. Bnt more than all, in order to look well, wake np mind and soal. When the mind is awake the dull sleepy look passes away from tbe eyes. I do not k.npv. that the brain expands, but it seems so. Think and read, not trashy novels, bat books and papers that have something in them. ’.re - Men sav thoy’Cannot afford books, anil sometimes do not even pay for a newspaper. In that esse it does them little good, they feel so mean while reeding them. Bat roeu can afford what they really choose. If all the money spent in sulf-indulgoDce, in bnrtful indulgence, was spent in books or papers for self improvement, we should see a change. Men would grow handsome and women too. We were not meant to be mere animals. Let ns bave books and read them, and sermons and heed them. Tbe Klrtd of> tiUmjiispeaker the Stal lvarla VaWt lO ttlaa state.' "just wait m turn .myse|f loose to-morrow," saiif Judge Topi Bojven to a Benver Tlibune reporter a if(iy be fore the receut Republican Stale Con vention. "Yon will make an address,, (hen?" “Me? An address? "iVell, I should smile! 'Xotyng man' did yon eFer *#-• a cyclone ?" “jfo Judge.” “You have never seen it whirr mid tear and rip and rend and splinter and break and gnash an<1 gnaw ami ffdw 'and fiounder and thrash and crash; yon have never heard it roar and'thunder and bluster nnd shriek hod scream and whistle nnd moan and rave and swear and groan. I a hi a cyclone 1” “Jndge, you amaze me 1” “Hush! Have you ever been in battle ?" “No!” “I am two armies met in gory con flict—a mingling of bngle calls, clash of sabres, roll of drums, rattle of musketry, boom of artillery, whis tle of balls, explosion of shells, moans of tbe dying nnd huzzas of tbe vic tors.” "Oh, Jndge!” “I am a royal Bengal tiger, a roar ing Nubian lion, a rhinoceros with two horns, a deep-sea whale, an infu riated elephant, alangbing hyena of tbe desert, a man-eating shark, an Af rican gorilla, a grizzly hear, an octo- pins—yes, sir Bnd eight-legged, one- eyed, blood-sucking octopinsl” "Judge, what do yon mean ?” "Come to the Convention to-mor row,” said Jndge Bowen, "and yon will learn what I mean. I am going to make tbe grandest effort of my lif& I am going to paralyze my audience —pulverize it—bite it in two—chew it np—spit it ont. Yes, yoong man, I shall rend tbe pale air like a two-edged sword—ravish prose—rape the mnses and deflower tbe very art and science of rhetoric 1” Carriers on Wheels. D. B. Harrell, Independent candi date for Congress in the 3d district, has withdrawn from tbe race. “Will- getyouleftsky” would do well to follow his example. An official of tbe post office depart' ment says that the recent experiments with tbe tricycle here as a means of collecting and delivering mails has been eminently successful, and that the introduction of the tricycle in tbe postal service in other cities ie only a question of time. The first to nse tbe trioyde in Washington eity was Mrs. P elva Lockwood, tbe female lawyer. Tbe city post office, having made tbe experimeot successfully, has ordered a number of tricycles, each one saving the government tbe expense of a carri er. Tbo impression is, however, that the successful nse of tbe trioyoleis lim ited to cities with smooth streets. A passenger in a Boston street car palled tbe vest button of tbe conduct or and was surprised to bear a bell „ ring. A new device for stealing fares 1 ai was thus discovered. Bell. punches are used on that line, and thb old plan of carrying a small gottg In' the palm of the band to strike when pre tending to punch a slip has become dangerous. So the plsn of conceal ing the gong in the vest and connect ing it with a button was invented. <iii» "■ ~ -1 A young man in western Illinois advertised for a wife, bis| sister an- swered tbe “ad” and the young man thinks there is no balm (in advertise ments, while the old folks think it's pretty bard to have two fools in tbe family. A dose of spade-np-the-garden, ta ken three times a day, before meals, will care dyspesia. Try it. Qyfi highest good: (Tb* uiattfr for \ veelr*7 by B#t. W, 1 dint church of tM» eftf.* .land* , r/dt ,,.The. height of eaiftbly. priyiitit.iop aud glory lifts us no ivhii nearer heaven.,,.^ti, is easier tq.jstep ,tli«re from the lowly vale of hniniliation and bio’lliul isj.1 si'T If h !, AlW9b of;reside»iC6 V&pnses k parson to'iew temptation's, it just ns often brings fresh opportunities. In y?nr„paw ,|iume begin n new nnd liet- •*UV>vJ?#t»3 lit'rOp. Enjoy the bletsings of this day if God sends theiDj abd i/thfi' evfls ,bi>ar patiently and sweetly! This day om ly is ours—we are dead to yesterday, and we are not born to to-morrow. When .dogs come t^ qhnyoh, they not only fill tbe carpet with fleas, bnt frequently disturb tne worshippers by a regular “dog fight,” and in some in stances hsve been known to' break np a meeting. Moral—leave tbe dugs at home. Tbe Christian women in tbis com- mnuity and elsewhere are referred to tbe following extract It shows what has been and whst can be done by the godly women of tbis continent May tbe dog soon come when they will rise to tbe fall measure of their power. There is no life to linmble that, if it betrae and genninely human and obedient. to God, it may not hope to shed some light There is no life so meager that the greatest and wisest of ns can afford to despise it We cannot know at what moment it may flash forth with the liijs of God. Sinoe the Woman’* Missionary So cieties were organised in tbe different evangelical denomination^ they'bave collected $4,600,000. There are fif teen of them, and tbeir collections last year were abont $800,000. Those of the Methodist and Congregational churches raised some $170,000. The following gem is found in an excbsnge, and will bear serious thought by all who rend these lines: Tbe most difficult thing to do is to refrnio from expressing censure when we feel dislike for onr fellow-men.— Tbe less onr opportnnics for forming an opinion, the more positive are our judgments. The man wbo makes light of relig ion by indifference to Christ’s invita tion, incurs tbe wrath of God as nmch as the vilest sinner in the land. It is not necessary for a man to be grossly wicked to be denied sn entrance into heaven. “Ye are condemned because ye have not believed on the name of tbe begotten Son tit God," says the worth 1' Can any man oiaim to be a follow er of Christ who bas .been is member of the church a twelve-month without having contributed to missions? f Tbo above quefttton we copy from an exchange, and diftre to commend if fo the cttrefa! Inquiry of every ohpreh-member who reads. True love fbr Christ involves' n love for men, nd a desire to see them saved. isn f* 1 - ! I." * “Say not tbou, wbnt is tbe canse that the former dnyB were better than these?— ior thou dost not inquire wisely concerning tbi*.” And yet wo follow tbe example of those who ha'o preceded os, and make tbis inquiry, as they made it The golden age of the old mao is tbe time of bis yontb and early manhood—tbe El Dorado of tbe': youtb is tbe time that is to come. 8o the old look backward— tbe yonng look forward. Blessed is be wbo has tbe heart of youth in the body of ago. To Promote a VlgoroMe Growth Of the bair, nse Porker’s Hair Balsam. It restores tbe youthful color to gray hair, removes dandruff, and cures itching of the scalp.