Newspaper Page Text
VOLUflE.vfil.
BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA* SATURDAY, JANUARY 6,1883.
' # . . , *
i!Bi. . . j — .i
NUMBER 27.
-The Advertiser and Appeal,
* itpnBLl«*HED 1TUT BATUEDAT. AT.
BRUNSWICK. . GEORGIA,
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Brunswick, UoorgU.
t. P. Hsire/.F. *• *}«•*
U. Couper. 4. WIKsr,
nuum ooM«rrt**» or oorjciu
fl»»»OE—Wilder. Oooli »nd (poor*.
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L lS5ra!»>«oi<e-n»rrot. Hwdr “•> eP«"»-_.
cuoraun—Uttlodold. Dmrtlnur ud H»rdr,
fUuoa—H»rdr. Cook ud UlUoield.
Public auiLDiwoa—Hartay. Jouptr and wlidar.
Biiuoaoo—WUdor. Ppm ud Btttl/.
UNITED STATES OFFICERS.
Collector ofOoetoou—w. f-Portow.
SoTlISor SiuraS »i«nu-D. t. Boon.
Depot/ Menkel—T. W. belter.
PMtaueter—Untie North.
OCEAN LObaEIfo- 214»F-^a
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Regular communlcailona of thla Lodge in held on
the flra
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A SEAPORT LODGE, No. ««.' I- »• £
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the Ant end third Jloode/i In eech monlli, »t 7:*0
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»«U erer/ Tnmd./ ^V.WMamom. N. O.
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fr.terh.il/ .erllrt to ..tend. MKUirau)> 0<c .
MAX RICE, V.C.
A. B. WATTLES, K. of H. end «.
GLOVER&DUM
wIlOLAMALZ AMD RETAIL
Book and Stationery Store
CROCKERY, GLASSWARE,
Lamps and Lamp Fixtures,
PICTURE FRAMES. BRACKETS, Etc.
Dleek book* of .0 kind* peper bege, luepplnp P*;
per. et«.; ienr/ (oode, to/e, mo.. mnete end meelcel
Jutrnaer' '
•appliee
Ali^l
Monitor Oil Stoves.
\ NEWS DEPOT!
Newcastle and Grant Streets,
BRUNSWICK, PA.
• Jf**r
Fire * Insurance!
A /« Ctorsrr,
attorney at law,
II RUNS WICK, GEORGIA.
°*ee eeU to Awmbmip ArrreL building-
SCHOOLS MOB OBOBOIA BOYS. I
Old conditions pawed away with
iekee k/the /ereellw.
*. M. DEXTER,
nfcuSANAWANPJttALEtTATE AGENT.
WHEftyuriiriiHs. e». p
OP ATHENS. OA^AND* OTHER FIRmT-CLASS
|e.r/ low rete. lu towo {with ignprance, while tbo prize* con-
tfae smoke of the great 'civil war, aad
to-day the people, of the Sooth are
brought face to hoe with cireataatan
OH that demand apo*e trained artiaaoa
and fewer profeaeiooal meo. -As for
men of leisure, we Want none ’*^.*11.
Instead of achools in which to teach
the claaoica, w* want technical achoola
in which the boys pi Georgia can ac
quire the rudiments of mining, engin-
sere, architects, contractors, mSchani-
cal engineers, chemists, .'foremen,
builders, mechanics and all other po
sitions embraced in material prog
We want schools that will turn out
artisans, instead of lawyers, doctors
and preachers. * Onr colleges and
schools must, of course, be maintain
ed, bat if Georgia is to retain her
place's* the moat enterprising South
ern State, we mast hers more Wc&
nieal schools.
Beyond ad) questions the foremost
feature in educational matters. atg|be
present time is embraced in industrial
education. In every civilized oonutrj
technical schools are being .establish
ed. Some are schools of trade, some
schools of technology, and some are
institutions of the highest grade of
applied science. In the larger cities
of this country there are hundreds of
lower industrial schools in which chil
dren are put in s way to acquire a
common English education and
good trade.
tfbarqu do 8t|U in the Union that
Tri greater need bf "totb classes of
industrial schools than Goorgia.' We
nro on the eve of nn immense develop
ment of our resources;' we nro engaged
in establishing a new order of things.
But ut present if we open a cotton
mill we have to send to other states
for a mechanical engineer end for
form'en. If we open a mine all the
high grade employes have to be iin
ported. If we build a railroad or dig
a canal the brain work of construction
inane to people of other states. And
every oue who has had occasion to in
vestigate the subject knows how diffi
cult it la to find in the South close
aud wall tritium).artisans of any elans.
These may be.nnwaloome facts, but
•till it is best to understand where w*
stand.
We need, in abort, technical schools
and tbs place for them is in tbs cities
of the State. There should bo excel
lent industrial schools in Savannah,
Macon, Columbus, Atlanta, Borne,
Americas, Albany, fhom*3vill^ Car-
tersville, Newusn, Graapsboro, and
many other central points, as well at
in Athens. The Athens school does
not meet the demand of the State iu
the direction of technical training,
bat perhaps in the end it can become
the high polytechnic school of the
State. Just now, however, we need
aohoola of a lower grade much more
than an ideal 'institution of tbia na
ture.
On tbia subject wo may be anre of
oee thing—if we desire to (levelup
Goorgia and carry her resources to
their utmost possibility, we must
have skilled laborers. If we desire to
compete with other markets, we must
train our boys for the struggle; for it
It a fight Hi which the best brains will
win, in which there will be a survival,
of the fittest. And in all this grand
work of material progress shall the
bofa of Georgia remain handicapped
A UUle fellow io a primary school
was askad by bis teacher to apell the
word knife. After be bad correctly
don* so, be added, “Bat whet’s the
K for 1"
“What can I do for yon to indues
you to go tabbed now ?” -asked a mam
ma of her five-year-old boy. “Yon
can kt me pit op a little longer,” was
the youngster’s response.
A little tbree-ysar-old girl, while
her mother waf trying to get her to
sleep, became Interested in some out
side noise. She was told that it waa
caused by a cricket, when she sagely
observed: “Hbimma, I think he ought
to be oiled.”* ,
A kmall boy of four summers was
riding on a* hobby-horse with a com
panion.' He was seated rather un
comfortably on the horse’s neck. Af
ter a refleotivo pause, he said: “I
think if one of ua gets off I could ride
better.”
A little lass, whose birthdays do
not number more than three, recently
went to a church in which the choir
occupies a gallery with a clock on the
front. “What did you see at ohurehf”
uslred auntie, when she came home.—
“I skw some folks Bing on the clock
shelf.”
A short time ago, at a school in the
North of England, daring a lesson on
the animal kingdom, the teacher pnt
the follquinjj' question: “Can any boy
name to me an animal of the order
edentata; that is, a front tooth tooth
less aoimal ?” A boy, whose face
beamed with pleasure at the prospect
of a good mark, replied, “I can.”—
"Well, wbnt is the animal ?” "My
grandmother,” replied the boy in
great glee.
' Be Had Been Told About It,
“Got any porpoise plaster ?” naked
a long yontb in a hickory shirt
The clerk donated a withering look
to the enquirer, but be spoke encour
agingly to the young man.
**T presume yon mean porons plas
ter.”
"Which ?”
“You mean porons, not porpoise
plasters.”
There you go. Dad said you fel
lers ’ud try end palm off something
1 else ef yer didn’t have what I wanted.
jilt told dad it ’ad be a cold day
when you ctngbt me on a pin book.
I’m glad there’s another store in this
’ere town."
‘ And be went in search of the other
store. • •
The Dangers of Courtahlp.
Schuyler, S. Y.. San.
A wildcat weighing thirty-two
pounds was exhibited in town on Sat
urday. It waa killed in Shell creek
precinct, where, it is stated, there
wee a den of thirteen—three baring
been captured. Tbeae animals would
oome in daylight to the premises of
the farmers in the vicinity end attack
the chickens, and, in the abeenoe of
man and gan, coal.i not be frighten
ed awav. The yonng men who go
“sparking” in that neighborhood now
stay till broad daylight, not caring to
brave their apprehension* of meeting
ooe of those wild animal*.
tinf* to go to states more progressive
and far-sighted T The only remedy
is summed np iu technioA'cnltore.
“Come down,” aaid the yonng man
stroking his upper lip. *
The largest fruit seller in New Or
leans, on being asked wbat became of
all the cocoauut shells, replied that be
sent annually 1,600,000 to New York
to be ground np with black pepper#
Some of the Asiatics are now cook
ing their nieak on American stoves.
This is pnferrable to the old -style of
serving np Americans on Asiatic
stoves.
New tirtdbmewlae Shnm N«wa.
The -world does not know bow
many women straggle with the mis
fortune of baring a growth of hair on
the face—so a physician told me yes
terday. Not only ill-favored women
soffer, bat those who have the 'high'
eat social positions, and are admired
for their accomplishments. In excep
tional cases a slight growth of hair oo
the npper lip is not a disfigurement
and indeed is regarded as a mark of
beauty. If a woman believes that it
hi so adorn meat, she is reconciled,
end makes no effort to get rid of it.—
This growth takes place moat fre
quently on the npper lip, or at the
corners of the month. But then ere
many, l am assured, with e hairy
growth all over -their faces, thick
enough sod strong enough, if allowed
to grow, to make a beard of wbieh
any man might be proud.' Bat this
it kept e secret from the world. Fre
quently the sufferer from this crtfel
fate ie so industrious in removing all
eigne of s beard from her face that
even her most intimate friends know
nothing a boat it Yarioa* means are
reaoried to to aooomplish this. If yon
go into the boudoir of some ladies,
you could see them in the set of burn
ing off the obnoxious heirs with the
flame of a candle, of spitefully pulling
them ont with a pair of tweeaera.—
Where the beard is very rebellious,
the poor victim resorts to sharing
mag and razor. It ie dangerous to
have recourse to this severe measure,
for the beard soon becomes so strong
that it cannot be concealed. Very of
ten face powders which have a oauatio
action on the skin are used. These
ore highly deleterious. They not on
ly destroy the'hair down to the ear-
faoeoftbe akin, but also penetrate
it If these powdere are not jndi-
oioosly used they eauee great injury
to the akin. Allot these expedients
give great paio, bat what martyrdom
will not h woman undergo in her ef
forts to get rid of a disfigurement.—
The physician showed me an ioetro-
meet used in removing hairy growths
from the face by mesne of eleotrioity.
The operation ie simple, oonaiating of
electrical machine and a fine
pointed needle charged with electrici
ty, which is conveyed through the
pores of the skin to the roots or pap
illa of the heir. The electricity by
chemical action destroys the note so
that the hair eannot grow oat again,
as it does when all other methods ere
resorted to. The face becomes quite
smooth after the moat sturdy hairs
have been removed so that no traoe
of them remains. The physician aaid
that the happiest women he had ever
eeen in his life were those who had
beards eueeassfally removed from
their
OUR HIGHEST GOOD.
lltaMttt Mr tM* aha win hath
How Lowall Uat IU Null,
“Heads or toiler
•Tails.”
The coin wo* flipped end—
“Heads she lies.”
It Wa* thus that the destiny of a
pro*porous city was decided a great
many yean ago io tbia, the pioneer
manufacturing town of New England.*
The story goes that two meo, Meeen.
Lowell and Boot, sometime about
1813, satisfied that another plaoe than
Waltham was better adapted to mao-
afaetaring, went to the present rite of
Lowell and started e factory. Boot
wonted to name the plaoe in bis own
honor, while Lowell desired to go
down to history with a similar glory.
The two men split upon the name
and resorted to the toering of a coin
to decide the matter. It fell for Low
ell, and to this day the plaoe is Low
ell. »
The germ of bolioeee is in faith,
not only because it brings os under
the operation of tb* divine power
whieh makes tu holy, trat because it
ie itself the great antagonist of selfish-
iss. ;
The old year is dead. Let the
handwriting of cares ;n yoorbrow,
the glosses that aid yoor foiling vis
ion, oqd the nervous trembliog of
yoor ones strong band, 1*11 yon of
the flight of time, end do their talk
of warning.
Let tbia be thy purpose, O friend,
to observe the law of right and to do
it The sunshine and the storm, the
night and the day. tb* beet and the
oold of life's discipline will foster sad
mature tb* grain for garners in the
Bkj.-N. A. Staples.
It is the hardest thing in tb* world
not to think onr good works better
than they ere, aad to make tbs very
best keep tbeir dietqnoe in the office
of justification. Though w* most be
judged by and according to our ac
tion*, yat we shall not be eaved by
them.—Thomas Adam.
It were better that many in these
United States were unable to reed at
all than that they should read the
vile atufl to whioh they ara addieted.
The devil end his publishing agents
are taming education itself into a
ears*. While we multiply schools,
os multiply good books end periodi
cals.
Yon kayo lost much time during
1883 in loafing end foolishness.—
Think how much mefnl information
yon might have gained by employing
yoor spar* moments in rsodiog. A
failure to appreciate the value of lit
tle things and UUle moment* entails
great loes on many people. It is
poor economy to "save at the bung,
and warts at the spigot
What is I
conscience; • if
addr
time
salvation 1
work
lost, is now.
evangelist
meetings are a'nrto>i. or tiU the “lour
months” or more between now and
harvest arq pawed. God’s time ia now.
The two Georgia Conference* of
the the M. E. Church, Booth, have
recently given nearly $8,600 towards
fonoding Dr. Allen's , Anglo-Cbineee
College in Shanghai, Chine.' This
oollege is intended to ednoate Chinese
yontha, end, while imparting the ad-
entifif learning of the western worlds
at tbs seme time to eradicate the su
perstitions of'heathenism, and give
sound religions truth in its Bead —
The movement will reach the literati
of China, and thou open tb* higher
classes of that benighted empire to
the gospel. The Chinese tbsmselm
are entbnsiastio over tb* enterprise,
and, though the college at present
has only room for six hundred, there
are already more 4h*u ooe thoavaud
applicants. Sorely God js moving
among tb* nations 6f tbs earth. .