Weekly advertiser-appeal. (Brunswick, Ga.) 188?-1889, October 12, 1888, Image 1

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L -APPEAL T, G. STACY & SON, PUBLISHERS. BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1888. ESTABLISHED 1875 NO DEATHS TO-DAY. m: ■ r -~ Soecial to Advertiser-Appeal. Jacksonville, Oct. 12.—Twenty three nfew cases were reported up to noon, but no deaths. Tom Stockton is doing well, as al so all others sick, except Dr. Fairlie, who is reported quite ill. The State press are requested to aid the Martin Memorial Fund for his family. A Pointer. It has been suggested that we at once prepare to erect a fumigation station to fumigate all baggage and furniture coming from Florida to Brunswick next winter, for fear some latent microbe might thus be import ed to flourish next summer. Wheth er this i$ either advisable or practi cable we will not stop to discuss, ex cept to say that we believe next sum mer to be a period of great danger, and in this connection will call at tention to something that happened in 1876-7. In ’76 Capt. Charley Al exander refugeed with his family on the sloop Betsey, and several cases of • yellow fever occurred on the boat.— The next season Mr. Rainey and sev eral others chartered the Betsey to g<J on a short cruise, and after their return several of the part}- had the fever. This little bit of unwritten history, and known only to a few, might prove of benefit to us in dis cussing all these questions. The East Tennessee Deals. Atlanta Constitution. The New York special in yester day’s Constitution was the talk . among railroad men yesterday. • The ra^ntiWpf the budding of a branch . jjne.frftpa Eastman toj^avanarij Mthe addition*oflTinc of steamers to’ ' ]the competition already afforded by Georgia ports added considerably to ithe interest with which the special :'wus read. Should this project be carried out, it is the general opinion , that Eastman will be made a grand junction point by the building of an air line to Jacksonville. The rail road situation and its developments in tho next two months are matters of interesting speculation all over the State, and particularly in Atlanta, where.the roads have their natural center. She Didn’t NeetLa Grammar. A teacher who fiad asked a girl to purchase a grammar received the fol lowing note from the girl’s mother: “I do not desire that Maggie shall engage in grammar, as I prefer her to inguge in more yousful studies, and I can learn-her to speak and rite proper myself. I have went through two grammars, and cant say as they done me no good. I prefer Maggie to ingage in Gurmep, or drawin or vbkal musick on the; pinner,”—Gol den Days.' A Novel Bet. Washington, Oct. 10 —Marcus A. Smith, of Tombstone. Ariz... the dcl- . egate in Congress i«>r Arizona, made the most unique be. to tint* yet made in Washington. At: onilnisiastic re publican laundryn.un, who has al ready bet all the money he could af ford, offered to bet Mr. Smith a year’s washing that Harrison would be elected, Smith to pay double rates for his washing for a year if Harri son should be elected, and the laun- dryman to do Smith’s washing free for a year if Cleveland should be elec ted. Mr. Smith promptly took the bet. . If you will invest two dollars at J. Michclson’s dry goods store you will get a ticket for the drawing at an elegant set of furniture consisting of ten pieces. Editorial Sandwiches. Seventy-five miles an hour—or a mile in forty-eight seconds—is the astounding rate of speed which has just been attained by the “West Coast Express,” of the London and Northwestern Railway on its trip from the English to the Scotch me tropolis. It will be a great pity if the yellow fever dies out before all the cranks who know exactly how to cure it, get an opportunity of going into the in fected districts—and taking the fe ver themselves. They could then ef fect their own cures. Some idea of the size of the big es tates in New York is furnished by the receipts of taxes. It took a check for $675,000 to pay this year’s taxes on the Vanderbilt property. The As- tor estate paid $400,000; the Goelet estate $250,000 and Trinity church $400,000. The increase of population in the Argentine Republic during the last ten years has been one hundred per cent while ours has been only 7!) per cent. It has been predicted that New York City will cast 25,000 more Dem ocratic votes at the next Presiden tial election than at the last. Indiana is now considered certain for Cleveland and Democracy. Doubts were entertained, but they have all disappeared. A narrow gauge railroad is being surveyed from Flovilla, on the E. T. V. & G. R. R. to Indian Springs, a distance of two miles. The Rome, Ga., Exposition contin ues to be one of the big successes of the day. married col man, in Williamsburg, S. O., killed himself this week, because he could not marry a dusky damsel of the neighborhood. This is said to be the second colored suicide ever com rnitted in that State. ELKAN’S MG] Linen damask towels at -25c. a piece—something handspme-nt the Racket Store. *£jp The largest, finest and cheapest line of picture frames you will find at the Racket Store. IS®? Leon Brand Collars and Guffs at racket prices at the Racket j Have you seen the Racket Store 50c. and 75e. corsets? They are equal to any $1, and $1.25 of any other house in town. Racket 8tp^, The Racket Store has cut thnprices in dress buttons to less thnn one halt' to what our competitors ansrielling them at. w Floor and table oil cloths below Cairo at tbe Racket Store. J 390 gross of fancy dross tftjtfpns at one bait 1 the usual price of pjttf^wpuld be competitors. Racket Something quite new-- and very cheap in wall pockets at tbs Racket A new line of window sbaoisat the Racket Store. For tliis week only: A special sale of photo and autograph d)|)ums at tho Racket Store. • ®jj- All colors of plushes at 1 yard,-worth $1, at the Rack! Jerseys, Jerseys, Jerseys,ml nobby at racket prices at the Store. Some very handsome Iaco very cheap at the Racket S ' Our 58c. kid glove is equal $1 glove of our competitors. Store. For Hamburg edgings broideries of all kinds, Racket Store. Ladies and gents band] 390 degrees below zero at til Store. Gents Neckwear in eudli at prices 50 degrees below the Racket Store. . 1 Our 25c. aud 36c.,alii; w per jitore. aud acket rtains em- the PROTECTION FROM IMPOSITION ALWAYS ASSURED BY DEALING WITH lot* J. The people have awakened to the fact that hitherto misrepresentation lias plaped sad havoc with their minds and purses, and that they are de termined to have no more of it is a credit to their good judgment, but a sad very sad, blow to tbe proprietors of those establishments whero they are uever so happy ns when they are making idle boasts of always underselling others. But it will be a very cold day when these parties come down to the prices of the Emporium Hall of J. Michelson. FOR, THIS WEEK WE OFFER SOME OF The Most Astonishing Values Ever realized in Southwestern Georgia. An immense stock of Dry Goods of the latest styles are arriving daily from New York and Boston, and will offer them at low and astonishing prices. ELEGANT PRIZE! To every purchaser of TWO DOLLARS WORTH OF GOODS, for cash, wc will give a ticket entitling the holder to n chance in the drawing for an ’ . Urf- .. - A - JSuMfc you buy of our would beci Racket Store. Ail shoes, ladies gents i ( r Misses are warranted as represent id at the Racket Store. Embroideried shoulder i carfs, the T'i,„ t' j very thing you want at tku season of 1 he boys ol r ranklin county, Ga., J , J ’ the year, at the Racket Sto have gone into illicit, distilling. — eral have been up before Judge New- Tca sets, dinner sets, V ash sets, and crockery, china and g ass ware man, as young as 16 to 17 years old., 0 f ever y description at rac let prices One of these boys says his distillery consisted of a powder cun for his still, a coftee pot for the cap, and gun bar rel for the worm. Kansas is anxious to annex tbe strip of land called “No Man’s Land” adjoining the State. Not, the news papers say, “for boom purposes,” but for protection. Every thief and mur derer who commits a crime in Kan sas makes a break for No Man’s Land, where lie is us safe as the man slayer of*oltl in the city of refuge. NOTICE. at the Racket Store. An act to incorporate the “Cordcle, Wuynesville and South Brunswick Railroad Company,” and to grant certain powers and privileges to the same, and to provide for the building of its line of railroad from a point in Waynesville, Wayne county, State of Georgia, into Cordclc, Dooly county, said State, passing through the coun ties of Wayne, Pierce, Appling, Cof fee, Irwin, Wilcox and Dooly, and authorizes said railroad company to connect its road with the South Brunswick Terminal Railroad Com pany at Waynesville, Ga., and for other purposes. We shall apply to the next Gener al Assembly of the State of Georgia for the passage of an act, of which the foregoing is the title. This Oct. 11th, 1888. W. F. Penniman, Mallokv P. Kino, Henky R. Symons, All Elegant Substitute For oils, salts, pills, and all kinds of bitter, nauscs medicines, is the ve ry agreeable liquid fruit remedy, Syr up of Figs. Reccommended by lead ing Physicians. Manufactured on y by the California Fig Syrup Com pany, San Faancisco, Cal. Syrup of Figsj Natures own true laxative. It is the most easily taken, and the most effective remedy known to cleanse the system when billious or costive; to dispel headaches, colds and fevers; to cure habitual constipation, indi gestion, piles, etc. Manufactured on jy by tbe California Fig Syrup Com pany, San Francisco, Cal. For sale by Lloyd & A dams. PUBLIC SALE. GEORGIA—Glynn County. B Y* virtue of n power of sale, conferred upon it In the several mortgages hereinafter referred to by It. W. Tliiot, the Mechanics’ llullding ami Loan Association, a corporation doing business In said State and county, w ill, between the hours of ten anil twelve o’clock in tho foremsm. on THURSDAY*, THE 18th DAY OF OCTOBER next, al the Court House door in said county, sell at public outcry, to the highest bidder, all that parcel of land m the city of Brunswick, in said State and county, and bounded as follows: Upon the cast by Earnout street, south by lot number three hundred nod thirteen (818). west by the other onc-ha|I of lot number three hundred and twelve ,312), and north by lot number three hun dred and eleven (311)-thc same licing the eastern onc-l'"!' ( ’f ‘bat lot, lying in what is known as the "Old 1 own” portion of said cltv, and deslg- nnted uiiuii the map thereof, ns mRilc by George R. Baldwin, surveyor, A. D. one thousand eight hundred ami thirty-sveen, as lot number three hundred and twelve (312), and being the premis es now owned and occnpied by said It. \V. Tliiot. anu whereon he now resides. Such sale being made by virtue of the power aforesaid, and to satisfy the principal, interest and the expenses of sale due upon four «) several “P"' 1 said property, made by said It. W. Tliiot in favor of the Mechanics’llullding amt Loan Association aforesaid, and upon which mortgages said Ihiot has made default for more than three successive months, whereby the right &!!&%!■» SK n, ' rru V ( * t0 this Association. " arranty Idle will be made to tho purchaser at such sale. Terms cash. September 19th. 1888. THE MECHANICS’ BUILDINGAN& LOAN ASSOCIATION, * By its Attorneys at Law, C BOV ATT * WHITFIELD. i Ittwiitaie afiQ Kesm. To take place January 10th, 1889. JACOB MICHELSON. This Space belongs to C. L. ELLIOT, The Live Newcastle Street Grocer. Dr. A, B. McCASKILL, PERMANENTLY LOCATED AT ST. SIMONS MILL§, Ga. Twenty years practical experience. Th« Brunswick Dining Mr A.ncL Oyster Saloon. A Meals lie Best the Martel Airis, Served in First-Class Style From 7 u. in. to 12 midnight, OYSTERS will he served in every stylo throughout the season al reasonable prices. Twenty-one regular meals for 25 Is our price. The best cook in the South has been secured, and we guarantee perfect satisfaction. Respectfully. WALKER & SHANNON, Props., NEWCASTLE STREET, OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE.*