Newspaper Page Text
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i
of Indian tribe* had a
.varying In dia-
M UW several tribe*
Wo Bcaltcrod over a territory. In
'hUrcBpqctitresembled the language
of Qrcai Britain and Germany in toe
'time'when there was little communi
cation between perron* livingat some
distance from each other. The lan-
triage of no Indian tribe was a Jargon,
aa it has often been represented to be.
oompreheagH
readily learneftad easily understood.
The language of the'JUgonquin group
waa the prevailing one and waa under*
stood on moat parts of the continent
As spoken by th<T Ojibways it con*
1 about 10.000 words. It has been
I the coast laogoags of the In*
■ K tor the teaaon that some of the
most advanced of nearly every tribe
could speak it In some cases boys
were senVto a tribe that spbke tbia lan*
‘ - lit It was like
. the lan*
Sioux lan-
and more
stronger and
on
, . Itiza-
vision and not
( was not expressed
-the language of
old reach,
tellmnch
i could call a
ad
ticet.'- 'If. lib could ca
eye of the* person 'he wanted he
8 d communicate seerpts to him,
!* those around him would no in
’ entire ignorance of them. He could
1 ' trning to a friend without at-
j the notice of others. A con
versation could be carried on in the
sign language between two persons so
far apart that their voices could not be
heard. The sign language could be
used in 1arc or war. It was not
confined TO gestures or motions of
the person. ' Every part of the
jbody touched or pointed to had
a significance. So did. the earth,
| water, sun, moon, stars aiid sky. Ac-
jtions, passions, -emotions, love, hate,
as well as tangible things, were ex
, the sign language. A
lick, hatchet, or string of
could also be employ
„ i of signs. One or more
employed for conveying
- long distances. An In
long
"der could guide his
pony s
Id unde
who', saw him could under-
I whether be had been successful
| in the chase or in battle. No race of
ixneh licking in intellect or deficient
,in inventions could have originated
“— J ! oved the language or signs
ols as it .was employed by
fines / this countiy when
discovered by *• the Euro-
The construction of this
_ i was as great a monument to
I greatness as the formation of
phabefc “The American In*
by Elijah 21 Haines,
~AU. ; KINDS QF NOSES.
nt Shape* of the Homan Proboscis
i What The; -signify..
more in a man's nose than
I at firstsight. Tho human nose
of character. In cases where a
been lost character has been
i it Itcannot be permanently
disguised. This led
i remark about an unmistakable
, “As plain as tl$ nose on your
t Tho nose was originally in*
as on organ. for conveying to
the brain’ the - delicate sense of smell-
Its uses have in mniy instances
£yerted. Savages bore holes in
i add hang joweliy on them.
‘ en put snuff in their noses,
tseof nature. A'sneeze is
Itary effort of nature to blow
•aoso the snuff the dirty old
'atoit When a gentleman
Rnk on the street, police-
ie has a sausage up his
aow what they
. but in some
irunken man is an
The African nooe b fiat and open.
It is a warm country nose, open for an
engagement with any air. It looks
lair, and is not fine.
There ore no perfect noaea away
torn the marble features of statuary.
They were not handed down to the
modern Greeks. . ’
Just now tho commercial nose is of
inept importance. In Chinn and Ja*
Legal Advertisement*,
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
OEOltfilA-GiYxst oi hty.
Bf virtue of u ontw of tfa* court of Ordinary
ot un county, will Iw will on Uw *r.t Tm-t'l •<
■ the commercial men who sample,
classify and buy tea* are called taster*
iould be called smellers. ThJ
could not begin to do their work ift]
sipped and swallowed samples of
thotciathey passed upon. The stSH
achs would not hold - enough and the
samplers would die.^Awn^M
upon their noses IH
opinions on the aromaofthoH
beverages. Their noses never go I
on them,
SampleMBMHMMIVIBIPnH
upon the nose, and it is the same way
with sugar men. The expert
broker trades on tho judgment of
nose, and he rarely gets left .
■The average human noso has aH
face of baby and seems destined to be
pinched frequently by the ambitious
nurse and ahtaya by the indiscreet
“peek-a-boo” lady viator, Then come
accidents to the nose when it begins to
ip. The little toddler who wean
over on it and bumps it; per-
it in rolling down
or falling out of the baby car
riage while nurse flirts with the police
man. Later the little thing is pressed
against window panes and worn away
looking at Christmas toys in shops or
at the children the little nose owners
would like, to be playing within the
streets. Then comes the scratches and
hurts noses receive in the battle of life,
bearing its blows and bruises. Per
haps one is fated to bo placed along
side of a cross eye, and to be Uncom
fortably stared at during waking
hours. And then when eyes become
dim and weak their obliging neighbor,
the nose, standing by and between
them, must hold for old eyes spec
tacles on its bridge and get no thanks
for it, because eyes do not think and
cannot imagine the nose helps them
see. Pole in death the nose goes away
to the tomb with all that is mortal of
man. The funeral sermon is' about
the loving heqrt that was and the soul
that is, and is to be saved, and the nose
is forgotten. From the cradle to the
gravo tho nose has a hard time.
There arc sharp and thin noses that
seem to belong to mean men. There
are proud noses that seem- to tell of
better days, even worn by shabby
.people. There are impudent noses
that seem to turn up at everything, to
carry an air of defiance. There are
noses ono wants to pull, and others
the pugilists want to flatten. There
are the beautiful red noses that are the
result of much constant drinking and
care and anxious solicitude. The red,
fed nose, that blooms in the spring,
blooms also in the summer and winter.
It has come to stay. It blossoms and
bulges, and is the rosy reoord of many
joyous events and the monufnentover
many Casks of brandy and demijohns
of wine'long since departed. The red
nose colored by liquor is tho most os-
jive of all noses, and should never
looked for on *the face of tho man
who is jxjfr but honest On the face
of a.temperance lecturer it is a contra
diction of his words.—Now Orleans
Picayune.
Eastern wood workers are using
naphthaline as a wood preservative.
It is said to be very effective, leaving
the wood dry ana with only a faint
aromatic smell.
t considerably through
me vocalists seem to
i the nose. 5 It becomes an
aent—a nasal kazoo
Bored through. It is a
poked into the business
do not own it.
with the sharp, long,
like the beak of an
a combative man who
„ > argue the ckse and want* to
his' Own way. Like the bird of
om, ke wants liberty of ’pinions.
IHio eagle nose is strong in character.
It speaks for itself. It stands up for
itself, and will not be snubbed or sat
The liftman nose is also full of char-,
acter. It is out - of plaeoand looks im-
Stoked grand on tho face of the
ancient Romans, for which faces it
waa made. It was In hannony with
acter and meant business. There could
have been nogreat Omar with an in-
rigajflm^tawied Bp »mennto^Ie*»
ton, Wellington/Napoleon, or whom
you will, and you wfll find that great
MMUtfiM however faintly.
Eyes and ears and chins and foreheads
do not This is but on instance show-
!«o opanbookm
history tag
STEAMERS
* SAN ANTONIO,
.,.* ' WILDER, i
STATE OP TEXAS,
WILLIAMS, it
O K and alter Sept. 28th, 1888, one ot the
■Lore steamer* will leave New York every
FridayatSp.m.,«rriTtn|lnBmniwIck follow
ing Monday. Returning,leave Brunswick every
Thursday afternoon. •
Close oonneeUont at Brunswick with B. * W.
E. T- V.« O. and A. P. * L. railroad*. Through
bill* lading lined to Atlanta, Albany, Amerten*
SUMS and all Interior point*.
Insurance between New York and Brunswick,
one-Sfth 01 one per cent.
Freight and passage a* lew a* by any other
line. ¥j» freight, passage end general inferme-
° n,PP THOS. FULLER, Agent,
\ Bruarwlck, Ga.
tn January neat at the court
twenty at public aurtlon, ‘
deneaaed. to-wit:
between the ,
ring WeerrtiaM i
gJBMwol Mint
o*e lota or parcel*
Id town oi unini
sport boil on satih
of load lying and being In
wick, Ga., and known and ,
wln'a map of aaid town aa lota
— i* deduloUow*
. „ JhMmm
by western faalvaeot Old Town lota Nos.
i<1 SS and north by eastern ball of Old
and being 80x80 feet each, end bounded i
East by Kgmont street, south by Ma.isO
weat by western halves ot Old Town
Wland hn and north by eastern hi
Town lot Ko, SSI, Terms cash.'
.Adm’r.l
GLYNN SHERIFF SALE.
job w d*mi •*-
both being ot the "Mon
m billiard ti
fonrby eight (cef; lour dona cues from one
t two eet* of Ivory
-ball*; ono ehake
‘ »wo wa
rn Its anper-
in; one ,otof
walnut table:
balls; one'setot
Jug: two. walnutt—
nut ball racks; one pin pool
tenanoes; five patent chalk holdei
gas pipe and lixtures; one round wanut table;
two water coolers; one drop-leaf poplar and
walnut writing desk; one refrigerator, manu
factured by Joe. W. Wayne; one cane seated and
maple office chair; nine wooden-sealed cuilr*;
•even cane-seated chairs; one show case; one
C o counter; a lot of shelving; ooeAStns, num-
. ten, heating stove, and eighteen joints ot
— belonging thereto. Levied on and sold aa
Aretus Turner,nnder and by vlr.
. - - if Gly
principal; attorney’s tee 881.87, Interest S18.B,
to Novemocr 1st, 1888, and further interest and
cost.
Alt of said property sbovs described i« Iocs'-J In
the store house of A. X. Putnam, adjoining that oc
cupied by the Oglethorpe National Bank, and front-
ncrrlo. Owing to tho expense ot transporting said
property it wiu be sold without carrying and ex-
posing *.ho same at the court house door on the day
posing
of sale.
This November SOth, 1888.
Vi . M. BERRIE,
Sheriff G. o. Ga.
SHERIFF sale.
CEOROIA—Otxaa C0UKX7.
WIU be sold before the court house door In the
city of Brunswick, Olyun county fid., during the
legal hours of sa'e on the first Tuesday In January
next, the following described properly, to wit:
all ot that traot, lot or parcel ofland situate, lying
and being In the County of Glynn and S '.te of
Georgia, and In tbe City of Brunswick therein, and
in that part of a id city called tha "Old Town" and
bontalnlng sltteen thousand and two hundred (16.
MOJscna'e feet,and.forming a rectangle ninety by
our hundred and eighty (MS180) feat and known
on the plan of aild city aa "Old Town" water lot
number thirty (30), land bounded north by water
lot number twrnty-nh;c (W: e at bi Bay Street;
sort* by Loudon street; weat by Oglethorpe bay;
and also lot numbor Ihlrty-ono (31'
containing sixteen tbonsand and two
hundred (1<S,20«) tqnare feet.and fortnlng a reeatn-
gle nine.y bv one uuudred amt eighty (OOnlSO) feet
and knotvu bn t.ie plan of said cityas '-Old Town"
water lot nu mber tlili ty-ono (31 , and bounded
North by Loudon Stree., East by Bay s.reet,
South by water lot number thirty-two (IS), West
by pglathorpe bay, together with nil and singu
lar- ihs tenements and heridltsments, the re
malndera and nvsvalsps- aadTShewIghm memben
and appurtenances nu,o the same In any way
belonging, or in auv wise appertaining, and all
the right title and interest, property and poa-
scsston, claim and demand which tbe
below mentioned John R. Cook aud
Isadora J. Cook have In and to
same as well as <u law as In equitv; sold m
and by vir.uo of a mor.gago 11 fa issued oi
Glynn Superior Court in favor of Bessie B. Beck
and ugainst .he said John R. Cook and Isadora
■T. Cook, principal four thousand dollars (v'4,000).
Interest to December 6th. 1387, twoiJiundred and
slghtyand 87-1110 dollars (8080.87), »ud tho '
her interest, and the aunt of 8130.28, attorn .
lees to date of judgment, and Ml further actor-
This November SOth, 18(8,
W. H. BERRIE,
Sheriff G.C.Ga.
ANYBODY!
FILL AND WINTER TO. CK!
Throw aside your old 'clothes, and. provide
yourself with something new, seasonable and
stvllsu from the old reliable clothier.
JAS. S. WRIGHT,
Corner Newcastle and Monk Streets.
I have Just received an elegant atoek of season
able goods selected bjr mysell In the Northern
markets, and can supply the town with
Clothing, Hals,
SXXOSS
Gents* F*
"Goods,
NI Ck'VL vIt I' llifTi KV
Which won) pun-baaed fur i-ta and opus*
quently can be mid on clusust nrirg- >a. -x .
“““8uita nude to ordir tnan -.unpics, much
(•than ftum s taller, and 111 guaranteed.
JAS. S n RIGHT. v
Kotlee of latsads* Appllcatlea Car tbs Psssags
•fa Local Bill.
& (or tha condemnation md
rend Connell ol the City of
awl Council, as Malar a Quarantine Button
. NELSON, Curt.
BDTCBtBS AH# fllKKlt I
TAKE a epeelaity of Delicious Fat 1
axi oel red dally from Armour's S*“*-
Chlcsgo. It la deliciously Fat ant
Is eoiaTwehty-flva Per Cent ehi
meat ean be benght Msewhere.
Try a Pleoe
Md yea will have no other.
Beef, Poik, Saasaroe, B
, ALWAYS OK HAND.;
NOTICE. «
KMtbir tbe Copula, owner* or oontiineee will
be responsible lor any eebtt ouatraete-i by the
crew ot the Ane. herb OBILIO
CUEBSEINAE, Muter,
Brunswick Wood Delivery Oo.
Torras’ WTiarf, Bay 0t.
SINGLE LOAD (Not Delivered.)
mK , «we , Un, , . ¥ Ht. n yleng , h;.;;;;;.;.; ; 8 H
PER COED.
Pn«,Mtrai>aBde)dltaii^lm(t& «••«*«««•« 18
: SINGLE LOAD (Delivered).
WNK, tawitdjand.pm Mijr length ■miiiKil jl
^ PJBR CORD,
Leave Order, with Haywood, Gage * Ga TERMS POSITIVELY 0ASV.
“WHAT IS THE MATTER WITH
S. W. APTE, Ppopp.,
• --OF 1UE—-
MiM House f
ISj THE CRY OF ALL, ♦
HE’© ALLRIGHTI
He is selling goods at <ray loyr /down prices, HI* {tnfflense Cidthlfig
Stock i^unsarpassed in styles, quality and prices,
In
worth $20,
geeks at wofMi
Fine Black Imported Corkscrews, 414 per sfl
Fine English Melton Square and Round
$20 and $22. / ,T ...
All Wool Sdotoh Shevlote In double and single bfeset Aom M0 «p t©
$13.50 Worth $15 and $18.|
Children aoABofiMh
I have the largest line in Children find Boy* Mil km $2 OSdBpWifdl 1 ?.
Boys’ knee pants 40o. and upwards, end an IwnSfliS IfMn kOf^ fOVtW
and mens’ Overcoats. ' »
HATS and CAPS. I have the largest 11ns, Slid at very reduced prim
Shoes, Shoes* Shoes* y . ;
The finest and cheapest Shoos for ladies, children find. gefitTefflSfis
Trunks, Satohels, UmhfellAl* BtOi
Tranks and Satchels—all styles. Silk Ufflhrells# ffdtO $1,T6 hp» A
large variety of Leather Goode in traveling companions and Cflff aild CdU
l&r boxes. , .... • (J
SPECIAL BARGAINS-
Vnla.t tdrieil Shirts at 46c., worth 76e.
Gents’ Linen Collars at 10c, worth 20o.
Fine Silk Neckwear at 16c, wor> h 60c.
All. wool Flannel Top Shiru from 76o. Upwarti*.
Polite attention, is given to oU who glr* ns d «alf,. P*
teed, and qualities warranted. Come and convince youtt
say anything that we do not mean. We cam* here and
and intend to stay and keep oar reputation tip oil lowest ]
goods. Jb. ^mmwmm
vVm
PH0i*HI UTd-
At Marlin’s old dry goods stand, New castle i
aug. r.
la;, liraii, feed, FNr, laid,
Mill Feed Qanerally. , *
Car-Load Lots a' Specialty
We Compete with any Market in
, Price, and Mean just what w<
L. D. HOYT & Cm
^-DEALERS IN-
Stoves. Onus, Pistol* Cartridges,
AGBICULTURAL IMFLHliVm 8A8H* BOOBS, BUMS
and Wsurorus
d. A. BUTTS,
i Physlolan and Surgeon'
attention givSa 8s i
L.J.LeavyA Oo.
IKIWfMI
imiatktMiN