The evening post. (Brunswick, Ga.) 18??-189?, July 09, 1890, Image 4

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TII/S SPACE BELONGS TO PALAIS ROYAL, TVLITTS ’•/riI'BEBG-, FROPRIETOR. I KtES! entire stock of Kv B IHllllMin, Lit., |B MUST BE CLOSED OUT BY ■k-TTGr. Ist, 1890 ■ As 1 have made arrangements to leave Brunswick. ■ do not care to move my stock and will sell it at I A GREAT SACRIFICE! ■_ In fact, if you need anything in my Store I will make Aures to Suit You. ■F ‘ I \lx I wold, Solid Fads. aEwSgiy' «rl\ ..nJ 111.1. \.H.! L. L.|, HL DAUGHTRY. 11IE EVENING rosr: WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1890. I \\\ w, I u\\ W SIMM. The Greatest Sacrifice Sale in Men’s, Youths’ and Boys’ Clothing, Gents' Burnishing Goods, Straw Hats, Shoes and Trunks. I must make room for a Big Stock of Fall Goods, and all Siinimer Goods MUST BE SOLI). This is no fake. A call will convince you. Ob ■iierve the elegant display of Summer Clothing ami Prices in my show window. CINCINNATI C LIIT 11l \Il house 5. 11. Proprietor. J E. YOUNG, Back Landing Lumber Yard Pine and Cypress Lumber, Laths, Flooring, Shingles, Ceiling, Moulding, Casing, etc Correct Measoremcßt Gnaraiteefl. Lumber not in stock will be furnished on short notice and at reasonable prices. Telephone No. 11; Post Office BoxS'u. 15. RADAM S JW MICROBE K,LLER - V y The Greatest Discovery of the Age. OLD IN THEORY, BUT THE REMEDY RECENTLY DISCOVERED. CURES WITHOUT FAIL CATARRH, CONSUMPTION, ASTHMA, HAY FEVER. BRONCHITIS, RHEUMATISM, DYSPEPSIA, CANCER, SCROFULA, DIABETES, BRIGHT'S DISEASE, MALARIAL FEVER, DIPTHERIA AND CHILLS, i In short, all forms of Organic and Functional Disease. Ths cures effected by this Medicine are in many cases MIRACLES! *<>!<! only in Jugs containing One Gallon. Price Three Dollars—aemall investment when Health and Life can be obtained. "History of the Microbe Killer” Free. CALL ON OR ADDRESS J. T. KOt KW ELI.. Sole Agent, Brunswick, Ga. Wm. Anderson 200 Gloucester street. Dealer in Dry Goods, Clothing Loots, Huts, Shoes, Notions, f'arpe’s. Hardware, Groceries and Genera Merchar. iise. Saunders Bros., LUMBER, < ’or. Newcastle and 1 Streets, are Oiferingat Kock Bottom Prices all i Kinds of Bough and Dressed Lum bet, Lime. Cement. Plaster and Build ing Material Generally. fWOrders Solicited, Satisfaction Guuraut, <•<!. WHERE CLOCKS ARE IN NEW YORK. Cogent RcaiinnM Why Women Shopping in New York I>o Not Carry Watche*. Many women whom I know invaria bly leave then* behind ■ < when they go out shopping. I remon strated with one of them the other day and got this answer and explanation: “There is no need of my carrying a watch, which is a most inconvenient thing for a woman to‘carry, anyway. She can’t put it in her pocket, for she'd never find it when she wanted it; if she j buttons it in the front of her waist it is more getatable, but is still inconvenient. I No one wears a watch in her waistband. | and a chatelaine watch, or carrying • your watch in a chatelaine bag, is a temptation to a thief. So I leave my watch at home and trust to the public clocks. "Os course I see my hall clock when Igo out. Then there are several clocks on the Grand Central; there is a clock in every elevated station; there is the church clock at Twenty-ninth street and Fifth avenue, besides Howard's electric clock. The Fifth Avenue ho tel clock every one knows, and there is a clock in Twenty-third street near Sixth avenue. There are two clocks along Broadway south of Twenty-third street, a clock in Fourteenth street near Sixth avenue. Tiffany’s clock is in Union square, and there are several clocks in all the big ‘shopping stores,’ generally near the elevators. “There are a few clocks along the Bowery, and some along Sixth avenue, wliile down town there are plenty of them; the City Hall, The Tribune. The Times clocks, the Produce Exchange clock, and quite a number of less prominent but equally good timekeep ers. So really what is the use of my carrying a watch that is either in my way or out of my way, and in both cases useless?” And I hadn’t a word to say.—Julian Ralph in Chatter. After Dinner. A lady who had become a member of a small club was horrified at receiv ing the announcement : “April 2, dinner at (1. Toasts. You will reply for the gentlemen.” “Toasts!” cried she. “Why, I know nothing about toasts except what I learned in the kitchen. Slake an after dinner speech! I could as well com pose a symphony!” She is not alone in her timidity. Many an accomplished orator has owned to the stage fright connected with “saying 41 few words” after din ner. There are still those who take comfort in Thackeray’s delightful pro phesy that “a day will arrive when we I shall have the speeches done by a | skilled waiter at a side table, as we i now have the carving.” Still, a man’s nerve and ability can I never be gauged by the amount of fright excited in him at the mere act of getting upon his feet. With many per sons that one movement seems to break the ice of timidity, though even Mr. Lowell once assured an audience that “whenever he finds himself upon his legs he is tempted to yield to a natural impulse and take to his heels.’’ There are. however, those who find no di acuity in getting up, but seem to be totally unable to sit down again. The old advice in regard to the length of such speeches as they are likely to make is still the best which can be i given them. “If you haven't struck oil in less than five minutes you’d better stop boring.”—Youth’s Companion. Stilton Cheese. It is a part of the religion of every I epicure that dinner without cheese is | like a beautiful maiden with only one I eye. An Englishman of national repn- | tation has said: “1 do verily think that in 1828 a Stilton cheese was a better fellow than he is in 1880,” and the man ought to know, for he has eaten them for almost three-quarters of a century. Stilton is a quaint old village in the northwestern part of Huntingdonshire, in the west central part of England. It has never been famous for any- j thing but cheese. The Stilton that j comes to this country is fairly good. It I has been said that in the old days men put less milk in their cream and less I water in their milk than at present, but it is only fair to admit that the erusty, brown old port that was taken with it made it seem better to those who ate it long ago. Stilton is the most expensive of the cheese brought to this country, and the sale for it is found altogether in the eastern states. —New York Tribune. One til Husk in's Jokes. I met a very charming English girl who told me a most characteristic tale of John Ruskin. One of the classes at Girton had just completed Ruskin's “Stones of Venice,” and to show their appreciation of the author’s work wrote him a “round robin” thanking him for ’ the pleasure this book had given them. In a short time each signer of the letter received a note from Mr. Ruskin telling her that her writing was a digraccful exhibition of girlish ignorance, and that she must write three verses from the Bible every day for a month and then send her manuscript to him. And the joke of it all, my young friend went on. was that the girls were geese enough to do it. New York Star. The use of the electro-magnet for in dicating the presence of submerged tor pedoes or lost anchors has been sug gested. The magnet in connection with a delicate strain dynamo meter is lowered into the water and excited by a battery. The metal Will attract the , magnet mid the dynamometer will re- ' veal the fact. Coney & Parker, Wholesale an«l retail dealers in Wood! Coal B F, I n K UDt Sewer Piping, including < himney Flues and Hoods ■sole HgeuU i’>.i Crovatt's Brick Yur i Telephone l». 52<Buy street p. c miller, House Mover. Headquarter* corner Mansiatd and " ’’ ■Maker* a HjicrJnlty <»t moving buildings of ali ■ Sat junction gnu ran teed. BURR WINTON, Nos. 314 and 31G B street, >• w Town, iCjilndir i Builder And Superintendent Postoffice box 150. Correspondence solicited Brunswick STENOGRAPHIC AND TYPEWRITING IIEADQLAKTEKB. All work neatly and promptly exo cuted. Patronage Solicited. GEO. W. KIRBY, JR., —at— BOWLES * BAKER’S OFFICE, Bay Street- MISS SHEARER, MODISTE, Ae. 311 Newcastle, St. Miss Shearer is now ottering her large and va i h*d Stock at the lowest prices, owing to the • • New are re eived dai y, and particular attention is called to a new line of Beach Hat-, etc , etc., etc. | INVITED. HENRY M. STANLEY “IN DARKEST AFRICA ’ The complete story <4 Stanley's recent thrilling adventures and tin- disclosure of Ins important discoveries will appear for the first time in the. work written by hinisell, entitled “7n Darkest Africa" In two volumes, profusely illustrated: price $3.75 jhc volume. Do not be deceived by any of the so-called “Stanley books’’ now being offered as “genuine” and “authentic." To no one of these has Stanley contributed a line. APFNTQ ihe work will be sold by sub- HULU 10. scription only. We are now ready to appoint < an\ a-sci a. Applicants should state experience. Remember that Mauley’* ott 11 book, !he <>niy <>ne in which he has a personal interest, will bear on the title page the imprint of Charles Scribner’s Sons Apply to JOHN K. MJ.SON, < liattanooga, Trim. Sole Agent lor Tennessee, r Alabama and Georgia* C E SHIPP asgfe reSSc adL* I“jp ™ *y» | .5 | ® <4\.a»'aL- smJLt. B-J&a mJLs iJLs te_> *.«sLs ■ n - x vfl DEALE R, o<H> 1 O--- N e wen st le St reel —-:} | O«C$ Big Stools I LOW PRICES ! Having moved to my new am! commodious quarters at 301 (Newcastle street, I am better than ever prepared to show my elegant stock of TURNITURE, which I will sell on very close mai'gm. Give me ft call. Cp E. SHIPP. H MRM Real Estate anti Insurance i t'pi. ,j ji-idii'g i ii'c Insurance | A large number <>l ii,,. d.-diable lots m New Town lor sale on reasonable terms. fl 150,000 Acres of Timber Correspondence solicited. Address fl XS. XS. EXOZ’XXXItTS cH Office 207 Newcastle Street. BIiEEPLOVILV SCARLETT. _ B Book and Stationery Stoß Fancy Goods ; Lamps and Fixtures, Pictures, Frames, GM ware and Crockery; OFFICE SUPPLIES A SPECIALTY. fl 219 NEWCASTLE STEE. T. 'fl THE ISTEW YORK B Steam Dye Housfl AND TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT. “ B Cor. 3?’ £aiacL Riclmiorici SSM U BILLbR, Proprietor. w U-z. Gents garments made to order, cleaned, dyed and isl .1 paired. Satisfaction guaranteed. - "fl Tin Hoofing and Guttering <on v.fd/ed and Plain Shut t Iron Work, Mansard mg and Shfl ing, Ihiven Wells, .1 LKinTXLVd PODS AND ORNAMENTAL FENCING* I he Be-T P.i ,-tnd> o! d IN, t:i nu n] ;U e w Puihjh. Points and Piping, Galvanized and Blocv bin et lion, >hect Zim*. L.-a.| and Copper Always in Stock. Job Work Promptly Atlende<t l o VY. 11. BAKER, Newcastle St., Op| osite die Ogle liorpe. 7 CENTRAL HOTEL jANIJ— .PrriLNL VM’. IT OTIS E, i. L. PETERSON, Proprietor. Both Houses Under One Management. Special rates for regular boarders. First-class in every jiaidcular. /MTYOUR PATRONAGE RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED I 1113 TiA OOnl ri M II tl 1 g J fl£ - i SWOS TS CDOXXX© and JXZE© in rnv new quarters.