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THE EVENING POST.
•fill: i:i.' r(A l>\ I-1:1 I-1 S'. si I I>l IM IN TUI
CITY OF BRUNSWICK. ,
**■ - I
Elite red in the |» Mortice nt Hrnn-w.uk, Ga , j
as sec'md-class in a*, ter.
C. L. EKOST, : : : : : : : : E. SiMkIXS
I’UBI.ISHEKS AND PMOPKIKTOUH.
<;
SUKSCKU’TIOX.
One year. - - >4.001 Three months, - SIOO 11
Six months - 2.00 1 One month, - - 40,
Subscription invariably in advance.
ADVERTISING RATES S
Are very reasonable, ami will be furnished ujmjd
application. »
Telephone No. 49. i
TO SUBSCRIBERS.
The management of The Post is 1
making an earnest eilurt for the
prompt delivery of the paper to every i
subscriber. Anyone who fails to get 1
his paper, will confer a favor bv re
porting the fait to the business oilice,
114 Richmond street.
——■ .. JJJna-r I
TO ADVERTISERS.
All contract advertisers will please
arrange to have the copy for any ,
changes or for new advertisements,
sent to the business otlice of The
Post the day before the change is
to be made. The management wil' 1
esteem it a special favor if this re
quest is complied with.
Abuse is one of the few things »:
man can get without earning or de
serving it.
The next new bar room set up in
a tough locality should call itself
the House.
Rest and recreation was the order
of the day yesterday for a great
many of the working men of Bruns
k wick.
Yesterday was a holiday in Penn-
Mivania. < liiwrnor Biaur issued a
■tlamat ion to that i - th.'
HH|K:< at . iii-i ■' may i. . ■
ignity whi> h it • !< s' i
1 !SI ''' 1 ' s ■lee u.
11.. a. v..':i h< : i.< iri’;
,'L’. t In I
fPSfeC, B' :u ‘'’ In: •ieiijil
I>l i She ri'ks heavily a'
<
i" i ■ 1
Jrttcnded wit h great dang' ris not
■hfirm al by experience on English
BKilroads. In 1887 700,000,000 pas
Psengers were carried and only one
fatal accident occurred.
When Governor Gordon made
that memorable speech last week be
fore the Farmer * Alliance he started
a boom for himself which has grown
day by day and will continue to
grow until he is elected to the senate
of the United States.
Was not that a glorious showing
of the South's progress published in
yesterday’s Post? Truly this sec
tion of the country has been wonder
fully blest, and just ahead of us is a
season of prosperity the like of
which has never been seen before.
/ Probably the smallest millionaire
f in the World is Jacob Seligman who
is only about four feet high, lie
came from Germany about twenty
years ago. and located in Michigan,
y At that time he did not have a dol-
he is now worth $15,000,000.
A gentleman who has just re
turned from New York says Bruns
wick is on the tongue of half the
men he talked with. He also met a
number es New Englanders who in
tend visiting Brunswick this winter
with a view to making investments'
Come on gentlemen, you will find
here a pleasant home aud a *\.od
field for your capital.
The following from the Pittsburg
Dispatch, a republican newspaper,
is rather pointed. The Dispatch
says: “Ifcongress should adjourn
without a reduction ol taxation,
leaving the sole summary of its fiscal
work the conversion of an eighty
million surplus into a fifty-million
e deficiency, it would bury the repub
lican party so deep under the adverse
votes of the people that it would
hardly be worth ressurrecting.”
NO DIFFERENCE OF OPINION.
It is characteristic of some good
natured men always to agree with
those with whom they converse. It
is with them a point of politeness
never to differ, which sort of polite
ness is certainly a very amiable kind
of tact. We have a capital instance
of the value of this policy in the
sensible speech of the man who, dur
ing one of the Belfast riots, was
asked by n mob w hat his religion
was. He didn't know whether bis
interrogators were Catholics or Pro
testants, but he looked at their
weapons, their bludeons and their
firearms, surveyed all carefully and
answered: “Gentlemen, 1 urn of the
same opinion &• that gentleman there
with Uie big sue.”—-<-baiul»er» Jour-j
GEORGIA IN BRIEF.
Tlie taxable property of Lawrence t
county has increased $278,903 over t
£
last ycur. j
**
Marysville is soon to have a new
guano factory,cotton and oil mill and (
an artesiau well. 1
*.* 1
The southern conservatory of mu <
sic has just completed an elegant 1
structure in Romeand will occupy it 1
immediately. f
* *
* [
One thousand" bales of cotton was (
received in Albany last Saturday. c
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The Gainesville Saddle and liar- t
uess company began business yester- *
day. Their capital amounts to *
$24,000,00. ,
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* 1
Dr. L. B. Wheeler, a veteran in (
the Mexican war, died yesterday at <
his home in Millerville. (
♦ * '
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A $150,000 phosphate plant will
be built in Thomasville during the ’
winter by Atlanta capitalists.
* *
»
A $50,000 cotton flannel factory
will be constructed in Atlanta im
mediately.
* *
«
The Standard Oil company will
establish an agency at Albany this
week.
*.. *
Lucius Johnson, a negro gamble r
shot Bud Shaver, a confederate, in
Atlanta last night mortally wound
ing him.
* *
*
'I he Macon Telegraph has come
out squarely for Governor Gordon
for senator.
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The Thomasville cigar factory was
put in operation yesterday morn
ing.
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*
Five miles of steel rails was re
ceived in Macon yesterday to be used
in constructing the Macon and Dub
lin railroad.
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A passenger train on the E. T. \.
&G. railroad was wrecked near At
lanta last night. No one was ser
iously hurt.
ODDS AND ENDS.
An English member of parliament
has patented an invention in which
electricity is made use of for improving
the extraction of gold.
The circulation of the Salvation
Army journals is over 600,000 copies
weekly.
A colored woman was so frightened
luring a thunder storm that, as she
•xpressed it, she “trembled like an
isbpan.”
Aside from the Morosini collection
dm handsomest diamonds in Saratoga
ire those worn by the wife of ex-Mayor
51 race, of New York.
“Should we keep our vests in the
vestryf" asked Gilroy. “Yes," replied
Larkin; “and our coats in the coterie,
and likewise our trousers in the pantry."
Dr. Gatling, of Hartford, Conn., the
Inventor of the famous gun, is a com
paratively old man, but still keeps
busily at work with his plans and con
ceptions.
Life has its compensations for most
people, but for his compensation the I
undertaker has to wait for death.
The Duke of Edinburgh and His I
inarek are hobnobbing and drinking I
water at Kissingen, and the Prince of
Wales and Chauncey M. Depew are ■
swopping stories at Homburg.
A grand turning cupola eight meters !
in diameter is to lie erected in the I
Vatican garden for covering the pho
tographic equatorial instrument which
is to be used in connection with map
ping out the stars.
Manslaughter in the first degree is
punishable by imprisonment for not
loss than five or more than twenty
yours. Murder in the first degree, and
arson in the first degree accompanied
by homicide, are punishable by death.
The Babylonians embalmed their
dead in honey, and discountenanced i
cremation, which they believed to be
nothing but a sacrilege to the sun.
At the end of the Bulgarians’ Palm
Sunday feast at the cemeteries they '
will not eat the remnants, but leave
them on the graves for the dead who .
are expected during the night.
The late Duke of Portland used to
shelter himself from observation while
walking in his park by hiding under a
huge umbrelliu Tlxe back of his Lon
do:: residence was guarded by a wall so
liigh that the neighbors could not see
tlu <’• ike’s house, much less its inmate
when he was walking in the yard.
A well known lawyer of Toronto
who is about to be married ordered his
wedding suit, whereupon it was at
taehed by a lady to whom he owed s4l,
the payment of which he had sys- •
tematieally evaded. fflis wedding gar
inents are now in the hands of a court
j official, and will be put up at auction ■
j if the matter is not settled.
The accomplishment of the man who
could speak four different languages
with bis hands tied behind him is sur
passed by a Quaker gentleman of whom
a western paper says that not desiring
I to see the terrible pictures of battles
and bloodshed hi a popular magazine
he "read the magazine clear through
with his eyes shut."
Tlier® Iu» recently been current n
story to the effect that the venerable
mother of Lieut. Cushing, the hero of
the blow ing up of tliun bel ram Alts'
maria, is u pauper, dependent upon
charity, in Boston. Tins is declared to
be a bam less falsehood. Mrs. Cushing
‘ is living at St. Louis iu easy i-ucuui- j
I’lIE EVENING POST: ’1 FES DAY*. SEPTEMBER 2 i.-90.
Gospel Outdoor,.
The greatest and most largely at
tended of all the camp meetings are
those at Ocean Grove, N. J.; Mount
ain Lake Park, Mil.; Pitman Grove,
Pa.; Old Orchard Beach, Mq., and
Marthas Vineyard. Thousands con- I
gregate at these gatherings, and during
the week or ton days of spiritual wrest- I
ling scenes are enacted which it would
be impossible to duplicate anywhere |
else in the world. The general man- :
ageinent and programme of the meet- ;
ings is pretty much the same all over.
Days are set for “Holiness Meetings,”
at which both men and women take
part, and where remarkable things oc
cur when the worshipers are “under
conviction,” and where, be it said,
many receive good impulses which last
as long as their lives. Then there are
the “Children's Days," “Young Peo- :
pie’s Meetings,” “Business Men’s Meet- |
ings,” temperance and Sunday school
meetings or “conventions," and “Old .
Folks’ Days.” At all of these services
there is a fervor and directness that
comes from the contact with nature in
the woods, and grace has full swing
while the meeting lasts.
It is in the west and south, however,
tliat the typical camp meeting is found;
for the east, with its many improve
ments, has obliterated some of the old |
time features. —New York Commercial I
Advertiser.
A Mtiscrflar Minister.
H. Price Collier, the young Unitarian I
divine, is the latest example of muscu
lar Christianity. He is a young man of
excellent physique and a Very fair all
round athlete. 4 He pulls a good oar,
plays tennis and is an enthusiast in
baseball matters. The Brooklyn
Heights Tennis club recently made
him their president. Sometimes, even
since his assumption of his Brooklyn
pastorate, he will go into training for
three or four weeks at a time. Fre
quently he may be met on one of his
pedestrian trips. At such times he
wears a regular athlete’s “sweater" un
der his cassock. He walks at a brisk
pace out to Prospect park, and there
runs a mile or so; returning home, he
is rubbed down, and then goes back to
his desk and his interrupted sermon.
Few clergymen carry their college train
ing into their clerical life, but Mr. Col
lier’s plan has a beneficial effect on Ids
preaching, and he is aware of it. He
preaches a broad, free, liberal theology,
and his reputation is rapidly growing to
be more than a local one. —New Y'ork
Telegram.
Decadence of Dible Ilhiatrations.
Where is the American Bible illus
trator? It is queer that among a people
in whose life the religious element, plays
so important a part no notable illus
trated edition of the Bible has boon
published, with one exception. That
is the “Illuminated Bible” published
by the Harpers in 1846. It contained
1,600 illustrations, 1,400 of them being ,
after drawings by John Gadsby Chap- 1
man, an artist noted at the time, but I
now quite forgotten. As examples of
wood engraving especially many of
the illustrations were excellent. Ex
cepting this, I can recall no other. I
mean, of course, Bibles illustrated by
prominent American artists, and not
cheap reprints of the illustrations by
Dore, Bida and other prominent artists
of France, Germany and England.
So far as our painters are concerned
religious art had some votaries in the
40’s and 50’s, in the days of Chapman
and Thomas P. Rossiter. Today it has
practically none, if we except the de
signers of church decorations and
stained glass windows. —Epoch.
Snarlci’M.
11l conditioned dogs do not all go upon
four legs. Most <f us have seen snarl
ing curs upon two If there is a hate
ful biped on t lie lace of the earth it is
your habitual snarler —the man who
has reduced ill nut ire to a system, and
practicesit met! dically at all times
and seasons.
These professors of the snarling art
’ of course snarl at everybody and every
| thing, but their especial targets are
I their families. They reverse the chem
istry of the bee. Instead of extracting
honey from the weeds of life, they con
trive to extract poison out of its honey.
It has been said that “man never is,
but always to be, blest;” but that’s not
the case with the snarler. He neither
is nor can be blest. In fact, he won't
be blest; but on the contrary is a curse
to himself and to all who come in con
tact with him.
Oh I the wives that are snarled at!
i Vain are their efforts to please. All
I their winning ways are met with con-
I tumely, all their fond words choked in
| the utterance with snappish yelps of
i anger and contempt.—New Lork Led
ger.
The Rev. Joseph Parker, of London,
■ now preaches one minute sermons after
J his more elaborate efforts. He directs
i these brief discourses to some particu
; iar class.
CHARGES MODERATE.
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viin' iii'i ix i in
JJ or
Sale.
ICEMM
MR
The
I
BEST
in the
Vi ■ .
STOW .
Hardware
COMPANY,
Under one Management
CENTRAL HOTEL
AND-
PUTNAM HOUSE,
J. L. PETERSON, Proprietor.
Special rates for regular boarders.
First class in every particular.
our patronage respectfully
solicited. ,
Wm. Crovatt & Co.,
Drnsgists anil Apothecaries.
DEALERS IN
PurcDiugs, Medicines, <fc Perfumery.
Cor. Newcastle and Monk Streets,
BRUNSWICK, : : : : GEORGIA
radamT
UnCROBE
KILLER.
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 ANO CHILLS.
In short, all forms of Organic and Functional Disease.
The cures effected by this Medicine are in
many case.
MIRACLES!
Sold only in Jugs containing One Gallon.
Price Three Dollars— a small investment
When Health and Life can be obtained.
"History of the Microbe Killer” Free.
CALL ON Oil ADDRESS
J. T. ROCKWELL. Sole Agent,
Brunswick, Ga,
Blood Purifier
Cure* IBnilt, Old Sotr*. Hcrofulou* I'lrwe. Scrof.
uloue sort » Hcrofuh'U* Humor «ud •!! *<rotuluun
di****** rr’inntt Hecot lar> -i I Trrliary Cuu*
HLmx! l .n i 'Ua S ie» . diwexeof
- the hct.lt> salt Khcum IBuU he* Fuwtule* Hmp*
le» Itch wmhu Im «ld Hea l FxaeMia,
KheuiuatiMii, < un>ua! Hl<nd Mcr*
curia! kUirumMiiaeu Duom** <4 the li-Mira, Gen*
eta! IMUilit* audaU <L»< ,<.»**ar,fnou impute
Muud ui Het ciliary 1 aial ttwld b> retail di ug
-11 uer b~»itie. Mciucdy Cw , AUauu. G«u
won ii
-MIOEB NOT TRADE
98 — l ~iw~i ~i~m—mm —— >iir~
i ■■■»■■■■■
I . tzon.. tex* 'tlxa't ZE’exsoxß
About one person in ten doesn't know that the other niil
of his i ’low-mortals have come to the conclusion that it’s al
ways safest to trade with K. S. (-RAIG.
About one person in ten doesn’t fcnow that his neighbors arl
saving money on every, deal, because they trade with R. sj
CRAIG. About one person in ten can’t be expected to knon|
that i am “headquarters” for everything in Groceries, Staph]
and Fancy, (banned Goods of every description, Domestic amß
Imported; in fact, everything you need to eat.
m Its THE Tin PERSON’ I Ul AFTER TO! J
ZEt. S. O2Et_A_TGr\ Grocer. J
COR. HOWE and NEWCASTLE STREETS!
. - - - - - - - - , -
D. T. DUNN,
j Clothing and Gents’
Furnishing Goods.
,
Mj’ friends and the public generally
are cordially invited to cal) and
examine my stock cf
NEW SPRING
TLOTHING
Styles to please the most fastidious.
Scarlett block, Newcastle street
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
THE
SteamerCORINNE
Os the Satilla River Transporta
tion Company leaves Brnnswiek for I
all points on the Satilla river every ]
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at|
8 o’clock a. m., sharp.
Returning, leave Owen’s Ferry]
every Tuesday, Thursday and Satur
day at 7:30 o’clock a. m.
Merchants and patrons of the line
are requested to have their freights
promptly on hand in time for the
Steamer. C. S. STEPHENS,
Agent.
N. B. Through connections with
New York and Savannah Steamers.
All freight rates as reasonable ns by
any oilier line, and satisfaction
guaranteed.
WE ARE HERE.
“As snug as a bug in a rug.”
THE PEARL SHAVING SALOON.
100 Monk Street 100
Experienced workmen only employed Will
treat each and every gentleman alike. < all and
bogus. TAYLOB * GOLDK:..
;P. C. MILLER,
House Mover.
Headquarters corner Mansfield and
Ellis Streets.
wakes a specialty of moving buildings of all
kind,. Satisfaction guaranteed.
I.L.T.
A. .1. Braswell,
r« ACTIO Al. —
WHEELWRIGHT AND BLACKSMITH.
Manufacturer, of W agon, and Biugies.
General Repair Work of Every de
scription promptly done at the
, lowest living prices, and in
i the best workmanlike
manner.
lIOKSESHOEI MJ A Hl'Et IALU
’ wo. ii you Uaw »uy work u> in »ur line cal i
■l* "ugbilivia M.. r»ar of Biuo»»l<k llaniwsrc
, <o.Si i>. wxA.Us. ssUWsoOua gUAiaui.o'l.
W. E. PORTER,
HOOSE AND SIGN PAINTER.
KALSOMINING, PAPERHANGING <
AND HARDOIL FINISHING.
All work guaranteed Also dealer in Paints, Oils, Etc
Wlicn You want to - Bay
Furniture
AT LOWEST PRICES AND
On Easy Terns.
13e Sure To Call On
McGarvey,
316 Newcastle Street.
iV. B.—Me Garvey's Store is Packed with
Furniture of All Grades and Prices. He
Can Suit You Every Time, Call on him.
BURR WINTON,
Nos. 314 and 816 IJ street. >ew Town,
Builder
And Superintendent.
box ISO C’orresDondenre golicite'l
Gr <Z> T O
M. PARKER, ]
FoK ALL CLAM OF
JOB I’KINTINGJ
"■ * 1\ p >• " OjM
fl||!
Brunswick w
STENOGRAPHIC AND TYPEWRITING'
HEADQUARTERS.
All work nd promptly exe
I cuted. Patio- '
I'.
i:.
I I
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.s ifc.
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