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ROOSTER AND PARROT.
TUI® MODERN POEM YOU'IX ** A MINI TK
HAS MOKE TKI’TII THAN POETRY IN IT.
There was a little ruo»tcr»
Not very long ago.
Who thought he was a booster,
You’d ought to hear him crow.
lie noticed when he balloncd
Tne sun rose in the sky.
Said he: "It thinks I called it,
And that’s the reason why?*
His head was high and empty,
His craw was full of gall.
e strutted around the hen-coop
And thought he knew it all.
A hen older birds, and wiser,
X\ ho had seen a thing or two,
liaised their he ads and tried, sir;
‘•Their cock—a-dcodle-do!”
He swore he could not l»ear it,
And shook his head with vhi’,
He called each one a “parrot,
Who dared to crow, but him.
The earth he claimed before Idin,
A far as he could see,
Its creatures should adore him.
And bend the suppled nee.
No hen should laugh and ca kle.
Nor should old Chanticleer
\\ ith sturdy voice and mettle,
King out his lusty cheer.
The little rooster knew not.
But thought to his surcease;
11 he held back and crew not,
| Hun, earth find stars would cease.
His cheek grew as he nursed it.
His pride w as on the swell,
Till his gall-bladder bursted
L And all his feathers fell.
They took his body dusty,
tow'jd Hu' garh-iu.- heap,
fr '"" thf -hovel IIIHK
'1
:11 "■ ' 1 - ! ■ ■' **'
B
sP
lx I
■Lli
■'
‘pair is gimnuilvi-d to wear one
„ar or money cheerfully refunded.
Our line of Laces and Embroide
ries are the most complete in the
city and our midsummer slaughter
prices still prevail. There is no
such stock for immensity or variety
anywhere else in the city, and no
place where you can get such genu
ine value for the money.
Young men who are thinking of
something as a present to their sum
mer girl, just to remember the soft
moonlit nights of this delightful sea
sod. should look at our unmatched
line of hair and neck ornaments, our
bracelets and the splendid assort
ment of those tasty and taking little
Lace and Silk Handkerchiefs. The
past has beeen a great week for Um
brellas. The public has taken ad
vantage of the great variety otlered
and the low prices. We still have
a good assortment left—notice our
window display.
In our confusion we almost neg
lected the mention of our Embroide
red Valencienes and Spanish Lace
Flouncings. We trust rou will not
be so forgetful. They are worth
looking at, from 74c. to 12.25.
Come and welcome. You’ll find us
on Newcastle No. 222.
Palais Royal,
Jvuva Watasaw., Prop.
COLD SUMMER ’WAY BACK.
Th* Oldest Inhabitant Outdone by h
Member of the Ananias Club.
‘‘lf I don't miss my guess very much -
we will have snow before morning,”
exclaimed Patrolman Josh Spears.
“If you remember, the winter of
1762-63 was a very open one. In fact, I
if I remember rightly, there was but
little weather too chilly for a man to go
in his shirt sleeves. Why, I was run- ,
ning around tlien barefoot, quite a
chnnk of a lad. It was in many re
spects a most remarkable winter. For
instance, we cut hay on the Ist of Jan
uary. Weil, the winter went away and
spring happened along. It was Just
like any other spring; but an old In
dian chief who lived near our house in
Brown county said that before the year
was done the winter would make up
for lost time. We didn't pay much at
tention "to the warning, laughing it
away as an idle jest, and soon it dropped
out of mind entirely. -The 23d day of
August, 1763, was the hottest day I ever
knew. The sun raised blisters on the
street pavements, and wells a thousand
feet deep went dry. It was not safe
for any person to be where the sun
could get a good square lick at him. If
lie did he would shrink up and die right
there. About 7 o’clock in the evening
a Light braezo came up, and the people
ventured out In the western sky
there was just sueh-a cloud as I pointed
I out to you a few minutes ago. We
didn’t know what it meant then, but
i we found out later on. By 8 o’clock t iiat
evening the atmosphere was cool and
pleasant, and every one went to bed to
cateh a little sleep, for the intense heat
of the previous nights had driven sleep
from our eyes. In the morning there was
six feet of snow all over J,he town.
Every bit of running water was now
frozen, wells and cisterns were frozen
solid, all grain und vegetable life were
killed, and flowers withered before the
snow like bananas before my friend
Hart. Several Is mses where the win
dows had been left opened were half
tilled with snow. It was a cracking
cold morning, the mercury was 60 degs
lielow zero and.it seemed to be'growing
chillier every minute.
<•About 11 o’clock a high wind came
up, and the snow was piled in drifts
about the city. It was banked up
against the Lutheran church to a
lioight of 70 feet. As if that was not
enough, at 2 o’clock in the afternoon
the enow commenced falling again.
It. did not come down like plain, every
day winter snow. There were no flakes,
but spheres about the size of base balls.
They were as hard as chilled steel rnitli
they struck the earth, and then they
burst, not because of the liardness of |
the ground alone— though It was frozen
so hard that it could not be broken
with dynamite cartridges- but there
was a peculiar atmospheric condition
a | that was heightened when the snow
ball came in contact with the earth,
and this brought about the bursting I
mentioned previously. There was not
the least bit of noise attendant on the
j bursting—or, I might say, by a violent
attack on the English language that
the explosion was perfectly noiseless.
But a thousand different colors darted
ami dashed from the fragments. It
. was the most wonderful pyrotechnic
display I ever witnessed. It was broad
daylight, too. The result of this
2 strange unnatural shower of snowballs
was that over fifty feet .of snow was
r piled upon that city"
“Where —where were the people?’
asked Sergt. Joyce in a voice faint from
* suppressed emotion.
"Dead. Every one of them dead. In
. tiiat city of 25.000 souls not a single
person escaped. They were smothered
by the snow or killed by the pellets
i that came from the clouds. No living
tiling, not even a dog, escaped, and
when the glad sunshine came out again
and melted the snow, tlie raging waters
washed the buildings from the face of
the earth, and to this day not a sign can
be found of the once beautiful and en-
, terprising city."
At this moment a commotion oc
curred at the front door, Sergt. John
Lowe rushed breathlessly into the room
with the intelligence that a man had
been frozen to death on Blake street,
near Indiana avenue, and the club tiled
out to capture the body before it could
get away.—lndianapolis News.
Circus Men Hmoke Good Cigar*.
I shall probably sella box of imported
rig irs the day Forepaugh’s circus strikes
Lewiston. Forepaugh’s and Barnum's
men always smoke the best Imported
cigar they can get when hi this city.
Two for sixty cents always hits ’em. In
the whiter, when there are plenty of
theatres and operas Ln the city, we al
ways have a big trade on Imported
goods with star actors and singers.
The Key West trade has been picking
up very fast lately. The local trade
in these goods Is way ahead of the im
ported business Key West goods run
all the way from S6O to SIOO a thou
and.—lnterview in Lewiston Journal.
Electricity im a Purifier.
it has been discovered that a current
of electricity passed through impure
water restores It to purity by destroy
ing any living germs with wliich it may
be impregnated. Animalcube which
escape the eye, and which almost elude
tiie mlorosoope, cannot SAoane the all
searching power of the electnc flash.
Rxchangi-
Falls Citv, Neb., May 18, 1889.
I want another jug of Microbe
Killer. I have used one jug, and
must say that my catarrh and dys
pepsia, of many years standing, have
almost disappeared. My appetite
which was so delicate, is "just the I
opposite. My kidneys also bothered I
me a great deal, but they do not now
I believe Microbe Killer to lie the
greatest medicine in the wofld. You '
may uh my testimony and welcome
if it will do any good. G. F. Allkw.
For sale by J. T. Rockwell, sole
agent. •
Big invoice of Duniap bate, latest
etyhn, just received by James h.
Wright. 1
THE EVENING BOST: TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 1 890.
NEWS BY WIRE.
A Young Man Meets With a
Tragic Death.
He Wanted toAccompany the Aer
onaut and Drooped to the
Ground From the Distance
• of a Thousand Feet.
New York, Sept. 2 —A special
from Woodfield, Ohio says: Pio
Lessor Carter, the leronaut, gave a
balloon ascension at, the fairgrounds
here yesterday. The balloon was a
simple hot air affair, and was kept
in position by ropes held by sland
ers.
When everything was in readiness
the :eronaut gave the word to let go.
The balloon shot upward, and the
thousands of spectators were horri
fied to see a man dangling at the end
ofoneof the small linos. Millon
Redin, a prominent young man of
this county, attempted to climb into
the basket, and Professor Carter
tried to assist him by drawing him
|upby a rope. When at a height of
over a thousand feet, the balloon
too', a sudden lurch and Redin’s
hold was loosened,and his body shot
downward. It was found half a mile
away, crushed out of all human sem
blance.
STILL L'NDEII QL'AIIAN’fINE.
Waco, Tex., Sept. 2.—The town of
Marlin still maintains an attitude of
rebellion against the authority of
Governor Ross and Irtis refused to
the quarantine placed against
Waco. A lawyer of this city, who
was employed to secure an injunc
tion in a cause involving half a mil
lion, was forcibly thrust upon the
cars and driven off, and the corpora
tion against which the injunction
was brought, gained an important
advantage. lie has filed a suit
against the authorities of Marlin for
half a million dollars damages. The
commerce of Waco is suffering ter
ribly on account ;>! the quarantine,
the cotton trade being directed
i away. Gov. Ross says that ho will
break the quarantine, and Texas
I rangers are now within five hours
I ride of the town. It is feared that
there will be a collision between them
and the people. ,
SOMEWHAT OK A FORGER.
Birmingham, Ala. fl.—lsadoro
Meyers, the ex Cincinnati rolling
mill man, an account of whose finan
cial escapades here aud subsequent
forgery of a S6OO check on St. Paul
b<ik, which purported to have given
by J. I*. Mudd, president of the Cen
tral Saving bank, of this city has
been given, it now seems has been
forgiLg Moddd’s name in a lively
style. This morning the Alabama
National bank received another
check of the same kind for $541, but
passed this time on a Minneapolis
bank. It had Mudds name forged,
aud was indorsed by 1 Meyers and
a prominent Minneapolis firm, whose
endorsement he evidently obtained
by fraud. The amount he has got
ten amounts to ovrr $l,lOO.
ARREST OF DESPERADOES.
Winchester, Ry,. Sept. 2.—Capt.
Gaither, with about thirty soldiers,
arrived here last evening, having in
charge twelve of the notorious
French Eversole faction, who have
been a terror to the law-abiding cit
izens of southeastern Kentucky for
the past two or three years. After
turning the prisoners over to the
jailer of Clark county’, Capt. Gaither
and his men went on to Lexington
last night. All the prisoners are un
der indictments for murder, but this
fact docs not appear to have a very
depressing effect on their spirits:
French and Eversole arc young men,
and their appearance does not give
any indication of the desperate
characters they have all proved
themselves to be.
Kidney Troubles.
Philadelphia, March 30, 1889. —
E Corner Fourth and Market streets
Wm. Radam, Dear Sir: —I have
had kidney troubles for three years,
accompanied with puns across my
tack and hips. Suffered very much
at times; at night had pains across
the lower part of my abdomen: bad
considerable intlamation at the neck
of the bladder. In general it almost
broke me up. I could get no relief
from anything I had taken until 1
commenced with your Microbe Kil
ler. I feel like a new person. I
will further explain my case to any
one writing me. Would advise any
one with any diseases of the kidneys
to use the Miciobe Killer.
Ei.i.wood Prickett.
, For sale by J. T. Rockwell, sole sgt.
——- • « - - -MMV
There are many styles of hats, aud
{each style has its friends, but no bat
I has ever reached the degree of pop
: ularilv as the Dunlap. Call at Jas.
(• Wright s und »ee them.
Go to Keen & Co, for all kind of
I produce
PERSONAL MENTION
Mr B J. Robinson came down from
O’Brien, this morning.
.Mr J W Bennett has returned fiom
a pleasant visit to Quitman.
Mr W S Branham returned yester
day from a visit to relatives at Ox
ford.
.Mr Willinin Hewett, of Trenton,
NY, is registered at the Ocean ho
tel.
Mr.l W Marshall, representing
Winn, Johnson & Co, of Macon, is in
the city.
Col A A Gaddis, now of Charles-,
ton. is looking after business inter
ests in Brunswick.
Mr George Jennings of this city
will remove to Atlanta to night. lie
will engage in the meat trade there.
.Mr A D Gale, stenographer for |
'Crovatt <V Whitfield, has been very |
ill for a week with fever.
Miss Fannie Forbes has accepted
a position with the Palais Royal and
will be pleased to have her friends
call at that well known cstablish-
I uient
The Work Stopped-
Downings dock on Biy street is
- in course of construction. But the
work was stopped yesterday evening i
‘ an : when it will be resumed is be !
yond conjecture.
Yesterday afternoon city attorney;
Frank 11. Harris directed Marshall
, Stafford to stop the workmen on .the
, dock, as the material being used in
, the construction of the dock did not
come under the head of fire proof
' material, and for the futher reason
that such constructions were being
' erected inside the fire 'limits of the
city-
However, the city council at its
meeting to night, may permit the
l work go on. Nothing is being done
on the docl; todgy.
Taking Care of the Dog.
ago a well known Bruns
wickian purchased a beautiful point
ter dog for a pet. Not many weeks
afterward the wife went away to
spend the summer. Before leaving,
however, she cautioned her husband
to take good care of the dog. Last
week she returned, reaching the city
by an early train. On arriving at
home she found her husband in bed
and asleep. Her husband was not
the sole occupant of the bed either.
Goiled up closely beside him was the
, fatd .ig. The first thing the husband
said after waking wrs. “Well darl
ing you see I am taking care of the
, *l°g ”
Almost Drowned.
1 Jim Clark, a negro boy abontfour
teen years of age residing in Dixville
' was almost drowned in the bay this
morning about 11 o’clock. He was
rowing a small boat on the bay near
the oyster canning works when the
biat was capsized. A gentleman
seeing his perilous situation went to
his rescue and with great difficulty
brought him ashore more dead tha»
alive to the shore.
Big Sale To-Day-
At 11 o'clock this morning, Mess.
Holt and Alexander the popular real
estate agents sold several pieces of
property in front of the court
house door at auction. The sale
lasted quite awhlie, aud some good
prices were paid. A lot in Dixville
180x180 feet, brought $1,900, and
, was purchased by Dr. A. A. Rowland.
Other tracts brought equally
good prices.
Big invoice of Dunlap hats, latest
styles, just received by James #
Wright.
Back at His Post.
The friends of Mr Richard Hun
ter will be pleased to learn that he
has recovered from his recent illness
and has resumed his duties at the
postoffice. Mr Hunter was sick
only a short while but the effects of
his illness are easily seen.
Call at Wright’s and sec the latest
style Dunlap hat.
...... —...- . ...
The Medical Society
The Brunswick Medical Society
meets to night at tine office of Dr.
McMillan. It is expected that every
physician in the city will be present
“Endometritis” is the subject for
discussion. Dr J A Butts will lead
the discussion.
The Medical Society is destined to
' be a great benefit to the city in gen
eral.
The leading hat of the world —the
Dunlap—see them at Wright's.
Radam s Microbe Killer is no lon
ger an experiment. It has been
thoroughly tested for two years and
has never failed in any case. For
sale by J. I'. Roi-kwell, sole agent.
i all at Wright’s and see the latest
style Dunlap b»t. *
Work on the city ball is progress
ing very rapidly.
Tbs Atlantic baud bad a rehearsal
at tbeir ball last night.
A PROFESSIONAL BACKSTOP.
How a Haseball Catcher Should Train
for HI, Season's Work.
The training of the catcher has in it
less variety, and is in consequence far
more tedious than tliat of the pitcher.
The work of strengthening the muscles
of the shoulder and arm is the same as
that described for the pitcher; but in
tile throwing practice the catcher
' should devote his attention to the
■ shortarm throw. He should liegin at
the short distance of perhaps fifty feet,
and increase that distance very gradu
ally. In fact, he ought, even when he
i can readily throw the full distance
j from home to second with comparative
I ease, to do most of his throwing at two
thirds that distance. After the nine
lias begun to work in the field it is not
I advisable for tiie catcher to throw to
■ second anything like the number of
i times the majority of amateurs attempt
dailw Only after the nine has been
out of doors for two or three weeks is
■ so much of the full distance throwing
■ safe for any catcher who wishes to have
i his arm in good condition.
The position of the feet in throwing
is all important. If he boa strong man
of moderate weight ho can and should
■ throw without changing the position of
the feet. Totliis object his gymnasium
practice should be devoted. Standing
steadily upon his feet in the exact po
sition assumed at the moment of catch
ing the ball, lie should, with a slight
swing at the hips, be able to send the
ball down. Throwing in a cage with
a low ceilit the best tiling possible
f>r him, an it >r c-s him to throw hard
i and on a line.
I A point of catcher’s practice, w hich
, does not enter into the work of the
i pitcher, is that of toughening the
hands. Rowing on the machines, climb
ing the rope, swinging on the Hying
rings and handball, if there are any
courts for that'excellent game, will all
tend toward this end. He should con
sider, however, that it is not merely
toughening the skin of the hands that
is desirable, but also hardening the
flesh so that it is not easily bruised. For
this reason he should “pass ball'’ with
out gloves regularly every day.
At the outset he should receive no
swift balls, and should stop at the first
feeling of pr.) thing beyond a moderate
tingling of the palms. His hands should
receive their full preparatory hardening
before he goes out into the field, for
ordinary carefulness demands that he
should do no catching behind the bat
after the season commences except with
hands thoroughly protected by well
padded gloves. What is called a stone
bruise is one of the tenderest and most
lasting mementoes of carelessness in this
respect.. In his gymnasium practice he
should wair the mask. This seems to
most catchers a useless bore, but the cap
tain or coach should insist upon it, and
the mask should become almost a part of
the catcher himself. All his throwing
and catching should be performed w ith
his eyes behind its wires, in order that,
from becoming thoroughly accustomed
to it, it may add no inconvenience to
bis work.
The breastplate need not be so rigor
ously insisted upon, but even this
should bo worn frequently. The right
hand glove must always be worn when
practicing throwing, in order that this
also shall offer no unusual difficulty in
the later work. Many a catcher may
think that it looks silly to stand up
with a mask and glove on to throw
at a mark; but there is every reason
for doing this, and he will himself ap
preciate the value of such practice
when lie stands accoutered on the field
behind the batsman and. with a runner
on first.
As often as it is convenient the
catcher, particularly if a novice, should
have some one swing the bat before
him wliile he is “passing ball’’ in the
gymnasium. By the tin*) he gets out
of doors he should be thoroughly ac
customed to the close proximity of the
batsman.—Walter Camp in St. Nicho
las.
The Material of Dumas’ Stories.
For the backgrounds of his stories
Dumas went naturally to the epoch of
Intrigue, his mots de la fin would not
easily have come from the bars of a
helmet in the rougher older days; it is
the thrust of the rapier he loves rather
than the downright blow of the heavy
sword, the coup d’estoc rather than the
coup do taiUe. His is the true drama
de cape et d'epee, as the French have
always called it, and his dialogue is its
exponent—the cloak to dissimulate, the
eword to attack and defend. The
whole epoch of Louis XIII and of
Mazarin was mask and dagger, con
spiracy and duel. Dumas leads us
among a gilded dramatis jiersonaj; he
loves a noble, and though he, distrusted
princes the royal blood was never quite
a common ichor to him. His artist
side responded eagerly to the pictur
esqueness of the court.—E. 11. and E.
W. Blaslifield in Scribner’s.
Apparent Idleness.
Sometimes apparent idleness is only
a change of work. George Lewes was
one day dredging a roadside pond, put
ting all the living treasures he found
into a glass jar.
“What are you doing?” inquired a
sneering bystander. “Fishing for sal
mon?’
But when he saw wisat strange beings
were discovered tn that unpromising
pool life interest was excited, and he
asked Mr. Lewes many curious ques
tions, all of which were patiently an
swered.
“All,’’said the scoffer respectfully,
at the end of the interview, “it’s a fine
thing to be able to name all God's
creatures.”—Youth's Companion.
Chumley—Wliat did your wile say
when you got liome last night ?
Buinley—Nothing—what did yours I
Chumley—Oh, she was terribly red
bead« 4.
Burnley—What for!
Chumley—Bom so.—Whiteside Her
ald.
lou Mietu to be very toud o< soup,
Mr. Nkipurior, r>marked the landlady,
as lie asked for a seoolid help
"Vaa," be rvturaad, with a iueanin<
l of Ids own, <«pxiaJly tUu soup*, i
WISTFUL. ■
, Dtiar, it is hard u> stand V Kl
So near thy life, yet so apart; ▼
. So near -I chink so near—thine heart;
t So near that I could touch thine hand,
i And yet so far I dare not take
That hand in mine for love's dear sake*
So near that I can look my fill
' At stated times upon thy face;
s So far that I must yield a place
j To others, sore against uiy will’
So near that I can see thee smile;
So far my poor heart aches the while!
. Dear, it is hard to know
r Whate’er the stress, the storm, the strife,
, The fret, the sadness of thy life,
I have no power, no right to show
Love in my heart, love on my lips,
’ To comfort thee in life's eclipse.
No right to claim before the rest
The privilege to weep with the**;
No right, across life s stormy sea,
, To bid thee welcome to my breast;
No right to share thy hopes, thy fears,
t Through al! the weary, weary years.
* Dear, it is hard to fee!
I That bliss may meet thee full and fair,
| Wherein poor I can have no share;
That thy wile future may reveal
The joys of harvest manifold,
S While I stand lonely in the cold.
' Dear, it is hard, but Go I doth know
How leal the heart that beats for thee;
It is enough, enough for me
To love th“ •. Let the future show
* Lov6 can live on for its own sake,
i Though eyes may weep, though heart may
j ache. —Bost >» True Flag.
A Tramp’s Large Estate.
1 The Abbe Martin, a French parish
riest. mi <>. i ' day accosted by a mis-
Table, poverty stricken man in rags,
vho said he belonged to a great and
wealthy family which he had dishon- '
■ ! >rcd in many way.:. He bogged the
1 ibbe to get him into a monastery, |
where he could live and die in obseur i
ity and unknown. The abbe procured i
his admission into a Spanish monastery
1 us lay brother. A few years after he [
’ received a letter to the effect tliat he I
had been appointed sole legatee of a
person whp had died in a monastic es
’ .tablishment in Spain possessed of prop
erty in France worth many millions of
francs.
Armed with his papers he visited the
’ deceased's family to find that a brother
had taken possession of the paternal
property in the belief Hint the heir had
' lied in penal servitude. An agicemeut
was arrived at under which the.abbe
received ati annuity of £2,400 on condi
[ don that he never disclosed the name
>f the family of the defunct monk.
I’he romantic story came out in a court
of justice recently, where the abbe ap-
* pearedto prosecute two thieves who
r had stolen the whole of ids annuity
hist received. He steadfastly declined
to mention the source of his wealth,
, but admitted that the family was noble
and great. —London Tit-Bits,
Xlasourjv
s The Order of Freemasonry is said to
have been established by Solomon at
’ the time of building his temple. The
order has been" derived from many
1 sources, but not till about 1717 did the
second stage of its history begin in
’ London, which is, in fact, the home of
1 Masonry as now taught. The first
lodge in the United States was organ
' ized in 1729 and was then under the
* jurisdiction of the grand lodge of Eng
land. The emblem of the order in
most common use is the square and the
’ compass worn by members of the Blue
- lodge. Besides this there are several
1 designs worn by more advanced mem
’ bers, among them a keystone for the
1 Chapter degree and a Maltese cross for
the commandery. There -are also hun
’ dreds of men entitled to wear the Con
’ sistory, or thirty-second degree badge.
1 The general design of this emblem is a I
’ cross on which rests a crowned double
3 headed eagle, with the figures “32” on
1 a smooth triangle on the breast.—St.
r Louis Republic.
Doctors, Take Warning,
I It is rather tough on a doctor’s son
» to be named William, and have to
s sneak through the elysium of youth
t under the opprobrious title of “the
doctor's Bill.” —Fun.
WJUOFW
; Real Estate. Insurance
t and General
; COLLECTING AGENT
z 500 Monk St,
3 Brunswick, :' : : : : Ga.
‘ (o)
- Wil! buy an<l manage Real Estate on Corr.n is
e sion. Pay Taxes, keep up Insurances, Collect
Rents, etc
i The collection of rents a Specialty. Mr. S, B.
a Alexander lias charge of the Colicciing Depart
ment. •
f Correspondence Solicited-
REFERENCES.
s The Merchants and Traders Bank.
3 Atlanta National Bank.
I Merchants Bank of Atlanta,
a “"TT" - ■ ■'' r . - '~~
* CONEY & PARKER,
. Wholesale and retail festers in
Wood ~<Joa3
; . B R. I O K
' SHINGLES AND LATHS.'
I —SOI.K AOENTH FOB—
BRUNSWICK BRICK WORKS.
s
r \Uo keep in sto k Alabama Oil I*rc-«‘<i
’ FxH IXG BRD K and Chattanooga Sewer Pip
-3 ing, including Flues and «hm <!•*.
Ortlers Solicited. SMtisfaetion Guaranteed,
J. E. YOUNG,
»
s Back Landing
Lmn her Yard
1 Pine and Cypress Lumlxr,
Laths, Flooring, Shinglee,
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■■ Correct Mtammtci Goaraiteed.
«' l.ur»bir l« ►umSwHIU- tumi.tis tub
M 4 St rrMwntblr
T , gge 1 >' .11. <‘M«t !»■> »".*!•
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I I
8 I
J
IS THE
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GIVES AN
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a
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Try Him Once!
YOU WILL
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11
IT.