Newspaper Page Text
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B Cotton.
3 A. l‘.m-. ff«.*., September 15. B?)
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'“' "'/ .. ... 1.022
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/Naval Stores.
ft ■f nir . is the receipts of naval stores
of the season to date:
/ A 7.102-
V 2,515
« s,IOWB spirits turpentine
Jft f.feJiL regulars; Rosin, firm: prices
V ’ »?■■ II $l6O
W . • I ... 170
1 /M 20 K .. 1 25
ft/ r M/|r2o M. . 1 <io
/W 120 n 2 ilO
hlUb ftr Iso IW G 325
> 1 « IVV W 3 »50
TRAINS AND BOATST
Arrivals and Departures.
| STANDARD TIME.]
E. T.,V. A G. Railway—Passenger trains ar
rive <laily at 6:10 ».ni. and 5:15 pan., and de
part at s" wa m. and ll:00p ni
B. & W. Il av—Passen o r trains arrive daily I
at 12:05 p.. f and 7:40 p.m,, and depart at ,
7:00a.m. and7:3o p.m.
St. Simon’s Island—Boat leaves the city at 8:00 j
a. m., and 2:00 p. m. Leave Ocean Pier;
10:30 a. m., 4:30 p. m. Sunday schedule;
Leave Brunswick v :30 a. m., and 2:30 p. m. 1
Leave Ocean Pier 10:30 a. in., and 5:00 p. ni. !
Cumlierland Route—Boat leaves the city at 7:00 ;
a.m. and arrives at 7:00 p.m.
Suvaunah, Brunswick ami Fernandina —Boats
arrive on Tuesday s and Fridays and leave
Wednesdays and Saturdays.
parien Line—Boats loave everyday except Sun
day at 8:30 a.m. and arrive at7:3o p.m.
Satilla River Line—Boat leaves on Mondays and
Thursdays and arrive Tuesdays and Fri
days.
Port of Brunswick.
September 15.
[Central Standard time.l
Hi rh water* on the bar 4:42 a.m.. 4:59 p. ni.
Lo* r water on the bar 10:46 a. in.; 11:20 p. di.
▲d 134 minutes for sun time. •
VESSELS IN PORT.
BARKS.
Bark John Harvey. Am. 736 tons. Phelan,
Bark Snes, Nor. 427 tons. Gunderson.
Ydum, Nor. 552 tons. Olaee.
Bork Dax,Nor., 392 tons, Terjesen, ’ •
Concorf a, Russ, 279 tons, Rank.
BARKENTINES.
Wm. II Dietz, Am. 463 tons, Wakely.
SCHOONERS.
Lizzie B. Willy, Am. 543 tons, Kinney.
Wm. J. Lennoud, Am, 843 tons, Tupper.
Sch. R. Bowers, Am. 414 tons. Wilson.
Gertie M. Hickerson, Am. "04 tons, Anderson.
Annie L. Henderson, Am. 407 tons. Henderson
Hrh, Nancy Smith, Am. 411 tons, Rayner,
Sch Kate -. Flint, Am. 555 tons, DeWintfy.
Mary .1. Cook, am. 414 tons, Higbee.
Harriet C. Kerlin. am., 491 tons, Shaw.
Brig Daisy, am, 4is tons, Nash*
Harry Prescott Am., 434 tons. Turner.
Otello, am. 332 tons Bond.
Edward S, Bten a. am. 321 tons, Ceal.
Bar >ld C Becdren nm, Cousins.
Earl I’. Mason, am .508 tons, Vickerson.
James Slater, Am, 295 tons. Sookcr.
Abba C. Stubbs, Am 328 tons, Eaton.
Steamship Christian, nor. Johnson, 3 1 tons,
Mtatal Route
to and from
Florida.
The short ime between Brunswick and Jackson
ville, via Jekyl. Cumberland, Dunge-
ness and Ferfiandina.
THE BEAUTIFUL STEAMER
City of Bnumk
Runs daily on the following schedule, tak- <
lug efical May 11. standard
time—3oth meridian.
s <> U T H .
Lv Brunswick via steamer. ."Wain
Ar Jekyi 8:45 a m
Jir ( umlierland. !(»:'*• a in
Ar DungeneA* . 11:45am
Ar Fernandina. 12.3(1 pm
Lv Fernandina via F C and P Ry ’.no p m
Ar Jacksonville .2.25 p m
Lv Fernandina »ia F(J and l‘R\ .150 p m
Ar Tampa via F C and I* Ry .7 20 a in
NORTH.
Lv Tampa via F C and P Uy ' 00 a m j
Ar Fernandina via F < ami PRy .2.55 p m
Lv Jacksonville via F C and P Ry to. 40 a in
Ar Fernandina ... * . ...12.15pm
Lv Fernandina via steamer. .3.00 pin
Ar Dungeness .. .3.45 p m
Ar Cu.nbcrlaml .5.00 p in
Ar Jekyl . • .6 30 pm
Ar Brunswick . 7.15 pm
Connections made at Fernandin i to ami from
all points in South Florida. \ia F < nod I’ Ry, at
Jacksonville to ami from st Augustine ami at
points south. At Brunswick with ET ,V and G
Ky and B ami IV Ry to and from all points west
ami north. A good breakfast or dinner served on
the steamer at low rates of 50c each. Through
rates Brunswick and Jacksonville $4.50, first
• $6 rouml trip: $2.59 second class $4.50
w round trip.
Tickets can be purchased aa v time on applica
tion to J. F. Nori m. ageet I I’. V and Ga Ry.
passengufdopot, or t . J v>»d, Purser on the
A’camer. to an\ point in H<u-' la.
I). < . ALLLN,
General Ticket and Passenger Agent.
« C. LITTLEFIELD General Manager.
St. Simon’s Line.
NEW SCHEDULE.
(Standard Tiaie )
On and-after August 20, schedule
will be as follows:
DEPARTURE.
Freni Brunswick—
For Ocean Pier amt Mills nt 7:50 a.m. ami 2
RETURNING.
Leave Ocean Pier at 10:00 a. in. and 4:30
p. tn.
SUNDAYS.
Ijjave Brunswick at9:3o a. m- and 2:30 p.m
leave Ocean Pier at 10:30 a. ni. and
C I*ol. U IJAIiT. Sii|>orintendent.
SEASIDE COLLEGE;
FOP YOUNG LADIES.
This institution will open on Mon
day, September 29. The equipment
will be complete, the faculty full, the
instition thorough.
For circulars or information ad
dress at Brunswick, after August 1.
s. c. Caldwell,
President.
DRUNKENNESS
Liquor Habit.
ata me wow mum /savrot/e cuae
u»HllrfEs GOLDEN SPECIFIC
It can begi ven In coffee, tea, or in artlcleKof food,
without the knowledge of patient if necessary;
it is absolutely harmless and willi effect a perma
nent and speedy cure, whether the
moderatedrinker or an alcoholic wreck. IT NEV
ER FAILS. Il operates so quietly and with inch
certainty that the patient undergoes no neon- (
venienee, and soon his complete reformation la
effected. 4s page book free. 1o bo ha<l us
LLOYD A ADAMS, Druggists,
Brunsuick, <»a
R. F. Bowles&Co
Krwuiim 810 ’k. Bay Hti« »
Merchandise Brokers
And-
GENERAL AGENTS.
Agent, for <»eorgi« and Florida for
Mim tHwle »nd Urboii Safe ( oinpuny
and AlpiocSgfe < <>inpuuy.
Agent* for the K Stmer Sbo*< *«e
<oo., and tlio Luligraub Typo wriurj
I. 1. HOPKINS & CO.,
Real Estate and Insurance Agents.
Represent a number of leading Fire Insurance Companies
; A large number of the most desirable lots in 18ew and Old
Town for sale on reasonable terms.
150,000 Acres of Timber Lands.
Correspondence solicited. Address
IK- X-ZOZ’ZCTXTS CO.,
Office 207 Newcastle Street.
J. M. madden’ m. a. 11. lane.
President. Vice President. Cashier.
Sa-viTigs ZBaxi-fe.
Interest allowed on deposits in savings
department of the
MERCHANTS AND TRADERS BANK.
CORNER MONK AND GRANT STREETS.
: GLAUBER &iM '
Grralri, Ha,v
and Provision.Se
Headquarters for— —
Dry, Salted and Smoked Meats, Hams
Breakfast Bacon
Lard, Meal, Grits, Corn, Oats, Bran, Mil)
Feed etc-
BAY STREET - Foot of Monk.
SAM B. BREEDLOVE. |
Book and Stationery Store.
Fancy Goods, Lamps and Fixtures, Pictures, Frames, Glass
ware ami Crockery;
OFFICE SUPPLIES A SPECIALTY.
219 NEWCASTLE STREET.
LTME ISTEW YORZK
Steam Dye House
AM) TAILORING ESTABLISHMENT.
Cor. IF’ tLiYci. ILiclimoiicl Sit.
. I BILLER Proprietor.
Gents’ garments made to order, cleaned, dyed and re-'
paired. Satisfaction guaranteed.
MERCER U N !<V ER S I T Y.
MACON, GA.
COURSES OE STUDY:
I. Preparatory School.
11. Classical Course.
111. SCIENTIFIC AL COURSE.
IV. schoolof Theology.
V. Modern Languages.
VI. The LaW school,
VII. Department of Practical Arts.
(Stenography, Book-keeping,
’ Epenses.—Tuition Free in court of study 11,
111 and IV.
Matriculation and contingent fee. *•>> annual y.
Board at students* hall, from f t >H I per month.
Board in private families from <l2 to per
month.
rail Term opens-Sept. 21. IN9O. For catalogue
ami further information, apply to
Prof. J. J. BRANTLY, t»r
to the Preside! t, G. A. N i X x ALLY. Macon,Ga
Ocean View Hotel.
Fine Surf Bathing, First-Class
Accommodations and
Easy of Access.
Being opened all the time strangers as well as
home people will find Ocean View Hotel a
very pleasant place to spend a day, a week or
a month.
Terms—sl.so per day, SB, $9 and
$lO per week.
MRS. A. F. ARNOLD,
Proprietress.
SUMMER RESORTS,
EXCURSION RATES,
/.. OWXiY
2 CENTS
per mile traveled.
TICKETS GOOD TO
UN RETURN
SALE SSKUK* UNTIL
may fFffIEnESJSF I’rOV
-16th.
No iron clad Tickets to annoy
families traveling without male
escorts. The most liberal ar
rangements ever offered.
For information apply to
Agents E T.V. He G. Railway
System, or V •
11. VIEH fi t Aft. Iwnih.M
THE EVENING FO$1: MONDA Y, si FTEMBEk 15, 1890’
i iVatclimaker
and Jeweler.
Removal. —
; I now occupy the old stand of
R. L. Daughtry. The in-1
creased space gives me an'
opportunity to display the
many goods I have
fore been compelled by lack
of room to store away.
For the convenience of
the people of Brunswick, I
have purchased an electric
clock, connected by wire
with the Naval Observatory
at Washington. Every day
at 11 o’clock a. m., standard,
1 want all who carry watches
to call at my store and get ■
Washington time.
This clock is daily cor
rected from Washington at
noon, standard (ii o’clock
here) and every watch in I
Brunswick should be regu
lated by it.
Don’t forget this. Regu
late your watch and you will
appreciate its value.
E.‘ J. ALLEN,
Inspector of watches and clocks for;
Brunswick and Western Rail-;
road.
I
rQUMMER
I iS’ OFFER |
*<WUM, HepfcmbW,
JU J > ur 00101-r M“1 P«» «l»a
W crop* <u« *.ld Mpul < nail
4t , Frier*. Th* !-"»•* kbtjwu.
JurttlMlla «u4uwi>.UUl>«
Mk p,nJ.,Utl. !«<•»».<.
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■AA I»• ■ **'•*«• r * r « *
■ uALE ■»< MMtM Ot'HfM >•’«
1 1890 JIUOOEH * BITES,
* A ***“ , * M *> < ’*‘
THE WINGS OF LOVE.
TABERNACLE SERMON ON THE EX
PERIENCE OF RUTH.
The Oriental Scene and the Encouraging
Salutation of Boaz—Ruth Had Become a
Voluntary Exile for Love, and Her Re
ward Was Great.
Brooklyn, Sept 14. The subject of
the discourse by Dr. Talmage today
j was “Wings of Love,” the famous
preacher taking for Ins text the words,
“The Lord God of Israel, under whose
wings thou art come to trust” —Ruth i
ii, 12.
Scene—An Oriental harvest field.
Grain standing. Grain in swaths.
' Grain in sheaves.
At the side of the field a white tent in
; which to take the nooning, jars of vin- I
■ egar or of sour wine to quench the |
: thirst of the hot working people.
Swarthy men striking their sickles into
the rustling barley. Others twisting the
| bands for the sheaves, putting one end
! of the band under the arm, and with i
the free arm and foot collecting the
sheaf. Sunburned women picking up
the stray straws and bringing them to
: the binders. Boaz, a fine looking Ori
ental, gray bearded and bright faced,
the owner of the field, looking on, and
j estimating the value of the grain and
calculating so many ephahs to the acre,
and with his large, sympathetic heart
pitying the overtasked workmen and i
, the women, with white faces enougli
to faint, in the hot noonday sun. But
there is one woman who especially at
, tracts the man’s attention. She is soon
to be with him the joint owner of the
field. She has come from a distant
land tor the sole purpose of being kind
to an aged woman.
I know not what her features were;
! but when the Lord God sets behind a
I woman’s face the lamp of courage and
faith and self sacrifice there comes out
; a glory independent of features. She
is to be the ancestress of Jesus Christ.
Boaz, the owner of the field, as soon as
he understands that it is Ruth, accosts
her with a blessing: “A full reward be
given thee of the Lord God of Israel, j
under whose wing thi*: art come to
trust.” Christ compares himself to a
hen gathering the chickens under her
’ wings. In Deuteronomy God is repre
j sented as an eagle stirring up her nest.
In a great many places in the Psalms
David makes ornithological allusions;
i wliile my text mentions the wings of
I God, under ■which a poor, weary soul
had come to trust.
HKK PROTECTION WAS SURE.
I ask your attention, the»efo»e,
I while, taking the suggestion of my
; text, I speak to you in ail simplicity
| and love of the wings of the Almighty.
First, I remark that they were swift
wings under which Ruth had come to
■ trust. There is nothing in all the
handiwork of God more curious than a i
bird’s wing. You have been surprised
sometimes to see how far it could fly !
' with one stroke of the wing; and when
it has food in prospect, or when it is
, affrighted, the pulsations of the bird’s
wing are unimaginable for velocity.
The English lords used to pride them
selves on the speed of their falcons.
These birds, when tamed, had in them
the dart of lightning. How swift were
the carrier pigeons in the time of An
thony and at the siege of Jerusalem I
j Wonderful speed! A carrier pigeon
was tlirown up at Rouen and came
down at Ghent —ninety miles off —in
one hour. The carrier pigeons were
I the telegraphs of the olden time.
I Swallows have been shot in our lati
! tude having the undigested rice of
Georgia swamps in their crops, showing
that they had come four hundred miles
hi six hours. It has been estimated
' that in the ten years of a swallow's
k life it flies f;ir enough to have gone
around the world eighty-nine times, so
1 great is its velocity.
And so the wings of the Almighty
spoken of in the text are swift wings.
They are swift when they drop upon a
i foe, and swift when they come to help
God’s friends. If a father and his son
be walking by the way, and the cliild
goes too near a precipice, how long does
it take for the father to deliver the
child from danger! Longer than it
takes God to swoop for the rescue of
his children. The fact is that you can
not get away from the care of God. If
yon take the steamship or the swift
rail train he is all the time along with
you. “Whither shall I go from thy
spirit, and whither shall I flee from thy
presence? If I ascend up into heaven
thou art there. If I make my bed in
hell, behold! thou art there. If I take
the wings of the morning and dwell in
the uttermost parts of the sea, even
there thy hand shall hold me."
THE CAR FOR ANTIETAM.
The Arabian gazelle is swift as the
| wind. If it gets but one glimpse of the
hunter it puts many crags between. |
Solomon four or five times compares |
Christ to an Arabian gazelle (calling it
by another name) when he says, “My
beloved is like a roe.” The difference
is that the roe speeds the other way;
Jesus speeds this. Who but Christ
I could have been quick enough to have
helped Peter when the water pavement
: broke? Who but Clirist could have
’ been quick enough to help the Duke
' of Argyle when, in his dying moment,
■ he cried: “Good cheer! I coaid die like a
Roman, but I mean to dio liko a Chris-
i tian. Come aw:ly, gentlemen. He who I
goes first goes cleanest!” I had a friend
who stood by the rail track at Carlisle,
I’n., when the ammunition had given
out nt Antietam, and he saw the train
Iron: llarrixbusg. freighted with shot 1
and shell, <w It went thundering down
toward the battle field. He sold that ,
It stop|>e<l not lor any crossing. They
put down tho brakes for no grad". ,
They held up for no perl!. The wheels
were on fire with tho speed as they 1
dashed past. If the train did not come
up lu tlnuj with the ammunition it
might as well not uomo at uli.
Ho, my friends, there are times in
our lives when wu must have help Im
mediately or The grai'e that
<XNMM t«M» Ute is IM> grace ah What ,
you t want |* a GW. Gh,
i
is it not blessed to think that tiod is
always in such quick pursuit of his
dear children? When a sinner seeks
[Kirdon, or a baffled soul needs help,
swifter than thrush’s wing, swifter than !
ptarmigan’s wing, swifter than fla
mingo’s wing, swifter than eagle’s wing |
are the wings of the Almighty.
I remark further, carrying out the |
idea of my text, that the wings under
which Ruth had come to trust were
very broad wings. There have been j
eagles shot on tho Rocky mountains 1
with wings that were seven feet from
tip to tip. When the king of the air sits
on the crag tlie wings are spread over
all the eaglets in the eyrie, and when the
eagle starts from the rock the shadow
is like the spreading of a storm cloud.
So the wings of God are broad wings.
Ruth had 1 a under those wings in
her infamilo uays; in the sos her I
happy; .mood in Moab; in the day
wh h gave her hand to Mahlon, in
her first marriage: in the day when she
wept over his grave; in the day when
she trudged out into tho wilderness of
poverty; in the days when she picked
up the few straws of barley dropped by
ancient custom in the way of the poor.
ASSURANCE FOR THE AFFLICTED.
Oh! yes, the-wings of God are broad
wings. They cover up all our wants,
all our sorrows, all our sufferings. He
puts one wing over our cradle, and He
puts the other over our grave. Yes,
my dear friends, it is not a desert in
which we are placed, it is a nest. Some
times it is a very hard nest, liko that of
the eagle, spread on the rock, with
; ragged moss and rough sticks, but still
I is a nest; and although it may bo very
hard under us, over us aro the wings of
tho Almighty. There sometimes comes
a period in one’s life when ho feels for
saken. You said, “Everything is
against me. The world is against me.
The church is against me. No sym
pathy, no hope. Everybody that comes
near me thrusts at me. I wonder if
there is a God, anyhow!”
Everything seems to be going slip
shod and at haphazard. There does
not seem to be any hand on the helm.
Job’s health fails. David's Absalom
gets to be a reprobate. Martha's broth
er dies. Abraham’s Sarah goes into
the grave of Machpelah. ‘ ‘Woe worth
the day in which I was born!” has said
: many a Christian. David seemed to
i scream out in his sorrow, as he said:
' “Is his mercy clean gone forever? And
will he be favorable no more? And
hath he in anger shut up his tender
mercies?” Job, with his throat swollen
and ulcered until he could not even
swallow the saliva that ran into bis
mouth, exclaims: “How long before
thou wilt depart from me and leave
me alone, that I may swallow down
my spittle?" Hav« there never been
tunes in your life when you envied
those who were buried? When you
longed for the gravedigger to do his
; work for you ? Oh, the faithlessness of j
; the human heart! God’s wings are
' broad, whether we know it or not.”
Sometimes the mother bird goes
I away from the nest, and it seems very
I strange that she should leave the callow I
■ young. She plunges her beak into the
bark of the tree, and she drops into the
[ grain field and into the chaff at the
barn door, and into the furrow of the
plough boy. Meanwhile, the birds in
the nest shiver and complain and call
and wonder why the mother bird does
not come back. Ah, she has gone for
food. After a while there is a whirr of
wings, and tho mother bird stands on
the edge of the nest, and the little ones
open their moutlis, and the food is
dropped in; and then the old bird
spreads out her feathers and all is
peace. So, sometimes, God leaves us.
Ho goes off to get food for our soul,
and then ho comes back after a while
to the nest and says, “Open thy mouth
wide and I will fill it,” and .he drops
into it the sweet promises of his grace,
and the love of God is shed abroad
and we are under his wings—the broad
wings of tho Almighty.
THERE IS ROOM FOR ALL.
Yes, they are very broad! There is
room under those wings for the sixteen
hundred millions of the race. You say:
“Do not get the invitation too large, for
there is nothing more awkward than to
have more guests than accommoda
tions." I know it. The seamen’s friend
society is inviting all the sailors. The
tract society is inviting all the desti
tute. The sabbath schools are inviting (
all the children. The missionary soci |
ety is inviting all the heathen. The I
printing presses of the Bible societies
are going night and day, doing nothing
but printing invitations to tliis great
gospel banquet. And are you not
afraid that there will be more guests
than accommodations? No! All who
have been invited will not half fill up
the table of God’s supply. There are
chairs for more. There are cups for
more. God could with one feather of
his wing cover up all those who have
come, and when he spreads out both
wings they cover all the earth and all
the heavens.
Ye Israelites, who went through the
■ Red sea, come under! Ye multitudes
who have gone into glory for the last
six thousand years, come under! Ye
hundred and forty-four thousand, and
toe tliuusauds ol tuousands, come
under! Ye flying cherubim and arch
angel, fold your pinions, and come
| under! And yet there is room! Ay!
if God would have all tho space under
his wings occupied ho uitlst make
st her worlds, and people them with
| other myriads, and have other resur
rection and judgment days, for broader
| tha* all space, broader than thought,
wide as eternity, from tip to tip, are
the wings of the Almighty! Oh! under
such provision as that can you not re
-1 joice? Come under, ye wandering, ye
! weary, ye troubled, ye sinning, ye dy-'
I Ing souls! Como under the wings of
1 the Almighty. VVliosoever will eome
let him come. However raggtsl, how
1 ever wn-tciusl, however abandoned,
1 however woe begone, there is room
i enough under the wings -under tho
broiel wings of the Almighty! Oil,
wiat a g<«|s-l! so glorious, so nmgnifi
uout in Its provision! 1 love to preach
it. It i» my life to preach it. Il is my
heaven to preach it.
THB MTMMOTM OF Ml* LOVM.
1 remark, further, that Uiv
under whleh Kuril came to trusrttero
strong wings. Tho strength of a bini’s
wing—of a sea fowl’s wing for exam
ple—you might guess it from tho fact
I that sometimes for five, six or seven
■ days it seems to fly without resting.
: There have been condors in tho Andes
! that could overcome an ox or a stag,
j There have been eagles that have pick
ed up children and swung them to the
top of tho cliffs. Tho flap of an eagle’s
; wing hits death in it to everything it
! strikes. There are birds whose wings
are packed with strength to fly, to lift,
to destroy. So the wings of God are
strong wings. Mighty to save. Mighty
to destroy. I preach him—“tho Lord,
strong and mighty; the Lord, mighty
hi battle!” He flapped his wing, and
tho antediluvian world was gone. He
flapped his wing, and Babylon perished.
I He flapped his wing, and Herculaneum
was buried. Ho flapped his wing, and
the Napoleonic dynasty ceased.
Before tho stroke of that pinion a
fleet is nothing. An army is nothing.
An empire is nothing., A world is noth
ing. Tho universe is nothing. King—
eternal, omnipotent—he asks no coun
sel from the thrones of heaven. He
takes not the archangel into his cabinet.
Ho wants none to draw his chariots,
for they are tho winds. None to load
his batteries, for they aro tho light
nings. None to tie tho sandals of his
feet, for they are tho clouds. Mighty
to save. Our enemies may bo strong,
our sorrows violent, our sins may be
great. But quicker than an eagle ever
hurled from tho crags a hawk or raven
will tho Lord strike back our sins and
our temptations if they assault us when
wo are once seated on the eternal rock
of his salvation. What a blessed tiling
it is to be defended by the strong wing
of tho Almighty! Stronger than the
pelican’s wing, stronger than tho al
batross’ wing, stronger than tho con
dor’s wing aro the wings of the Al
mighty.
I havo only one more thought to pre
sent. Tho wings under which Ruth
had come to trust were gentle wings.
There is nothing softer than a feather.
You have noticed when a bird returns
from flight how gently it stoops over
the nest. Tho young' birds aro not
afraid of having their lives trampled
out by the mother bird; the old whip
poor-will drops into its nest of leaves,
the oriole into its casket of bark, the
humming bird kite its hammock of
moss—gentle as the light. And so,
says the psalmist, he shall cover thee
with his wing. Oh, the gentleness of
God! But even that figure does not
fully sot it forth; for I have sometimes
looked into the bird’s nest and seen a
dead bird—its life having been trampled
out by the mother bird. But no one
that ever came under the feathers of
the Almighty was trodden on.
WHOSOEVER WILL MAY COME.
Blessed nest 1 warm nest 1 Why. will
men stay out in the cold to be shot of
temptation and to be chilled by the
blast when there is divine shelter?
More beautiful than any flower I ever
saw are the hues of a bird's plumage.
I Did you ever examine it? The black
bird, floating like a flake of darkness
through the sun light; the meadow
lark, with head of fawn and throat of
velvet and breast of gold; the red fla
mingo, flying over the southern swamps
like sparks from the forge of tho setting
sun; the pelican, white and blaek—
morning and night tangled in its wings
—give but a very faint idea of the
beauty that comes down over the soul
when on it drop the feathers of the Al
mighty.
Here fold your weary wings. This is
the only safe nest. Every other nest
will be destroyed. The prophet says
so: “Though thou exalt thyself like the
eagle, and set thy nest among the stars,
yet will I bring thee down, saith the
Lord of Hosts. ” Under the swift wings,
under the broad wings, under the
strong wings, under the gentle wings of
the Almighty find shelter until these
calamities be overpast. Then when
you want to change nests it will only
be from the valley of earth to the
heights of heaven; oud instead of “the
wings of a dove,” for which David
longed, not knowing that in the first
mile of their flight they would give out,
you will be conducted upward by the
Lord God of Israel, under whose wings
Ruth, the beautiful Moabitess, came to
trust.
God forbid that in this matter of eter
i nal weal or woe we should be more stu
i pid than tho fowls of heaven; “for the
stork knoweth her appointed time, and
the turtle, and tho crane, and the swal
low observe tho time of their going;
but my people know not the judgments
of the Lord.”
of Paper Barrels.
After three years of experimental
work an English company has succeed
ed in producing paper barrels which are
able to compete favorably with barrels
made of wood. The paper barrels are
used at present principally for the car
riage of gunpowder, mining fuses, fruit,
flowers, molasses, paint, cement,
matches, chemicals, dyes, asbestos,
sugar, size and extract of meat. The
materials used in making the barrels
are waste ]>aper, cardboard and (for
the better quality) old sacks. Whtjn
cardboard is used it is soaked or boiled
for six hours and afterward treated in
the same manner as toe other raw ma
terial. Tliis is carefully sorted and put
into a rag engine, or beater, where it is
beaten and torn to pieces by a series ol
knives for about an hour and a half.
It is afterward mixed with water until
n pulp of uniform consistency is gained.
This is rolled, joined, shaped and dried,
and the barrel is finally covered with
hoop*.
Before the tops mid bottom* are put
in the barrels iu« painted with n water
proof couqsisition, made of linseed oil
and resin, for ordinary purpose barrels,
and with a apeobU varnish where they
are used for food products. The stand
>ir<i size made i» 10 12 inch . in diaiu
eter by 2S iiielius long, llio price nt
which flwmj Lmu'iuU be produossi
enable* tiiem to eouqx’to favorably
with wooden barrel* V barrel costim.
34 eants in wood etui, when iiumlu o]
pn|s r, be sold tor cent*. Ou < greet
feature Is that tlicru i* no waste with
j the proncas, all '’waster*" being ixateu
t uu iuto vulb again. -
1 PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
WAITER A. WAY,
Attorney at Law.
Office—No. 312} Newcistle St.
Office Hours—B to 12 and 2 to 6.
Dr. j. e. mcmillan,
Physician and Surgeon.
Ofike —Payne building on Monk
Street. *
PEARSON ELLIS,
Attorney at Law.
Office- 312A Newcastle Steeet.
Will practice in the State and
Federal Courts.
H. H. HOWARD? -
Real Estate and Insurance Agt
Office in ScHilett Block—Newcastle Street.
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,
Will pra tice in Supreme Court of Georgia,
United Stites Court at Savannah, and in the Su
perior Courts of Glynn, Wayne, Charlton, Pierce
and Coffee Counties and elsewhere by Special
Contract.
Oftloe in Scarlett Building, Newcastle St.
Dr? O~ W. TUCKER,
Physician and Surgeon.
Office -No. 121)4 Newcastle Street.
A. C. BLAIN, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon.
No. 314)4 Newcastle Street.
Residence, 508 xiilycmarlc street.
Office hours—oa. m. to 5 p. ni.
SAM DEL BORCH
Attoruey-at-Law.
Office No. 121# Newcastle Street.
Special Attention Given to Maritime
Law and Questions Affecting Laund Titles.
BENNET & GROOVER,
Attorneys-at-Law.
Office Up-Stairs, Cor. Monk and Newcastle
Streets.
SAM C. ATKINSON,
Attorney-at-Law.
Office in Wright’s Building, Cor. Monk and
Newcastle Streets.
Brunswick Title and Guarantee Company
(INCOKPORATED.)
308 M NK IVCASTLE STREET, ROOMS 2 and 4
CROVATT BLOCK.
CYRUS Suelton, Attorney at Law, Manager
Guarantees Titles to Rnal Estate in the city of
Brunswick ami Glynn county. Ccmplete’ab
* tracts for all property In said city and county
from the earliest period to the present time, and
supplies omissions caused by the destruction of
a pprtion of Glynp county records. For infor
mation apply to the Manager
—• ■ '
New Store,
New Goods.
Latham & Peterson
GROCERS,
105 Monk Street 105
A new and complete stock of
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Canned
Goods, etc., just received.
CONEY & PARKER,
Wholesale and retail dealers in
Wood gCoal
-KnTlTths.
—sole agents fok—
BRUNSWICK JRICK WORKS.
keep in stock Alabama Oil Pressed
FACING BRICK and Chattanooga Sewer Pip
ing, including Flues and dooda.
enters Solicited. Satisfaction Guaranteed,
What We Hav’nt Got.
—(°) —
The most money in town.
The largest store in town.
Tin: handsomest clerks in town.
The cheapest stock of goods in town.
What We Have Got
Five small children crying for
bread, that have got to be fed.
A full and complete stock of Gro-
1 ceries, every article of which is stan
dard goods and bought to please the
trade. Vegetables received weekly
’ from New York, also as good Butter
1 as can be bought, which we get week-
• ly and insure its always being fresh
1 We have a fine Grape Wtne, 3-years-
• old, for table use, that cannot be ex«
’ celled.
What We’ve Got to Do.
t
Sell enough good* to feed the five /
il small children —we don’t eat our
i, telves.
> I'. S.—The children are not for
i salt 1 . I'hese are a few cold fact* that
■ are staring us in the face. Call and
t see us and we will make the price*
il satisfactory.
> (o)
L. P. WILSON,
O-IT O O EJ K. .
414 Bay street. <H.