Newspaper Page Text
I
BRUNSWICK AIIIBTISEI IB
VOLUME VII.
BRUNSWICK. GEORGIA, SATURDAY, JULY.23, 1881.
The Advertiser and Appeal.
U An
-DY I
RTAenr*
i UltUaiUO XVEliV SATUi.:uv
l>HTTV’C\lTTpTr
imv. Ao i» iUi.
Jos.E.Lambrig!it
Green Grocer,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES:
Cue copy elx monthi
Advcrtlm-mcnt* from fwjpoiwiRl" p»rti< « will
bo publl«b--<l until ordered ottt, whm flieWiu* l*
aol *|w;ri4f4;pwyiuont exacted nccdwBiffr.
icmenti
lollctod for publication. When c
/•I'iwp, cUartcul a* »<lvcrt l»«ncUt*.
Alll<-t*ptm«u<l •mnmtiulcatiuu* aiioulil bu a
s&si.’ fbr iuiiividual b*noftl, or of 1
barged
Marriagra and obituary
Cooding thi
^ All lot
: ...
crrY*orncicKs.
tfajwr- J. F. N«laon.
AlJcrmrn- A. T. Putnam. W. W. WatVln*. J. .1
Hpearx, 1). T. Dunn, i. 1*. Harvey. H. C. Little
field. Y. J. DoerAIngrr.
Vkrk * Treasurer—Janu-a n«ua«on.
Chuf jmrtW^V. A.Taliiu. s
. v -
lU(ctmm—Vt. 11. lUincy, T. W. l»olt.
K’'y<t of G to in I lt-nudial Ckrk <f Marl
l*rt nyticiaa -C L flrlitattar. Jr. M- D.
City l%wMfm+b 15 Daria, Mr I». *
UarM^Yabt-a j mn:
iv-rf ll'anfriw -Matthew Shannon. Tit"* t
uor. Jr. and A V rutuaui.
►Tffjpm'* «u«Aqqj*p or^v Kr Dj>.
AM) DEALER IN
udDui
and 1
Hoiton Cok»r~'t Omotery—/arklo H'lil***.
Town coUVoss —Harvey, Ootipcr and Spr
-8p<*ar*. DaoriUngor and Co*
Ua»uo»—Littlefield, Spear* and Putnam.
Public building*—Watkins, lx><-rlllngci
Railroad*-PoorfliiupT,
Education- Pmuam, H|*oan ami Duu;
CiMttmr—mtJiaM, Littlefield anti Hw
Kiuk nr.rAitTMr.NT--Hpoarw.l’ntnam am
rotjeu. I’ntnam, Dunn. and Watkiim.
united states officer*.
I Littlrt
Deputy -II. T. Dunn.
Colbvior Internal llcvotiim-D. 1
bounty Marshal—O. J. Hall.
4bA!iiMter-Ltnna North.
Cojuinlsaloner-tJ. 1C. lHixter.
Shipping ConiftilwIoU'-r- O. J. Ha
siAIVKT LOWiK, No. 08.
JAM. ri. LAMDlllOIIT. I’
Country Produce
KtLl-3 ALSO ON HAND A FULL ANI< WELL AS
SOKTKD STOCK or
GROCERIES,
CANNED GOODS,
TOBACCO.
CIGARS,
STANDARD AND
FANCY CRACKERS,
CANDIES, NUTS,
FRUITS, Etc.,.
AllI of which are offered for caab at reaaouable
I MEAN BUSINESS!
Store corner Ncwca* He and Monk Strecta,
BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA,
THE NEW CAPITOL.
TRC QfRSTtOR BErOKE
HOUSE.
Plan* dud kpftlflralloRi of ihr Pro
posed New Capitol—The Introduction
of Mr* Birrowii mil rot the Ere?i!tm
ofthe proposed itntl*lnff«-.4tl«nta'a
Itelatlona to the state.
COURT SKH8ION3 IN TU* BRUNSWICK CIRCUIT
CLINCH—l*t Monday in Varrli and Hept« ii».or.
AlTLINp—iid Potidny IM March and
WTAKR—2d Monday in A|»rl
(X»m:K-Tuesday after If
October.
CAMDEN- Tuesday after
‘ CHARLTON- :id Monday in
GLYNN—4th Monday in Ma;
i Monday in April ;
■I Monday In May «
JACOB COHEN
/
152 BROUGHTON St,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA,
Thank* tho public through thi* medium for the
fact, and afkaa continuance of their patronage, aa
he haa opt-nml hi* ftl lUNO IWI’URTATIOS <*g«oda
In all grade*, and placed Ida low pricea on them,
which cause* a malt by » very bud jr that 1* within
roach. He ofpT* the name chance to all who read
tlii* |*p«r to aval! tk<
ulty. Hi*
:,<>«• (VIMElf SILKS AMl SATINS
WIITTF -
_ .• a|..n« tui|
o.|Ual. Ill* FANCY ARTICLE* cairn.
EM15UOIDKULF.S
It. H. P.
THE POPULAR
Liver Medicine!
HILL’S HIM PH
la* a'taiuod unprecedented *uceo*a In relieving
prevalent tlitturdura of tlio Liver. It* in ‘
Hy eutitlo it to the preferment it rcrelvea
LIVER MEDICINES.
is now kept by many i>#raona always at hand.
, u -od regtdarly, mid tlions torrwoaa are new
>l**ct to the usual *yinpt..m* of a dlaord. r*d Llv-
prevalent at thi* wv-m of tliymr. It will
50 CENTS
to try it. amt yon will certainly 1h> pleased 1
the roault. For sale by .V. .11. AlADDl.N.
noviyy_
Str. David Clark
Only Direct Boat twiroper week bctWiJen
SAVANNAH & BRUNSWICK.
LEAVES SAVANNAS FOR BRUNSWICK EVERY
MONDAY AND THURSDAY AFTERNOON.
RETURNING. LEAVE BRUNSWICK
Tuesday g Friday evening
FOR SAVANNAU.
tc* .-lose eon net lull at Drunswirk with B. * A.
.wd. ami at Savannah with Ocean Hteaturhiji
steamer* to and from New York.aud with
ilolphia, Baltimore amt Boston »learner*.-
hi* at lowest rate*. Mara all through freight
o Steamer David Clark "
C. WILLIAMS, Agi
llrm
ii the
THE DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT
I* a srtivssi PAMIIMEUB »<•» Hummer at 7Jr i*
worth 11 ?•» In V''V York. In fact, them fa not an
article in fcaMcvGir Staple Dry U«o4i that rai.m.t !*«•
toun-rm l.V*fftof*hn.Mit. Also. th. newest gnoda
out. Called NUN’S VEILING, for dr.**•-*. !* kept In
till grmk-s. All he a*k* i* a call. !>.. not forget hi*
place.
1.12 lillOl'GHTON STUEKT,
SAVANNAH, - GEORGIA.
M.Vly
W.B.Mell&Co,
WLnltvale and Retail Dealer* iU
SADDLES & HARNESS,
RUBRF.R-AND
Fire Insurance!
N.Y. UNDKRWRITERSAGBNCY.
tCOUI'VHKD OF TUK OEfilfANlA AND
llANOVFU INSURANCE CO.'M)
—AND
IIIIITISII A.HBRil'A ASNUR’G CO.
T. O'CONNOR, Jr.
gg-DWEU.INOI AT VERY LOW RATES, fob
8HOLE8’
Georgia State Gazetteer
Business uml Planter’s
Leather Belting,!”' Rectory.
1881 a 2«
IENC1I AND AMF.Klt’AN CALF MKINH, HO I
HA it NESS, Pitt OLE. AND PATENT LEATH
ER, Will I’M AND SADDLERY WARE.
me I of thia
u or before tVtoher lat. DM1. Vol-
iHtjweit contained 934 pegiebre-
rill contain fully 1000 page*
HARNESS, COLLARS, BRIDLES. Etc.
ri . , 1V w ini village, population.
-ahti. ln.ln.lrt.-. »iii|.pln„ JtrrelM.., »c., buM-
... .n.l i*.m*M»l ni.n, KhinU, cullivn,
...iirrl*. Str«. m ■■«... tin.. J-Wfc.
ITMULI ,.m MIU. MKX \SI> rTKI KNTlN* I uni I uitnl at, «■ UOImn. «»J '"l——
JnnJVnCriniKUK ! il'uinnn, i
AlUnt. Cnnatltutlon
Yesterday morning tho question of
bnildiog a non State Capitol was
brought boforo tho Hou«o of Repro-
sentatives, in an attentive form. Dis
played on the northern nails of tho
hall nere fonr largo viens of a mag
nificent bailding, nhicb on inspection
were found to bo labelod os plans tor
a capitol bnilding. Thoy como to the
Executive ofiico from Louisvillo with
out any lettor or noto, hut accompa
nied by an olaborato pamphlot or
specifications, shoning tbst they ncro
tho work of Andronaltha k Wabicu
borgor, architects. Thero ncro also
olaborato plans for tho arrangement
of each floor.
Tho fonr vions of the proposed
building give the front and rear ele
vation, the prospective and the end
vion. They shon a superb strnotaro
nbich one nontd ssy cost a cool mill
ion at least. Tho grace of tho nrchi
lecture and the general richness of
the dosign are admirable. During
tho morning, mombers and visitors
oxamined the pictures with great in
terest
At the last session there nas a reso
lution passed authorizing tho payment
of $250 for tho beat plans and specifi
cations for a capitol bnildiog sent in
to tho Oovornor, and theso came as
tho first in what may prove a long
list. Thoy certainly cost far more
than the price named, but tho glory
of dotigniDg a capitol for (ienrgia
must bo cousidored as wort It a great
deal. The question of tbr new enpi-
to! tlms suggested was brought out
in a more practical shape later iu the
session by a carefully drnwu bill,
which Mr. Barrow, of Clark, bod tho
honor to introduce.
It providos thoroughly for the buil
ding of a capitol in Atlanta, at a cost
not to cxccod ono million dollars, mid
to bo finished by tbo first of January,
1887. There are to ho five annual
appropriations of not exceeding $200,-
000 each, to be paid out of tho sttr-
plns in tbo Stato Treasury, and if that
fails, to be raised by taxation. Tho
hill also requires that tho building
bo of Georgia granite, provided thnt
it can bo prodacod ns cheap as gran-
ito from any other quarter. It carc-
fnlly guards tho construction by con
stituting a board of which the Gov
ernor, Secretary of State, Comptroller
General, President of tho Sonnto and
Speaker of the House shall bo mom-
tare, and by laying down claarly the
duties of this commission. It wns no-
ticonblo that ns this bill wns rond
tbcic wns tho closest attention in nil
parts of the House. It was referred
to the committee on public property,
and 250 copies of it were ordered to
be printed for tho nse of tho Honse.
It seems certain that thnt this or
some similar bill will pass st this ses
sion, for of thirty Representatives
whoso viows have lieon expressed in
tho CtmMutwn, only threo have de
clared ngainst tho proposition to
tmild.
But ono of I ho preliminaries pre
ceding bnilding is the fixing of At
lanta's position toward ths State in
tho matter. During the famous capi
tol campaign, the city of Atlanta pro
posed that if tbo pcoplo would locate
tbo soat of government hero, it would
build ns good a capitol ns the old ono
at Miltcdgevillo. .
At the last session of the Legisla
ture a committee to consult with the
representatives of Atlanta ns to the
fulfillment of this promise; nothing
definite wns done in tho several con-
| THE SEPARATIONS THE COMET.
j As Professors Stone and Wilson, of
the Cincinnati Observatory, were
watching the comot, on the night of
July (’>, it was seen lo sepa
two parts, Tho report of tho obser
vation says thnt a jot wns seen to pro
coed from tho nnclons in tho direc
tion of tho tail, and gradually form a
separate nucleus, tho division being
shnrpiy defined.
This is not the first known splitting
of B COfiief, Bioln’s comet haviug"dP
t ided, probably in n similar manner,
some - time bctwcou 1815 and 1810;
bnt this is tho first time the actual
separation has been observed
This spontaneous division of tho
comot into two comets gives peculiar
interest to certain speculations ns to
tho identity of tho presont comet ami
tho possible fate of all comets.
In a communication to tho Herald,
dated July 1, Prof. Lewis Boss, of
Dudley Observatory, Albany, Now
York, discnsscs tho striking similarity
of certain clemonts of this comet's or
bit to the corresponding elements of
tho orbit of tho comet of 1807. That
tho two comets nro not the same
body—that is, that tho comet of 1881
is not a prcmntnro return of tiic com
et of 1807—ho is qnito sure; bnt, lie
asks, could these bodies have origi
nally formed a part of tho same body ?
For illustration bo refers to tbo com-
ot discovered by Bieia iu 182G, whose
splitting has already hcou mentioned.
This comet wns found to revolve
nronud tho siin in the comparatively
short period of seven years. It wns
not scon again, however, unlit 1845,
when it presented its nsuonl - appear
ance.
Oti tho 12th of January, 1840, Pro
fessor Hubbard, of tho Washington
Observatory, on looking at the comot
through his telescope, was surprised
to find uot one hut two distinct com
ets iu tho sauio field of view. The
distauco between the two bodies was
small, hilt went on increasing night
after night, until in March the dis
tance sport had, become 200,000
miles. At its next return in 1852 this
distance lmd heroine more than a mil
lion miles. What became of the coin-
et iu subsequent years call only be
coujoclurcd, fur it has never since
boon scon, unless nu observation of a
strange body by Pogson, in Madras,
is held to ho antbcntic as a view of
this coiuut of Bieia—a matter nbont
which opinions uro divided.
Professor Buss continues: “What
Ims happened once may happen again.
It is known that great forces of mil
tnal rcpnlson exist in the particles
which constitute a comet. It is to
this that we probably owe the varied
ap|mnrance« in the bend of a comet ns
in approaches to or recedes from the
snn. By nblo astronomers this force
of repulsion is held to explain tho ex
istence of tho gigsulic tails which ale
seen projected from the beads of com
ets on tho side opposite the sun.
It would seom possible that the two
comets of 1807 and 1881 may have
formed a single body in distant asms
of time, and that at a certain period
the original l»dy separated into two,
diverging more and mote widely, uu-
til now we have them, the one follow
ing nearly bnt not quite iu the wake
of the other, at an interval of about
seventy-tour yonrs. It is a question
well wortli tho close attention of as
tronomers. If the present comet
should prove to have a jK-riod of from
1,100 to 2,200 years, the rcosonnblo-
ncss of tho above conjecture will ho
almost dciuocstratod."
The observed division of the comet
>w ill sight gives peculiar signifi
cance lo these suggestions. It Also
allows that the natural sntshvisiun of
n comet is no longer to Ihi considered
THE FLY.
MISDIRECTED BENEVOLENCE.
i Mt« York
i It appoars that our rich and dis-
„ X,,, . Boomerang. j languished fellow citizen, »ir Cyrus
Much has been said et the fly of tho j W. Field, and somo of his compeers,
• * ' ' f un w.ilu about mm nbo propose to raise a subscription of
are band-headed.
Hence wo say a word. It is of no
nso any more to deny the borriblo
truth. Allbough os beautiful as a pe
ri in other ways, our troBsoa on top
hnvo succumbed to tho iDclcmoncy of
the weather, and oar massive brow is
slowly creeping over to the hack of
our neck. Nature makes all things
evon. If a man he possessed of such
ravishing beauty and such winniug
ways that his jiower might bccomo
dangerous, sho makes him bald-
headed.
That is our fix.
TVhou wo lmvo our hat on, and go
inchnyiug down the street with that
camel glide o( ours, everyone asks
who that noble-looking Apollo with
the docp and melancholy cyo is; hut
when we are at tho office, with our
bnt bang up on tho French walnut
sikebonrd, and the sun comes softly
iu through the rosewood shatters and
fights up the shollec polish on oar.in
tellectual douie, wo uro not so pretty.
Then it is that the fly, with gontlo
tread and sednetivo song, comes np
and prospects around our bump of
self-esteem, and tickles us, nud makes
us mod.
When wo get to wliero forbenruuco
ceases to bo a virtue, we haul oil and
slap the place whore ho wus, while ho
goes over to tho inkstand aud snick
ers lit ns. After lie has waded around
iu the carmine iuk awhilo ho goes
hack to tho stump of spirituality aud
makes somo rod marks over it.
Having laid olT his clnim under the
new mining law, lie proceeds to sink
It we write anything bitter, it we
nay aught of our fellow-man that is
disappointed or unjust, nud. for which
we afterwards got licked, it.isboesnse
we get exasperated anil nro not re
sponsible.
If tho fly were large, and woigbed
20U pounds, and emuo iu here aud
told us that if we didn't taka bark
what we had said about him ho would
kuock out the wiudow with our re
mains and lot us full a hundred fuel
into the busy street, it wouldn't wor
ry us so much, bccnuBO thou wo could
strangle him with ouo hand while we
wrote a column editorial on Coukling
with tho other. Wo do that frequent
ly. Bnt a little fragile insect, with
no home and no parents, snd only
four or five milliuu brothers and sis
ters, gains our confidence, aud then
tickics our scalp till we have to write
with a sheet oT tar roofing over our
head.
If tho tly could ha removal from
our |inthway, we would march aloug
iu our juiuney to tho toiuh in a way
that would lie Hie envy and admira
tion of the civilized world. As it is,
we feel that we are.uot making n very
handsome record.
s-riiaib or Lire.
S3730Cir^lt3^-
WRITE FOR PRICK 1 '
Savannah, Georgia.!
»>y '
City Tax Notice.
t COMPLETE 8AIETTEER OF 6E0HBI*
snow* * co..
cl Street. Align 1
—ns the splitting of Birin's comet 1ms
'm.te, I fcrcnccs thou had, and yestoriiny at-j been -an astrunumirni anomaly.- j
I ternoon Mayor Kr,g!:sh, with A'.lur-1A ml tim question aiises. To wimi. ex- j
■ ' men Lowry, Bnalie anil liisstwii*. u--» « •i-i- » «nmlivi.i..o i
! ! r-:i. *.!L.'.'..-.rr. '. tu.. i. t.»!' .. ; w-**w f ,
Inc ti us: tumi created try : rufesaor
Tyndall upon his departure from this
untry has neciliuiilatcd snfiictetilly
The following table is one that is
used by London assurance compnuics,
showing tho length of life at various
ages. It is tho result of careful cal
culation, and seldom proves mislesd-
ing. ()f course, sudden and prema
ture deaths, ns well as livos unusually
extended, occasionally occur, but Ibis
is a tnhle of average expectancy of an
ordinary mao or woman. A person
one year old may expect to live thir
ty-nine yean longer; of ten years,
fifty-one; of twenty yoers, forty-one;
of thirty veara, thirty-four; of forty
years, twenty-eight; fifty years, twon-
tv-onc; of sixty years, fourteen; of
seventy years, nine; of eighty years,
fonr. Our readers will easily gather
from the above statement the number
of vests to which their lives, acctifth
mg to the law of averages, may n»-
$250,000 ior the benefit of Mrs. bar-
field, wifo of the Prosidont of the
United States.
Benevolonoo is t quality hardly
lower in rank than the religions senti
ment. Bat thero is no quality of the
human sonl so exalted that, if loft to
gropo in the dork, it may not take a
.wrong direction. Thus when the spir
it of worship is allowed to rango
wildly in blindness, it somotimes loads
to idolatry, to tho worship of sticks
and stones, and bats, and mice, and
birds, aud fine clothes, and stocks, and
houses.
Beuovolouce also often goes astray.
Wo think it goes astray whan it
proposes to pat * large gift into tho
whito and delicato bond of a living
President’s wife. It seems to ns on
insnlt to her. Her bnsbnnd still Jives
and sbems likely to live, and to have
tho dispensation of immense official
patronage. She is believed to have
groat inflnenoo over him. Naturally,
she is cxpcctod to he grateful. At all
evonts sho is bnman. If, for instance,
Sir Cyrus W. Field eoald by possibil
ity bo brought to resign bimsolf into
tbo scrvico of tho Government, end to
supersodo that “literary feller," Jamoe
Raseoll Lowell, u minister .<to Eng
land, how eoald sho say him nay after
bo bad been tho activo agent in giring
her a quarter of a million dollars ?
Should the President nulortonuto-
ly die, than, wo say, let a million bo
raised for bis helpless family by pop
ular subscription in three days, btit
not onn dollar whilo lie livos, and
while it may look like a briber.
•''•"Ill the Branch lur a KIiiSc,
Thom is, says tbo Coustitntion, no
mode of punishment that would oorve
ball so well to toko tho self-ooncoit
oat of Charles Jules Unitenu as a so-
rios of good Hogging applied iu cam-
ost. If District AttorSoy Corkbill,
and his superior, the Attoruoy Gener
al, can see any way to subject tho
impudent rascal to this method of
pnoishmenl, thoy will not ouly lower
hie own estimate of his cowardly soil,
bnt thoy will deter other “cranks”
from committing acts that would
bring their worthless bodies under the
lash. This remedy was appliod to
the lunatic tbst last fired st tho
Queen, nud it is Sir Edward Thorn
ton's opinion that this iu itself put an
ond in England to nttneks upoiremi
nent people. By all menus let Gui-
teau foci the lash and the degradation
thnt goes with it.
WuMukIou sUr.
A letter to Coloucl Corkhid, dated
Northeast Aid., July 111th, reads as
follows: "I hnvo a great interest in
this man (or boast) Gnitcnu, particu
larly his appetite. Now, sir, I pro
pose to cut two ouuces of flesh from
him overy day and make him eat it—
to Im continued nntil lie eats himself
np. He will then have a historical
reputation as the man that shot the
President and then eat himself up.
"Yours with respect,
"W. J. Dssi.itio.
P. 8,—If yon cannot find anyone
in Washington to do it, jnst call on
mo. I mean it”
Tbr. Lumber World:— Eli Perkius,
the groat American delasioiiist, lias
struck a bonanza for lumbermen
in Texas. Sim Graves, nqiative,'has
shown Eli a grove oI blnck walnut
trees, baud planted ten years ago,
thnt hnve attained tho respectable
proportions of nine inches diameter,
and which, ho assured Bim, would bo
niuetoon inches through within twen
ty years from the date of pbuitlug.—
Sim snd f-'.ti thou »nt down and ti“-
PLEASINB PARAPRAPHi.
Tim middin nrri’U—tpttpqnn.
Toe ffront tv-"* - -. TV I
o! funds.
Strange behavior—A vessel "bug-
The first Black Friday occurred in
Robinson Crusoe’s timo.
A match safe—one put up where
tho small hoy can't got at it.
Wheu is water most liablo to os-
capo ? When it is only half tido.
Evon a clothes lino becomes unsteady
when it bos too many shcots in the .
wind.
“ Mankind," said a preacher, “ in
cludes woman, for man embraces wo-
roau.”
You mustn't think l dentist is mad
because yon soo him grinding bis
teeth.
It requires a man o( considerable
pnsb to earn his living with a wheel
barrow.
A cruel husband calls his wife
'green fruit," because sho uovor agrees
with him. '
Many a good, square mail loafs
around tho corners till ho goes home
at rye tangles.
" No, ma’am,” said a grocor to an
Applicant for credit, “I wouldn’t trust
my own footings."
Tbo host thing about carpets is thut -
you hay thorn by tho yard, and woar
thorn out only by tho foot.
Why should not daoks be allowed
on'doctor’s promises?—Bocanso they
mako.BUch personal remarks.
Why onght a gardener to bo a crack
shot ?—Because ho has a groat deal
of cxpcrioncu with little shoots.
Lomoii juice prevent.! uialariu aud
a little Jamaica rum, withico, prevents
any injurious effects from tho lemon.
A South End moidon wants to
know bow to avoid having a mous
tache como on the tipper lip.- Eat on
ions, sis.
- Mrs. Partington will not allow Iko
to play tbo gnitar. Sho says ho had
it onco when ho was a child, and it
nonrly killed him.
The host anti-fat remedy wo know
of is trying to carve tip n chunk of
hard wood with a batchot that was
originally cat oat for a hammer.
It has boon discovered that cats
can't livo at a greater elevation than
13,000 foot, therefore back sheds
shond bo bailt 13,600 foct high.
Tho next attraction in tho circus
and menagerie parade will probably
be a den of trained New Jersoy mos
quitos, accompanied by their koopor.
A courtly negro rccontly sent a re
ply to an invitation, in which bo "re
gretted that circumstances repugnant
to the rcqnicsconco would pro von this
acceptance of tbo invito."
■■<ia«tios.
From Rev. Mr. Cltvelsnd, pastor Pres
hyterian church in Gainesville, Os.;
I have tried roar neurotic for iudigos-
tioir, suit foaml it a most excellent rem- *
dy.aiul most heartily recommend it.
Tnos. P.Clkvzlaxd.
neuralgia, retire, cates, Rlr.
From Rev. G. G. Smith, pastor Moth-
odist church, Gsinsville, Ga.:
I have used nenratio iu my family with
great ealisfastion. Have found it a epe-
eiflii In cramp colic. In early etigoa of
oold, a toaepoonfiil is of groat ueoefit,
and ft givee great relief in nenmlgla ami
tooth ache. I like it very nraeb.
GnxO. Barra.
Macox, Ox.
Messrs. Lamas, IUsjus A Lamas—
Dsas Btsa: It gives me great pleasure to
certify to the merits of Brewer’s Lung
Restorer, as I linvo used it ssd found it
all yon represented it to bo. My lungs
were effected to some ox tent, snd I bail
s tracking cough, often spitting up blood,
which at times would amount to s hem
orrhage, and I became very much fright-
cnod at my condition. I bought several
bottles of Brower's Lung Restorer, aud
bsvo been' entirely cured by its use, snd
(cel satisfied that it is permanent, ss I've
luul no symptoms o( the disease since. I
am satisfied that this medicine will prove
u great blessing to the pcoplo. If you
would introdueo it iu tbo Northern States
it would moke your fortsce*.
years very trnly Ifyicnr Wnoras.
ivc which j With Messrs. Niuthaum tc Danncnburg.
tho « »ty oj Until*'
: Win. Hauer,
it »f return*
ICUls
* ni*t .l*y »t Hatch.
1 AM Lit UOUSIuX. U 4 *i* uul Tr«4»i
JS RUNS WICK, GA.
Boot & Shoo Maker.
t now to «lo m? *nd »U *jnd«
U my Utif*. ynaranU* aatlfttetK
ltd price*. HU -V ~ “ “*■ '*—* -
if auk rlr ft bttl
WM. KKVBAl'CR.
■r.nt- r
wan u
lefiuito
joint committee, of -vhiel
llnives is chairman Tin i
general consultation, bnt n
result was reached.
Everything looks hopeful for lh«
now capitol, and by this time next
year its fonndntion may bo laid.
A musician, Oeorgo Sjiarp, hail bis
nninu on tho door thus: “O. Sharp.”
A wag of a painter, who know «omo-
thing ol music, cnrly one morning
mado tbo following undeniable and
eiguGcaut addition: “Is A fiat."
...’ ’ oil... t, l.aln. -
il- belts or streams may
notary disintegration,
fives additional plunsibil-
1 the- buUvi...
!y, that lue;.
he duo to
certainly ret-
ity from this repetition of so fur ns
]>ositivo observations go) tho primary
act of division. 'Willi n few more
splittings tho comot might entirely
cease to !>« visible.
With a spirit of martyrdom, the
(ieorgia Legislature have decided to
devote July to the affairs of the State.
Patriotism and jierspiralion go band
in baud.
tur the purpose to which he devoted
it: The .'uisistuneo of needy American
htndouts iu physics who shonld show
uptitndc for original study and should
wish to complete their education in
Gerniauy. The fnud will now fnrniib
u moderate income to two atuiieuts.
1n rt-iiMqusnce of a failure to poat
n notice at the Court Honse dour, the
town of Ahqipalin will nut bu incorpo
rated by the present Legislature.
nrod out tin, value of this
contains ten acres. j>a._ t
A. a t .a. . ...I Kncfctt Mas Less
tains two lmmlretl *.rw», or the who!*, j Q .. on n , t * r t » ic Hottentot? fun nrfrt?
patch two thousand. Sim soy; those -jfiUsea.A "From those rude prartilioa-
trots will yield him fufir hundred
bushels of nuts thw year, which st
$2 50 1st bushel will give him $1,000,
and as this yield will increase instead
of decrease, he reckons his future in
como it no less than this mm per an-
uaro nnlil Urn trees are twenty yean
of age. When that timo arrivos, Sim
oxpvcta to sell his grove for $25 per
tree or $50,000. Eli concludes hi*
narrative by advising the public to
Imy land at $25 per aero and settlo
down as black waluat farmers.
prs
era the remedy was borrowed by the res-
i Jcut English and Dutch physician* by
whoso recommendation it was employed
in Europe, and has since come into gen
eral use. Combined with Jaaiper ami
ether desirable ingredients. IS inthe
urcmiration of Rankin's Compound Fluid
Extract Of Buchn and Jnnipir, it proves
a most reliable remedy tot tenonjaten-
tion or incoutincnco of urine, Irnmoon,
inflammation or nlceiwtion of tto bladder
and kidneys, stone in tbs bjaddse,.Om-
el orbriek Just deposit mfiky dischmnroj
ami all diseases of the bladder or Kid
neys, snd dropsical swelling In mam wo
man or child. Prepared only by Hunt,
ltonkin A Trlniar, Atlanta, (la . .iud sold
by all druggists. jcI5cow2ui