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About Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893 | View Entire Issue (July 26, 1889)
I it ; Climt at By CLENk 6 . M 90 RL VOL. XIII. THE ADKINS HOUSE, -c’UJL .-.Vc*---*;;. .* C* I % mc\ | "l m •■’rfi I m ' m i tfi ft !i ■ISKIsfiE mBKB P m: L4S l.-x a LjP 1 »ss ■ ,i .5 811 ESUis St AUGUSTA. — • • • • M GEORGIA. Wlllffi Ml EBMFM Atlanta, G-a. Cotton Gins, self-feeders, OOPiJlD ES3V® E3EIIS, COTTON PRESSES DOWN. TO PACK The UP Best OR in PACK Use. 5 on Market. . i Wi§ 1 , * J »•<>« “M 1 ’It 11 O A CANE MILLS & SYRUP KETTLES. Shafting and Pullies, Mill Gearing, ®^SEND FOR CIRCULARS AND PRICES ^ Mention Democrat. * At|irit® StiWtlf -A. J. SCHWEERS, Manager. Augusta, Q eor^ia. Office and Brewery o McKinne, Fenwick and Nelson Sts. Browers of Beer Guaranteed PURE AUD WHOLESOME •Export Battled Beer a Specialty. HUCHSON & SULLIVAN’S THREE-QUARTER ROAD WiCOIL ii l K KJ jS 3STO- 105 T1ii!i Is * light and tasty Buggy, trcH built in every particular, to carry ono or two passengers ; and : our large sale- On It allow us to put the price Very Low. ! Send for Illustrated Catalogue and Price List showing a full line of Carriages, Bnggles, Carts and Cutter* STXLIVAN, HUGHSON Wholesale Manufacturer*. ROCHESTER, TT - TT* - SENSIBLE LOW-COST HOUSES.-HOW TO BUILD THEM Our new AT I, AS, entitled, “SK SSI II I.K LOW v ■ COS T HOI'SKS—HOW TO HLT1.D THEM.” Now ready. This contains plans, illustrations, and complete descriptions of 56 New, Beautiful, and ( heap < ountry Houses, costing from $800 to $7500. —Shows how you can build a S2000 house for J517-JO, and how to make them Al ’Ttk, L**r* j Ljf * i handsome, and cheaply convenient, heated healthy* in winter. light, Teil* cool, intending and bnilders airy in of summer, home* warm adapted [ IM w what to do, and warns them what not to do. Describe* booses ?*L V> all climate*. NATIONAL ARCHITECT** I NION, Pau by maiL j yj7 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, j V*s L YmvBKHMmii L^a /■/,: J// -if BZ 8VB.M YOVB. TICKET RE An a VIA. esorts. ummer , ™ s ^■ uM'SSOURyPOLORADO HI PACIFIC " U SHORT une. ^ Poll Kansas man Bfflet City. Sleeping Wichita. Cmr* Pueblo, without Colorado change Springs. from St. Mani- Louis o - mu and Denver. ■HHHlHHHHHIi — and (toner*) Sews. | CRAWFORD VILLE, GE( A V,JULY 2(5, 1889. “Pray and Paw “An Honest Han's the Ha God.” —Pope. A “Hen Ought J o )v»y, as R Simon Petek K ■ •' MA Time is going—mon Creditors Speeding on tiny' for moux Debtors bnngs^M® lil led Pin day Who !n nfl in. .I- '0 '•I' i^Rj|pi|j§ .-.M a .all ’ > lions ni'i’lie^B < ill. is Ih ie—pure ‘Oweon .» til ii. ui, ind ne^ mun.” and swee To Quite dlvin.- your heauj Pay your Cod, uni M / nd your for Heaven's . Pay your preachei Pay K?ep Hu 0 good?al£ Un-el/ V h,,, V" ‘°fi d ® tni >'°« ' ni n«’ r bost! ilwve.r-P^ " dl, '"jOL.tracheri I will not say— Tim 3ro vi.nr ,printer pay, and preacher! O h ‘byte Hone st—pray and 1! pay! %ve yourself an upright debtor! ‘Spurn tiie tricks or courts and law! Honest ways will serve you better, Fraud will bring the sheriff’s claw Close all claims before December First of «|1 your preacher pay! ’ And this Gospel line remember_ Christians “pay as well as pray.” Purge tlm pockets of your breeches, Or all cash you justly owe! Lest at death the Devil's witches Speed your soul to realms below! I hen he sure, as I’m your teacher You will rue tli’ unlucky nay. When you did not pay the preacher Did not “pay as well pray.” Jiidgincnt comes—1 must remind you Purge your purse and conscience fast! How shall then the Record find you— Uitli the "sheep” «, r ’gouts" at last? I Imt depends on this most (ruly— How you pray, and h.>w you pay; If you pay your preacher duly: If you “pay as well as pray.” Wlnterville, Ga.~ Ry w. P. jr. : A driving out with a load of WfckTand the other driving in with a load of hay. Both attempted to got the best side of a mud hole, and as a conse quence their teams came head to head and stopped. “You, there!” shouted the brick man. “You there yourself!” replied tiie other. “Going to turn out?” “No.” “Neither will I.” “I’ll stay here a whole year first!” “And I’ll stay ten of them!” Both proceeded to make themselves as comfortable as possible, and to ap¬ pear careless and indifferent as to result. Other travelers took the other side of tiie hole, and passed them by, so it became a question of endurance. At the end of an hour the bay man said: “If there’s any one man I hate above another it’s a human hog.” “Then it’s a wonder you havent hated vourself to death!” was the re tort, and silence reigned . supreme again. Another iiour passed, and the brick man observed: “I’m going to sleep, and , I , hope . you w- n’t distmb me. Just what J w, is going oak > you,” replied the hay man. Both pretended to sleep, but at the end of the third hour the hay rnan sud denly called out: “Say you are a cussed mean man!” “The same to you!” ‘‘Where you going with those brick? “Four miles out, to John Dayton’s. Where you going with your hay?” , “To Stinner’s brisk yard.” “Say, man. I’m John Dayton my 1 self, and I’ve traded this hay f brick!” j “Well I’m young Stinner, and I v, i! driving the first load out!” f “What fools we are! Here, taks ai| the road.” “No—no let rue turn out.” i “I’ll turn.” I “No—let me.” And in their hd%te to do the polity tiling the load of hay was upset and wheel taken off the brick wagon. j Manyp ‘opie think tbatthe word ‘ ‘Bitti can be used only in connection with ? intoxicating beverage. Thisis ami-fat-, as the iiest remedy for all diseases of ’ ig blood, liver, kidneys, etc., is Prickly **v(J Ap, Bitters. It is purely a meeicinc and vt'Lfc ry article used in its manufacture i • of able origin ofknowm curative quaiilh'M* ns Of Gold. ir degrades the just, ih to be correct in jour rong when a man is ■if. [better capital than a ing. f a thing depends on the [t is suspected is not safe [never frets about his lurid. mie to do what you can •if. ihat easily which yon illy. limit as a stone is a heavy [iat I tiie post of duty where. jc room in the heart the house. ■> : ’scape the censure or Hi o escape your own. lolba contented with what r neVor witli what we are. Jealousy. J i at once the meanest and t hA uaccouuUble of vices. k* to us we shall have in a what we want and have A hever win by unreason. Ively wo shall ho loved and nlovely we shall not 6b lov jer |er whether not. Jealousy any otheriakes of the w IJsoclal wcil i importance, or tho bapj k others is alike unHccount aide Bfcjfourown ho rise is out 1 ar neighbor’s is fo;n ’te to stone. If ho ebH ML up his cmri ■ cars ’^^P%jans proyil V isiiittly, with very tolerable L»ii'.-ieas. We shall receive that of wiilyh we are worthy, no more; and w h*i't is our own by virtue of our de- 8,1 1 no fate caii take away. A Washington Man in Luck. here Is no incident jy all my life.’’ said Mr. It. C. Pallmer, of 721 8th St., N. W i’A iisblngton City, D. U. “that looks SO I ch like providential assistance as, the ,[i(* which will send me to Dayton Oh', 1. to-day. I had arranged to start in th' i, it,u re business. I selected Day ton *s ti,o place in which to establish m.'i ll. 1 was endeavoring to raise the n< • jury money but was disappointed, l’v,, been in the habit of investing a d'ljiar a month in The Louisiana State Lottery, and tho drawing of tho 14th alt. bojitglit mo just exactly tlm sum I needed If this a istance had not come to ino I m -t have remained a working mechanic a I my life.”—‘Washington (I). C.) Star, •J*|ae 4. He: tt VVomen make a much great ej 0o over choosing a husband than Ufiffn U<> in choosing a wife.” She: “Yes, our chance for securing worth¬ less partners are much greater than Mien’s, jj^., and we must bo more di-criini ,, Prohibition lias had eight successive defeats. ^ New Hampshire, Oregon, Vjf(?jnji|< TeXHgf Tennessee, Michigan and Pennsylvania lu turn /0 i e d It down, and Massachusetts ie eently gave the majority of 50,000 votes against it. A Tru^Tontc. When you don’t feel well and hardly know what ails >'ou, giveB B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) a trial. Jt is a fine tonic. T. O. Calls ban, Charlotte, N. C., writes: B. B. B- is a fine tonic, and has done me <rreat good.” L. W. Thompson, Damascus, Ca., writes: “I believe B. 15. 15. is the tx-st blood puri¬ fier made • It has greatly Improved my general heath ’’ An old gentlemen writes: ‘15. 15. 15. give-me new life and new strength. If there is anylhi ig that wi.l make an old man an yonnu, voiiir' u it is is u. B ii. It 15” D I*.a. Shepherd, .Norfolk, \a., August 1HH8. WlitJ's: “I depend on B. B. 15. for tin: pr< rvation of my licaltli. I have had it in my family now nearly two years, and in ail that time have not had to v. ve a doctor-” ’ iios, Paulk, Aianaha, f>a., writes; “I suffered terribly from dyspepsia. The trie of B. B. B. has made me feel like a man. I would not take, a thousand du !ars for the good in has (lone me.” VV. M. Cheshire, I'anta.On., “I had a long spell Oi dmid f'-ver, which st las: -eerrv-d to settle in my right icg, which swelled up enormously- An ulcer also appeared which discha ged a enp fu = ofmatt* -s a day. 1 then gave B 15. I! s> (rialam i; sored me ” Terms: $ 1 . 50 , in Advanetb GRANDPA EDWARDS. Ho Talks About His Fifteen Thousand Dollar Lottery Prize ____ Mr. T. F. Edwards, or "grandpa,'' as he is familiarly called by everybody wbo knows him, is still r.t work, keeping his engine bright. He says lie is getting sort o' used to be¬ ing wealthy now, and his money don’t trouble him much. "That'3 the first Louisiana State Lottery ticket 1 every bought," ho remarked to a group of friends yesterday. "1 hadn’t any more idea of winning anything than 1 had of finding 915,000 In the street. Koine folks seem to think I’ll never get the money, but they are badly mistaken, for I’vo already got the lucre, right down there in the Capital City bank, and what's more L haven’t spent a cent of it yet. “I'vemade up my mind to keep it and make it support me and my old lady for thehalanao of our days. I'm going to buy us a home-a nice, eosy little place—and then I'll invest the balance f» real estate —Atlanta (eal estate, because I think it the if, lieovei best l | mots a min to can get put it ids again. money In, out "The oi ft rouble about tho money is the way tl\ enl estate man run after me. They think because I’m a poor man and never owned a lions o and lot in mv life that I'll bo in a hurry to buy one, but I’m just going to wait until tlm excitement dies down a little, and then take n look around before 1 buy. The old lady will Imvu something to say about it, too. Its strange, but.it seems like she takes just about as much Interest in Hint fifteen thousand dollars as 1 do! I reckon it’s all right though, for she’s tho hotter half, and I expect she’ll get the biggest part of it. “We have never seen the money yet, but vve’er going down to tho hank homo d:i.v and aid-Mr. llemntilll to let us look it some of It anyhow." It will be remembered that “Grand-pa’’ wne the lucky winner of § 1 , 1,000 in the recent drawing of the Louisiana State Lottterv. Atlanta 'Da .) Constitution, July a. E-\ppiipticp<l. The in•.'Htie muor beams and ttb^nkle »>f the ■ » jn ulc pa; t. t ie to tt ' rvi'Uic bridge across tiie Aitfle streao. jt whiclt prattled idly to the pebbles as it hurried along. “Mabie,” said lie, “do you know what love is?” “I think so,” she replied simply. “I moan were you ever the eject of a love that was as fierce as tho on¬ slaught of a tiger and as unquenchable as the stars. VVero yon ever truly loved?” “Was I ever truly loved?” aim re¬ peated though tfully. George come hack to tiie house and I will snow you two diamond rings, six vale nttnes, and a trunk full of photographi.” And George was silent. Sr. Ltuis, .VI o- I’oHt-Disptafii, says ‘Indian women are proverbially heal¬ thy and strong, often marching for days witli their babies upon their hacks. In fact, they frequently go tiie day before and after confinement, witli tlieir tribes, upon the march. These women acquire this great strength and power of endurance by using a weed that grows in their locality, out of which a medicine is now being made, and kept by the druggists, under the name Indian Wkud (Female Medi¬ cine.) “Indian Wkkij (Female blessing Medicine) the has proven a great to weak, delicate, over worked women to our urge cities, for it is said that all window, it keep robust and healthy. Drs. Lucas & llarnmack and a) Druggists keep it, A Kentucky man* who was dying alone left his will in lead pencil oil the head of a whisky barrel, and it is held to be valid. The only tiling he left, however, was a gallon of whisky in the barrel, and that isn’t worlli lighting over. Bowman, •>,%., ,, May 1 it , isss. aaa . Dn. W. M-Pitin, Thomson, (Ja.— Dear His—I can cheerfully testify as to the in triimic merit of tom Carmin.itivr.. In the latter part of the spring our little girl, in the process of teething, was suffering from cholera .nfantiim, and was fast lie coming a mere xkdeton, when fortunate lv my attention was called to *lio cura tive properties of your Carminative. Af er using o few doses, she eornmencfd to rnproye, resting sw-ctly at night, and soon regained her natural boom of, IWFPtDHM. You are at liberty to use my humble test imm**) ns you think best Trusting that fjisl’s blessings may re - upon your libois in disseminating \onr, Carminative to the alleviation of tiie troubles consequent to teething children. I *m gratefully and respctfully yaurs J- N '°- L Nzau k NO. 30. An Eminent Physician's Opinion WaycB iss. (»a , Mirch S WHO. P. P P. Mfg. Co.: Deab Silts—After careful observation ° r tlle notion of your remedy, Prickly Ash Poke Hoot and Potassium, JL nm prepared to give it my unqualified endorsement an an alterative of very decided merit, t regard it, moreover, ai one of the tie-t remedies for Dyspepsia. I gave it to my wife for Malaria and General Debility and to my surprise she was more benefited, than by any other remedy see had tried her Dyspepsia, which was very distressing and of several year* duration. She serins to have been entirely relieved of Dyspepsia, and has gained flesh rapidly. 1 prescribe it with confidence In Rheumatism and other condition requiting a tonic, and and invariably with the most satisfactory results. Respectfully, J. II. REDDING, M. D. Last Monday we saw a colored lady hoeing cotton in tho Hold with a neat fitting calico dress on over a good sized busily. She also wore a dainty straw hat neatly trimmed, appearance we should judge that she wore a cor¬ set.— Hnrtwell Sun. “Hunger is the Beet Sauce.” As a rule, a person who has a good ap. petite has good health. But how many, there are who enjoy nothing they eat and sit down to meals only as an un¬ pleasant duty. Nature’s antidotes Jot tills condition are no happily combined In Hood’s Sarsaparilla that. It soon restores good digestion, creates an appetite, ami renovates and vitalizes the blood so that tiie beneficial effect of good food is Im¬ parted to the whole body. Truly hunger Is tiie best sauce, ami Hood’s Sarsaparilla ducos hunger. • A “cotton chopper” or horse hoe has just been invented by n South Carolinian, and works bo well that it is expected to quite supersede the oid-tinus hand hoe. The Inventor claims that bv using his implement the cotton planters may save them¬ selves just $7000,000U a year. '* UHiW Boh, ttmfViTiiousiieh Some Georgia newspaper men got hold of a poor Florida editor a few days ago and used Inm up pretty badly. When the poor fellow found himself beaten at every point lie fired thi* last triumphant shot: “Well, anyhow, Florida lias more sea coast than any other dog gono state In the Union.” nucklmi** Arnica Halva. The IlirsT Sai.ve In the world for CuU, Kruses, Sores, Ulcers, Suit Khoum, Fovov Korea, Tetter, Chapped Hand*, Chilblain*, Corns and nil Skin Kcupfioni, and poo lively cures Piles, or no pay required. II Is guaranteed to give perfect sail*faction, or money refunded. Price *5 cent* pa box. At Haim lack, Lucas A Co’a. Col. Jem Smith, champion heavey weight pugilist of England, has dial* lenged Gol John L. Sullivan, chap pion slugger of tho world. Col. Hnl n V an, however, has announced his in tention to retire from the ring, and w j|] henceforth devote hid attention exclusively to the business of drinking whisky. The Harber Shop. When you are in Augusta and wan have or hair cut go to tho Central IIo tel Bailier Shop. It is the plac An old negro man came into Vienna with a load of water melons last week. He asked 10 cents apiece for them. !„ fun some one offered him 11 cents apiece for them. lie said: “Aa! hal hx! No, sur, boss, you can’t swindle dis ole nigger no way like (lat. I ain’t gwiue ter sell dem millions fur less nor ten cents ” an icMUiKkr DOCTOR kpuk. HCHIPTIOW, Dr. C. P. Henry, Chicago, III., who hss practiced Spring medicine lie used many and years prelscribed say*: Last Clarke's Kxtarct of Flax (Papillon) knew Skin Cure in 40 or 50 ease*, ami never a case where tt failed to cure. “Know of no remedy 1 can rely on so implicitly.’’ Skin Positive cure for all diseases of th* Clarke’s pljt-ri externally. Flax Soap Is best for Babies Skin Cure 81.00 Soap 2-1 cents. At all Drug Store*. The Verdict l/ii*n!mun*. W. D. Suit, Druggist, Bipptis, Ind., tes¬ tifies: “ I can recommend Electric Bitter* as the very iiest remedy. Every bottle sold has given relief in every case. <‘ne man took six bottles, and was cured of Kheu matisui of 10 y(>»rs‘ standing.’’ Abraham Hare, druggist, Betivtlle. Ohio, affinn-: The In-vt selling incdieine I have ever han* died in my 20 years’experience, I* Electric 1 tiller* Thousands of other* havo aids ed I heir testimony, so Hint the verdict l« unanimous that Elect tie Bitters do curr 4 ,| - of the Uver, Kidneys bottle ut Blond, a half dollar » a liiicas «& Ilanirmrk.