Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by R.J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation.
About The Advocate-Democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (April 9, 1897)
Pure I v n floral ?>i ■a* fWrmft In u ;*,• t and nerd* UxmI treatment The Irritated, dli -W.-4 r»c frx/tbcfj njiti fsAhf'ti H fid 1 * Hi! !;* 1 ’ a Patron ya an Alabama ImJtiHtry Use Glory Si*ot/'b Snuff. H»*e ailvertiaoiueiit In another *-ohinm. Ufa mi I!ss':h Hjtpliine** ,i ,d ti ft'n'new depend upon pure blood. H«r- 1 -. rflia m «4 pnrnb'ood< Tbi* i* the t in - to t-iko Hood** Sar~ «ptrilla. beenuge th*» blood it now lolled *|fh impu¬ rities wh cU mu * be promptly expelled or fee* tb will be in danger. Remember, Hood’s Sarsa¬ parilla I* tlie l«v.t In font the Oil.Trim Blood I’urtflur Bold by all drtiitriutu $1. .It fur $$. Hood’s Pills net 1 armoni mJv wifi Ho 4*» barrupartlU. 'ickLeif MOV *TrtLF,i,H -tt, f 'b.tr/d L L mf [: i 1 Nsuw" Wh*v« th®« m»tt«r V * |.»TTf.« ** Pop r.Httyh t »BO glar-kl Ug, IUi<l h*'l *< UTTir, itm I • 'km, k !!>• ” r.lTTVH I *r'It "Quirk i%m hoffHs UiJrtHijrh saoklA* ’ I'iOK |4«*I LYO ISI A c o*s _ SMOKING EXTRA TOGACCG from tho^Pnrtmt, R«»retu Ifio.k «•«••-’ with hp■». ’ ta. i o»icb. / > a /; t on /o f a s A Plea van (, Cool *n fti i t*l 5moke. \ LVUN 4 CO TOSACC9V Kl». OUHNA' O C I - - - — —-- Who *7 „ „ ^ Opened lh< ; ^ j bokUe ©( niREx* i ‘ Rootbeer? The popping of n / cork fromalKittle of * Jlirrv is a signal of \ _»-/ V good health and plea¬ v sure. A sound (lie I old folks like to hear I —the children ain’t resist it. j ti HIRES I Root beer le compost'd <*f tlie S very Ingredient* the •vatoni tlic dlgCKlfoti, rtNiulran. Aiding aoothhig 1 lit MrviNi, purifying ttio IiWm oil. A temimr »nce drlule for temper* »m'e H«4e .mlr a* 8 - Th" t I'O rhii». e \ A (»•* kagr nmIh '• gulittM. Alda •W»T*I»4W*. WANTFO J l: KSlPK.NT or irnv/viii "Y *pl AtmCHI If f • ut tills I’U m < . glu work ■OH A>V K HKFlNJNli CM.. i'l«v«UnO, *> MllJ for *•*<»<» |uv*nUoa* Y. r* k l V*. 4*6 Mwmy, N Am. N. V. No. 14 1897 It! UlMt. Hiokl I’Y »1 ruyi»t&rA. C OM S PENS* ON . ”“3 {L $333.5 Pistols and Pestles. The duellingr pistoi now occupies its proper place, in tho museum of the collector of relics of barbarism. Tho pistol ought to have beside it tho pestle that turned out pills like bullets, to be shot like bullets at the target of the liver. But the pestle is sti’.l in eviuence, and will be, probably, until everybody has tested the virtue of Ayer’s sugar coated pills. They treat the liver as a friend, not as an enemy. Instead of driving it, they coax it. They are compounded on the theory that the liver does its work thoroughly nnd faithfully under obstructing conditions, and if the obstructions are removed, the liver will do its daily duty. When your liver wnuts help, get "the pill that will." Ayer’s Cathartic Pills. a coloBy o hail bought U bilge tract of land six miles south o t Washington, Ga. The colonists are pleased with their new I home, ami, as they pay cash for e.v ; "rything, their neighbors are very | much pleased with them. } J "Villn. inoC; altpf c give place to cataclysmic dynuinlb a t h<‘ war fare of the future. (.'ap’aln Zitlin.sk! thinks. After a man is dead it does not matter to him what killed him, but hin surviving friends generally prefer to nee enough of Him left to afford at least a pretext for u funeral. Ri,me one recently called the atten¬ tion of a Chicago paper to the curious fad that a man may be elected Vice President of the United States who could not serve as President In case of the President's death. The reason for this Is that the Vice President may be as young as 30 years, but the Presi¬ dent must be 45. In the cane of right actions which may be difficult or unpleasant, one will perform then, •be sake of some hoped-for reward they may hold In store for himself, another for the real good they are to accomplish—their ac¬ tual results. This is the true distin¬ guishing line which divides much seem¬ ing liberality, much apparent self-ab¬ negation from tbe true spirit of sacri¬ fice. Order and method are the conjurer* by whose aid a man of very average abilities may, if he chooses, *ecuro to hlmnelf the blessing of never being bur ried. Only arrange properly the quark turn of work which is to begot through In a day or week, or any fixed period, | and a small margin over and above the 1 bare part of space It, and absolutely that margin needed will for be avail* each j ; able for tbe chance distractions for which people complain that they hava 1 qo lime. . . - In a country town In Kentucky, aay» Flari>vr‘ii Drawer, tl»-ro is a store j where they sell “ ’most everything.” The voting man vvlio doe* the st-liiue umlders himaelf a brilliant hand at nqiartee. t n,. prnctlCM hi s. skill on his patrona ln general, with a preference for col- . onsl ones. An old • auntie" came In mi a taarket day and eemis Inquired: satin | . "Voia *i*‘t got #o o’ cut • iqtiintln’, I. ,v««r hadn’t, auntie. I didn’t say I “Well, you needn’t be no smart, ml»- | ter. 1 ain’t arst you isn't you; I am • you ain’t yau. Ia you?” | UtmaVft O. Milclieli, w’no la known to the reading public us "Ik Marvel," author of tlio ifelightfnl “UeverloB of a Bachelor" and “Dream Ufe." Bpends I s declining years quietly at Edge wood, near New Haven, Conn. Sur rounded by his books, hi* garden, and ills forest, he is happy and contented in the memories of a well-spent life. In j personal appearance tie is about the av erage height, somewhat stout, with broad shoulders. He has a gentle face, ■ with kindly blue eyes, and soft white whiskers. He has uo fads or fancies, but ha* a horror of being “written up” in (he newspapers. Armour’* Frugal Ilubit*. Philip I). Armour, the Chicago mil llimalw-, carries Into his busbies* the working habits be learned as a boy on hi* father’* New York farm. He rises ivitli the sun every morning, has break fast at <1 o’clock, and Is at Uls office by 7 o’clock. At uoen he has a slin pie luncheon, usually consisting of nothing but bread and milk, after which, of late years. It Is his custom to take u short nap. lie Is In bed uau ally by » o'clock every night. He be long* to several clubs, but rarely vhe It* them. He thinks a young man stands as good a chance to make a for ! »ne now as at any time In the past There was never a better time then ' the present.” he says, “and tbe future will bring even greater opportunities - than the past.”—Evening Sun. FASTEST TORPEDO BOA r - The Farragut the Swiftest of th* United States Navy. Tiie United States navy now jpsscsses the {aatest torpedo boat in thl worid. she ha3 been christened with fbe name of Farragut. Thirty knots an hour is tP e speed w f,j(h this wonderful little craft reach ed on one trip on the Poto mac. That i: equal to over thirty-four htiies an pour. If she could maintair Buch a speed across the Atlantic sfc* would make the trip in less than fc# r days, thereby leaving the fastest li»* rs days behind. J The Farragut, otherwise town as torpedo boat No. 6, was bui 1 by 1 be Herreshoffs at Bristol, R. I. ber trial trip at Bristol she avf r ** e d in five runs over a twelve-mi e course 28.74 knots an hour, equal to miles an hour. This is the best re 00 ™* h® ld by any torpedo boat. On her subsequent trip from Newport to Brooklyn she averaged t T ' eDt J'~^ ve miles an hour in spite of b 3ev 7 seas and a northwest gale. Only CK 1 of her three boilers were used. ‘I tk Then she proceeded to hington for inspection hy the Secretly Potomac. t^e Navy. This took place on th and it was on this occasion that she showed her ability to make of er thlrty four miles an hour. Her engines even then were not pressed to do tneir utmost. Vs in most other cases it is expected that her machinery will give better r<®°^ after a certain amount of use. Those on board during th* trial trip Included Secretary llerbeu» General Alger, who is now Secretary War; Mr. Wilson, head of the jtepartment of Agriculture; Chairman j*ouielle, the House Naval Cod i Ltd'* and the Herreshoffs. There was a brisk wind blowing, and when the boa was mak ing fast time the landsmei could not keep their feet in the open, ao< * ^ ^ * 0 take refuge behind the smokestacks. The Farragut’s mea°urtr Ben f s are: j Length, 175 feet; beam, 1? feet; ex¬ treme drauelit, 8 feet. Her guaranteed ,sj < >#! was 27.5 knots an boF- Her en¬ gines are capable of deve°P’ n 5 4,200 horse power, which is great 3 * than that of the Boston, Atlanta an* Yorktown class of cruisers. The Karragut is formid^riy armed, although not so large as some other new American boats, whic 1 will come in what is known in EuF* a ' n< l as c!d , . tovpcdo-bont destroyer s - | carriage ^ on the <>™ port ‘^‘.’f^orward sid mrwaru, »■- 1 | other on the starboard S*i® amidships, ; and a third in the very Bt ® r11 0,1 tile i midship line. These carhiges all have load'd ^ “i^rge 'torped.is with 208 i p 0 „„ds of guncotton, anejono of these effectively place! bluest would send to the bottom the warship a jj na j especi^ty f q-j le Farragut is meant to ,p, a | destruction and not to resiBt it. g|j e j s long, slight, black, iiakclike in appearance. Her outer sted skin is not more than an eighth of an inch thick. Along the boiler space h«' sides are lined with several feet of cial, but this arrangement would not hi a defence against the fire even of sixpuunders. Her twin screws make mire than 400 turns a minute. Her boilert steam with a pressure of 240 pounds ti the square inch, and large blowers faft the turn a , ,. s into blinding incandescence that this pressure may be maintained, Lieutenant John C. Fredont, son of the famous Pathfinder, cocmantis the Farragut. She has room jaarters for four o(fi« ers and twenty-five men New York Journal, Value of a Nicke' “I learned itie value of i: nickel in a peculiar way to-day,” said a man who was waiting in the poetoffite to a New Tlme6 reporter. “1 walked just ^ corner {rom ^Nassau on B(V , kraan street and stopped to let a , JUU Wack give me a s >iine. Soon throe or four little feiio-fs gathered around me. “ ’Say, Chimmie,’ said c ’I wants dat nickel. You owes it me.’ " Yes. an’ when you get- It I wants dat four you owes me. See?’ Siiid another. 'You owes tne free celts fer put tin’ yer against dat bund!- dis after utxm.' said a third. “’You berried two papeS from me yistiddy,’ said a fourth addressing tbe second, an’ I wants i t penny.’ "Then counterclaims bet an to pour in. It appeared that each of the boys had debts and debtors, ai.-l when my nickel was handed over li was divid ed into pennies and they were passed around until they cleared about filly rents of indebtedness, My only re grot is that I can’t remember which of tlie bov; had the mi,nm when the fin and l t ransaction was iiishcd. ” a Ncsdic Machines. Nrod’es are ail made !•* maebin e E 5 LTX.-Sr»: ZTS h.v.. Pic- es the eye. U,e- sharpens unc tii.j - >ia>ent and g.ye» it that id miliar to the imrch.ts.tr. There is a. so a machine by which irodu* are minted and placed » the PHOT in whi?fa rhoy are sold, these after MLrd tocieu by the same coCtrivmnoe. free: tion inxrkable We direct to tile fttbtmenti: special following: atten¬ re. i ra 1 I>'a.r Madame: Your* to hand, 1 recoin - mend the Moore t rent mem because I have tried It, and know it to be just wbot he Wm iajs ft is. I wag cured by it, and have remained so ei^htyears; havek».own of A many other* being: cured of tne Tory worst oases. Hy all means get ft. Your* truly, W. E. P*xx. , * Tbe Bu&EKA a bo I^PKIKOR, vm is a A letter UK. ' writ ton by the late Rev. W. i E. Penn. the aotod Bvanro- ! )*■*. to Mr.«. W. H. Watson. ; New Albion, S. Y. j Restored fKs Rearing in 6 Minutes. My age is 88. I suf¬ fered from Catarrh 10 year*. Had intense head¬ ache. continual roaring and ringing in eard, took cold easily. My hearing began to fail, and for litree years wiu almost eistirejy deaf, and oon tlnuallv grew worse. Brery thing 1 had I tried failed. In despair com¬ menced to use Aeria ! Modieation in 186£, and the effect of the first — ------ application was simply wonderful. In less tnau Live minutes my hearing was fully and re¬ stored, and has been perfect ever since, in a few Months was entirely cured of Catarrh. Bui Brown, Jackaboro, Tenn. “Whereas I was deaf, new I hear.’' iag At suffered the uge of from W, after Ont«rrh*l hav^ Oegfaoss tweuty years, th&t wn 1 truly tTMvnkful to state } am ei\tir«ly cured by Aerial ' Mo'iieation; my bearing. .» which had become so bad that ’M y I couid not hear i< wafcoh tick , P or conversation, in fully re g&.«cor(y1. I will verify thia statement,. Wm. Kxtihie. Vt. _ Uerby Center, MsdioiRS for 8 Months’ TreatraantTreB To introduce thl* treatment end prove be¬ yond doubt tha t. Aerial Medication will cure bo.jfuuM, Catarrh. Throat Bend and Cuay Medicines macaw,. lor I vrill, for a -l-rt ttmo, Addrea,. tinea montlu’ treatment free. J. H. Moore, M. D„ Dept K. 7, Ctocianali, 0, Cotton. j • With careful rotation of crops and liberal fertilizations, cotton lands will improve. The application of a proper ferti }jygy containing" sufficient Pot asll Otteil , makes , tile , rliffV.rt Ciu _lt.lL nre . between a profitable crop and j^tilure. Use fertilizers contain ing e, not less than 3 to 4 % Actual Potash. Kifinit is a complete specific against “ Rust, ah .bout Pota«h—the rwuhsof is i r by actual « »nv fanner in America who will write forte. GERMAN 93 1 kaij^woKK^, ,iU ” ANDY CATHARTIC CURL COHSTIPATIOH 10 * o. ALL 25 ♦ SO* DRUGGISTS _ ABSOLDTELY GUARANTEED sST pie>n4 tmnklrt frn-- Ail. STF.ELlNil KEMKIIY CO., Ctiic.go. Mi.ntrpal, fnn.. orKvw Tork. *17. :\u Si %. ALABASTiNE.l OFF. 1 7’ IT WON’T RUB ’vV SsriS“' < n iW- ALABASTiNE.'* 1 For Male by Paint Dealers Everywhere. FREE r A Tint Card showing 13 desirable tints, also Alabastine r s. Ybut csanotthrive. ’ . «■’ 1 HHMS ati« liitiTOl— c l THE STANDARD PAINT *n „ STRUCTURAL PURPOSES. n,” Sample Card and T>e?cr:; ive Price List free by ma». Pamphlet, ‘'an^cest ns for Exterior - AfttK'SlO* H. W. JOHNS MANHFACTUBING CO., CHICAGO! 440 A 142 Rudolph St^ ^MhS., BOSTON’: W A :»_I . pie. safe. sure, ••onv u l names \A all rupt Westbrook. Maine. THE BOOK YOU WANT t© refer JUST ENCYCLOPEDIA UNIVERSAL KNCWLEDCE, is constantly, oar k&ndy as it CONDENSED Or profusely iilttstrated, about every »ubjec: under the «un. it contains SW page", treat* upon .. silver. \Y hen reading you donbt* »nd will be sent, tws.p i. r ... ENCYCLOPEDIA: - « erences to many zitzzZ AN --“riBE ;. “ »- f ran U K DUO. c fin ^“o ^ to . -,cb mine of vaiuabi. lamr«.tiD < manner, and w A.mdyof this book witt *»*» CEMTS , Meh ark for it. edurat.on ha* been neglected, while the nimf h ^ f d 2^ OO^TpU■ f ^, t T4 , 3e to theu who cannot readily co-nmaai the St.. knowledge N^Y. Qlja. they **** LISW4Mc HOUiE. .34 Leonard * W. L. DOUGLAS 3 si!r i ■m m ll ■3 DOLLAR jP» % * K Ti SHOE §y mm BEST IN THE WORLD FOB 14 YIARS this shoe, by merit alone 1 has distanced all competitors. | nOORSED TtE BY OVER 1 , 000,000 WRARXRS , as BEST In styla, fit and durability a any ahoc ever offered at $3.00. IT IS MADE Or AIL TEE LATEST SKAFE8 and STYLES and of every variety of leather 0WI SEALER IN A TOWN riven exclusive sale and advertised in local paper on reclpt of reaaonnble order. Write for catalogue to W. I. B0TCIAS, Brockton, Mass. 5 V-USE SCOTCH SNUFF. FOR SALE BY ALL DEALERS. Presents. Coupons. McNAMARA - LAIRD CO., MANUFACTURERS Birmingham, Alabama. Manufacturer PURCHASES" to wearer. IJltistrated catalogue free. Underwear CONSt/JHKlfe’ department. Address Hf/P FUK.S t'O., Troy, N. Y. k? Oil/KN M A N \V A N T K IK $Uf> per month and uapenses rolling cigars to dealers. Chance Novelties las of advance meat, experltm.-c unnecessary. dross given with CtlAa. our goods, BISHOP for & further informuti L-iUis, uu a id C. CO., «f. Mo, OET IMdu MARRIED, or correspond with pretty girls or ni« meajjsond for cl re alar; ladies free, boraa Oati Uo; rrespundlug Club, P.O. Box lit, Savannah, Ga. Here St Is! Want to learn all aliout a Horse? Hovr to Pick Out a tions Good One? and Know Guard Imperfec¬ against f so Fraud? Deteot Disease and w Effect a Cure when same is possible? Tell tbe Age by Che Teeth? Whet to call the Different Parts of the Animal? How to Shoe a Horse Properly? Ail this •uuottior Valuable luaonaetlou can be obtained by reading our lOU.PAEE IT/LUHTKATED HORSE BOOK* which we will forward, post¬ paid, on reoeipt of only 25 cents in Ntaiups. BOOX PUB. HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., N.Y. City.