Newspaper Page Text
Store 44 1 -Market 49.
Wo now Jmvc a phono in the market.
When you want market call 49.
When yon want the store call 44
Always call one of the above numbers
wlii'ii you want something to cat and want
t 111! I)(*st.
W. C. Chapman,
The Grocer.
THINGS LOCAL.
Had a way A Moore liavo put
up their fount. It is a beauty
Bring iih your lumber ami wi will
dress it for you while you wait.- ,1. N.
ChapmanA Son.
Dr. A. H. Beazley spent Fri¬
day in Union L’oint.
Bergstrom sells crockery and glass
are. Call on him.
Ilawes cloud, Ksq., visited War
ronton Wednesday.
The work on the new brick
stores is progressing' rapidly.
If you want your work done right
call on .1. N. ('liiipman A Hon.
Judge II M. ilolden and Mas¬
ter Frank are visiting Atlanta
this week.
Candies, Crackers and Fruits at
Bergstrom’s.
Miss Bertie Darden of Wash¬
ington is the guest of Miss
Blanche Asbury.
Mr. and Mrs, Kay Voazoy of
Barnett were shopbiug in Craw
fordvilie Wednesday.
Wo are prepared with our new ma¬
chinery to dress weather-boarding and
lumber of various kinds, match ceiling
and flooring,on the shortest notice.—
,1. X. Chapman A Son.
Little Miss May Phillips^ of
Bailout is visiting her aunt, Mrs.
W. F. Hubert.
Messrs. Horace Clark and
Claude Weinges of Augusta
spent Sunday in Crawfordville.
Bergstrom has a few Boxes of that
good cheap tobacco loft. Country
merchants will do well to see it.
Miss Belie Melton of Union
l’oint and Miss Clifford Thomp
son of Monticello are visiting
Mrs. A. J. Melton.
The season when t railing in land will
he brisk is near to hand. If you have
land anywhere in county list it with
me I sell all the land every year list¬
ed with me. No cost unless sale is ef¬
fected.-- .1. \ . Beazley.
Rev. C. A. Owens and Rev. A.
F. O’Kelley of Greensboro will
exchange pulpits next Sunday
morning and evening. Mr.
Owens will preach in Greensboro
and Mr. O'Kelley will till the
pulpit at the Baptist church in
this place.
Have You Tried
Those fresh Tomatoes aiul Cabbasre at
McCord’s:' He also has a nice [me of
Pickles, Olives,
And best Canned Goods of various kinds.
Hams, Shoulders, Sausage,
And other meats kept in stock.
J. W. McCORD.
Mrs. Ii. JO. L. Harris and Miss
Mary Fannie were in Crawford¬
ville Saturday.
A few pieces of that Swiss lace left
at Bergstrom’s.
Mrs. S. >S. Edwards who lives
in the country near Crawfordville
has been ill for some days.
Mrs. Janey Howard and chil¬
dren are visiting Mrs. Howard's
mother, Mrs. L. F. Stephens.
All k ini Is of wood repairing and black¬
smith work done without delay by J.
N. Chapman & Son.
Mrs. Joe Gee of Uuiou Point
visited Mrs. C. W. Gee Sunday.
Messrs Gee & Taylor are hav¬
ing a new warehouse erected
back of the hotel.
I f you can’t liml it elsewhere, call at
C. Bergstrom’s.
Miss Mabel Andrews will leave
Saturday for her home at Powel
ton to spend a vacation of two
mouths.
Let us set your tires according to the
best method. See cut of our machine
in tliis paper.—.1. N. Capman & Son.
Mr. Prior Veazey and Mrs.
Alva Rainwater attended the fu
neral of little Fannie Cnaptnan
at Union Point Thursday. ___<
Mrs. W. J. Norton went to Au¬
gusta Thursday to visit her
daughter Mrs. Jno. I 4 ’. Thomp¬
son who is ill.
Our new planing machine will dress
your lumber to suit you. We can do
the work in such short time.—J. N.
Chapman A Sou.
Little Fannie the ten year old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Addio
J. Chapman of Union Point died
at their home Wednesday night.
Several relatives aud friends
from Crawfordville attended the
funeral Thursday.
Beginning Sept. 1st all subscriptions
must bo paid in advance. Wo will call
your at tention to tho fact, when your
time expires, and will expect a renew¬
al ;:t least within 30 days after receipt
ot such notice. All subscribers in
rears will please take notice. We do
not want to inconvenience anyone, but
ibis is business. The postal authori
.As expect it. and we are but dealing
justly with ourselves and subscribers
when we require it.
Advocate-Democrat.
Some liac ip Tbongbts.
(Continued from Pag-) 1.)
1 consciences had been
reserve, whose
dead so long they had forgotten how
an honest man's conscience feels, with
great unction, solemnity and loud
squawking of 1 loyalty to the Demo¬
cratic party they placed a caption to
the Democratic ballot to cut out thou¬
sands Democratic of voters, who had been voting
the ticket four or six
years, exit said committee.—Enter
Clark in his iajughable act of eulogiz¬
ing this great Executive committee fol¬
lowed by the dailies and weeklies over
the state tha. are subsidized by the
railroads and corporations. With stud¬
ied bombasily they enact the parts
assigned to them and then wait for
the applause of the audience. But
the great ardiience—the people—don’t
applaud. Instead they denounce the
farce and disregarding the caption of
the ballot arid like'iiil honest men they
say decisively and emphatically that
a pledge imposed by those without au¬
thority or against public policy binds
no one and determine to exercise their
God-given ^right to a voice in their
states govern ment.
Exit Clark] and his eulogizers amid de¬
cat calls any hisses and a perfect
luge of figuJUive rotten eggs, turnips
etc., etc. j
Enter .Pin Smith, Russell, Estill and
Nunnally ; rid loudly and longly and
with much l(amentation and concern
for the dear public, they denounce the
hero of the play—Hoke Smith—as a
villain a boozer and all sorts of things
but the dea'r public don’t see it that
way, but instead give the little actors
such a chilhng reception till one little
actor falls f.i ad immediately and Jim
and Dick a'J.d the Col. retire to remote
parts of tly stage.
Reenter .'lark in his wearisome role
of again lambasting the Pops and ever
and anon, lie slips up behind the hero
of tlie play and stabs at iiis back but
his daggers are made of tin and do uot
get through his clothing.
Exit Chirk in his specialty of lam¬
basting th) Pops and Hoke and the
audience hisses.
Jim and Dick and the Col. are seen
in the back part of the stage with eyes
toward tl jurtains longing for Clark
to return Clark beckons to them
from b; ' "?<• wings and each
one
goes to dil t rent parts of the stage
where he Las the most friends before
him with the hope that each one will
get enough applause from his own per¬
sonal following to combine with Clark
and rout Hoke from the stage, but
amid an outburst of cheers for the
real hero they slink back to their cor¬
ners.
Re-enter Clark with his Constitution
and begins to mention prominently
Chairman Holloway, Yancy Carter,
! Jolm prepared FulIw>od the audience a ‘ ld othors lor ’ aud the havin return R
j to life of these PROMINENT men he
retires.
I Enter Holloway and Yancy and
John followe l by a great multitude
of other Populist executive committee
men, ton it! all. Clark is not on
I th e scene, but but even even tiiose those j,]
j p K , back ot the audience declare
tiie'curtaina. they smell* him strong behind
j This crowd of commit¬
teemen with ;much eclat and dignity
breathe the words to bring the Pop¬
ulist party batik to life.
i Exit Committeemen—enter Clark
j holding aloft l li3 Constitution with an
: announcement, covering half^of first
| page, of the return to life of the Pop¬
ulist party and the action of these
’prominent Gentlemen. The people
i if it he possible to be surprised at any
' thing Clark does) are surprised at his
; contradictory attitudes, lie takes the
position that the white primary is
j good enough and then encourages the
pulling out of a Populist state ticket
which will necessarily bring the ne¬
groes back into power.
Exit Clark amid the jeers and hisses
of hi-; audience. The populists recog¬
nize the scheme as a HowoIl-McWhor
ter plan to deficit Hoke^mkK Tom
Death From Lockjaw
never follows an injury dressed with
Buckleu's Arnica Sa.ve. Its antiseptic i
ami healing properties prevent blood
poi-i nitig. Chas. O-wnlri, merchant, of
R m s<i la a-ville, N Y., wiiter: ‘‘It cmed
Seth Burch, of this place, of the uglie ;
-ore ou his mek I ever saw.' 1 Curi s Cut
Wounds Burns ar dSorvs. 25, ■ at 1 tafia
i way A Moor'es drugstore.
THE SCHAD COLD TIRE SETTER
k The Machine that Does it Right.’
j A)
p
When this machine is used no tires are taken off, no bolts are
taken out and thrown away, there is no burning or marring of felloes,
no boring of felloes for new bolt holes, and no spoiling of wheels by
welding the tires too short. Four tires can be set in half an hour’s
time and any degree of dish can lie put in the wheel. The work done
with machine is a great deal neater than can be done by taking tire off.
You will find one at
J. N. CHAPMAN & SON’S
We also set tires the old way.
Watson exposes the scheme, showing
that Jno. Fullwood, a republican, and
Yancy Carter, long an office holder
under a republican, were the leading
spirits, with Clark and Hump in the
back ground. Clark, from behind the
scenes, notes the failure of his scheme
to arouse any populist enthusiasm and
goaded to desperation he sallies forth
once more in his old stale spcialty of
lambasting the populists. He fills the
columns of his paper with such rot and
thus tliefarce continues, ad infinitum.
There is no telling to what lengths
ho will go or to what absurd tricks he
will' resort. If Clark hopes to drive
off any old line democrats from Hoke
because the populists are for him. why
he is chasing the ever vanishing mi¬
rage. He will learn at last that the
honest democrats are only too glad to
have the populists help to drive out
this gang. They have voted with us in
our county campaigns and in our state
campaigns for six years ; Clark had no
objections then. If they wore good
enough in the past, why they are still
I better now when honest, true demoe
j racy needs them.
An Alarming Situation
frequently results from neglect of dog¬
ged bowels and liver, until constipation
becomes chronic. This condition is uu
knnwn to those who use Dr. King’s New
Life l’ills; the host arid gentlest regulators
of Stomach and Bowels. Guaranteed by
Hadaway & Moore druggists. Price 25c.
I have'265 acre tract 5Li mi. from
Crawfordville, no improvements ex
j l 'cpt one tenant house ; splendid river,
| hot toms and good uplands, 1 mile of
j Lyneville. H ill make some man splen
' did plantation. J. A. Beazley.
—:
We Set Your Tire While You Wait.
---WITH THE-
i HOUSE COLD TIRE SETTER,
The Most Wonderful Invention Of the Age brought to
a Marvelous State Of Perfection.
;
set is way. Now. by the man who says the old* way
as good as any. We hereby invite you to come and see for yourself.
More wheels are ruined by over-dishing than anything else. Only 20
to 30 minutes required to set all four of your tire-, there tore you can afford
to wait for your work, which we guarantee will be do, ein the most perfect
. j ........... manner. iiiiiouvi • ea-Reroomber IU.IIIWIH/VI that tutu we n c ut; do ,ijt all kinds ivjlltiS ot l/I Repair a t Work and wc assure
y0(1 l!m tow will find our prices very reasonable.
We Also Set Tires the Old Way.
We keep Horse Shoes and do Perfect Horse Shooing.
R. A. DOZIER, Crawfordville Ga-
Hon. Harvie Jordan to Speak.
Hon. Harvey Jordan, President
Southern Cotto Association, will
address the citizens of Hancock
and adjoining counties in Sparta,
Ga., ou July 4th, 1906. Visit¬
ors from adjoining counties will
be cordially welcomed in Sparta
on that day.
Jno. D. Walker, President,
Hancock County Divisiot S. C.A.
The &incerest tri bute that can he paid
fosuperil)ritv , s im nation. The many im
t ations of De vVitt’s Witch Hazel Salvo
that are now before the public prove it
the best. Ask for DeWitt’s. Goo 1 for
burrs, scald-, chaffed skin, eczema, cu's,
tetter, bruis is, boils and piles. Highly
recommended and reliable. Bold by
Hadaway & Moore.
I have 60u acre tract land for sale.
Large two story fi room house and
large well built barn and several ten¬
ant houses: in 1L, mi. school and 3 mi.
church. Well watered. This place
will go quick, as season for trading in
land will soon be here. J. A. Beazley.
NOTICE.
Alex Stephens Camp of U. C.
V. are requested to meet at the
court hour>e in Crawfordville at
10 o’clock Tuesday, July 3. By
order of S. J. Flynt, Command.
The sworn statement of the manufact¬
urers piotects you from opiates in Ken
nedy’s Laxative Honey and Tar,—thecough
s.vrup that diives the cold out of your
system. So.fi bv il.-i da way & Moore.
M itli this machine we guarantee
that we wil not over-di-h your
wheels and that wc will not hurn
or heat up your wheels getting the
tires off and getting them hack, and
’hat t tie rims of the wheels will not
oe torn up getting the bolts out and
putting them bacit, for we do not,
have to take the tires off nor the
holts out. And we also guarantee
that the tires sec on this machine
"’ill stay tight longer lhan will