The Georgia cracker. (Gainesville, GA.) 18??-1902, October 02, 1897, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

A FAULT OF YOUMMEEH. YOUR EYES OPEN JbfflhS. ® c Fu UT restoredtu a * / fif ' Ultj lZS > * a short time. One 111 /VV 5 b.-,x tablets *1. j* 1' 53Td “Si^Three* & 1 ufit 2^5 l&W** ™*P-2s * Y, / I VAT il 2 Writefpr partlc-«« j 1 .1 Ill! 5Sg Q l»rsto »g j la 1 illv T* gS HAGGARD’S 9.8 Ilu* s SPECIFIC CO. *.« iflUL? H Atlanta, Ga. They cure all Kidney, Bladder, Uterine, Prostatic and Urethral Affections; impart vigor, and Over come effects of excess and indis cretion. Containing remedies that act as a tonic to all mucous and gland secretions,* they impart vigor to all of the organs and healthy action to all of the func tions of the system, and to build up the entire organism. In other Surely if the word REGULATOR / s not on “A grave fault with a goodly number of young men is a disposi tion to quarrel with their sur roundings, whereas the real fault is not there,” writes Edward W. Bok, in “Problems of Young Men, ” in the October Ladies 1 ! Homq Journal. ^ “Young men do | not seem clearly to realize that where they are they were intended to be, and for some mighty good purpose, too. The place where a j young man finds himself is exact- ly where his Creator meant that he should be. Therefore he is capable of filling it. God makes no mistakes. But it is meant TREE AND CALOMEL. A Novel Way of Preserving the' Fruiton Trees. A farmer living in Clarke coun ty has made a novel experiment in the’way of preserving peach trees and their fruit. Into each tree he bored a small ! hole and put therein a teaspoon ful of calomel, and then stopped up the hole. The result was that all the fruit on those trees ripened perfectly and were without blemish. Fruit on other trees nearby was faulty and the crop unsatisfac tory.—-Athens Banner^ J Mouse Making a Century JE&un. A wheelman of Corunna, Mich., has to thank a mouse for the ad^ dition of ninety-eight miles to his cyclometer record, says the New York World. He hung his bicycle from the cellar ceiling the other evening, not far from a swing shelf, where food was kept. A mouse bent on supper reached the shelf, and when he had sampled the Viands, leaped to the tire of the front wheel. That immedi ately began to revolve, and the mouse naturally ran to the highest part of it.. It couldn’t stay on top of the tire and it couldn’t get enough foothold to jump to the wall. So it ran round and round the revolving wheel, and the next morning was found, al most exhausted, but still running with ninety-eight miles to its credit. I The True Remedy. -W. M. Repine, editor Tiskilwa, I1L, “Chief,” says: “We won’t keep house without Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds. Ex perimented with many others, but nev er got the true remedy until we used Dr. King’s New Discovery. No other ! remedy can take its place in our home, as in it we haye a certain and sure cure for coughs, colds,-whooping cough, etc.” It is idle to experiment’ with other remedies, even if they are urged on you as just as good as Dr. King’s New Discovery. They are not as good, because this remedy has a record of cures and besides is guaranteed. ?- It never fails. Trial bottles free at M. C. Brown & Co.’s drug store. lanta, Ga., says: “I take pleasure in stating that I have ^used and . tested your Specific Tablets with splendid results. Their effect on the genital and urinary organs is all that could . be desired, being both curative and invigorating. Where there is loss of manhood, weakened vitality, or nervous de bility, they act like a charm. W. C. Smith, M. IV’ Dr. C. R. King, well known as the discoverer of King’s Royal! Germetuer, says: “I have tried ] Haggard’s Specific Tablets, and find them an excellent compound. Their therapeutic virtue ae a nerve tonic, hepatic and general secre tory stimulant, giving vital tone to the entire system, makes them a superior remedy. j C. R. King, M. D., Specialist.” Atlanta, Ga., April 28, ’96. j Rev. A. R. Holderby, M. D., j pastor of Moore Memorial church, I and physician in charge of the dispensary on Luckie street, says: I “I have tried. Haggard’s Specific ! Tablets, and find that they readily and promptly act in relieving gen- J eral debility and nervousness. j A. R. Holdebby M. D.” J “Ihave tried Haggard’s Specific J Tablets in a few eases, and eon-j aider them the best nerve and! uterine tonic I have ever used. I Would recommend them to all I parties suffering from nervousness! or-any uterine, trouble. . j " A H-. CtTLPEPPEB, M. D.” The grand jury of Madison county, Ga., has recommended the building of a new court house at a cost of not more than $8,000. />Af T\ Sioo.oo in Gold given E if II II away, by The Youths’ Vv JLrf ■ Jr Advocate; Nashville. - ; Tenn. to the person who Given Away. S.&'SSSXgS the name DRAUGHON. Send, before the con test closes, for free sample copy of the Tooths* Advocate, which will explain the offer in full. The Youths* Advocate is a semi-monthly journal of sixteen pages, elevating in character and moral in tone. Especially interesting and profit able to young people.' but read with interest and -profit by people of all ages. Non-denominationaL Stories and other interesting matter well illus trated. [Mention this paper when writing:} “ | The Right Idea. I A western paper, with ideas of J its own as to the proper method of receiving pay from those'it J serves, has printed the following [editorial: “Persons knowing themselves indebted to thiB office are re quested to call and settle. All those indebted to this office,-and not knowing it are requested to I call and find oat. All those knowing themselves indebted, and not wishing to call, are requested to stay in one place long enough for ns to catch them. ' All those who' are not indebted are re-1 quested to call and get indebted.”] Liver Ills Horse Owners! Use GOHBATJXT’S j^gsgPQaustic H3L Balsam Like biliousness, dyspepsia, headache, consti pation, sour stomach, indigestion are promptly cured by Hood’s Pills. They do their work A Safe Speed; and FasUiri Can The Safest, Best BLISTER ever used. Takes the place of all liniments tor mild or severe action. Rpnifirp;nil Bnnches or Blemishes from Horses and Cattle. SUPERSEDES ALL CAUTERY OR FIRING- Impossible to produce tear or burnish. Every bottle sold i3 warranted to give satisfaction Price SI-50 per bottle. Sold by druracists, or sent by express, charges paid, with foil aireettot» for Us use. Send for descriptive circulars. THE LAWRENCS-WILLIAMS CO.. Cleveland O, easily and thoroughly. B B ■ Best after dinner pills. I B I Q 25 cents. All druggists. ■ III Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. The only PiU to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Sick-poison is a poison which makes you sick. It comes" from the stomach. The stomach makes it out of undigested food. , The blood gets it and taints the whole body with- it. That’s the way of it, The way to be rid of it is to look after your‘digestion. If your food is all properly digested, there will be none left in the stomach to make sick-poison out of. If your stomach is too weak-to see to this properly‘ by itself, help it along with a few doses of Shaker Digestive Cordial. . C' ■ ' That’s the cure of 'it. Shaker Digestive Cordial is a deli cious, healthful, tonic cordial, made of pure medicinal plants, herbs and wine. It positively cures indigestion and prevents the formation tof. sjek-poison. At druggists. Trial bottles 10 cents. tug thi imoile. Menstruation. “I take pleasure in recommend ing Haggard’s Specific Tablets. I have used theca, with great success in several cases of painful and suppressed menstrnation and acute cystitis. -J. L. Hull, M.3X” “ Finally, in offering the tablets to the public, *we claim for them that they are superior to ailknown remedies, and accomplish results unknown to medical science. On this point we challenge investiga tion! and will be gladT to have the medical profession test their mer its, And give the pnblic the benefit of results. ' All made of. Best Ma- -cSmsidS/miSa&i terial, with Best Work- L■’ •_ t 'X * mansliip, in Best. Sian- ner. Most economical . * in use of fuel, splendid39 H - . ^.steamers, and most free ; / Kf from sparks. More LEF- XT - EEL ENGINES in use ^ ■ — - —- .throughout tnc Ajutli than any other make. Range in capacity from 3 horse-po^er up. All about these engines in new pamphlet “D,” copy of which, with price*, and any further information deisired, furnished free on. application to PLEASANT TO TAKE. Will Relieve Every Time. Sure Cure! INSTANTLY RELIEVES INFANTILE COUCH, ? COLD, CROUP OR CRAMP. If these remedies are not on sale in your locality, order direct from Haggard Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. Chewing Gum. The habit of" chewing gnm is not a modern one by any means. It appears that the soft eyed Hin doo ; maidens,- as far back as in the time; of the "Vedas, were .in. the habit of chewing Kashmr gams, if a stanza in an ancient Sanscrit poem is to be believed. These gums were said to sweeten the breath and redden the lips, and if the almond-eyed, indolent daugh ters of the East chewed in the dreamy fashion of their climate and temperament, perhaps the effect was not so irritating to the nerves, nor pffensive to the taste, as the vigorous and audible mas tication of the modern American girl. The temperature of the cucum ber is a degree below that of the surrounding .atmosphere. It is, .therefore, apparent that the ex- a cucumber” ■ession “cool as scientificially correct, Without A Rival. As a positive cure for sprains,bruises, and pains of all kinds, Salvation Oil has no equal. Mrs. Frank Juif, 518 Gratiot Ave., Detroit, Mich., writes: “I used Salvation Oil in my family and can say it lias no rival as a lini ment; it certainly cures pains. I sprained my ankle and it cured me and since then I have always used it for any pains and bruises.” Salvation Oil is sold for only 25 cents. No other remedy will do the work as promptly. IT CURES ECZEMA AND ALL SKIN DISEASES. If you are afflicted, swap 50 cents for a box. It will be the best trade of your life. At all Drug Stores, or by mail Upon receipt of 50 cents in cash or stamps. J. T. SHUPTRINE, Savannah, Ga. For sale in Gainesville by Dr. E. E. Dixon & Co., M. C. Brown & Richards Drug Co. ON THI8 DEPENDS. The Father’s Patience,. The Mother’s Happiness, The Baby’s Health. After serious illness Hood’s Sarsapa' rilla has wonderful building up power. It purifies the blood and restores per fect health. , "-SUSl n lit 111 ii i ii i lull i Hi i Li r; fm i f Royal mokes the food pure, wholesome and delicious. POWDER Absolutely Pure ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. “THE COLONEL.” In the Atlanta Journal several weeks ago Thomas R. R. Cobb printed a character fketch which he called “The Colonel.” The friends of Colonel Lon Livingston, congressman from the Fifth dis trict, will agree that he and “Col onel Don” bear a striking resem blance to each other, and from the fact that Mr. Cobb and the congressman have campaigned to gether it will be suspected that in .writing “The Colonel” Mr. Cobb has been more a historian than a ftioyei mt. [ According to Tom Cobb’s viva- cious sketch he and Lon, whom [ Tom in his screed calls “Don,” fell to watching the politicians in the Kimball House as their pulled r and jerked one another at their [wirework. After shooting a flood »f tobacco juice between his fingers ■tome distance across the floor, the ‘colonel” adjusted his spectacles rad remarked: ‘Nothing’s too high or low for these little fellows to barter and sell. The other day a boy running for page in the house traded the rote of a state senator to a gen tleman who desired lo be justice >f the supreme court.” “You surely don’t mean that, ;olonel,” said I. “To be sure I do, and the meau- ?st part of it was after the supreme jourt candidate got the little >age’s senator and was elected he refused to deliver the promised rote to the boy. The youngster rot there nevertheless.” My surprise at this story seemed amuse the colonel greatly and said: “That’s nothing; a gentleman for secretary of the senate years ago and the repr;sent- from his county was a jolly who was brand n^w in legislative business. The can- got Pat to let him trade Irishman’s vote and afterwards legislator told of it in about way: “Now, begorra, how was Oi.to bow miny jedges and silici- they’d be avthim, whin naver of them had Oi heard of or before? But, Bill, you bet, knowed thim all, and he’d to me,Bill would, with and he’d say ivery toime, Bill would, ‘Now, Pat, the mon you’ll vote for,’ thin O’d say, ‘Sure, Bill, and thot he is.’ But Bill coom so much and he coom so often till at last Oi said, ‘Be St. Patrick, Bill, hQW miny be they?’ ‘Not anither wan now of thim, Pat,’ says Bill; ‘Oi ain’t agoin’ to trade you any more, my old liberty-loving, pa triots South Georgia citizen, for Oi’ve done already swapped you. off all around.’ ‘How’s thot, Bill?’ says Oi. ‘Why,’ says that domned fellow, Bill, ‘Oi’ve traded ye, my friend, Pat, to ivery mith- er’s son av thim on both sides in ivery race.’ ‘Good Gawd, Bill, says Oi, ‘is thot honest politics?’ ‘Jest as honest as honesty,’ says Bill; ‘all politics is.’ ‘Well, thin,’ saye Oi, ‘what in the h—-41 am Qi to do whin the votin’ toime cooms?’ ‘Oh, thot’a easy,’ says Bill, ‘all ye must do 19 to play sick in y*our room and stay in your bed.’ Aud thot same thing Oi had to do, and, begorra, whiniver a bloody candidate av thim coom knocking on my door Oi yelled at him thot Oi was sick with the stomachache down in me bed and Oi could hear old Bill on the out side fellin’ av ivery wan av thim thot my belly wuz in a extreme fix. and iu no way to be carried to a caucus—not eveD a democratic caucus. And thot’s the way Bill coom to be secretary, and up domn mon has iver traded me since thot day, and* none av thim niver will.” “Did that actually happen, col onel?” “Yes, sir, it did, and I knojv all the parlies well, and such things occur every session of the general assembly.” While we were chatting at the cigar stand we saw many ladies promenading the arcades of the Kimball and they would lean over the balustrades to watch with great interest the seething poli ticians below. A gentleman near us asked one of his companions if he had noticed how such scenes attracted women. “I have,” said he; “why is it?” “Because thev are natural born gamblers. It’s in their nature to take great risks. No -man could ever be born unless the very na ture of woman was recklessly that of a gambler.” “Yes,” said an eloquent and poetic young fellow from Augusta, “they sit fascinated yonder that they* may watch the most terrible game man can play, the game wherein Rome’s lofty powers were won and lost—the game that gave Greece names which will keep the name of Greece alive- forever—the game that has, does and always will absorb the lion’s share of man’s heart, soul and mind—the fierce game of politics.” “It is an absurd thing,” said an old whitehaired official who has been sucking the public teat for thirty years and who was flocking with the boy’s to keep on the in side. “Yet,” said a serious faced man who had just bought a cigar, “while these very men were gath ering here the biggest player of them all was struck from the stage, which only plunged the re maining actors deeper into their excited play.” “Death can’t stop the game observed the colonel. “No,” rejoined the gentleman, “it may vary the stakes or change the players, that’s all,”- CAUGHT IN THE ACT. Two Ladies Discover How They Had Made Themselves Dis agreeable, Two ladies were standing on the door-step of a house in George town, where but a moment before they had rnng the bell, and were waiting to be admitted. One was talking along very intently, when the taller woman interrupted her. “Be careful,” she said, “some body may hear you.” “I’m very particular,” replied the other. “I looked all around before I said anything and there was nobody iu sight.” “That’s what I thought once, too, and I made a serious mistake. I was calling once, just as we are now, and waa with a woman who could and did say the meanest things about people I ever heard talk. I’m not given to that kind of thing usually, but I do love a bit of gossip, and sometimes I am led into saying things I shouldn’t. On this occasion the lady we were to call on was not a favorite of mine, and when the other woman said something sarcastic I chimed right in and said I thought she was the silliest and homeliest and dowdiest and 6tnpidest woman of my entire acquaintance, and that I only called from a sense of duty anyhow. And a few other things like that I said. “Well, we were let in after long wait, and the reception was the chilliest I ever met with, couldn’t understand it, for we were really T on good terms, as those things go, and we got out as soon we could. That night I told my husband about it when he came home, and he wondered at it too. Next evening he came in IMMONS Nothing else is the same, it cannot be and never has been put up by any one except J. H. 2EILIN & CO. it can be easily told by their Trade Mark He. smiling, aud told me that the next time I had anything to say about my neighbors on their own door steps I had better first see if there were any speaking tubes to tell on me. That explained it all in second. A doctor used to live in that same house and he had a speaking tube at the door, as physicians do. The lady we were calling on had never changed it, and as I found out afterward, the mean thing, she used to sit close to the other end of that tube and listen to what people might be saying at the door. “She didn’t make much by lis tening to me, and she didn’t dare to tell me that she knew what I thought of her, and I didn’t care if she did know, only since that time I have been more careful. There’s a tube up there, eee?” and the tall lady pointed to. an inno cent looking month-piece pouting out of the door-frame. However, there was no response to their ring and as they met the lady coming in just as they started away they felt perfectly safe and hadi a pice call. —Washington Star. Society the Best Teacher of Eti quette. The best book of etiquette is that great one, the best society. If you feel awkward or uncertain watch those people whose man ners show that they are conver sant with all that is best. In im itating them you will noi be apt to make mistakes. The average American girl is quick at recog nizing her mistakes and seldom re peats one after she realizes her er ror. She is kind of heart and sympathetic, and because of her quick wit and these two virtues she will always be a gentlewoman in the best sense of the word.— Octoher Ladies’ Home Journal. TJucklen’s Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores; Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fe ver Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chil blains. Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Tiles or no pay re quired. It is" guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per dox:. For sale by M. C. Brown & Co. FOR DRIVING COTTON GINS, MILLS.ETC. The Best and Most Economical Power is Furnished by the