The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, January 28, 1909, Image 6

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Cured Sweeney And Removed a Spavin Da. Sloan’s Liniment and Veterina ry Remedies are well known all over the country. They have saved the lives of many valuable horses and are a permanent institution in thousands of stables. Mr. G. T. Roberts of Resaca, Ga., R. F. D. No. 1, Box 43, writes:—"l have used your Liniment on a horse for sweeney and effected a thorough cure. I also removed a spavin on a mule. This spavin was as large as a guinea egg. I regard Sloan’s Liniment as the most penetrating and effective Liniment 1 have ever known.” Mr. H. M. Gibbs, of Lawrence, Kan. R. F. D. No. 3, writes:—''Your Lini ment is the best that I have ever used. I had a mare with an abscess on her neck and one 50c bottle of Sloan's Liniment entirely cured her. I keep it around all the time for galls and small swellings and for everything about the stock.” Dr. Sloan will send his Treatise on the Horse free to any horseman. Ad dress Dr. Earl E. Sloan, Boston, Mass., Station A. TBLOGA. The weather seems extremely warm for January. Mrs. J. S. Sitton is away on a several days’ visit to her son, T. M. Sitton, at Kock Springs, Ga, After spending several days with home folks, Walter McCa my returned to his home at Dot han, Ala. The Teloga school is progress ing nicely under the management of Miss Maude Sewell. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Jenkins spent Sunday with Robt. Hood and family. James McCamy, Jr., spent Sun day and Sunday night at Broom Town, Ala. Sam Sitton and sisters, Misses Myrtle and Mollie, attended the singing at Mr. Woods, near Chel sea Sunday,. Rev. A. F. Mahan preaches at New Hope next Sunday at elev en o’clock and will also be with the people at the young folks union which meets at the church in the afternoon at half past two next Sunday p. m. Rev. and Mrs. A. F. Mahan of Trion were pleasant visitors with friends in our community last week. We are sorry to report Mrs. James McCamy being in very ill health again. She is now con fined to her bed with cold and grip. '' X Cured of a Severe Attack of Bron chitis by Chambelain’s Cough Remedy: •‘On October 18th, last, my little three year old daughter contracted a severe cold which resulted in a bad case of bronchitis,” says Mrs. W. G. Gibson. Lexington, Ky. She lost the power of speech completely and was a very sick child. Fortunately we had a bottle of Chamberlain’s Cough Rem edy in the house and gave it to her according to the printed directions. On the second day she was a great deal bettor, and on the fifth day, Oct. 23rd, she was entirely well of her cold and bronchitis, which I attributed to this splendid medicine. I recommend Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy unre servedly as I have found it the surest, safest and quickest cure for colds, both for children and adults, of any I have ever use. ” For sale by Sum merville Drug Co. Superabundance. “Did, that manager discover any hn ■gar tn you’ play f “T»s," answered the gloomy author. “Us the whole thing was a jtak*.” The See* LultaMss. na motherly woman who has raised baJf a down children can beat all the Mraa that ever "dore” at staging Ini IBM* that many irrtl. - Gahaaton Mam. Baa FMBklta was the oldest signee st the Dadamtlon of Indepeodenca Impossible to be It is impossible to be well, simply impossible, if the bowels are constipated. You must pay attention to the laws of nature, or suffer the consequences. I ndigested material, waste products, poisonous substances, must be removed from the body at least once each day. or there will be trouble. A sluggish liver is responsible for an immense amount of suffeting and sen* us disease. Ask your doctor about Ayer's Pi' He '* vs v.hv they act directly on the liver. Trust '• i . .t< 'Jasx SEMINOLE Elmer Ragland , who has been visiting kinsfolks here has re turned to Omaha, Texas. Our district, 961, elected J. T. Weaver to meet the board of county commissioners Tuesday. Arthur Whitfield has moved to Lindale. If the coiton mills keeps tak ing our formers,that within itself will reduce the cotton acreage. Labor is scarce with us already and there will ly: a pretty good chance of land on my place to lie out and rest some. 40 or 50 acres not yet rented that was worked in cotton and corn last year. But I am not caring as it needs rest anyway. J did fully intend to cut my peach trees down and cultivate the land in cotton this year. But I have now decided to let them stand this year and work them and try the fruit one more time. We are having warm spring like weather in mid-winter. I am afraid winter will extend over into March and April. Our garden is green, the colards and turnip greens are groiwng like spring time. Born to Mr and Mrs. A. L. Bell about two weeks ago a fine son. Henderson & Co. will wind up ginning tomorrow. Mr. W. M. Cook carried the last of his cot ton this morning to Summerville Cotton Mills. Cotton is getting scarce here. Just now and then a hale is not sold, and the price has begun to go up some since the bulk of it is sold and gone out of the farmer’s hands. Not many farmers are able to hold cot ton. We cannot hold our cotton and pay interest. That does not pay the farmer. Neither can a farinr borrow money to run his farm even at 8 per cent and mak< it pay. But it will pay a farmer to borrow money even at 8 per rather than buy at credit prices It does not pay the farmer to go on a credit. Stay out of debt one year and ever after you will be free and know exactly what you are doing. Keep a correct account of all you spend this year for flour, corn, meal, oats hay, meat, syrup, sugar, coffee, tobacco, and everything else you buy and then this fall when your crop comes in give a correct credit and the overplus will be what you have cleared. A man does not know what he is doing unless he keeps an account. By so doing you will see your prof it if you have any, if not you will see what you lost and will know better how to start in another year. The merchant knows exact ly, or ought to, what per cent he is making and so should the far mer. We should run our farms on dollars and cents. Just the same as merchants run their bus iness and if we are losing money we had better change to some thing else and keep changing un til we make a success, or at least a small profit, or in other words, a living. I just merely give these pointers that some may learn before they lose all they have, as I know many are doing who do not know what they are making, whether anything or not If they plant 20 acres of cotton and come out at the little end of the horn in debt, the next year they plant 40 aeres the next year they plant 40 acres and come out dead broke. Plant less, buy less guano, make bigger compost heaps, make more to the land and get more money in the fall. G. A. Ragland. If you are hunting for a row, throw a rock at a man's dog; or criticise his children, or raise his taxes. These are all row-provok ers. —Marietta News. The Summerville News, Thursday, January 28, 1909. FROM UNCLE JIM FOWLER’S BOY Mister Editer:— Hab yer notis de society, or clubs dat am a formin roun about de kuntry what claims dey am gwinter walk in Christ’s footsteps fer a limited timeL Es dey ken do dat fer a number ob days, day shorely am under obligations to do so all de time But Mr. Editer dat feller what presumptions nuff to believe he ken do dat way fer a limited time aint gwinter do it at all. Dats gwinter be de irufe. Dat feller what am a gwinter bout umble lak feelin ob his week ness and seein as how he cums mity short ob his duty and how inperfec he am. My notion he de feller what will cum de niest walkin in Christ’s footsteps. Dem Clubs what am persumptus nuff to believe dey ken walk zackly in Christ’s foot steps are gwinter find out when de walkin match am ober dey gwinter leve hind dem amity crooked trail. Dese here patint medisin men am a gittin mity smart dese days. Dey foun out how as folk had quit persuin ov dey literatur and so dey changed da adverti ment. Dey would tart off wid dere fraud lak it wuz gwinter be some turrible sinsational matter kasc dey node dese Merican folks was monstrous spry to hanker arter sensations. So folks arter a while get quainted wid dat sort ob fraud and when dey saw a ar ticle what had spicious ear marks dey would jess glance careless lak long down de lines to see whether it was sho nuff readin mater or a advertisment and den some times de best a fel low could do, he would kasional ally git kotched. Now dese pat ent medisin folks done foun out as how folks done quit bein kotch dis way, and so dey am on to nudder dodge and it am a daisy fer it am ketchin of a lot of peo ples dese days. Dey gits up a article as if dey had nufin to do wid paten medisin, dregs and sicb lak, but jes written fer de good ov de public—a kind ov philan thropic job yer mite say—tellin as how by de mixin ob a few simple dregs yerself ,yer kan kur de cat-R, dispepsa, corfs, kolds, gout, chilblins, sore eyes, glanders kroup, disintery, di-rere, rumatiz, pink eye, big head, and so on, and so a pussen will say to his self dar mus be somethin in dis, as dat pussen has no interes in de mater ceptin fer de good ob de public, and so he goes rite strata arter dem ingredients and bless yer sole de feller what writ dat article up am de dady ob dem ingrediants, and so when folks gits well on to dis racket 1 cant say what de nex trick am a gwinter be. I think news pa pers orter keep differentpages fer de difefrent mater and hed em up kinder this way, “Helthful Lit erature, ’ ‘ ‘ Unhealthful Liter- ature,” “Bogus Advertisements, “Trufeful Advertisements,” “Frauds,’ Paid fer Readin Matter,’ and so on. Maybe doc tor Broughtin ob Atltnta am a gwinter nock dese paten medisin frauds outer bizness. Kase I see as he am now a full fledged kristin seinest. He sails it Enian uel Treatment, but it am kristian science pure and simple. De doctor say as how he tried to kur a fellow once by ebbery remedy known to de medisin fraternity to no good .and so he suaded dat feller dat he had overcame de disease and dat he was gwinter git well immegiately and darfore dis pussen did git well immegi ately’. I sho would lub to hab seed de doctor tried dat spirmint on my- boy Sam, what had eat a lot ob trash not. long ago. and wuz a rolin on de groun in tur rible panes widin his circumfrene< Uncle Jo Paterson cum long bout dat time an gib dat boy 3 table spoonfuls of ile mixed up wid a spoonful ob parajoric and rite away he fotch dat boy roun all rite party quick. I had rather risk uncle Jo’s treatment on dat boy Sam dan de doctor's spiri ment. Kase whilst I node de doc ter am fluent in wurds and mon strous eloquent in speech but wid Ml de eloquence he possess he couldnt’ hab pursaded dat boy dat his truble had bin removed ceptia it had bin removed. I ant rs* 1 ir I* I* no doctor, an I aint no scientif ic pussen but I jess node dat mag ination aint gwinter kure no bad kase ob de kolie. Now I nose dat, sho I dose. Uncle Jo say as how es I jess feed mi young nig gers plenty ob fat possums, yam taters, keep' dem home o nites and gib dem plenty ob kaster ile and wurk to do dey gwinter stay helthy. I specs dats so. Uncle Jim Fowler’s Boy. THE FARMERS’ CREED. Southern Cultivator I believe in the trinity of deep preparation, liberal fertilization and rapid cultivation of the soil. I believe in the making and sav ing of barnyard manure as the standard of all fertilizer material and as the surest means of enrich ing our soil so as to make paying crops. I believe in the imperative nec essity of adding humus to our soil. I believe in the great value of rotation of crops and of the plant ing of the legumes to add fertil ity to our soil and increase our yields. I believe in raising cattle upon our farms, that it is necessary of the proper development of the highest type of farmers, as well as a necessary part of any bal ance system of farming. I believe in growing home sup plies, that we may use our time and lands to best advantage, and for the surest profit and least strain. I believe in keeping out of debt so that we may be able to market our cotton and produce only when the market price will give us a living profit for our labor. I believe, first, in individual ef fort and merit, then in co-opera tion for the development of our farmers’ interest and home in dustries, that our people may be more prosperous. I believe in home-raised meat, home-grown corn, oats and hay ; and then 10-eent cotton. I believe in chickens, eggs, but ter ,potatoes, melons, onions, and cabbage being raised and grown both for home use and for sale, to increase the income from the farm. I believe in the use of all ma chinery that will aid us in the doing of more and better work, with less physical strain and ef fort. I believe in our farmers reading and improving their minds, re lying more upon brain and less upon the drudge and more upon the hustling modern ways of ef ficiency and skill. There is no case on record of a cough, cold or la grippe developing into pneu monia after Foley’s Honey and Tar has been taken, as it cures the most obstinate deep seated coughs and colds. Why Use anything else. Sold by all Druggist. FOLEISHONEWAR and heals lung. Administrator’s Sale. Georgia, Chattooga County: Under and by virtue of an order ’ from the Court of Ordinary of said . county passed at the regular Decern- i ber term, 1908, of said court, will be sold for payment of debts and distri- ! bution among the heirs of Luke Bass, deceased, on the first Tuesday in Feb ruary 1909, before the court house door in said county, within the legal hours . of sale, to the highest bidder for one half cash, balance due January Ist, 1910, with interest at 8 per cent per annum, what is known as the Luke Bass Home place in Chattooga county Ga., in the 6th district and 4th section and being parts of Lots Nos. 51, 50, 59, 85 and 86, described as follows: Commencing on Chattooga River where the south boundary line of said lot No. 86 crosses said river, thence with the river, to the branch, thence with the branch—the branch and ditch being the dividing line between T. P. Henry and Luke Bass estate—thence with the blanch and ditch to where the east boundary of lot No. 60 crosses said branch, thence soutli around the boundaries said No. 60 to the north east corner of the lands of Dr. Bry ant, thence south with his line to the private way leacing to and in river, thence west, southeast and northeast so as to include what is known as the flat iron piece, the same being three cornered, containing about one acre, thence east with said private way and the south boundary of said lot No 86 to commencing point, excluding therefrom Dr. Bryant’s ten acre tract north of said private way, all in one body containing 210 acres more or less. No, 1, Commencing on said private way where the Luke Bass lands adjoin the southeast corner of lands of Dr. Biyant, thence nortli eleven degrees east to a corner with Dr. Bryant, thence north 81 degrees east 17 3-4 rods to stake, thence south 66 reds to said private way, thence west with said pri vate way to commencing, containing 10 acres more or less. No. 2, Commencing on said private way 30 rods from the southeast corner of tract No. 1, thence north 28 rods, thence north 193-4 degrees east 150 rods to south boundary of lot of land No. 60, thence west with said bounda ty 45 1-2 rods to Dr. Bryant’s corner, thence with dividing line of Dr. Bry ant and Luke Bass estate, with east boundary of tract No. 1, and with said private way to commencing point, containing 32 acres more or less No. 3, Commencing on southeast corner of tract No. 2, thence east 21 and 2-5 rods with private way to Dr. Bryant’s corner, theme north with Dr. Bry ant's line, thence north 27 1.2 degrees east 150 rods to south boundary of lot No. 60, thence west wits said bounda ry to corner of tract No. 2, thence with east boundary of tract No. 2 to commencing point, containing 32 acres more or less. No. 4. The reversionary interest in Dower of Clara Bass, Commencing on the north west corner of Dr. Bryant’s tract; thence with the bounda ries of said tract to said private way thence with said private way 19 rods, thence north 21 1-2 degrees east tU branch, thence with branch to east l boundary of lot No. 60. thence south and west with the boundary of said lot to corner of tract No 3, thence with east boundary <>f tract No. 3 to com mencing corner, containing 60 acres more or less. No. 5. Commencing on said private way on the south east corner of tract No. 4, thence west, to river, thence ( northerly with river to branch, thence with branch 40 rods, thence west 122 rods to east boundary 7 of tract No. 4 and with said East boundary to commencing point, containing 35 and 3 4 acres more or less, excepting therefrom a 20-foot right of way on the west boundary, No. 6. Commencing on the north west corner of tract No. 5, thence with east boundary of tract No. 4 to ditch and branch, thence with ditch and branch to north east corner of tract No. 5, thence west 122 rods to com mencing point, containing 41 acres more or less. After selling same in parcels as above the whole tract will be sold and the Administrator will elect to take bids in parcels or in whole.—Except ing therefrom the reversionary inter est in Dower. This property was sold on the first Tuesday in January, 1909, and the whole interest bringing the greater sum was knocked off to John H. Sal mon at the sum of $4,000. Refusing to comply with the bid the same is re sold. Also lot No. 1 in block “J” in the East Side addition of the town of Summerville, known as the Herndon place. A map of the various tracts may be seen in my office. Thia January sth, 1909. J. N. RUSH, Admr. Estate Luke Bass. I Very Serious It is a very serious matter to ask for one medicine and have the wrong one given you. For this reason we urge you "a buying to be careful to get the genuine— BLack-drIgHT BT i,r Cr Medicine :ation of this old, relia le, for constipation, in d liver trouble, is firm ed. It does not imitate ines. It is better than : would not be the fa powder, with a larger 1 others combined. ID IN TOWN F 2 60 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trade Marks ~ Designs ’ Copyrights 4c. Anvon© sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive ipccuil notice, without charge, in the Scientific jfinerican A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific journal. Terms, ?3 a year: four months, Sold by all newsdealers. MUMN & Co. 36,Broid Mew York Branch Office, 625 F St„ Washington, D. C. KlLLtke COUCH *N» CUKg the LUNGS wm, Dr. King’s Naw Discovery FORCBI!gs HS AMD ALL THROAT A\3 UJMGTiiOt'BLES. GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY OR MONEY REFUNDED.