The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, February 11, 1909, Image 7
CHILDREN!
Vinol is the only preparation of
Cod Liver Oil that children will
take and which is easily assimi
lated by their delicate digestive
organs. It builds up firm, healthy
flesh, and makes little limbs
round and plump. Delicate chil
dren thrive on it and love to take it.
The body-building and strengthening
properties oi Cod Liver Oil but no
oil combined with peptonate of
iron, makes Vinol the ideal tonic for
delicate children. It tastes good and
always does good.
GROWING CHILDREN
play hard and work hard. They
use up an enormous amount ol
energy and vitality that needs
replacing. Give them Vinol reg
ularly. It keeps them healthy,
builds strong bones, sound flesh
and muscle and pure rich blood.
DELICATE GIRLS
"My 9 year old daughter was
' zeak, pale, and had no appe
ite. I gave her Vinol, and she
began to thrive at once. She
gained rapidly In weight, color
and strength.” MRS. W. H.
GILMORE, Durand, Mich.
VINOL QUICKLY CURES A COLD AND STOPS A COUGH
Yhibl
YOUR MONEY BACK IF VINOL FAILS TO HELP YOU
Summerville Drug Company
You can get Vinol at the Leading Drug Store in every Town and City in this State
EXCURSION RATES
Via Central of Georgia Railway
Company.
To Washington, D. C.—Account
Presidential Inauguration March
4th, 1909. Tickets on sale Feb
ruary 28, March 1, 2 and 3, 1909.
Final return limit March 10, 1909
Passengers must leave Washing
ton not later than midnight of
March 8, 1909.
To Birmingham, Ala.—Account
Laymen’s Missionary Movement,
Presbyterian church in the U. S.
February 16-18, 1909. Tickets on
sale February 14-15 and for
trains scheduled to arrive in Bir
mingham before 1:00 p. m. Feb
ruary 16, 1909. Final return lim
it leaving Birmingham not later
than February 20, 1909.
To Louisville, Ky.—Account
.Southern Electrical and Industrie
Exposition, Apr. 12-24, 1909. Tick
Kodol
For Dyspepsia and Indigestion
If you Suffer from Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas on
the Stomach, Belching, Sour Stomach, Heart-burn,
etc., a little Kodol will Relieve you almost Instantly
Kodol supplies the same digestive
Juices that are found in a healthy
stomach. Being a liquid, it starts
digestion at once.
Kodol not onD digests your food,
but helps you enjoy every mouthful
you eat.
You need a sufficient amount of
good, wholesome food to maintain
strength and health.
But. this food must be digested
thoroughly, otherwise the pains of
indigestion and dyspepsia are the
result.
When your stomach cannot do its
work properly, take something to
help your stomuih. Kodo) is the
only thing that will give the stom
ach complete rest.
Why? Because Kodol does the
same work as a strong stomach, and
does it in a natural way.
SOLD BY SUMMERVILLE DRUG CO.
SICKLY CHILDREN
cannot digest ordinary Cod Liver
Oil or Emulsion of Cod Liver OU
on account ol their greasy na
ture and nasty taste. It upsets
their delicate little stomachs.
Vinol contains all the medicinal
value they do and tastes good
besides.
“MY TWO CHILDREN,
who were puny and ailing, rap
idly gained flesh and strength
v. hen I began to give themVinol.
I proved that Vinol is a splendid
tonic for delicate children.”
MR. . C. ALLEN, New Bedford,
Mas .s.
ets on sale April 11, 12, 19 and
20, 1909, good to leave Louisville
returning not later than April
26, 1909.
For full information in regard
to total rates, schedules, etc., ap
ply to nearest ticket agent.
Shake Into Your Shoes.
Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder. It
cures painful, swollen, smarting, ner
vous feet and instantly takes the sting
out of corns and bunions and makes
walking easy. Try it today. Sold
everywhere. Sample Free. Address
Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
FOR SALE—An 80 acre farm
on the pike 2 miles north Lafay
ette. Running water, orchard,
tenant house and other out build
ings. Ground practically level.
Will sell reasonable. —T. A.
O’Neal, Lafayette, Ga.
So. don't neglect your stomach.
Don’t become a chronic dyspeptic.
Keep your stomach healthy and
strong by taking a little Kodol.
You don't have to take Kodol all
the time. You only take it when
you need it.
Kodol is perfectly harmless.
Our Guarantee
Go to your druggist today and get a dol
lar bottle. Theo after you hart used the
entire contents of the bottle if you can
honestly say that It baa not done you any
good, return the bottle to the druggist and
he will refund your money wlthoutques
tion or delay. We will then pay the drug
gist. Don't hesitate, all druggists know
that our guaranteels good. This offer ap
plies to the large bottle onl y and to but one
In a family Tne lart-e bottle contains
times »s much as the fifty cent bottle.
Kodol Is prepared at the laborator
ies of E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago.
The Future of Farming
In this good year, 1909, when
we are free from elections and
should be free from polities, we
know of no better theme that the
papers and the people could take
up and discuss than that of farm
ing. says the Cartersville News.
It seems to us that the future
of farming was never quite so
bright in our recollection as at
the present time. Even the farm
ers themselves do not realize ful
ly what advances have been made
in farming in a generation. Liv
ing on a farm at this day is not
what it was fifty years ago when
conveniences and comforts were
few and the grind of farm life
was something not easy to
endure. Today the farmer en
joys most of the comforts and
conveniences of the city man. In
vention belongs altogether to the
one hundred years just past and
think what invention has done so
the farmer in bringing into exist
ence for his use the improved
plows, reapers, threshers, gins
and implements to aid him in
cultivating and harvesting his
crops more conveniently and per
fectly. Then think of the many
things his family enjoys that year
ago were unknown, especially by
the farmers’ family. Education
and rural deliveries have done
innch for the farmer and there is
no reason why the average man
o f agriculture should
not now be as well informed as
the man in the town or the city
and he usually is. Home and
Farm cites numerous ways in
which the farmer finds himself
better off than he used to be
and also names certain things tha
will be his to appreciate and
enjoy in the future.
“The editor of the Home and
Farm dreams of a time when the
extension of the trolly lines, the
improvement of the railroad ser
vice, the establishment of postal
savings banks, the adoption of a
parcels post, the Use of electricity
and the use more and more of
concrete in building will have
made life-on the farm comfortabl<
cheerful and social, will have
brought the scattered farmers in
to close contact with each other
and with the world.
“Great changes do not come
suddenly in the social organiza
tion of any body of people. One
does not at first realize tdie in
evitable results following some
simple invention. Few persons
could have foretold the influence
of the invention of the cotton gin
upon southern agriculture or the
invention of the reaper and mowei
upon agriculture in the grain re
gions in the north and west.
“We have as yet in the south
not fully secured the benefit oi
the free delivery. The country ha
not yet utilized that branch of
the public service ac it should do.
It will not get the full benefit
of it until we have at least a
limited parcels post, so that the
farmer can telephone to his mer
chant at the cross roads or the
nearest town to send by the next
free rural delivery some small
package of goods that he needs
at once.
“We trust moreover, that there
will be a genral use of elec
tricity on the farm in the near
future. As yet it is not available
to any great extent, but in time
it'will be available, and electric
ity will do a great deal of
work that we now look to the
horse to do.
“Then there is the concrete
for building purposes. It ought
to do much to protect the farm
houses and farm barns from fire.
Properly utilized it will do much
to reduce the labor needed to
keep the dairy and the barn and
the kitchen walks about the house
neat and clean.
“Moreover ew dream of the
time when country schools will
be so good that there will be no
necessity for farmers with large
families moving into town to
educate their children. This
ought not to be a long look ahead
There should be graded schools
through the rurals districts with
a central high school, and arrang
ments ought to be made by farm
ers through co-operation for the
transportation of the children of
the neighborhood to central
schools which can be much more
effectively organized than the
HUNTING THE SEAL
The Dog Hood of the Atlantic la a
Desperate Fighter.
The seal hunters have been call
ed heroes, but they have earned the
title in doing just what their fa
thers and forefathers have done for
200 years —catching seals to make a
living. When we think of seals we
bring to mind the animals for
whose rich coat of fur milady is
willing to pay hundreds or even
thousands of dollars—the fur seal,
which inhabits the north Pacific
ocean. But in the waters of the
Atlantic lives another species,
which is also sought for its coat or
hide, which goes into many thou
sands of pocketbooks, satchels,
gloves and other articles, for which
it is especially valuable. So every
year hardy Newfoundlanders take
their lives in their hands in the
seal hunt, for not only is its coat
valuable, but the blubber of the
young yields an oil much prized for
different purposes.
There are four species of seals in
the waters around Newfoundland
and Labrador the bay seal, the
harp, the hood and the square flip
per. The harp seal—the seal of
commerce—is so called from hav
ing a broad, curved line of dark
connected spots extending along
each shoulder and meeting on the
back above the tail, forming a fig
ure something like an ancient harp.
As the hoods are often with the
harps, they are also taken for their
skins. The male, called the “dog
hood,” is distinguished from the fe
male by a curious sack or bag of
flesh on his nose. When attacked
or enraged he inflates this hood
with air so as to cover the face and
eyes, and it is strong enough to re
sist seal shot. When thus protect
ed he can be killed only by shoot
ing him in the neck and the base of
the skull.
Unlike the cowardly harp seal,
the dog hood fights desperately in
defense of his mate and young ones,
and if they are killed he becomes
furious, inflates his hood, while his
nostrils dilate into two huge blad
ders. As he rushes at his enemy
with floundering leaps, it is as well
to keep a safe distance if the hunter
is alone, for instances have occur
red where a fight between an old
dog hood and five or six men has
lasted for an hour, and more than
once a man has been crunched to
death by the powerful jaws.
The seal is a great traveler, but
depends on the rivers of the ocean
to take him’where he wants to go.
Like a good many other tourists, he
spends his summer in the north,
leaving the southern waters in May
and spending about three months
in the seas about Greenland. With
the beginning of the arctic winter
the seal horse starts on its long
southern voyage.—Day Allen Wil
ley in Van Norden’s. .
THROAT TROUBLES
WEAKEN THE SYSTEM
A serious illness is often brough
on by a neglected sore throat.
All throat troubles invariably
weaken the system and should
not be allowed to go unchecked
A gargle made with twelve
drops of Sloan’s Liniment in half
a glass of water will break up a
sore throat.
Sloan’s Liniment is anexcellent
remedy for tonsilitis, croup,
asthma and bronchitis. Applied
freely to the outside of the throat
and chest it draws out the in
flamation, reduces the swelling
and relieves any soreness. Twelve,
drops of this liniment in a wine
glass of water makes a splendid
antiseptic gargle.
Mr. Albert W. Price of Fredo
nia, Kansas., writes-.-—“We have
used Sloans Liniment in the
family for about a year and find
itan excellent relief for coldsand
hay fever attacks. Two drops
of the Liniment in a teaspoonful
of water will stop coughing and
sneezing instantly.”
Mr. L. T. Hurst of Coatesville,
Ind. R. F. D. No. 1, writes:—“l
find your Liniment the best rem
edy I have ever tried for sore
throat, either for horse or man.
I once cured a ease of sore throat
on myself the secend day and
almost the first night, which had
continued for over three weeks,
under constant treatment of
three physicians I was traveling
and it was getting owrse.
widely scattered schools with one
teacher for all grades.
“Then there are the roads that
are to be improved so that the
cost of transportation may be
greatly reduced and the pleasure
of intercourse greatly increased.’
» lUousness, headache, dyspepsia
• .acher's Liver and Blood feyrua
|T„ aSTORIA
CASTORAI Th ' * V" H ™
v 1 Always Bought
Avertable Preparation Ihr As „ ' »
similatingthcFoodciidllc'ditla 1 ■ ■ _ , g
tingHieStoinaclisandßovelsof |' D63TS t'lo ff <
, ——-- _! i signature Z/JU
PromotesDigcslioii.ChccrfuF-j J $ 80
I ness and Rest Contains neither | f !' *?aß
I Opium. Morphine nor Mineral ; j JJ Z-
Not Narcotic, g cVhr
jj 1
IKmifJiui Seed’" > Hjj!;t| ■Jk w
Alx.Scnnfi * j ». a
Scftr - I w - I m
1 tin I\ IJn *
Ser-J I I H AZ Q
I J KI
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A perfect Remedy for Constipa | w Ijr VvU
Bon, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea S M
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ness and Loss OF SLEEP. ■ ( I? VU I
Facsimile Signature of S
Thirty Years
pjqthria
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ' Rjp Sj.» HSR
lil>'w. -
THE CFNTHUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.
EXCURSION RATES TO MOBILE,
PENCACOLA AND NEW OR
LEANS, LA.
VIA
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY
COMPANY
Account Madri Grass Celebrations
February 18-23, 1909.
Excursions tickets will be sold to
Mobile, Pensacola ami New Orleans,
La., on February 17, 18, 19, 20, 21,
22, good to leave those points return
ing vp to and including but not la
ter than midnight of March 1, 1909,
except that an entension to March
Id may be obtained by depost of tick
et and payment of extension fee of
SI.OO.
For further information in regard to
total rates, service, etc., apply to
nearest ticket agent.
PARKER'S 1
HAIR BALSAM
UD'Otiwh mid !><Huti!ii-a tlin hair.
v fIMO ProiiKift H ft hixuiiniit growth.
JQE N<-v«t Foils to Hootoro Gray
MIUL U h- to Hh Youthttil Color.
V'- y 1 ->*'■**■ hi.ir fulling.
Alx . hikl |l <H> nt JlrugplHtM
Many a man who isn't a coward is
afraid of consequences.
—,,, , ■ .......
(k »SK YOUR CEAI.ER FOR A
J PIEDMONT fa
L BUGGY J
ra Made In onogrr.de only MKI ' jj! -- r r
K "THE BEST.” ‘ M
jy ji.i’it i'V ■ .e .i. job ruiiy Z.\ .v '/.sr. !/ X Q
y guanm Huh all the hi tent ts i \ ' ’* 'V, - , <
[A imnr<»vet*i*»nim. Corn Kpondcitcu I' Tar • 1 r, -1 —-—I
• 4 solicited from live dealers. f
H PIEDMONT BUOCY CO., . -"'I \Y W
U Monroe, N. C. • ;•=& - • -Vx? Wk
H W&tcll them wherever wo go; they go whatever we sell them,'* j
wAw. -Jta. -**- -A- --**• •*- *dSh. -«*- -«•>-
BREEDEN’S
RHEUmATiO CURE
i« not a cure all but a guaranteed cure for Rheumatism, b jth inflammatory and
chronic. Purifies the blood, liver and rilomac h. Il is sold under a plain positive
guarantee io refund the money if a < lire i > not effected. This remedy has relieved
chronic and long continued id a< ks <>t rheumatism after the la st physicians had [
faib, dto do so. It i a preparation that cannot be < xrellcd. I las brmi t< fed, by
the pcoph-, le iding di H i I>, merchant . and phyf;i< fans; also some of the h ading
drug manufacturers of this country. these men of authority all pronounce!
Breeden’s Rheumatic Cure perfec t as a preparation ran be made ami as having!
no r/pial. Guaranh < d uudej tin Pun rood and I Tug Act. Price $l«00.
FOR SALE BY LRUGGISTS. If your dealt r should not carry this prepar-|
ation, write direct to us.
MEDICINE CO., Inc, 5 Chatt.tmoo(
■:TOR KING
OLDEST IK ADE ADD LOHBEST LOCATED. REGULAR GRADUATE! M MEMOIH.
WE OFFER ret) THE LARGE MO VALUABLE EXPEKIEMCE OF TH UMEIT
ESFABIISHED AHO MOST REIIAOLE SPECIALISTS IR THE SOUTN
Authorize'! by the hLmLc to treat CiikOMiC, NERVOUS Alt SPECIAL
DISEASES. Ws guarantee to refund money If not cursd. Allrnedl
clnett furnished ready for use—do mercury or Injurteuemedicine *
used. No detention from business. Patients at a dll’.ance
treated oy mall ai d express. Medicines cent everywhere free
from gaze or breakage. No medicine sent 0.0. D. unless Id
structed. Charges I w Thousands of oases cured. State your
cur* and send for terms. Consultation FREE and confidential, in
person, or by letter. Call or rrlte today. Don’t delay.
id WMkn'mt Stricture St «"-
iibjuin.il, .nd .«<•<■_.> l-iNo p.ln.ndno ..potort. Bo e.n.tb
C"> «>."l —■ ~U.| . b, or will. |,.,„ K |r, o t ,ou..U* Ko d.taa«l«n from bu.l J
: .rib.. pin.,.i. .and b,u’. I.r» on tb« Ucr lurb.l <>f, , fbuuMind. car*). W. V> r.fuud X
pan inib.bM. ■ lr ,,ot p ,.rm*MnU, <mrd! Hr M.k taJiy •> C
: *nd n.rz* tnunew fnlbMi.. ar.nlon tn i.i.ln.lbl.dler...-
.ll»l r.t.1.. . ma.ibond.eto, cutril to. Cnl.rgrt ».Im la «>• MWHa-*
pin. ..gM|., !f .r, ro.n.ru l<»t .Itality 7311000818 euUMn.rrou,<UblU«y,MißiwtrA
■Syphilis. h y dross le JXK’U? ~
.’X,':; ~L P Mm o« Is "" JZZZ.ft
F shi' d.a.ul!. BOOK tTtb , J2r“us.
GXldnty blaautr ana ProstMic he offers *nd cure, Mmt
tuc ' 'full* t ranted ar.il i< ii.nurii' CvfiA Z f ’?2n H
| DR. KING MEDICAL CO., “• CUtT E
(Tnorougblr *<wpoa»ibLe. Legally Uw>>rr<ireXcd coder the laws us Georgia.)
CHIWERLAIK
b COUGH
BEHEK"
orrrasuai
Coughs,Colds,
CROUP,
fcpgCough
This remedy can always be depended upon and
is pleasant to Me. It contains no opium or
other harmful drug and may hr given asconU
deutly to a baby as ta an adult.
Price 25 cents, large Rize 50 cents.
Vw». —t I IW—I ■ mil ■■ II I »w I II aa—R—■