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Women as Well as Hen are Hade Hisorable
by Kidney and Bladder Trouble.
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind,
discouragesandlesseusambition; beauty,
» vigor and cheerful
ness soon disappear
when the kidneys are
' out of order or dis
eased.
Kidney trouble has
V become so prevalent
1/ that it is not uucom
? men for a child to be
1 born afflicted with
weak kidneys. If the
child urinates too o'ten, if the urine scalds
the flesh, or if, when the child reachesan
age when it should l»e able to control the
passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wet
ting, depend upon it, thecause of the diffi
culty is kidney trouble, ami the first
step should be towards the treatment of
these importantorgans. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased condition of
the kidneys and bladder and not to a
habit as most people suppose.
Women as well as men are made miser
able with kidney and bladder trouble,
and both need the same great remedy.
The mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is soon realized. Itissold
by druggists, in fifty-
cent and one-dollar
size bottles. You may
have a sample bottle | HwISSSSSg
by mail free, also a
pamphlet telling all
about Swamp-Root, <>l hwunp-itout
including many of the thousands of testi
monial letters received from sufferers
who found Swamp-Root to be just the
remedy needed. In writing Dr. Kilmer
fc Co., Binghamton, N. V., be sure and
mention this paper. Don’t make any
mistake, but remember the name, Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the address,
Binghamton, N. V., on every bottle.
Mom htan $96,(XX),000 worth of
gold was dug out of the earth in
the United States and the territo
ries in 1908, an increase of $6,-
000,000 over the year before. The
greatest producer was Colorado,
followed by Alaska, California
and Nevada. Georgia showed a
•ons derable slump in production,
the amount ofr last year being
$48,918, against $64,800 for the
year before.
Plant Wood’s Seeds
For The
Garden & Farm.
Thirty yearn in busmens, with
a steadily increasing trade every
year—until wo have today one
of the largest businesses in seeds
in this country—is the best of
evidence as to
Tte Superior Quality
of Wood’s Seeds.
We are headquarters for
Grass and Clover Seeds,
Seed Potatoes, Seed Oats,
Cow Peas, Soja Beans and
all Farm Seeds.
Wood's Descriptive Catalog
the most useful and valuable of
Garden and Farm peed Catalogs
mailed free on request.
I. W. WOOD t SONS,
Seedsmen, • Richmond, Va.
MON EV TO LOAN
$1,000.00 and up on First
Class Farms
Write or Call on
Lipscomb, Willingham & Doyal
Attorneys et Law
1-2-3 4-5-6-7 Clark Bldg.
Rome, Georgia.
Headache?
If it docs, you should
try Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain
Pills. Why not do so.
They will relieve the
pain in just a few min
utes. Ask your druggist
There are 45,000 druggists
in the U. 8. Ask any of
them. A package of 25
doses costs 25 cents. One
tablet usually stops a
headache. They relieve
pain without leaving any
disagreeable after-efleets
—isn’t that what you
want?
•My non Frank Snyder han used
Dr Mlles’ Anti-Fain Illis for a long
time. Ha never had anything to
help him so much for headache. A
year ago he came home, and 1 was
down sick with such a dreadful nerv
ous headache. He gave me one of
the Anti-l'aln Pill*. and after while
I took another and was entirely re
lieved. I always keep them in the
house now. and gave many away to
others suffering with headache.’*
MKS. LOUISE LKWKLIAN.
Dowell. South Dakota
Your druggist set s Dr. Miles’ Anti-
Rain P s and we authorise him to
return t”t price c* tint package (only)
If It f • (■ be n it y
M 2.. 5U al v... klkhart,lnd
FARMING AS A MONEY
MAKING BUSINESS
Hon. Pope Brown is reported
to have sold his farm near Haw
kinsville for SIOO,OOO. What a
moral there is in this little news
item, what it will mean to the
South if it is properly understood
and appreciated.
At the dedication of Agricul
tural Hall at the State University
last January, Hon. Pope Brown
delivered an address. It was on
the subject of improving farm
lands, and, incidentally, he re
ferred to a bit of personal histo
ry. He said:
“In 1879 I rented a farm with
the understanding that I take it
as it stood, get no pay for better
ments. The place had been long
neglected and the land considered
very poor, therefore the rent was
low, and I felt that I could af
ford to do a little fixing up. So
I took my farm hands, got out
some boards, covered the dwel
ling and some of the shanties, tore
down the old rail fences, cleaned
up the hedge rows and burnt up
the trash, re-set the fence, put
some new rails at the botom and
one on top and made the place
look like somebody lived there.
This was all done without a great
deal of expense; mostly at such
times as 1 could spare from my
crops. I plowed the land a little
deeper, fertilized it a little better
and cultivated it a little better
than it had been accustomed to
and made a good crop. Before
going upon the place the owner
had offered to sell it to me on
long time, so I decided to buy,
but when I went to him in the fall
he said he had gone up SI,OOO on
the farm as it was a better one
than he thought it was, so I de
cided then and there never to rent
any more land.’’
He then told of the land in his
county, how some of it was con
sidered much more valuable than
tonic other. He mentioned a cer
tain tract of land of the less desi
rable class, then occupied by shift
less negro tenants. He contin
ued :
“There were 1,300 acres of
land in this tract. It was offer
ed to me at $3,000. I decided at
once to buy, but the owner de
manded the cash. I had not the
cash, but I had faith in the land;
I had faith in the country; 1 did
not think that any country could
ever amount to anything with
lands selling at $2.50 per aere. 1
did not think it would ever be
any cheaper, so I went in search
of a man who would lend me the
money to buy the land. At that
time I was just twenty-three
years of age; and when 1 first
approached an old gentleman and
asked him for the loan of the
money, he really seemed to be
amused. 1 have since thought it
was rather an audacious thing for
me to do. and he at first declined
to accommodate me, but finally
decided to do so. So then* 1 was
with 1,300 acres of land and a
$3,000 debt. There being about
300 acres cleared. I had sufficient
equipment, which 1 started out
to do with hiredl abor. My fath
er. who was a good farmer, said
I wouldn't make enough to pay
for what the negroes ate. An un
cle of mine called the place “Pov
erty Plain.’’ But I was young
and hopeful and not afraid of
work.’’
In his address he told how he
farmed on this land, gradually
bringing it all under a high state
of cultivation, and every farmer
anti every young man in the state
should read this address. And
this was the farm he has just
sold for SIOO,OOO.
He started out as a young man,
just past his majority, with no
other capital except good health,
confidence in himself and a wil
lingness to work. The first year
he rented land and learned the
lesson that it pays the other man
best to farm on rented land. The
next year he bought a farm, en
tirely on credit, and a farm con
sidered of such little value that
nobody would buy it. Today he
is a farmer prince.
What one man has done anoth
er can also do. All that is nec
essary is to bring to bear the
the same intelligence, perseveranct
and application to business. Then
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1909.
■
“SEE THE SIGN”
When jou come to CHATTANOOGA,
13 E. Eight Street
This sign represents skill, and a
thorough knowledge of the Opti
cal business. Eyes examined
and glasses ground to order. . .
..EASTMAN KODAKS..
ANO FRESH SUPPLIES
Mail orders Solicited
and application to business. There
Georgia today, which can be
bought cheap, which can be
bought on credit if necessary,
which invite the right sort of
young men and will make them
rich, as this farm did Hon. Pope
Brown.
The South is an inviting field
for young men, offering in her
farms possibilities which can be
found nowhere else. Behind that
little story of the sale of Hon.
Pope Brown’s farm for SIOO,OOO
lies a moral which should put
young men to thinking, and lead
them to action and success and
fortune.—-Augusta Herald.
Children especially like Kennedy’s
Lax live Cough Syrup, as it tastes
nearly as good as maple sugar. It
not only heals irritation and allaysin
flamation, thereby stopping the cough,
but it also moves the bowels gently
and in that way drives the cold from
the system. It contains no opiates.
Sold by Summerville Drug Co.
1 ue reports given out by the
United States census as to the
wealth that comes out of the
mines every year, almost staggers
belief. They show that less than
one man out of every one hun
dred working men in the United
States is engaged in mining, yet
the mines produce more than
$800,000,000 annually. If the
other working people produced
as much wealth proportionately
as the miners they would be pro
ducing every year in the country
twenty-two times as much as all
the gold and silver money in cir
culation in the entire world.
There Has Recently Been Placed
In all the drug stores an aromatic,
pleasant herb cure for woman’s ills,
called Mother Gray's AUSTRALIAN
LEAF. It is the only certain regula
tor. Quickly relieves female weak
nesses and Backache. Kidney, Bladder
and Urinary troubles. At all Drug
gists or by mail oO eta. Sample Free.
Addiess, The Mother Gray Co.. Leßoy,
N.Y.
CENSUS FOR PENSIONERS.
Atlanta, Ga.,—State Pension
Commsisioner J. W. Lindsay has
prepared a circular letter, which
he has mailed to every member
of the new legislature, to county
officers, to the newspapers all
over the state, with the request
for publication, and to all the
camps of confederate veterans in
Georgia, in which he urges upon
them the importance of making
a careful and accurate census of
the confederate veterans and wdi
ows in each county entitled to
receive a pension.
Commissioner Lindsay shows
that this information will be val
uable from two standpoints: Ist,
in preventing fraud in the pen
sion rolls, and. 2nd. in indicating
to the legislature to just what ex
tent it will have to go in making
provisions for new pensioners.
People pant middle life usually have
some kidney or bladder disorder that
saps the vitality, which is naturally
lower in old sge. Foley’s Kidney
Remedy corrects urinary troubles,
stimulates the kidneys, and restores
strenght and vigor. It cures uric acid
troubles by strengthening the kidneys
so they will strain out the uric acid
that settles In the muscles and joints
causing rheumatism. Sold by rll
Druggist,
HOLLAND NOTES
Mr. Reeves of Milan, Ga., ma
triculated in the Holland Tele
graph school on March 25.
Mr. T. J. House went to Rome
one day last week.
Mrs. Walter Vanpelt of near
Sardis died with typhoid fever
on March 24. A few hours later
Mr. Walter Vanpelt also died,
his death resulting from typhoid
pneumonia. Truly the griin reap
er Death seemed, in this instance,
more merciless than usual.
Miss Spencer Kicklighter of
Atlanta returned home Thursday,
after an extended visit to Mrs.
Wm. Oldfield of near Taliaferro.
Mr. J. J. Woodward of Hol
land, has been quite sick for sev
eral days.
Miss Dorothy Wallace of Hol
land is assistant teacher of the
Pine Grove school near Foster’s
store.
Mr. Frank Cordle of near Rome
was in Holland Thursday.
On Wednesday night the storm
fiend gave us a stiff brush of his
wing, blowing Holland Bros.’ new
store building from its underpin
ings and killing a fine cow be
longing to Mr. Strong.
Mr. J. S. Doster of Lyrely was
in Holland Saturday attending
count
KATRINA.
Menlo, Route 2.
As I have not noticed any
thing in your paper from this
part will try and drop you a few
dots.
We have plenty of rain this
spring, and have also had a few
pretty farming days and most of
the farmers are taking advantage
of it.
Mr. Oscar Green of our town
has gone back to his father s
home at Varnell Station. He is
a good boy and we hated to give
him up,but we are expecting him
back soon.
Quite a number of the farmers
here are putting out straw ber
ries again this year.
Our neighbor, h\ed McWhort
er, is all smiles this week; it’s
a girl.
Tell Uncle Jim Fowler’s Boy
he had better “keep his shirt
on,’’ talking about “MarsTaf”
and the boys in blue, orwe‘ll give
him a worse chase than we did
from 1861 to 65.
Well, I will ring off, and if
this don’t find its way to the
waste basket may coine again.
MINK.
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the best
known pills and the best pills made,
are easy to take and act gently and
are certain. We sell and recommend
them. Summerville Drug Co.
TAX RECEIVER’S ROUNDS
I will be at the following places
on days and dates mentioned for
he purpose or receiving tax re
turns for the year 1909.
Gore Apr. 5 a. in.
Kartah Apr. 5 p. m., 19, May 10.
Haywood Apr. 6, 21 and May 11.
Subligna Apr. 7, 22, May 12 pm.
Trion Apr. 8, 23, May 14.
McWhorter’s Apr. 9 a. ni., 26,
May 18.
Menlo Apr. 12, 29, May 19.
Bagley’s Store Apr. 13, 30 May
20.
Lyerly Apr. 14, May 3, 21.
Seminole Apr. 15, May 4, 26, pm.
Holland sta. Apr. 16, a. m., May
5 24.
Anderson’s Store Apr. 16, p. m.,
Ma l 6 a. in.
Silver Hill May 6 p. m.
Tidings May 7 a. in.
Jones Cargal Apr. 20 a. m.
Zula Apr. 20 p. m.
Bethlehem May 13 a. m.
New May 12 a. ni.
Dr. Blackwell’s May 17.
Chelsea Apr. 27 a. ni.
Saw Mill Apr. 28 a. in.
Alpine Apr. 28 p. ni.
Dirtseller Mt. May 27 a. m.
Sprite May 25 a. in.
Walt Hinton’s place May 25 p.
m.
Millican’s Store May 26 a. m.
Clements & Hall’s Store May i
13 p. m.
I will be in Summerville every ;
Saturday until June 19th, at
which time my books will close'
Please observe the days mention
ed above and save time and
trouble.
F. A. WEAVER.
Receiver Tax Returns.
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 onlv 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 stomach. Kodol 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.
H. D. M ALLICOAT
Dealer in
Fresh and Cured Meats
Breakfast Bacon, Canvassed Hams, Skinned Hams
Nice Fresh Steaks, Roasts, Stews, Pork Chops
Sausage, Etc.
Soft Drink, Tobaccos, Cigars
MUNG BEANS
(HAY PEAS.)
One of the most valuable forage crops
and soil builders known. Vines stand
erect, two to three feet high. No more
trouble to cure than clover hay, which
it closely resembles. Peas excellent for
the table and for poultry. Seed i-3
as large as cow peas. 1-2 bushel sows
one acre.
I=4 lb. ioc, 1 lb. 25c, Pospaid.
Price per peck or bushel on application
Supply limited.
W. L. GAMBLE,
Summerville, Ga.
OUR CLUBBING RATES
The Summerville News and th'
Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal < <
year for $1.50.
The Summerville News, Atlan
ta Seini-Weekly Journal and
Home and Farm, all three papers
one year for $1.75.
The Summerville News and the
Atlanta Tri-Weekly Constitution
Chattanooga Marble Works
1 W. HASSELL, Prop.
Granite Monuments 7 a'XV
1149-51 MARKET STREET
We have Honuments in stock from SB. to $3,000
CALL ON OR WRITE US.
So, don’t neglect your stomach.
Don't become a'" ronic dyspeptic.
Keep your stomach healthy and
strong by taking a little Kodol.
You don’t have to take Kodol ail
tho time. You only take it when
you need it.
Kodol is perfectly harmlean
Our Guarantee
Go to your druggist today and get a dol
lar bottle. Then after yon have naed tea
entire contents of the bottle if you can
honestly say that it has not done you an*
good, return the bottle to the druggist ana
be will refund your money without auc
tion or delay. We will then pay the drug
gist. Don't hesitate, all druggists know
that our guarantee Is good. This offer ap
plies to the large bottle only and to but one
in a family The large bottle contains 3*
times as much as the fifty cent bottle.
Kodol is prepared at the laborator
ies of E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago,
one year for $1.75.
The Summerville News, Atlan
ta Tri-Weekly Constitution and
Home and Farm, one year for
$2.00.
The Summerville News and
Home and Farm one year for
$1.25.
The Summerville News and
The Commoner one year for $1.50