The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, April 08, 1909, Image 6

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How To Gain Flesh Persons have been known to gain a pound a day by taking an ounce of Scott’s Emulsion. It is strange, but it often happens. Somehow the ounce produces the pound; it seems to start the digestive machinery going properly, so that the patient is able to digest and absorb his ordinary food which he could not do before, and that is the way the gain is made. A certain amount of flesh is necessary for health; if you have not got it you can get it by taking SCOTT’S EMULSION Send thi» advertisement. together with name of natH-r In which It appear*, your addrew and four cent* to cover portage, and we will lend you a •'Complete Handy Atlas of the World." SCOTT & BOWNE. 409 Pearl St. New York TELOGA As Teloga has fallen short a correspondent for several weeks will endeavor to send in a few of the happenings. We, are again having some fine farming weather, consequently yon can see plows going in every direction. Aunt Catherine Jennings, who got a severe fall a few days ago. is able to be up again, and has been moved to her brother’s Mr. A. J. Ford’s, where she expects to spend the summer. Miss Mollie Sitton is in Chat tanooga and will be the guest of relatives tin re for several days. J. 11. Quails and family of Sunny Dale were visiting rein fives here Saturday and Sunday. Work on the two bridges, which were washed down on Te loga ereek during the recent freshet, is progressing nicely. Mrs. Hazel Bryant and Mrs. Jewel Slow visited relatives near Sunny Dale Sunday. The new addition which Mr. V. Hammond has just added to his dwelling adds much to the looks and comfort of the home. Children especially like Kennedy’s Laxtlve Cough Syrup, ns it tastes nearly ns good as maple sugar. It not only heals irritation and allays in flamation, thereby stopping the cough, but It also motes the bowels gently ami in that way drives the cold from the system. It contains no opiates. Hold by Summorville Drug Co. Twelve Months' Support GEORGIA, Chattooga County. George L. Cain, next friend of Jewel Cain, having made ap plication for twelve months sup port for Jewel Cain out of the setate of John Cain, and apprais ers duly appointed to set apart the same having filed their re turn. all persons concerned are hereby required to show cause before the court of ordinary of said county on the first Monday in May, 1909, why said applica tion should not be granted. This 6th day of April, 1909. J. I*. JOHNSTON, Ordinary. HOLLAND NOTES Mr. C. J. Logan, agent for the Central railway at Eelton, Ga wat visiting friends and relatives at Holland Sunday. Mrs. G. S. Holland and Miss Dorathy Wallace attended preach ing at Rome Sunday. Rev. T. J. Ratliff, of Trion, fill cd his regular appointment at New Hope church on Sunday. Mr. M. S. Henderson of Lyerly, attended preaching at New Hope Sunday. Miss Estelle Weathers of near Lavender was the guest of Mrs. J. P. Holland one day this week. Katrina. Not a Drop of Alcohol! What is a "tonic”? A medicine that increases the strength or tone of the whole system. W hat is an "alterative”? j A medicine that alters or changes unhealthy action to* healthy action. Name the best “tonic and alterative”? j Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, the only Sarsaparilla entirely free fr.m alcohol. Ask your own doctor al! about it. Never \c medicine doctors cannot endorse. < itthout daily action ol thc boweH poiM>nou<. | I •i t • ... •purr Mood. bibou»ncr*. headache. A*k>oui d Kt cm about Ayer a Hus ioi const ipauon SEMINOLE The general meeting at Sardis has come and passed. We had ar excellent good time Saturday and Sunday and Bro. Griffitt and Bro Mahan preached some excellent sermons on missions and why we should be missionaries and give of our substance to send the gos pel to heathen lands. Our Sunday schools were very good at both churches Sunday. I must not forget to say that on last Saturday at the mission rally there was an abundance of victuals on the ground and enougl to have fed two such congrega tions. But Seminole never fails on the feeding line. Our good ladies attend to that part of the business. We had very hard winds Sat urday and Sunday which made the dust fly every where and the rations were not exempt, but it did not change ist taste. H such winds occur in Txeas it is called a sand storm, and I no tice the Red Ranger gives an ac count of one from Dallas, Texas, that hides the sun from sight. It was not that bad here in old Georgia, but if they keep on im proving we may yet have a reg ular Texas sand storm here in Georgia. Well, last week passed off with out rain and still some are. not satisfied, they say if we don’t get some rain now soon we can t plow. The ground is getting so hard. Well, it is hard for us to be satisfied and we are too prone to grumble. This is quite a busy time with farmers and a great many will be hindered hauling guano for at least a day or two. Well, it seems that we think we can’t make cotton without com mercial fertilizer to go under it. And it will soon get to the place place where we cannot make cot ton with it, so we are right in the middle of a bad fix, are we not? We now have no cotton nor money. So we are like the man who wanted to get oVbr the river and he told the ferryman he had no money to pay him for setting him over. So the ferry man told him if he had no money he was just as well oil on one side of the river as the other. So 1 think we would be about as well off without the guano as with it. It will be to pay for next fall. It must be paid wheth er we pay the preacher or the blacksmith or the merchant, for the guano company generally gets the first mortgage. But it may be 1 am too hard on guano. Well yes, I use it to some ex tent, but 1 have to. 1 have to rent my land for a living and my tenants use guano and 1 pay one fourth of it and it takes the eream of the crop to do it. So we only have the skimmed part left. Now if you like skimmed milk with no eream at all you like the guano pay. Well the chorus is, the farmer pays it all, and that means all. We keep up everything; we run the factories, we feed the merchant and we pro duee it all and we pay it all; everything comes through the toil of the farmer for without farming everything would stand still ami be as dead as a door nail. G. A. RAGLAND. Up Before The Bar. N. H. Brow, an attorney, of Pittsfield, Vt„ writes ”We have used Dr. King’s New Life Pills for years and find them such a good family medicine we wouldn be without them.” For Chills, Con stipation, Biliousness or Sick Headache they work wonders, 25c Summerville Drug Co. .. When you find a man generous with black paint for others you may be sure he has whitewash for himself. THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS THURSDAY, APRIL 8, 1909. SEATTLE, WASH. Dear Editor: This is one grand morning in Seattle. I am writ ing where 1 can look 180 miles and see Mt. Baker, the top cov ered with snow. Also the Cas cade mountains, a range of snow* capped mountains that show theii white heads all through the year while in the valleys the gardens full of vegetables and grass greet the year around. The winters here are very dis agreeable to a new comer It rains so much and the roads, where they are not paved are mud knee deep.. In the summer they need no paying for they are simply grand for it seldom rains here during the summer. The people are glad when it rains. We visited the U. S. Navy yard at Bremerton, on the Sound, 17 miles from greater Seattle and about an hour’s ride by boat and one of the most enjoyable rides 1 ever had. The scenery is just grand. The Olympic mountains on side of the sound, about 50 miles distant on the one side and the grand old Rainier moun tains on the ohter. Mt. Rainer is three miles high and always cov ered with snow. The snow now on the top is 25 feet deep and the little valleys on the side, 7,000 ft. high, the snow is 35 feet deep. We saw several of our war ships at the Navy yard and the great dry dock capable of receiving our lar gest war ships. The old Oregon that made the long trip from San Francsico to Cuba during the Spanish war, is here now under going repairs and looks very lit tle like the great ship she was then. Bremerton is a fine little city of about 2,500 people and is up high and dry—a lonely little su burb of Seattle. They have a boat every hour, and hte govern ment is spending two million dol lars there. Seattle is breaking the record for buldiing. Th efirst quarter of 1909 indicates the extent of $5,- 589,640 buildings underway in the city. Twenty-seven days in March there were 1370 building permits issued representing an aggrgeate of $2,365,020, quite a good showing I should think. The buildings at the Exposition grounds are nearing completion, 95 per cent finished, and will surely be ready by the first of June, and will be the finest dis play ever shown in the United States, for the good reason that we have more to show here than any other city. We have water anil scenery that no other city in the United States has and men, women and children are intereste and working hand and soul to make it a success and you may b< sure it will go. The weather is getting fine. Very pleasant days and cool nights. It looks a little back ward to a Georgia man but I reckon it is all right. [ am well and happy, also is my good wife. We have bought us a tentAand when the weather grows warm ami the robins nest again we will move into our brown stone front on the banks of the beautiful Lake Washing ton and camp for the summer. With kind regards to you and best wishes to The News 1 am, Yours very truly, A. B. CHIVVIS. 4908-42 Ave. South, Seattle, Wash. Rheumatism. Mor* than nine out of every ten case* of rheumatism are simply rheu matism of the muscles, due to cold or damp, or chronic rheumatism. In such cases no internal treatment is required. The free a] plication of Chamberlain's Liniment is all that is needed, and it is certain to give quick relief. Give it a trial and see for yourself how quickly it relieves the pain and soreness. The medicines usually given internally for rheuma tism are poisonous or very strong medicines. They are worse than use less in cases of chronic and muscular rheumatism. For sale by Summer ville Drug Co. FOR SALE The following second-hand farm machinery: 1 Jone's Binder. 1 Hoosier Grain Drill. 1 Champion Mower and Rake, 1 3 horse Disc Plow for cash or good note. 0. K. McCOLLUM rr / f yz PLAINVIEW, TEXAS. I wish to give the readers of The News an idea of how this country looks. There are no trees, mountains or hills, just a level plain, cover ed with snow today. And when this is said, all is said as to the looks of the country. This is the land of alfalfa, maize, Kaffir corn and Indian corn also wheat flourishes here. I is a grand sight to see a wheat field here. It is like entering a room of untold length carpeted with green velvet. The prairies are indeed beauti ful, where, once the cowboy roam de, and gazed lazily over his longhorns, is now dotted with farm houses and thoussands of acres of alfalfa, the great feed crop. There are but few railroads, now, but they are beginning to connect the small town all over the plains, and after awhile, if prosperity lends a helping hand still, these large ranches and pas tures, will be the homes of indus trious farmers, and the rich land that is now idle will be yielding abundant crops. Mr. Ragland, if you were out here you would soon forget that you had to pay dear for fertili zers, that you had to do twice as much work putting the stuff in the ground. You would only see those bygone days in dreams, as you sit behind fine mules who knew they had nothing to do but walk from one end to the other, and you asleep on your cultivator Such is the life of the farme here. But I must not leave out the bad part of “plains” life, The wind blows, there is no doubt about that. If any one should doubt this just come out here, and let your sky piece get away from you, then we would see a good automobile race. About rain. We have had two little rains and three light snows. The ground is covered today the last of March. We have been here five months, and this is the a»nount of rain we have had since we arrived here. Plain view is the county site of Hale county, which is two coun ties east of the line of New Mex ico, and abou’ five hundred miles northwest of Athens. Texas, our former home. I have seen of Texas, no little part, and must sa; she is a grand, great state. Her beautiful Italian skies, her level plains, and delightful climate makes it home much to be desir ed. One other item and I must close. Win. J. Bryan, ex-candi date for the presidency, the great est Democrat of his time, will lec ture at Amarville, Texas, today. Many people from Plainview will doubtless hear this great man. If this escapes the waste bas ket 1 will come again. J. Clarence Abrams. March 31, 1909. PETITION FOR CHARTER GEORGIA, Chattooga county. To the Superior court of said I county: The petition of G. W. Welch, M. N. Wood, S. S. Lawrence, R. L. Knox, 11. J. Garvin, J. Miller and R. A. McWhorter respectful ly shows the following facts: (1) That petitioners desire for themselves, their associates and assigns, to be incorporated un- I der the name and style of the Menlo High School Company. (2) Petitioners show that it is the purpose of the said Company to carry on and maintain a High School and Normal School in the town of Menlo, Georgia. They desire the further right to carry on such other lines of educational work, reasonably connected with or incident to the regular High School work. (3) Petitioners desire the right to charge certain tuition fees, to be fixed by the Directors or said Company. (4) Petitioners show that the Cap ital stock of said Company is $10,000.00, divided into shares of $25.00 each, and that said Cap ital Stock has been fully paid. (5) Petitioners ask to be incorpor ated for a period of twenty years, with the privilege of re newal at the expiration of this term. (6) Petitioners show that the prin cipal office and place of busi ness is Menlo, Chattooga county", Georgia. (7) Petitioners desire the right to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, and all other further rights and privileges usual to corporations chartered by this Court. Wherefore, petitioners ask to be incorporated as aforesaid, with all the rights, privileges and im munities granted by law, and sub ject to the liabilities imposed by law. TAYLOR & JOLLY, Attorneys for Petitioners GEORGIA, Chattooga county. I. J N. Rush, Clerk of the Su perior Court of said county, hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a true and correct <opy of a petition this day filed in my office. March 30th. 1909. J. N. RUSH, Clerk Superior Court. Foley’s Honey and Tar is a safe guard against serious results from spring colds, which inflame the lungs and develop into pneumonia. Avoid counterfeits by insisting upon having the genuine Foley’s Honey and ’1 ar, which contains no harmful drugs. Sold by all Druggists. ~ CASTOnTA.. EXCURSION RATES Via Central of Georgia Railway. To Louisville, Ky., and return, account Southern Electrical and Industrial Exposition, April 12- 24, 1909. Tickets on sale April 11, 12, 19 and 20, 1909. Tickets good to leave Louisville return ing not later than April 26, 1909. To Louisvlile, Ky., and return account Southern Baptist Con vention, to be held May 13, 20, 1909. To Atlanta, Ga., and return, account Conference for Education in the South, to be held April 14- 16, 1909. To Macon, Ga., and return, ac count Grand Lodge I. O. O. F. of Georgia, to be held May 25- count Medical Association of Ga. to be held April 21-22, 1909. Tick ets on sale from points in Geor gia. To Thomasville, Ga., and re turn, account Grand Lodge I. O. O. F. of Georgia, to be held May 25-27, 1909. Tickets on sale from points in Georgia. To Memphis, Tenn., and re turn, account U. C. V. Reunion, to be held June 8-10, 1909. To Albany, Ga. and return, account Georgia Chatauqua to be held April 18-25, 1909. Tick ets on sale from Macon, Colum bus, Perry, Eufaula, Ft. Gaines, Lot khart and intermediate points For full information in regard to rates, dates of sale, limits, schedules, etc., apply to nearest ticket agent. 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 50 cts. Sample Free. Addiess, The Mother Gray Co.. Leßoy, N. Y. FOR SALE—Russell and Mort gage Lifter Cotton Seed, 50 cts. per bushel.—S. W. Johnson, Sum merville, Ga., Route 4. Lots of men know how they could get rich if other men would not butt in. FOLEY’S KIDNEY CURE WILL CURE YOU of any case of Kidney or Bladder disease that is not beyond the reach of medi cine. Take it at once. Do not risk having Bright’s Dis ease or Diabetes. There is nothing gained by delay. 50c. and 51.00 Bottles. KKFUSI •ÜBaTITUTBS. Sold by all[Diuggist.