Newspaper Page Text
Don’t Worry
If you are sick, don’t worry, but begin at once
to make yourself welL To do this, we but repeat
words of thousands of other sufferers from
womanly ills, when we say:
CARDUI
It Will Help You
For 50 years, this wonderful female remedy, has
been benefiting sick women. Mrs. Jennie Merrick,
of Cambridge City, Ind., says: “I suffered greatly
with female trouble, and the doctors did no good.
They wanted to operate, but I took Cardui, and it
made me feel like a new woman. lam still using
this wonderful medicine, with increasing relief.”
AT ALL DRUG STORES
Sheriff’s Sales
Chattooga county.
Will be sold on the first Tues
day in May, 1909, at public out
cry, at the court house in the
town of Summerville, said county
within the legal hours of sale,
to the highest bidder for cash,
the following property towit:
Lots of land Nos. 204, 205, 232,
238, 266, 308, 300, 302 303, 88, all
in the 13th district and 4th sec
tion of Chattooga county, Geor
gia. Also the mineral interest
in lots Nos. 172, 162, 95, 123,124,
.55, 90, 56, 94, 189, 89, 171, 193,
194, 240, 262, 153 154, 172, 167,
122. ‘>23- 208,, 156 k 268, 230, 271,
40, 62U20, 229, 237, 207, 131, 134
192, 233, all in the 13th district
and 4th section of Chattooga
county, Georgia. Said lands lev
ied on as the property of the
New England Land and Improve
ment Co., F. W. Copeland, Agent,
to satisfy a tax fi fa for state
and county tax for the year 1908.
Said execution issued by A. S.
Alexander, tax collector of said
county.
** This April 7th, 1909.
A. 11. GLENN, Sheriff.
Also at the same time and
place and upon the same terms
the following property, towit:
Lots of land Nos. 127, 162, 165.
201, 234, 236, 273, 228, 164, 196.
232, 235, 269, 318, 233, 234, 89,
126, 270, 271, 131, 246, 294, 132,
195, 203, 202, 92, 166, 157, 225.
206, 291, 241, 125, 129, 292, 244,
all in.-tlu' 13th district and 4th
section of Chattooga county, Ga.
1 Said land levied on as the prop
erty of the Connecticut! Land
& Improvement Co., F. W, Cope
land, Agent, to satisfy a tax fi fa
for State and County tax for the
year 1908. Said execution issued
by A. S. Alexander, Tax Collect
or of said county. This April 7,
1909.
A. H. GLENN, Sheriff.
WANTED.—IO,OOO cross ties
delivered on Central of Geor
gia railroad.—N. K. Bitting.
The Value of Good
Digestion
I« ea*y to figure if you know what your stomach
is worth. Kodol keeps the stomach at par value,
by insuring good digestion. Kodol cures Dyspepsia.
Kodol insures good digestion by
absolutely duplicating Nature’s
normal process, in perfectly digest
ing all food taken into the stom
ach.
While Kodol is doing this, the
stomach is resting—and becoming
strong and healthy. A strong and
healthy stomach guarantees a
sound and active brain.
The man with a sound stomach
—a stomach that is doing for the
body just what Nature intended
it -to do —is the man who is always
prepared for any emergency. He
is “there with the goods.”
The man with a sick stomach, is
a man sick all over. When the
stomach is irritated by undigested
food, the blood and heart are di
rectly affected. Then dullness, un
natural sleepiness, sick-headaches,
vertigo and fainting spells, and
even serious brain trouble develop.
Kodol will prevent these.
Spurring the stomach and brain
SOLD BY SUMMERVILLE DRUG CO.
In Loving Memory.
Os Lois Janett Robinson, who
deported this world on March 19,
1909, age seven years and six
months.
The child is not lost but gone
before, and shall be restored
again to the parents’ bosom in
ten-fold greater beauty and prom
ise. And what a sweet thought
it must be for parents to know
that angel eyes now watch for
their coming to that place w’here
there will be no more sad part
ings
Little Lois was a loving and
affectionate child, ever ready to
help “mamma” with her work
or to care for “baby brother,”
whom she loved so well.
Following is a piece of poetry
she memorized a short time be
fore her death:
The truest friends must part, thej
say,
The fondest hearts must sever;
But friendship’s bonds may last
for age
And memory live forever.
And yon will, and I shall, miss
Each word, each look, each
smile,
Each vanished pressure of your
kiss,
And long for the while.
Each thing that we have seen
and loved,
Each flower, each bird, each
tree,
Each place where we’ve together
roved
Will hold a charm for me.
Then fare you well this parting
pain,
To those whom fate must sever.
I only say good bye again
And trust ’tis not forever.
We feel sure of meeting little
Lois in heaven and now dear par
ents,
“Look upward and your child
you’ll see
Fixed in his blest abode,
Who would not, therefore, child
less be,
To give a child to God?
—A loved one.
to special effort by "tonics” and
“stimulants" doesn't cure anything,
or accomplish any good. Neither
does dieting. Indigestion and the
serious ailments which ft Induces
i can be averted and corrected only
■ by natural means.
Kodol supplies this natural
i means. It performs the stomach's
work for it—just as the stomach
should perform ft —while the stom
. ach takes a little rest, “for the
I stomach’s sake."
Our Guarantee
: Go to your drugplst today and get a dol-
lar bottle. Then after you have used the
. entire contenta of the bottle If you can
‘ honestly say, that it has not done you any
! good, return the bottle to the druggist and
[ he will refund your money without gues
tion or delay. We will then pay the drug
gist for the bottle. Don’t hesitate, all
- druggists know that our guarantee is good.
This offer applies to the large bottle only
I and to but one in a family. The large bot
-1 tie contains 2'4 times as much as the fifty
. cent bottle.
Kodol is prepared at the labors.
i tories of E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago.
■RWfCTBURVHI! NAWB THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1900.
The Drinker and the Drunkard.
There is a significant distinc
tion drawn by Dr. Aked in his
discussion of “Christianity and
Temperance” in Appleton’s Mag
azine, the distinction between
drinking and drunkenness.
The evils of drunkenness are
notorious, he says. Nobody de
nies them. Few people seek to
minimize them. And nobody on
the face of the earth defends
drunkenness. And yet, on the
whole view, it seems certain that
the harm done by the drinking
which never passes into drunken
ness is greater than that caused
by all the drunkenness in the
world. This is not the same thing
as saying—as temperance advo
cates are often accused of saying
that the moderate drinker is a
worse man than the drunkard.
It is a simple statement of fact
that in bulk the injury done by
the constant use of alcoholic li
quors in quantities insufficient to
create drunkenness is greater am
more widespread than the more
patent and demonstrable harm
done by alcoholic excess. Drunk
enness has stained some of the
noblest names, destroyed some of
the finest intellects, ruined some
of the bravest souls of pulpit and
pew. The priest and prophet have
erred through strong drink. All
this is known, indisputable. But
there is something more. Every
man or woman familiar with
the work of the churches has pon
dered, sometimes almost in ago
ny of spirit, the problem pre
sented by the mass of smug, cal
lous indifference which no preach
ing or pleading can pierce. The
preacher with his heart aflame
making himself one with his Re
deemer in the effort to seek and
save the lost, receiving branded
upon his soul the, stigma of Christ
sees in his congregation and in
the circle of his friends such easy
such complacent indifference to
human sin and human suffering
as comes near to making ship
wreck of his faith in man and in
the power of God to save mam
from himself. Is there not a
cause? The habitual use of in
toxicating drink in quantities
which never go beyond what is
called “moderation,” which has
never caused drunkenness, and
which probably never will, cre
ates more than anything else with
which we have to do the type of
character so hard to move. The
aspirations have been a little
dulled, the conscience made a
little less sensitive, the emotions
a little the less responsive the dai
ly use of a drug, a drug called “al
use of a drug, a drug called “al
cohol.” Would any reasonable
human being ask the most elo
quent of living preachers to speak
his message to a nuinebr of per
sons who had been drugged into
insensibility by chloroform?
Would a reasonable person ex
pect the best results from preach
ing to people who had been chlo
roformed into semi-insensibility ?
Why make people dull and heavy
and stupid, and expect swift re
sponsiveness, generous ardor,
warm-hearted zeal? It is only
a question of degree. The drink
habit as practiced among really
nice people, good men and women
people who have never been what
is called the “worse” for drink,
and who never will be, has a cer
tain physiological effect, and that
effect is demonstrated in the in
difference found among 10,000
congregations throughout the lam
It is not drunkenness which is
the preacher’s deadliest enemy;
it is drinking.
B«st Treatment for Colds.
“Most ordinary colds will yield to
the simplest treatment,” says the
Chicago Tribune, “moderative laxa
tives, hot footbaths, o free perspira
tion and an avoidance of exposure to
cold and wet after treatment.” While
this treatment is simple, it requires
considerable trouble, and the one
adopting it must remain in doors for
a day or two, or a fresh cold is almost
sure to be contracted, and in many in
stances pneumonia follows. Is it not
better to pin your faith to an old re
liable preparation like Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy, that is famous for its
cures of colds and can always be de
pended upon? For sale by Summer
ville Drug Co.
CAHTOItTA.
Kind sou Hare Always Bought
fjignatnx.
tt
Scientific Fa tning.
It used to be the V. bit of farm
ers to ridicule the m;,n who pro
posed to put his scientific knowl
edge, or any kind of knowledge,
into practical application in farm
ing. They thought that about all
the farmer needed was plenty of
muscle and the will and capacity
to wield hard licks in its use.
The day for this conception of
the business has passed, and the
man who aspires no higher than
this will be outclassed in his own
profession. The successful far
mer, to compete with men of his
own business, will need to be
well educated if he wishes to
realize the full benefit of his la
bor and maintain a high standing
among the men of his occupation.
The wonderful improvements in
farming implements of the present
day, over what they were fifty
years ago, proves the necessity of
scientific knowledge.
Who would discard the mower
and return to the old-fashioned
mowing-blade, or the reapeY for
the old reap hook, or the gang
plow for the old wooden mold
board? Such folly would be ridi
culed now more than these im
provements were when the old
fashioned farmer shied around
them with sneers as they were firs
offered to him.
Education means mental devel
opment that qualifies the man to
do his own thinking in whatever
sphere he may choose, and this ea
parity is just as helpful in produe
ing corn and hay, pigs and pota
toes, horsess and cattle as thinkin
in any other capacity or business.
A good farmer needs a practical
knowledge of chemistry to tell
what his soil requires to produce
certain crops. A correct knowl
edge of the plant he grows in
volves the science of botany. I’o
handle his farming machinery
properly requires a knowldege of
mechanics, and this knowledge is
almost as necessary to him as to
the engineer.
The happiest and most independ
ent life is that of the farmer,
and if a young man can get a
suitable piece of as much land
as he can cultivate properly he
would make a great mistake to
run to the city for business. Our
country offers enough tillable
land to give nearly every young
man in it an independent, happy
home.
Tire educated farmer knows not
only how to do things, but is not
satisfied without also knowing
why, and thus get tin' habit of
analyzing and systematizing his
knowledge, which is of greatest
value. He will keep posted in
his line of work by reading regu
larly some good periodical de
voted to it. He will investigate
intelligently and for himself ev
ery improvement that is present
ed in his line, and will be capable
of determining its real valqc or
its want of that. He is qualified
to do his own thinking and there
by help to elevate the standing
of his occupation.
He will know how to observe
the characters of men and how
to study the influence of their
previous experiences and educa
tion, and how to value their
views on general life questions,
and thereby see the things that
contribute to efficiency and happ
ness. By reading when off duty
he can keep from growing rusty
in his previous knowledge, and
can really have great pleasure in
literary investigations, more than
men in other modes of life. Why
should not the farmer be as well
up in intellectual investigations
in his sphere as the tatesman in
his? Hardly anything can con
tribute more to the elevation of
the w< lid of mankind than such
an uplift as this among the far
ming imputation. Os all men, he
has the opportunity to be gener
ous, polite and considerate to
others; because he is not cramped
up in a city office, the blue ex
panse is his office, pure air, and
sparkling waters and everything
about uiri on such a scale as to
■ naturally make him big-hearted.
, He has no trouble about being
underpaid, and i.o fears that his
efforts are not appreciated by
the employer, for he is absolute
ly out of the reach of bossism,
( tile most independent citizen of
the country; aid yet there is no
[CASTOR..,.
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and has been, made under his per
// - sonal supervision since its infancy.
Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Just-as-good” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THt CtNTAUn COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
one who realizes more fully than
he that there is no meaning in a
man’s lite if it bo detached from
other men's lives. It. is. therefore
easier for him to obey the great
injunction, “Love thy neighbor
as thyself.” Then, if a farmer,
prepare first to be the greatest,
the truest, the best. Every station
has its duty and its ideal, and
the ideal is in the man himself,
and his condition is the stull
out of which he is to shape it
by meeting strenously the duty
it, demands.
The writer knows whereof he
speaks, having come from the
farm himself, where his experi
ence proved that it is the best
kindergarten in the world. When
a boy at the plow he devised in
imagination some of the same
pieces of farming machinery in
use now, but had not the courage
to brook the ridicule that would
have been provoked in the at
tempt to realize them. — South
ern Agriculturist.
Mr. F. O. Fritts. Oneonta, N. Y.,
writes; “My little girl was greatly
benefited by taking Foley’s Orino
Laxative, and I think it ’s the best
remedy for constipation and liver
trouble.” Foley’s Orino Laxative is
nest for women and children, as it is
mild, pleasant and effective, and is a
splendid spring medicine, as it clean
ses the system and clears the com
plexion. Sold by all druggist.
MONEY TO LOAN
$1,000.00 and up on First
Class Farms
Write or Call on
Lipscomb, Willingham & Doyal
Attorneys at Law
i-2-3-4-5-6-7 Clark Bldg.
Rome, Georgia.
■ST PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
■g/?.IM Cleanses anil b< uutilnH the hair.
.q. .m,,!,.. a luxiinmit growth.
■ Nev. F Falls to in utore Gray
Eta/*' WV Hair to i'h Youthful Color.
.fIR Cui' « " >■ i' <luit/i»‘’« A hnir inlling.
//" . iui’l • r'*' nt J>rnggiwt»
[DOCTOR KING
1 THE OLD RELIABLE DOCTORS. OLDEST IN USE HD LOUDEST LOCKED. REGULAR 6RADMTU ■ MMOSIi.
I _ WE OFFER SOU THE LARGE AHO VALUABLE EKERIEKCE Os TH IMOUT
■J ESTABLISHED AMD MOST RELIABLE IHCIALISTI I* THE J SOOFR
j i t \ Authorized by Vie male lo treat CHRONIC. REBVOUS AM arwIAL
S aSsi zwe/wiznAV) DISEASES. W. guarantee to refund mouey if not jurat Allmadi
j clurs furnl.hed ready for use—no mercury or lnjurloaa»y4lclneß
I %'A hl used. No detention from bnslnexn. I-atl.nta a» a Alatanoe
1 Y treated by mall and express. Medl.lnea .out .v.nrwb.r. free
A '•tSi From gaze or breakage. No medicine «e«» 0.0. D. union I tn-
1 Sr mructed. Chargea low. Thousands of cases cureA Btate your
1 -‘Nta Z ■C'./Aje*. case and send for terms. Consultation FREE and oonttA.atlal, la
I peraon. or by letter. Call or write today. DoalAetof.
iNorvous Debility and Weaknesses stricture harmful* Instrument*. A new Horne I
the lev.n'A'.f yuiHhfui folly and rirrw lrer . t meni JVo pelri end no • apoear* Wo oauetf. >.
IVI snOlli sjkuehiK loseoe by dreame or ’*Hh . ljlI)| t,.>aglfe oreounda. No detention from but!
n urine, pimple* and blotch®" on the face. rußha of l)n| . TMou»ands cured. We jfW*« t r '• r "J®* 1
£ blood to Hire liead.palriß in the ba< k confuted Idean Jri ,, ne y ir not prermouienliy cured. My beet fnllj •*-
hand f ,rg«tfulnenH. baehfuineee, aveito •ociely, j.uhie tble dlseane. .. .
Sloes of vital forcree.loMß of manhood. nD . cii-’wl f'«- bam ßnlnrgod velne In Ibe •eewtaau-
EiJfo We< an H.p nigbtlGßMs, restoro l.et vitality, VdnCOCSIO rAtjsln< nervous debility, wenfcnete
Bdevolop and m«t ire y-unK or middle; aged who •.re tbe lierTOtM •!«., penuMßUjwith
iL.veaklv and wre'ikn anil make thorn Ht for marriage out pain.
Mwnkl’le thatSerriablrediMaHeJn all tte fornnj MVIWMi «V«d
31'o inning, Hkm Dfse->s«-a. Uh ore, Mv-'*llings. Kora- _ - book—lan kW dnye
RUon ii Gireot and »ii foime of private dlßeaiiar p k | m q m I A palsu
j-iur-d te stay I'uird. Weguararitoo to refund jour j ▼© M<K Wpe« n»plUtter. '
K money If not Permanently cured. BO O K with doocrl ption of ebwre dleoaer .
Sidnev Bladder and Prostaiic .heetfect. and euro. !
loiseases Rm
1 .<1 b, methods. “*• Cor. HzrtstU u/ntUUM BU.
i DR. KING MEDICAL CO., Atlanta. GA.
M (Tboroushl-..»pon,lbl*. cnd.rtti. l.w. at trtorglq.)
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA, Chattooga county.
Notice is hereby given to all
creditors of the estate of Mrs.
Amanda Johnson, deceased, to
render in nn account of their de
mands to me within the time pre
scribed by law properly made out,
and all persons indebted to said
estate are hereby requested to
make immediate payment to the
undersigned.
This March 2nd, 1909.
S. IL JOHNSON, Admr.
of Estate of Amanda Johnson.
KlLLthe couch
AND CURE THE LUNCS
w,th Dr. King’s
New Discovery
FOR
■ uil Trial Bottle Free
AND ALL THROAT ftND LUNG TROUBLES.
GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY
OR MONEY REFUNDED.
Toss
BEMEDY
iSuunuuuuuuuuuuuuu.auaiiaauuggßMM
cnrizKie
Coughs,Colds,
CROUP,
WhoopgCough
This remedy can always be depended upon and
Is pleasant to take. It contains no opium or
other harmful drug and may be given as confi
dently to a baby as to an adult.
Price 25 cents, larfte siie 50 cents.