Newspaper Page Text
fs The Kidneys Are
® Weakened by Over-Work.
Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood.
Weak and unhealthy kidneys are re-
Bponsiblefor muchsicknessand suffering,
a therefore, if kidney
Xm# trout,lc * s permitted to
continue, serious re
dft/Wp \ suits are m " st likely
to follow- Tourother
IL organs may need at
■* *z23l tent *° n ' but y° ur k ’' l_
I I neys most, because
/ they do most and
ysj -IP'*’ should have attention
~X3 first. Therefore, when
your kidneys are weak or out of order,
you can understand how quickly your en
tire body is affected and how every organ
seems to fail to do its duty.
If you are sick or “ feel badly,” begin
taking the great kidney remedy, Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root. A trial will con
vince you of its great merit.
The mild and immediate effect of
Swamp-Root, the great kidney and
bladder remedy, is soon realized. It
stands the highest because its remarkable
health restoring projierties have been
proven in thousands of the most distress
ing cases. If you need a medicine you
should have the best.
Sold <>v druggists in
fifty-rent and one-dol- fSuKIiS
lar sizes. You may | j!;Sg»gz4
have a sample Ixittlc j
by mail free, also a ’
pamphlet telling you r^hwstnp-Root,"
how to find out if you have kidney or
bladder trouble. Mention this paper
when writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. V. Don't make any mis
take, but remember the name, Swamp-
Root, and don’t let a dealer sell you
something in place of Swamp-Root—if
you do you will be disappointed.
Notice of Sale of Land by Guar
dian for Reinvestment
GEORGIA, Chattooga county.
On the 3 day of May, 1909, at
the Court House in Rome, Ga., I,
as Guardian for Albert S. Ham
ilton, DeForest A. Hamilton and
Margaret K. Hamilton, having
been appointed Much Guardian in
Chattooga county, Georgia, shall
apply to the .Judge of the Supe
rior Court of the Rome Circuit
and said county, by petition for
an order to sell at private sale
for re-investment, certain lands
belonging to my said Wards, to
wit:
“That tract or parcel of land
lying and being in the 23rd dis
trict and 3rd section of Floyd
county, to-wit: Same being lot of
land number 293, except about
fifteen acres, more or less, re
aeretd by Jefferson Johnson; al
so all that parts of lots of land
numbers 308 and 309, lying North
ol the Etowah river, except, how
ever, the right ot way of the
Rome Railroad which is reserved.
Said lands fully described in a
deed of Execution of the estate
of Frank M. Freeman to Maggie
A. \llgood, recorded in Book of
Deeds S. S. page 624.’’
My reason for making said ap
plication is that said land is at
tended with great expense in the
proper keeping, that it is practi
cally impossible* to preserve the
same ami have it properly culti
vated at all times, and the re
investment sought will pay a bet
ter net income and is more suit
able as an investment for Wards.
A. S. HAMILTON,
Guardian.
Neuralgia
Pains
Are the result of an
abnormal condition of
the more prominent nerve
branches, caused by con
gestion. irritation, or dis
ease. If you want to re
lieve the pain try Dr. Miles
Anti-Vain Pills. They
often relieve when every
thing else fails. They
leave no disagreeable
after effects. Just a
pleasurable sense of re
lief. Try them.
*’| haw neuralgia headache right
over my ry<». and I am really afraid
that my eye* will burst. I aiao have
nvuralgia rm In around my heart. I
have N <*n taking Dr. MHee' Antt-
I'atn Pili* reomtly and find they re
lieve thrae trouble* quickly. I •ehhun
And It neceeaary to take more than
two tablets for complete relief."
MRS KATHERINE BARTON
111’ Valley St. Carthage. Ma.
•*I have awful wpelt* of neuralgia
and haxe doctored a great deal mtn
out getting much benefit. For the
last two year* I have been takinff
Dr Mile** Anti-Pain Fills and they
always relieve me. I have been *o
bud with neuralgia that 1 a»mvtinue
thought I would go rraxy Sometimes
it la neeosaata to take two of them*
but nvxrr more mid they arc 'sure to
relieve rm MRS FERRIER.
34S< Lynn St. I in* <»ln Neb.
Your druggist sdl« Dr. Miles* Anti-
Pain Pills, inj we authorire him to
return the price of first package (only)
If it fa«is to benefit you.
Miles Medtuil Co., Elkhart. Ind
The family medicine in thousands of
aomea for 54 years—Dr. Tbscber's Liver
sad Blood Sy ruj>
INDIANA FAST GOING DRY.
Temperance Wave is Sweeping
Over Hoosier State
Indianapolis, Ind. —The wave
of local option sentiment that
has been sweeping over Indiana
for the past few months and
which promises to carry 95 per
cent, of the counties of the state
into the dry column has reached
this county, and within the next
60 days the brewery and saloon
elements will be attacked in what
is believed to be their Indiana
stronghold. The temperance
workers arc more than anxious
to test their strength with the
saloons in the capital city and
county. The saloon-keepers and
brewers are admittedly afraid of
such an issue, anti the conserva
tive onlooker confesses that it
would be a toss-up as to which
would win.
Since the passage of the re
monstrance lay several years ago
the sentiment against the saloon
has been growing steadily, and
much of the territory in which
elections have been held under
the local option counties, for in
stance, more than half the town
ships had been made dry by re
monstrance. A total of 22 coun
ties wasmade wholly dry under
the remonstrance law, and 1,800
saloons were forced to close.
Because of the many sections
in other counties that had been
made dry by remonstrance the
exclusion of saloons by local op
tion voting does not show up as
well as under the remonstrance
law, the proportion being very
much smaller. In the 33 coun
ties that have voted dry under
the law a total only of 470 sa
loons has been voted out of busi
ness, a number out of all propor
tion to the 1,800 closed under re
monstrances in the 22 counties,
finder the two forms of ousting
the saloon 2,270 bars have been
closed in 56 counties. There are
92 counties in the state and
nearly two-thirds have therefore
registered their protests against
the saloon. The territory does
not include any of the larger eit-
PINE GROVE
(Last week’s letter.)
Aunt Mollie Hawkins is very
ill, we are sorry to say. Also
Miss Cassie Gardner is very ill.
The Sunday school at Oak Hill
is in a flourishing condition, un
der th<> management of R. W.
Bagley.
The school at Pine Grove will
close th" 23rd of April.
The singing given by Miss Eth
el Bagley Sunday afternoon was
enjoyed by all present. I hose
present. were, Messrs. John
Brady, Haymond Gardner, Allred
Jones, Arthur Bridges, Howard
Airship, ami Gordon Dempsey,
Misses Lizzie and Ida Dempsey,
I’luma and Hattie Bridges, Rosie
and Minnie Reynolds and Ethel
Walters.
Miss Berta Watson, our efficient
school teacher, went to Rome
shopping Saturday.
Come on you good people from
Texas with your good letters as
we like to read them. Also Mr.
Chivvis from Seattle, Wash.
If you have backache and urinary
troubles you should take Foley's Kid
ney Remedy to strengthen and build
up the kidneys so they will act prop
erly, as a serious kidney trouble my
develop. Sold by all Druggist.
The Working Man
The happiest life in the world
is that of the working man. We
do not mean by that grinding
hard work, day in and day out,
for meager wages, in order to
keep the wolf from the door, but
steady, healthy work- that makes
a man feel that he is creating
something that he is doing some
good in the world. Work that
makes him know that he is liv
ing by the sweat of his lace.
Work that keeps his mind inter
ested and that makes sweet sleep
come to his pillow at night. The
most miserable creature on earth
is the loafer, who finds time
hanging heavy on his hands.
They, of all others, get the least
out of life. Steady work brings!
surcease of sorrow and content
ment. and after all contentment j
brings the only real happiness—
Ex.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1909.
■
*
“SEE THE SIGN”
When you come to CHATTANOOGA,
13 E, Eight StrcU:
This sign represents skill, and a
thorough knowledge of the Opti
cal business. Eyes examined
and glasses ground to order. . .
..EASTMAN KODAKS..
AND FRESH SUPPLIES
Mail orders Solicited
MORE COTTON PER ACRE
The average production of cot
ton per acre in The Progressive
Farmer territory, North Caroli
na, South Carolina and Georgia,
according to the last census re
port, was .38 of a bale. In oth j
er words, 2 3-5 acres are requir
ed to produce a bale of cotton.
While this is the average we have
no hestancy in stating that one
bale of cotton per acre on an
entire farm is not a difficult ag
ricultural proposition, and one
which any man of average intel
ligence and with average land
can solve. We know that it is
easy and that the average man
can do it, because we have never
visited a neighborhood in the cot
ton belt (and we have been over
all of it except Texas) where we
did not find some man doing it.
This is the best and most posi
tive evidence that others can do
it.
How is this increased yield to
be brought about? By a good
crop rotation; more stable ma
nure and more intelligent fer
tilization; better seed and improv
ed varieties; and better cultiva
tion.
The need of crop rotation by
the cotton farmer is not because
of the plant food which is re
moved from the soil through the
lint. In fact, if the stalks and
seed are all returned to the soil
ttie plant food taken from the
land by a bale of cotton is very
small anil does not exceed 50
cents in value at ruling commer
cial prices.
The reason that crop rotation
is essential to increased produc
tion on the average farm is that
cotton being cultivated until late,
in the season there is no humus
making material left to turn un
der for replenishing the supply
which our long, hot and moist
seasons so rapidly exhaust. The
great need of the soils in humus,
or rotting vegetable matter, and
without a humus-supply rotation
the average farmer will not fur
nish his soil with this need.
One third the land now planted
in cotton can, in five years, be
economically made to produce as
much cotton as all of it now pro
duces. so there is no excuse for
a failure to rotate our crops in
such manner as will best increase
soil fertility.—The Progressive
Farmer.
According to the construction
put upon the law and its rulings
by the state railroad commission,
an attorney for a railroad com
pany may travel on passes, but
the members of his family must
pay their fare just as any one
else.
Ever notice how things that
are none of your business will
interest you.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
Ito Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Fear is a belief in your infe
riority; nothing else.
PORK PRODUCTION IN SOUTH
When we refer to pork as an
article of diet on southern tables,
we speak of a meat which is more
generally eaten and, in total con
sumption in pounds, greater than
all other meats combined. Fig
ure the annual number of pounds
of beef, mutton, kid and all oth
er meats eaten by southern peo
ple and compare the total with
that of hog meat consumed an
nually in the south and we find
pork far in the lead. A large
number of our popualtion rarely
enjoys any change of diet from
that of pork, hence we find the
hog as staple and essential to
our living as wheat or corn. In
1890 90 percent of the pork con
sumed in the South Atlantic and
Gulf States was furnished by the
great packing houses of the west.
Since 1890 our people have, how
ever, shown an increasing inter
est in hog raising and the ship
ments from the west are being
gradually reduced.
Thousands of our farmers are
recognizing the importance of
raising enough pork for their
family consumption, while others
are growing hogs for the market.
The census of 1900 shows a wide
difference on this question
over that of 1890. The
showing is a commendable one
for the south, and in line with
those progressive methods which
are becoming so necessary on
southern farms. The day upon
which the south becomes an ex
porter of the products of resour
ces, rather than an importer of
such as may be here produced,
agriculture will take on a new
life and prosperity on the farm
be more general.
While we are doing much bet
ter in the business of raising
hogs, than ten years ago, still we
are not by any means doing
enough on what is possible for
the southern farmers to accom
plish in the hog industry. Too
few of oil! farmers raise enough
pork for their immediate needs,
and by far too few are those act
ually engaged in growing hogs
for market. Fork is a staple ar
ticle, as much or more so than
any other product of the farm.
There exists not only a constant
and increasing demand for it.
but there is good profit in the
business here. The south is pre
eminently the best adapted for
successful hog raising over that
of any other section in the I nion
Climatic conditions are far more
favorable and diseases rarer,
while general typography of the
land and water in plentiful sup
ply render the south an ideal sec
tion for the hog industry.
The hog has largely taken a
place in the business of the west
ern farmer, because corn is rais
ed in such an abundance, and
corn can be made more profitable
by utilizing it in growing pork.
But we of the south can produce
better and cheaper pork by the
great variety of crops which can
be grown here, and on which
hogs can be profitably pastured.
—Cotton Journal.
BETHLEHEM
(Last week’s Letter.)
The farmers of this community
are busy preparing their land
for another crop. Most of the
farmers are ready to go to plant
ing cotton.
Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Scogins of
New were visiting Mr. and Mrs.
J. M. Wilson Sunday.
Mrs. Jesse Manning of Sublig
na is on the sick list.
The Egg hunt at Bethlehem
school was highly enjoyed by all.
Next fourth Sunday is our reg
ular singing day. Everybody
come out and bring their books.
He—When we were married I
thought we were to be two souls
with a single thought.
She—Well, aren’t we? Don’t
we both wish we were single
again ?—Rochester Democrat.
People past middle ife usually have
some kidney or bladder disorder that
saps the vitality, which is naturally
lower in old age. 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 all
Druggist.
TT ||‘
| Rome Business |
TT XX
TT XX
I College J
XX Typewriting, Stenography, Commercial Correspon- -H-
XX dence, Penmanship, Bookkeeping, Commer- XX
c'al Arithmetic and Commercial TT
II Law. are included in the
TT course of study. XX
r; —ADDRESS— H
| PALEMON J. KING g
|: H
I S. CALBECK, g
f; Rome, • = Georgia g
IX II
H............... , ; 5
♦ tlt -j j—l~ t t tI4? *$ t r.l_Ta,?..*—*—*— TmTwT—TmT—?— t—T—T»-*—*—*-
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. m., 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 - 6a. m.
Silver Hill May 6 p. m.
Tidings May 7 a. m.
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 b. 1 >i lb 2 sc, Pospaid.
Price per peck or bushel on application
Supply limited.
W. L. GAMBLE,
Summerville, Ga.
Chattanooga Marble Works
1. W. HASSELL, Prop.
Granite Monuments :.:;'
1149-51 MARKET STREET
We have Monuments in stock from SB. to $3,000
CALL ON OR WRITE US.
Jones Cargal Apr. 20 a. m.
Zula Apr. 20 p. m.
Bethlehem May 13 a. m.
New’ May 12 a. m. ,
Dr. Blackwell’s May 17.
Chelsea Apr. 27 a. m.
Saw Mill Apr. 28 a. ni.
Alpine Apr. 28 p. m.
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
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.