The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, July 22, 1909, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

| Avoid Danger | |y When you are sick, or suffering from any of the troubles peculiar to women, don’t delay—take Car fl dui, that well-known and successful remedy for wo ?l men. Thousands of women have used Cardui and |l been benefited. Why not you? Don’t take any ■ chances. Get Cardui, the old, reliable, oft-tried |i remedy, for women of all ages. “ CARDUI J 40 I It Will Help You F Mrs. Lnzania Morgan, Sneedville, Tenn., writes: "For ten H years I suffered with the turn of life, and tried many remedies fl without relief. I had pains all over my body and at times I could fl not sit up. At last I took Cardui and now I can do my housework, fl I have told many ladies about Cardui and recommend it to all sick fl women.” Try it. AT ALL DRUG STORES EXCURSION RATES Via Central of Georgia Railway. TO ALBANY, GA., and return account District Grand Lodge No. 18 G. U. 0. O. F. to be held August 10-13, 1909. Tickets on sale from points in Georgia. TO BLACK MOUNTAIN, N. C.. and return, account Montreat Chautauqua and Religious as semblies to be held July 15-Au g(.sr 31, 1909. TO DENVER, COL, Pueblo- Colorado Springs and return ac count National association, to be held at Denver, Col., July 9 to 31 TO LOS ANGELES, CAL., Port land, Oreg.ii;, Seattle, Wash., San Francisco, Cal., San Diego, Cal., account Alaska-Yukon-Pacif ic Exposition and various other special occasions. For full information in regard to rates, dates of sale, limits, schedules, etc., apply to nearest ticket agent. The man who is too busy mak ing money to give any thought or attention to making friends is likely to feel the need of friends before lie dies, for there are times in every one’s life when he craves some of the things that money can’t buy. Better Not Get Dyspepsia If you can help it Kodol prevents Dyspepsia, by effectually helping Nature to Relieve Indigestion. But don’t trifle with Indigestion. A great many people who have trifled with indigestion, have been sorry for it —when nervous or chronic dyspepsia resulted, and they have not been able to cure it. Use Kodol and prevent having Dyspepsia. Everyorfe is subject to indiges tion. Stomach derangement follows stomach abuse, just as naturally and just as surely as a sound and healthy stomach results upon the taking of Kodol. When you experience sourness of stomach, belching of gas and nauseating fluid, bloated sensation, gnawing pain in the pit of the stomach, heart burn (so-called), diarrhoea, headaches, dullness or chronic tired feeling—you need Ko dol. And then the quicker you take Kodol —the better. Eat what you want, let Kodol digest it. Ordinary pepsin “dyspepsia tab lets,” physics, etc., are not likely to be of much benefit to you, in digestive ailments. Pepsin is only FOB SAL.fi BY ALL DRUGGIST. DOCTOR KING] THE OL9 RELIABLE DOCTORS. OLDEST II AGE ANO LONGEST LOCATES. REGULAR CRABUATU H MOICINL f Wt OFFER TOU THE LARGE ANO VALUABLE EXPERIENCE OF THE LMGUT k \ ESTABLISHED ANO MOST RELIABLE SPECIALISTS IN THE SOUTH | \ » Authorized by the state to treat CHRONIC, lEBUOUB ABB ItttlAL | SjTa zgwfzgi* DISEASES. Ws guarantee to refund money if not cured. Aultuedl-r stF? ernes furbished ready for use—no mercury or fnJurtoM medicines g £3 used. No detention from business. Patients st a distance L . V treated by mail and express. Medislaes sent everywhere free L A from gaze or breakage. No medicine seat C. O. D. unless in I v structed. Charges low. Thousands of eases cured. State your g case and send for terms. Consultation FREE and eonßAsatlal, in K p«r»on, or by letter. Cell or write today. Don't May Nervous Debility and Weakneseer stricture ST.T of Hfin. folly and eicw tireaunent. No pain and no ex power*. Mo eaustloH Iw J iNUllf se»-causing l< h«M by dream* rutnng. bougies or *oand*. No detention from bus! E artne,pimple, and b otches on the face. ™’ h «* ®« B es*. Thousands cured We run.te* to refondg >h-<.d to the head, pains iu .be back, confused idea* noney ( f not permanently eurod. My book fully ex gj an .1 forgetfulness, baohfuineas, aversion to • oclet T* : plain* tbit dis-aar g? ■.-».«lnalhrwi.l.M»r m.nh.wlevc.. co-ed tor y . . interred rain, to th. wrvtum H lite. WeeanstoFnightlo.Ms, renter. l-,rt .ItoHty. VariCOCVIS eau.l ”« nervoru d.b'liry .alriiiß develop end mature jound or middle «ed -he are of nerron.oftom.ecc . permaMaUy eand with S weakly - d wrecK* and make them ht for marriage mt pain. yW u r-1 iIC that ter n s hie dlr ease, in ail It* dr c pay of tha Mrwtasa •nredfc; cyVhlliS. and .’ages, cuied for hfe B VUFO CC I • without palm f -;nn z .‘■kin i>Uaase«, Ulcers. Swellings, Bores. * . z .ior. -r- L -ea, Gleet and all forma of private diseaeee Lk | r 'z. A a t a book - e «»v< “ • ’•* ••T* ■ ir- dte -lay Cured. We guarantee to refund your F A I 111 9 • I 3 without pain. I ■ioney if not pe mauentiy cared J / M £ \lf FW£« TO MEN apes nppltettec-. . * - • « n.m.1.1!* » < w WIN. With description of abev. disease, • zFiey dnd PrOStMtlC uceffect* and cure, sent sealed In plain wrapper, ix • taaoawfv sucreisfatfy treated and permanent Ewa& tßllCOlim Anatomy for Men Only *• y ’ired. PILES and RUPTURE ear » IflUofulTj You *r* invited to *ee it when 1 n- DMiu e- -and >lo«xi;e*. method*. lit th* city Very Inrtr active. Otete vow nothing ’ - v*t f Ir* Ir-r* t ■ z% r* l*>- 7 Mirt u C:r. Hardens u 4 Piuavw Bi; 1 KlhG MEDICAL CO., Atlanta, ca. * (fhoroughlr ->dapomtinia. Lega. ted garter the w* of Fully Appreciated. • Raymond, age five, returned from i Sunday school in a state of evident > excitement. He strutted around the | room as if about to burst with im ) portance. The sympathetic eye of his mother was not slow to observe this. “What’s the matter, Raymond?’’ she asked. “Oh. mother," exclaimed the small boy, his eyes sparkling, “the super intendent said something auful nice ■ about me in his prayer this morn- • ing.” > “What did he say?” “He said ‘Oh Lord, we thank Thee . for food and Raymond.’ ” —Womans' Home Companion. .’ If You Wish to Be Popular— Don’t contradict people even if you are sure you are right.. - Don’t be inquisitive about the as- I fairs of even your most intimate , friend. ; Don’t underrate anything because you don’t possess it. Don’t believe that everybody else in the world is happier than you. Don’t declare that you have never had any opportunities in life. Don't believe all the evil you hear. Bara dogs may not bite, but you car always tell just when they will qua barking. a partial digester—and physics aro not, digesters at all. Kodol is a perfect digester. If you could see Kodol digesting every particle of food, of all kinds, in tho ; glass test-tubes in our laboratories, you would know this just as well as we do. Nature and Kodol will always cure a sick stomach —but in order to be cured, the stomach must rest i That is what Kodol does —rests the stomach, while the stomach gets well. Just as simple as A, B, C. Our Guarantee , Go to your druggist today and get a dol lar bottle. Then after you have used the entire contents of the Dottle 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 ques » tion or delay. We will then pay tlie drug gist for the bottle. Don’t hesitate, ail 1 druggists know that our guarantee is good. This offer applies to the large bottle only and to but one in a family. The large bot tle contains 2“4 times as much as the fifty ' cent bottle. i Kodol is prepared at the labor*. r toriesof E.C.DeWitt &,Co.,Chicago. THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, JULY 22, 1909. SCHOOLS FOR COUNTRY BOYS. By Robert H. Adams, A. M., Princi pal of the Berry School Rome, Ga. I To the ambitious young man on the farm, away from the centers of population, wealth and culture, the average rural school, with its lim ited equipment, short terms and un trained teachers, offers scant oppor- i tunity for an education. The pub-I lie common schools are for children; | their courses of study embrace lit tle more than the traditional element ] ary subjects, and their methods are conformed to the childish mind. Few t rural schools makes even a pretense to a high school course, and still fewer have adequate equipment for such courses. Even supposing that a boy complete the common school —and how fevt there are who do so —he is still far from prepared for .'taking up his life work. He has not been taught to do things. The great majority of country boys, however, drop out of school before they finish even the com mon school studies. Yet many of them, doubtless, w'ould have contin ued in school, or would return to school now', if the schools had some- I thing to offer them which they could see was worth while. The fact that they do not stay in school, and sel dom return after they have left, shows that the schools do not give what they want. The young man of eighteen, twenty, or twenty-five, whose education was neglected or left incomplete in his early days, and who now feels the need of a practi cal education to equip him for his life work, should have school of a differ ent type—a school whose every feat ure is especially designed to meet his needs. Until recent years no such in stitution was to found in the South. The great states of the mid dle West, have been working along this line for many years, but the South, eighty-five per cent of whose people live in the country, has made but. few and feeble efforts to grapple with the problem of rural education. The so called agricultural schools and colleges have been, for the most part, either an emasculated form of academic institution with an experi- ■ ment station attached, or else a com bination agricultural and mechanical 1 college in which the agricultural de partment played a part similar to that of the lamb in the famous coin binatiqn of the lion and lamb; at ■ least the mechanical department claimed and got the lion’s share of . attention and appropriations. We have no fight to make on , the mechanical or technological ' schools. The South needs more of them. But it also needs more agri cultural schools which shall be true to the purpose of their creation in provision of a rational education for the young men who come from the farms and expect to return thither. The South is beginning to see this. The establishment of a District Ag ricultural and Mechanical Schools of Georgia is but one indication of the trend of thought in this direction. Similar schools are being establish ed or planned for all over the South, and we may expect to see their num ber increase year by year. There is no inherent reason why the country boy should not have as good schools as the city boy. As a matter of fact, he does not; the city boy’s advantages in this re spect are so great and so obvious as to need no further comment here; they are recognized by all, and by none more than the intelligent cit izens of the rural districts. Yet the reasons for this state of affairs are purely accidental and we may trust to time and a wise statesmanship to remove them. Nor is it to be ques tioned that, the country boy is as ea ger as his city cousin to get an ed ucation; if there is any question at all it is on the other side. The coun try boys would go to school if there were schools of the right sort to go to. This brings up the question as to what is the right sort of school. Perhaps the question may be an swered by a brief dsecription of one such school for country boys. , In the seven years of its existence ; the Berry School, near Rome, has grown from five students to one hundred and fifty, and plans for an increase next year. The value of I its plant has increased from about four or five thousand to one hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars. It now owns seventeen hundred acres of land. These figures are given I here to show that, the school has succeeded, it has succeeded because it has met a need. The school was founded for the sake of those boys and young men who have passed the common school I age limit, but who is deficient. For this reason, it takes no boy un der sixteen years of age and fur ther limits its student body to those who cannot afford to attend more expensive schools, but who still wish a good education. To accommodate such students its char- ges for board and tuition are put very low, and through its industrial department it aids the students in paying their own expenses. The courses of study are arranged to meet the needs of boys and young men who are backward in their studies, not from lack of mental ability, but from poverty of educa tional advantages. The public com mon schools make no provision for i such young men; yet there are hun ; dreds of thousands in our own state | who must enter life ill prepared be cause the State has not provided for [ them. The course of study of the Berry School extends over seven years, beginning with the most elementary subjects and continuing through the high school. Students may enter any where in the course. The Prepara tory School gives a two year course in reading, writing, spelling, arithme tic, simple English cofiiposition, ele mentary geography, nature study, physiology, Bible and music. It is especially intended for those who have attended school very little. The Grammar School offers a thorough two year course in the essential of a common school education, prepar ing tlie student to enter the high school, or fitting him to deal success fully with the ordinary problems of every day life on the farm, in the store, or at work at the bench. The High School courses are ar ranged witli two classes of students in view. First, those who wish prep aration for farming, trades, business or teaching in the common schools; for such tlie academic or agricultural course is provided. Second, those who wislt preparation for college; for such a college preparatory course is provided. Each course is three years in length. In the High School arc met all the requirements of the agricultural school; a curriculum not so high as to be beyond the reach of the aver age farmer’s boy; moderate expen ses; skilled instructors who are spe cialists in their line, and sufficient equipment. Such schools can take a boy who has outgrown the common public school, give him a thorough, practical education, which combines English, mathematics, history, geog raphy, pysiology, elementary biology, agriculture, physics and chemistry, and then send him either to college, into business, or to the farm, prepar ed for either. Moreover, in tlie Ber ry School, the student learns to work with his hands at any sort of work to which he may be put, at. the same time that he receives from the cam pus life and from the class room in struction which includes music ami the Bible, lessons of the “the true, the beautiful and the good" not to be gotton from the course of study of the ordinary school. Each student Is required to work two hours a day at some manual labor assigned him by the instructors. All the work of the institution is done by the students, space forbids a full description of this department; it is sufficient to say that the aim of the department is to help students to earn an education, to teach right views and right methods of work, and to make work a part of educa tion. A complete rural community is planned. The school aims to exhib it on its plant every form of indus try connected with southern farms, and to teach the students everything that the intelligent, educated and progressive farmer should know. This plan gives scope for the teaching many forms of plant and animal in dustry; the elements of the crafts connected with the farm, such as car pentry, masonry, wood and iron work ing, painting, elementary architecture and construction; road building, sim pie surveying and landscape garden ing; marketing of crops, sanitation and laws of business; and all that goes with these to make up a com plete education, science, history, eco nomics, literature and art. When such schools as this are to be found in every county, then the farmer’s sons and the future farmer will have provided for him an educa tion adapted to his needs. Then the boys will neither grow up in Ignor ance on the farm nor be educated away from it. Then the problem of the rural school will be nearing a so ; lution, A Night Rider's Raid. ’ The worst night riders arc calomel, croton oil or aloes pills. They raid your bed to rob you of rest. Not so . with Dr. King's New Life Pills, i They never distress or inconvenience, i but. always cleanse the system, ctir i ing Colds, Headache. Constipation, Malaria, 25c. at Summerville Drug Co. The most determined debt dodg-1 er on record is said to be the South Carolina man who killed his mule and then shot himself to prevent the mule from being seized by credi tors. V I id OISVO 5,U3H3131J 803 Auo CASTORIA The Kind. You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of _Z> mid has been made under his per- < , sonal supervision since its infancy. 1 ■//, Allow no one to deceive you in th is. ■- AU 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 Narcotic 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 tlie Food, regulates tlie 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. THC CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY BTRtET, NEW YORK C«TV. £ ■ -41 * Praised by Press and Pulpit No Piano has ever been more enthusiastically endorsed. The Artistic Case, the Easy, Responsive Action, and above all the deep, sweet, rich Tone, captivates performer and lis tener. The united verdict io that .*. .’. LOMBARD PIANOS ARE THE BEST .LN THE WORLD JJ Mrs. Helen M. Sinker, 244 Grand Ave., Aurora, 111 , nays: •*! cannot find words in the English language to express my appreciation to you for having Hold me such a beautiful in strument. 1 really think it Im the most beautiful case I ever saw, and the tone i« simply grand. I shall be glad to give you any tcHinnoiii.il, ag J think the Lombard should take the lead.” Rev. Geo. Doubleday, Pres. Corpus Christi College, Galeaburg, 111., Hays: “We are using the Lombard in our College work at t orpus ( hristi, and it is a pleasure to recommend it. It is a beautiful instrument with a <!«•«-p, sweet, rich tone.” J. W. Pnrviance, Editor McNairny County Independent, Selmer, Tenn., says: ‘‘The instru ment (Lombard Piano) fills our most sanguine »• xjn-ct.itions. It is not only a rare beauty in its outward finish, but the tone is round, full, rich and sweet. Your firm has proven to be prompt and reliable in its dealings with mi ’ J Ernest Paxson, Editor Press, Parkersburg, Pa., says: ‘‘l must say that the Lombard bent me is a beautiful instrument, and a credit to a standard firm. We are morcthan satisfied.” R. S. Knapp, President Federal Charter < <»., Washington, I). C., ways: “We now realise after a careful and comprehensive trial of the, Lombard by many musical artists of Washing ton, that it stands sec ond to none, regardless of price or make. Every one who has tried this instrument is enthusiastic in it . praise.” These are samples of hundreds of enthusiastic letters ' received In every mall. Do Not Buy a Plano I ntil Y o uJI aye I nvestlgated the Lombard. Wc send the Lombard Piano to any reliable party on 10 days’ free trial. It may be paid for by easy monthly or quarterly payments. Credit will be given to suit any honest customer. A discount allowed for all cash. GALESBURG PIANO CO., MANUFACTURERS. GALESBURG. ILL. See the editor of this paper for further information about the Lombard Piano, and a special opportunity to get one almost FREE. Some one will get the bargain of his life. V ASK YOUR DEALER FOR A J A PIEDMONT AVB m I BUGGY /Jffl J & Made in one grade only JW y ■ ■ "THE BEST.” Z \ if Bunt by expert*. Every job fnlly Z \ // X W r gu.irantx <d. Htut all the latent f 1 I A improvements. Cf-rreMpondence r W 1 solicited from live dealers. /f / \ / Iw B PIEDMONT BUCCY CO M fl Monroe, N. C. i■ - W M sei/ lhem vktrrewr ws go; they go wherever we nctl the'/iL** fl