Newspaper Page Text
I Worn Women I
r Women, worn and tired from overwork, need a ■
!■ tonic. That feeling of weakness or helplessness will
9 not leave you of itself. You should take Wine ofggi
M Cardui, that effectual remedy for the ailments and®
|j weaknesses of women. Thousands of women have ||
■ tried Cardui and write enthusiastically of the great■
|l benefit it has been to them. Try it —don’t experiment B
■ —use this reliable, oft-tried medicine.
»CARDUI
Efe J 33 H
The Woman’s Tonic
Mrs. Rena Hare, of Pierce, Fla., tried Cardui and afterward I
■ wrote: “I was a sufferer from all sorts of female trouble, had ■
B| pain in my side and.legs, could not sleep, had shortness of breath. ■
■ “I suffered for years, until my husband insisted on my trying H
ss Cardui. The first bottle gave me relief and now I am almost well.” H
■ Try Cardui. ’Twill help you.
B AT ALL DRUG STORES H
EXCURSION RATES
Via Central of Georgia Railway.
TO ALBANY, GA., and return
account District Grand Lodge
No. 18 G. U. O. 0. 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„st 31, 1909.
10 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, Oregon, 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 United States government main
tains fifty-seven wireless telegraph
stations and has ninety-six vessels
fitted out with such facilities.
Trouble seems to have wireless ’
connection with the fellow that is I
looking for it.
The Value of Good
Digestion
Is easy 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, slck-headaches.
vertigo and fainting spells, and
even serious brain trouble develop.
Kodol will prevent these.
Spurring the stomach and brain
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGIST.
fDOCTOR KING}
g THE OLD RELIABLE DOCTORS. OLDEST II A6E AID LOISEJT LOCATED. REGULAR MADUTU K MEBICIIE. fc
B ———WE OFFER YOU THE LARGE ARD IALUABLE EXPERIENCE Os TIE LMOUI
9 1 ESTABLISHED ISO HOST RELIABLE SPECI*' ISTR l» THE IWTR’
\ y \ Authorized ny the to treat CIIRCMC, IEAVCOO AES SPECIAL ■
S 'L'l z'VS-'*'' 4 DISEASES Ws guarantee to refund money it noi oursd. Ailmedl-r
-y'“r j c i C es furnished ready tor use—no mercury or Injurtona waedirlues P
-
7 ~HL ■ *ts*. treated by wail and express. Medieines sent eTerfwhere Ires pt
/ From gaze or breakage. No medicine sent CO. D. units* In K.
« structed. Charges low. Thousands of eases eared. Stale your g
*SAdfLfc tnsw- case and send tor terms. Consultation FREE and oonflasatlai, In --
L person, or by letter. Call or write today. Don't delay
Morvous liability and Weaknesses stricture harraf nstrumenta. A now Horoe|gg
* 'r>< UaM the result# of youthful folly and exces- 7 rMtnient No p«in end no expoeuro. No oauetl- £
«Vi MB!’? tee—-auMF.g by dreema or ’rHh| cntd or aounda. No4eUntlM from bu> fj
urine,pimple* and blotches on the face, ruphee "’ r , Frtß Thousands cured We gnaruatea to refundjr
» blood to the head, pains in the back ronfubed ideas fn , ff not permanently cured. My baok fuiiy ex
JW ami forgetfulness. Lashfuinesa, aveis. ,n to society.;, |<lM ttdß dleeaae.
osaot vital forces.lo»» of manhood etc., cu-cl fur Enlarged velru in the aarotam I
Itfe. VFe can «top night looses, restore loti vj’allty fgr tCOCviV eau ting nervous debt'lty. weakne-n.'.
~jd mature young or middle aged who are |of Uie nerTOaa ey.tem, etc., permaaaauy oerad wIU-L
--■ e.'id wrecks an 1 make thorn fit for marriage , t .,* patrv
•Hie thattemabie'iwea»e,fn aii ita form* dropeyof the aoratonm wed I?
yns. a&d erazes, cured for hfe. Blood HydrOCQli without pel..
bktn Diseases, Ctcers, Hwellings. Soree. * . .
and aii forms of private diMaaee. D Iwq t. t “ 7 1
Cvreii We guai autee to refusal your-’ •• * ew ■ w wltbou. oain.
Boe. “'n-..t y*SJ*i. 7 T" 11 TO MEM SJX. .pHteli.r,.,
£-/ i A ft- with daacri ption of abe<e ct»ea«<-
H giSCCSr ahu rrOSsSIIC heefle-ts and cure, e-D’ Ln R.aiß wrapper.»
Bt ?r 'Z- Free Museum
fl L.-/sCxVi- CO*j ATLANTA, GA,
Nearly a Tradegy.
At a seaside resort a lady fell into
the water from a landing stake while
entering a boat. Her husband ap
peared frantic and cried in the most
beseeching tones:
“For heaven’s sake save her! She
is my wife.”
A young man gallantly plunged in
to the water and brought back the
poor woman.
The look of gratitude the husband
gave fully repaid him for his ef
forts.
On recovering his equamity the
husband thrust his hand into his
wife’s wet pocket, pulled out a some
what bulgy purse, and with infinite
relief said:
“Old woman, the next time you
tumble overboard just leave that
purse behind, will you? You almost
scared me to death?” —London Scrap.
Smiles are like oil; they make
I things go along a great deal easier.
The petroleum areas of the United
i States at present known are set
' down at 8,850 square miles, or some
what larger than the state of Massa
chusetts; and the gas areas at 10,-
1 055 square miles, or slightly more
I in area than the state of Vermont.
Paradoxical as it may seem, an
■ idle rumor is always busy.
to special effort by “tonics” and
“stimulants” doesn’t cure anything,
or accomplish any good. Neither
does dieting. Indigestion and the
serious ailments which it induces
i can be averted and corrected only
by natural means.
Kodol supplies this natural
, means. It performs the stomach’s
work for it —just as the stomach
should perform it —while the stom
ach takes a little rest, “for the
stomach’s sake.”
Our Guarantee
Go to your druggist today and get a dol
lar bottle. Then after you have used the
entire contents of the bottle if you can
honestly say, that it has not done yon any
good, return the bottle to the druggist and
ne will refund your money without ques
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
and to but one in a family. The large bot
tle contains 2!4 times as much as the, fifty
cent bottle.
Kodol is prepared at the labora
toriesof E.C.DeWitt&Co.,Chicago.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, JULY 29. 1909,
LAUREL HILL, FLORIDA.
I take pleasure in giving the read
ers of your paper a few dots of inter
est from our state.
The farmers are pulling fodder in
this section. The cotton crop is sor
ry in West Florida. Velvet beans
are very good. Watermelons have
been sorry, although melons at pres
ent are very nice.
It has been awfully rainy on hay
makers, in fact, hasn’t been much
made up to date.
The pinder crop does very well.
Pinders make well with some guano,
but the large red or white Virginia
peanut does not do well here.
The health of Walton county is
very good, there being only a few eas
es of fever over the northern part.
Several of our schools are in ses
sion. Owing to the healthy condition
of the county there is a good attend
ance.
A few days ago a gentleman
was attending the same series of
meetings as the writer and on his
return from church, coming to a
brook he espied an alligator. He ■
hastily left his seat, taking his hors
es bridle reins, he unhesitatingly las
soed the young water monster and
led him to shore. He was only about
five feet long, but wasn’t to be!
played with in the least. There is a I
nice number of alligators in this ■
county and like the above narrative,
they are many times captured. Mr. ;
editor, these people will have some
kind of a reward for attending the
churches. If nothing else a nice
dish of alligator tail soup, and
that beats not hing. Some people;
don’t go to church in this county,
or if they do they don’t believe in
what the church is for. But I say
go, and if you can’t get any good out
of the services then you may get
something good out of the brooks or
creeks. So yoti see it pays to at
tend church in Florida. Give it a
thought.
Leaving all the 'gators that can’t
be captured, will say something in
regard to the turpentine business. I
suppose the reader has heard folks
talk of money growing on trees, but ■
the nearest money I ever saw grow
on trees is in Florida where the tur
pentine runs down the face of the
pine tree. It's precious tree-grown
money if you want to call it tree
grown, when a man chips 8 or ten
thousand trees with two chips from !
each tree eight or ten inches in
length. It takes a good chipper, an
expert to chip his 10,000 trees or
20,000 chips in four to five days. I
want to add right here that who ev
er he may be he will keep the mos-1
quitoes off of himself if he gets done
in five days. A man who chips 10,-
00 trees will average about $35 or
$45 per month. He earns SSO and
that is plain facts. One bad thing
about turpentineing in Florida and
that is if a drunk or sober man falls
against a gummed or unscraped race
of the pine, if he should be so lucky
as to escape, his clothing would be
ruined. Indeed, it pays to watch and
be sober while among alligators and i
sticky pines in Florida.
Land and lumber is getting higher
in prices. Some land has gone up $5
to $lO on the acre in the last year.
Logging is still moving on rapidly.
One large company is just finishing
up in our county, and another is just
starting. So in a few years that
thing called pine timber will be very
scarce. Farms are being opened up
and the immigration to West Florida
is moving at a nice per cent. Last
but not least our religious determina
tion is growing stronger and strong
er. I close with best wishes to the
editor and readers of the News.
TILLMAN BRADDY.
WELL EQUIPPED.
A Methodist bishop was recently
a guest at the home of a friend who
had two charming daughters. One
morning the bishop accompanied by'
the two young ladies, went out in '
the hope of catching some trout. An
old fisherman, out for the same pur
pose, wishing to appear friendly, call
ed out:
“Having any luck, pard?”
The bishop, drawing himself to hl»'
full height, replied, "brother, 1 am
a fisher of men.”
"You’ve got the right kind o’ bait,
all right,” was the fisherman’s re
joinder.—Success Magazine.
Some women wonder why their
husbands seem gladder to see the
dog than themselves after having
been away for awhile. Just watch
the dog when hubby comes home and
you may know.
Lack of pluck is apt to be the
reason for a man’s complaint about
his luck.
A Night Rider’s Raid.
The worst night riders are calomel,
croton oil or aloes pills. They raid
your bed to rob you of rest. Not so
with Dr. King’s New Life Pills.
They never distress or inconvenience,
but always cleanse the system, cur
ing Colds, Headache, Constipation,
Malaria, 25c. at Summerville Drug
Co.
NATURE AS A CHEMIST
Feats Which the Highest Exactitude
of Science Cannot Rival.
The bursting leaves of springtime
illustrates nature as a chemist who
performs feats which the highest ex
actitude of science cannot hope to ri
val. In a leaf the living matter is
his chemist, and the cell is his lab
: ratory. By daylight the leaf chemist
is absorbing the carbonic gas and is
decomposing this gas into its com
ponent elements —carbon and oxygen
; The carbon it is retaining as part of
Ihe plant's food to enter info combi
nation with water, and the oxygen
it sets free into the atmosphere. By
night this process ceases, for light l
! is an essential feature in the opera
tion.
Out of the carbon and water the'
leaf chemist will elaborate the sug
j ar and starches which the plant world
affords. As sugar the products will
pass from the leaf to be stored up,
as in the ease of the potato, for ex
ample, so as to afford a storheouse
of food whereon the plant may draw
for its sustenance and for the devel
opments of its leaves and flowers
i when occasion comes. All the veg
etable essences and acids, the scents
| and gums, the juices which yield In
dia rubber, the flavoring of fruits j
■ and even the color of the flowers are i
similarly the products of a construe- |
| five chemistry which beats man’s es-!
forts to imitate. Man follows nature ;
i but at a distance. —Chicago Tribune, j
The great event in every young j
; man’s life is his awakening. There J
comes a time when he’s aroused
from the dreamy carelessness of
boyhood by the opening possibilities
of life. If he then drops into indif
ference and begins life in an easy,
shiftless way, he fritters away his
chances. If he comes to a deep,
earnest purpose to be his best and
do his best, he arrives early at the
highest rank among equals in bus!
ness, profession or trade. Enthus
iasm leads him to attempt the seem
ingly impossible. Energy will achieve
the marvelous. Effort will seize trail
scendent leadership in the chosen
sphere. These forces in youth
look forward, while age looks back
ward. They make youth radically
venturesome, while age becomes con-'
servatively cautious. Youth may
make mistakes, but is doing some
thing. Age less active, may be [
less mistaken. It is well for en
thusiasra and energy to bo guarded
by experience, but not to be par
alized by fear. —Ex.
The census bureau statistics of
. electric lighting, electric traction and
‘ telephone companies shows a gross
I income for the three industries in
the United States of $790,000,000 in
1907.
“I don’t know how to refuse him.”
“Then let him down easy.”
“How can I?”
“Accept, him, start a flirtation with
i another fellow and when your finance
I gets mad break off the engagement.”
—Louisville Courier-Journal.
Miss Minnie Shaw, of this place,
has just completed a quilt contain
ing 28,450 pieces. It. is a remark
able piece of work and the young
lady deserves much credit for her
patience and perseverance. Some
time ago she made a quilt contain
ing 20,000 pieces, and when a mere
child pieced one with 4,000. —Jack-
son Herald.
To relieve constipation, clean out
the bowels, tone and strengthen the
digestive organs, put them in a nat
ural condition with Hollister's Rocky
Mountain Tea, the most reliable ton
ic for thirty years. 35 cents, Tea or
Tablets. Summerville Drug Co.
Some men think they are unselfish
‘ because they are willing to let. some
other fellow have something they do
not want.
H. H. Bass, Manager, wants a
good hustling man to write insurance
in this county for the Jefferson
Standard Life Insurance Co., Ad
dress 312 English-American Bldg.,
Atlanta, Ga.
All men’s sins are committeed in
selfishness; nine out of ten of wom
en’s in sacrifice.
It’s awfully hard to convince our
selves that people who praise us are j
liars.
Proper Treatment for Dysentery and
Diarrhoea
The great mortality from dysentery
and diarrhoea is due to lack of prop
er treatment at the first stages of
the disease. Chamberlain's Colic, :
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is a
reliable and effectual medicine, and
when given in reasonable time will
prevent any dangerous consequneces.
It has been in use for many years
and has always met with unvarying
success. For sale by Summerville
Drug Co., Summerville, Ga.
rH 0 ASTO RIA
For Infants and Children.
CASfORiA T X xr
AVi'gclable Preparation for As |i| -
similating the Food andßegula- ' _ X
ting lite Stomachs iimf Bowels of j £)6<ITS tllO J t
l / cz d*
; ——. . J Signature //J y
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- |i|ii J
ness and Rest. Contains neither I 9• ■
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. JI Xf\*wl/
: Not Narcotic. 6- XiVl *l*
| H i J y V
t j! |V/\***
/A/r/y>Z’l/r Sfgtl' . ■ V 9
X/.V.1/W/R* * 1 ■
/Jwkrlle Sa/tT - I I
situ.* Seed ' I Jk * >
] f\ lip
. /W X IIS P
I A perfect Remedy for Conslipa I jV UvU
lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea if I lly
Worms.Convulsions,feverish 1 [nF fl If OP
ness and Loss (if Sleep. 1 lUI UVul
— : ■ {ll
Facsimile Signature of
j Ji Thirty Years
I EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. gj &_|| G GIG BB
w, -
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK OJTY.
m , r' . ■' ij I
F .. J >
, TjWIW'W
I I. ||^_ I
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 is that .’. .’.
LOMBARD PIANOS ARE THE
BEST IN THE WORLD !!
Mrs. Helen M. Slakcr, 244 Grand Ave.. Aurora, 111., Kays: ‘I cannot find word* in the
EntfliHh language to rxpresH my appreciation to you for having Hold me such a beautiful in-
Htrument. I really think it iw the most beautiful case I ever Haw, and the tone is nimply
grand. 1 shall be glad to give you any testimonial, as I think the Lombard should take the
lead.”
Rev. Geo. Doubleday, Pres. Corpus Christi College, Galesburg, 111., says: “We are using
the Lombard in our College work at Corpus < bristi, and it is a pleasure to recommend it. It
ib a beautiful instrument with a deep, uwret, rich tone.”
J. \V. Purviance, Editor McNalrny County 1 ndependent, Selmer. Tenn., says: “The instru
ment (Lombard Piano) fills our moMt sanguine ex pe< t.itions. It is not only a rare beauty in
its outward finish, but the lone is round, full, rich and sweet. Your firm lias proven to be
prompt and reliable in its dealings with me.”
J. Ernest Paxson, Editor Press, Parkersburg, Pa., says: “I must say that the Lombard
sent me i» a beautiful instrument, and a credit to a standard firm. We are more than satisfied.”
R. S. Knapp, President Federal Charter <’o., Washington, D. C., ways: “We now realise
after a careful a tid comprehensive t rial of tin* Lombard by many musical artists of Washing
ton, that it stands second to none, regardless of price or make. Every one who has tried this
instrument is enthusiastic in its praise.”
These are samples of hundreds of enthusiastic letters
received In every mail.
Do \ot Buy a Plano Until You Have Investigated the Lombard.
We 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. GALE.3BUR.O, 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.
- - - ■■■ - "■ ' *—■
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR A 9
J PIEDMONT ft
U BUGGY /'A J
4 Made In one grade only JW - ■
■ “THE BEST.” / Z\
P.iiHt by experts. Everyjob fully / . \ W
W guaranteed. 11 a# all the latest j
f A improvement*. 1 Drn*Rpon<lence I’’ ' 1 1" 1 * 1 “1 JBl
W| bolicited from live dealers. f
« FI£OMONT BUCCY CO., \ W
Monroe, N. C. i wafii '
9 IFp fte.U them vherewrr v» go: they go wherever we tell ■