Newspaper Page Text
Are you one of the thousands of women who]
■ suffer from female ailments ? If so, don ’t*be discour- B
9 aged, go to your druggist and get a bottle of Wine of ■
I Cardui. On the wrapper are full directions for use. H
p During the last half century, Cardui has been]
9 established in thousands of homes, as a safe remedy B
|l for pain which only women endure. It is reliable, B
9 contains no harmful ingredients and can be depend- ■
9 ed on in almost any case.
CARDUI
j It Will Help You ' |
te Mrs. Charles Bragg, of Sweetser, Ind., tried Cardui. She I
9 writes: “Tongue cannot tell how much Cardui has done for me. I
M Before I began taking Cardui I could not do a day’s work. I B
9 would work awhile and lie down. I shall always give praise to your I
H medicine.” Try Cardui.
AT ALL DRUG STORES
HOW MEN AND WOMEN FACE
GRIM MONSTER.
How do men and women face death
when the sentence is pronounced by
the doctor? A medical man tells us
of his experience.
Tell the man of higher type and
•greater intelligence, he says, that
he is facing death and he begins to
fight, demands a consultation, talks
about going to specialists, and fights
grimly to the finish. Tell a woman
the same facts and she lies back to
await her fate. All women are fatal
ists.
On the other hand, tell a man he
has one chance in a thousand to re
cover if he will undergo an operation
and he will trust to his own strength
and endurance rather than undergo
the knife. The woman will choose
the thousandth chance and submit to
the operation with undying calm
ness.
The dying woman thinks first of
her children and their future.
The dying man thinks first of his
wife, then of his children.
And most remarkable of all, no
matter how destitute a man has
been, no matter how untrue he may
mave been to his wife, in that su
preme hour of facing death he seems
anxious to right every wrong he has
done her. She is the object of his
solicitude. Hers is the face he wants
to look upon.
Women Suffer Agonies
from Diseased Kidneys
And Most Women Do This Not Knowing the
Real Cause of their Condition
These poor, suffering women
have been led to believe that their
misery of mind and body is entire
ly due to “ills of their sex.” Usually
the kidneys and bladder are re
sponsible—or largely so. And in
such cases, the kidneys and blad
der are the organs, that need and
must have attention.
Those torturing, enervating sick
headaches, dragging pains in back,
groin and limbs, bloating and swell
ing of the extremities, extreme
nervousness or hysteria, listless
ness and constant tired, worn-out
feeling—are almost certain symp
toms of disordered and diseased
kidneys, bladder and liver.
DeWitt’s Kidney and Bladder
Pills have, in thousands of cases,
been demonstrated as remarkably
beneficial in all such conditions of
female organism—affording the l
most prompt relief and permanent
benefit.
As an illustration of what these
Pills will do, Mrs. P. M. Bray of
Columbus, Ga., writes that she was
very ill with kidney trouble, and
that she is now well—and that
these Pills are what cured her.
They are very pleasant to take,
and can in no case, produce any
deleterious effects upon the system
—as syrupy, alcoholic, liquid prep-
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGIST.
DOCTOR KINGI
THE OLD RELIABLE DOCTORS. OLIEST 111 ACE AIR IMBEST LOMUS. REMLAR WADUATU ■ MDICIK. B
. HE OFFER EOU THE LARGE AHO VALUABLE EXPERIENCE RFTMIJttUT L
ESTABLISHED AHO MOST RELIABLE SPECIALISTS 111 THE WSTI £
fml**'' \ 1 \ Authorized by the state to treat CHRORIC, IEBVOU MB WSCIALH
■MB DISEASES. We guarantee to refund money if not cured. All meal*»
cines furnished ready for use—no mercurr or injurious medicines Eg
used. No detention from business. Patients at a distance
treated oy mail and express. Medleises sent ererTwnere free
4 from gate or breakage. No medicine sent QO. D. unless in
Av structed. Charges low. Thousands of cases cured- State your
case and send for terms. CoßSultatlon FREE and oonfiSeatlai, in
P’ r ’o». orb/letter. C»ll or write today. DontMUy.
Nervous Debility and Weaknesses stricture rnfuf Instrument*. A BOW Homel
aa__ tbe re*uits of youthful folly and ex<*s-| lreßtnjent . y<o pein and no exposure. Wo eaestlc*
'VI W!il, »e» causing losses by dreams or *1 lb hcatting. bougies or so undo. Modeteatloa from bu» >
urine,pimples and blotches on the face, rushes °*<neee. Thousand! cured. We guaraatse to refund
blood to the head, pains in the back, confused Ideas rn , >aey if not permanently cured. My book fully ex
end forgetfulness, bashfulnese, aversion to society ulDgtblßdlgeßM ,
17m ot vital forces.loss of maahood.etc., cured for Enlarged veins ta tho scrotum-
fife. We-an stop nightloasss, restore lost vitality f BrlCOCvlw causing nervous debility, weakness
develop urt mature young or middle aged who are! of tbe nervous system, etc., permanently oared with
weakiy and wrecks and make then, fit for marriage
t» w -L,:U> that terrtable disease, in all its forms Uv»lpaaala dropsy of the eeswbam cured
■Syphlus« and stages, cured for life. 8100 d ft V Q fQO £| g wish out pala.
Po-eomnv. J*k»n Diseases. Ulcors, Swell Ings, Bores /
O eet aad all forms of private diseases D h l m Q | I « wkb< Jt t
cared te stay Cured- We guarantee to refund rout; yugg TO tttM UM* apptletlor.'r
money if not permanently cared. 800 IC with desertptlor of above disease,!
Kidney Bladder and Proitatic
’tier -‘•ae- eueceAsfuily treated and P*™** 0 * 01 pFAfi MUSSUni Too are in»Uod to sas it when B
,315 C iSCS lyrurrt "Lt* TF •• f
*3 hr P..L- awdlod.. _ k/? XubtU Sot. KirlrtU AM Em*RBM BU. »
DR. KING MEDICAL CO., * Atlanta, ca. j
The man thinks days of the mate
rial welfare of his famliy.
He wants to make sure that his
business, his insurance papers and
1 everything is prepared for their care
and protection. The woman thinks
’ less of the money she may have to
leave her loved ones than of their
care after she has gone. The prop
erty, she thinks, can take care of it
-1 self, but who will keep the babies
together, and who will make a home
for them and their father?
Unselfishness, strength of char
‘ acter and calmness, these are the un
questionable traits of nearly every ;
man or woman face to face with '
death. Their last hours are given I
over reservedly to those they Ipve. —
Ex.
>
Oh! my stomach’s a very uncertain
thing,
I suffered the torment that cost
tiveness brings,
, But now I am happy, normal and
free,
A miracle wrought by Hollister’s j
Rocky Mountain Tea.
—Summerville Drug Co.
>
> ————
• A contemporary points ot that
• “after 10 years of unprecedented pros
s perity” the country finds itself with
s a deficD of $86,000,000. A few more
s years of such prosperity and Uncle
3 Sam would be apt to find himself a
| hopeless bankrupt.
AfW ''l fel*
wmt
arations are apt to do.
E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago,
want every man and woman who
have the least suspicion that they
are afflicted with kidney and blad
der diseases to at once write them,
and a trial box of these Pills wilt
be sent free by return mall post
paid. Do it to-day.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1909.
AIM TO SUCCEED.
The Self Improvement Habit as a
Business Asset.
I The very reputation of having an
ambition to amount to something in
the world, of having a grand life aim,
is worthy everything, says a writer in
Success Magazine. The moment your
assoqfiates find that you are dead in
earnest, that you mean business, that
they cannot shake you from your de
termination to get on in the world or
rob you of your time or persuade you
to waste it in frivolous things you
will not only be an inspiring example
to them, but the very people who are
throwing away their time will also
admire your stand, respect it and prof
it by it, and you will be able to pro-
I tect yourself from a thousand annoy
ances and time wasters and experi
ences which would only hinder you.
In other words, there is everything
in declaring yourself in taking a stand
and thereby announcing to the world
that you do not propose to be a fail
ure or an ignoramus; that you are go
J ing to prepare yourself for something
out of the ordinary, away beyond med
| iocrity, something large and grand.
The moment you do this you stand
: out in strong contrast from the great
mass of people who are throwing |
away their opportunities and have:
not grit and stamina enough to do
; anything worth while or to make any ,
great efofrt to be somebody in the
world.
Some Appeals to Georgia Orphans
Homes
A glance at the multitudes of sad
bro Ken hearted letters, asking help
for desolate orphans would surprise
the public.
This morning mail to the Decatur
Orphans’ Home brings this appeal
from the mountains: “Please take
the five little girls of a preacher
who left nothing of this world's goods.;
; Their mother is a weak, delicate
J woman who can’t do hard work.
She wants help until she can learn
some light work by which she can
support them.’’
Two full orphans from Middle Geor
gia have no kindred able to help ;
them. The boy has had a mastoid .
abscess and is paralyzed slightly.
Yesterday a country boy with a
| good face was taken by the Associa I
i ted Charities from his worthless moth
er, who with her babe and four chil
dren, were begging. The court gave
full possession.
Augusta and Atlanta have just sent \
■ in desperate cases of need, etc.
These are like those received by
every Home in Georgia. The homes
ask every one to give them their full
earnings of the annual Work Day
for the orphans to help save every
suffering child in Georgia.
Saturday, Sept. 25, is the Work
Day.
The secret of fashionable beauty.
I asked the question of a beauty spe
cialist. In order to be round, rosy
and very stylish, take ’ Hollisters I
Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents. Tea
or Tablets.
Summerville Drug Co.
Frequently the only way to meet
the objection that an undertaking is
impossible is to go right ahead and
do it.
Joy riders, boat rockers and those
that point loaded guns “just for fun”
seem to vie with each other to pre-
I vent an increase of population.
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Di
arrhoea Remedy Never Known
to Fail.
“I have used Chamberlain's Colic,
Cnolera and Diarrhoea Remedy since
it was first introduced to the public
in 1872, and have never found one
instance where a cure was not speed
ily effected by its use. I have been
a commercial traveler for eighteen
years, and never start out on a trip
without this, my faithful friend,” says
Mr. H. S. Nichols of Oakland, Ind.
Ter. For sale by Summerville Drug
Co., Summerville, Ga.
It isn’t so much what you have not
: got that hurts you as it is what you
want and can’t get.
The road’to ruin is always kept in
good repair.
If you are not satisfied with your
lot, trade it for a better one.
The best remedy we know of in all
cases ot Kidney and Bladder trouble
and the one we always can recom
mend, is DeWitt’s Kidney and Blad
der Pills. They are antiseptic and
at once assist the kidneys to per
form their important work. But
when you ask for these pills be pos
itive that you get DeWitt’s Kidney
and Bladder Pills. There are imita
tions placed upon sale to deceive you
Get De Witt’s. Insist upon them,
and if your dealer cannot supply you
—refuse anything else in plj.ee of
them. Sold by all druggists.
HOW FIRE HURTS THE FIELD
The Burning of Vegetable Matter Is
a Loss of $4.40 Per Acre in
Fertilizer Material
Os course the greatest loss sus
tained through the burning of vege
, table matter which should be mixed
i with the soil is the loss of the hu
mus-forming materials'; but the act
ual loss in plant food is also worthy
of serious consideration. The phos
phorus and potassium contained in
the vegetable matter are not destroy
ed by burning, for these mineral
plant foods remain in the ashes, but
the nitrogen which our soils need
most is driven off into the air and
lost.
We repeat that the greatest loss
■is the destruction of the humus
j forming materials, but let us see just
• what the loss of nitrogen amounts to
while a ton of crabgrass, broomsage
or cornstalks is burned. If the ma-
I term 1 , burned be Japan clover or
other legumes, the loss of nitrogen
I is much greater. A ton of crabgrass
( hay contains about 22 pounds of ni
trogen, and this is worth 20 cents a
. pound, which gives it. a value of
$1.40. A ton of crabgrass hay. and
frequently much more than a ton of
crabgrass and other materials equal
jly rich in nitrogen, is often burned
’ off each acre. That is, for each acre
we. burn over we may easily destroy
$4.40 worth of the very plant food
! our soils need most .
We are slow to accept such state
ments as facts, because the plowing
under of these materials does not
give immediate evidence of any such |
value to be obtained from the plow
ing under of such a quantity of corn -
stover or crabgrass. That is, more |
benefit to the first succeeding crop
would bo obtained from the applica
j tion of $4.40 worth of cottonseed
meal than from plowing under a lon
of corn stalks. This is undoubtedly
so, but the effects of plowing under
I humus-forming materials are not
alone measured by the nitrogen they
■ contain, and are not limited to the ,
! first year. It. is the working for
■ immediate results alono that has
J brought, our soils to that degree of
, infertility represented by an average
I yield of 200 pounds ot lint cotton
and 15 bushels of corn per acre. No
rich land ever became suddenly un-
■ productive, nor can a depleted soil
bo economically built up to a high
degree of fertility in one or two
| years. From these facts we should
learn that farming lands for this
1 year's results exclusively, while
j sometimes necessary, if persisted in is
I certain to lead to soil depletion and
' finally to agricultural and financial
bankruptcy.—Raleigh (N. C.) Progres
sive Farmer.
SUMMER CUTTING OF PINES
The cutting of pine trees in the
summer months should be avoided
as far as practicable . Timber that
is cut. in the summer is more liable
to "blue” or become affected with
a fungous growth which causes blu
ish streaks and spots in it. Lumber
that is so affected does not bring
as high prices as lumber without
these blemishes.
Summer cutting is also liable to
bring on attacks of bark beetles.
Such attacks do not always follow
summer cutting, but they very often
do. A common example of this is
a tree struck by lightning in the
spring or summer months. Such a
tree is often seen in the woods
j surrounded by trees that have been
■ killed by bark beetles. The tops and
. stumps in the case of cutting, and
: the dying tree in the case of a stroke
j of lightning, furnish a breeding place
for the beetles and when they have
. become sufficiently numerous, they
spread to surrounding trees and
. and cause their death .
Farmers should, therefore, do as
little cutting of pine trees as prae
tlcable during the summer months,
i If it becomes necessary to cut poles,
i fire wood, or other material during
the summer, the tops should be
: used as closely as possible, or bet
ter still, should be piled and burned;
and if- trees are killed by lightning
; or thrown by the wind, they should
also be cut up and removed as soon
as possible.
The year’s supply of poles, fire
wood, and other material, is best cut
in the fall or winter when the frost
will check the spread of the beetles.
ALFRED AKERMAN,
■ July 27, 1909. Athens, Ga.
Prof, of Forestry.
I ; Love is a thing that makes two
, persons think each other good-look
. ing when all the courts in the world
. couldn't prove it.
I
If you are all run down Foley’s
t Kidney Remedy will help you. It
- strengthens the kidneys so they will
r eliminate the Impurities from the
• blood that depress the nerves, and
l cause exhaustion, backache, rheuma
, tism, and urinary irregularities, that
i sap the vitality. Do not delay. Take
f Foley’s Kidney Remedy at once.
i Sold by all druggists
I WBB—aB
— - - J
i j g a; isl
iQUEB® ■
CASTORI4
_ -IL. 1 - ijffi
A\l’gclable Preparation for As
similaling ttic Food and Reg ul:i
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of ji
Promotes Digeslioii.Cheerrul- |
nessand Rest. Contains neither |
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narc otic .
Seal- .
■z/zu.vi- .ftvrZ * I
Jfyurrnunt - /
lit * j
I
C/tifi/t.'ti. \u(nr
MhAvy/ww fvaiw: •
Aperfccl Remedy forConslipa ,f|
lion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea
Worms .Convulsions .Fcwnsh
ness and Loss of Sleep. ;|
Facsimile Signalure of
NEW YORK. |
i . 1Z..11
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ||
tetas.
%
m. El ' t|| ~/
o -J pH
zl! ' Tope
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., Hays: ‘I cannot find wordu hi the
English language to express my appreciation io you for having Hold m« such a beautiful in
strument. I really think it is the most beautiful case J ever saw, and the tone is simply
grand. I 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 < hristi, and it Isa pleasure to recommend it. It
is a beautiful instrument with a deep, sweet, rich lone.”
J. W. Purviance, Editor McNairny Comity Independent, Selmer, Tenn., says: “The instru
ment (Lombard Piano) lillHour most sanguine expectations. It is not only a ran* beauty in
, its outward finish, but the lone is round, full, rich and sweet. Your firm has 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 is a beautiful instrument, and a credit to a standard firm. Weare more than satisfied.”
R. S. Knapp, President federal Charter (Jo., Washington, I). C., says; “We now realize
after a careful and comprehensive trial 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 Not 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.9BUKG. ILL.
1..
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.
/Wg , *
% ASK YOUR DEALER FOR A J
A PIEDMONT (ft
L BUGGY j
I. Made In one grade only Mg rx. ■
& "THE BEST." X\ 7 .
1 Ir Built by expert*. Every Job fully f \ W
F guaranteed. Hae. all the latent f 11 >
lA improvement*. Correspondence! j Ai
j Ml aoitcitcd from live dealers. s Lw
% PIEDMONT BUDDY CO., \ W
i'/ Monroe, N. C. —•
H K “We tell them wherever we go; they go wherever we nett then.”
ICASTdRIfI
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
I f
Bears the / i
Signature Z/Jjj
of
Or .
(k Jr ln
Use
La For Over
Thirty Years
CASTOfIIA
THF CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY.