The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, August 12, 1909, Image 7

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Bi^raßß|Mwwoman ’s medicine. It acts specifi cally on the female organs and has a tonic, building effect on the whole system. It contains no harmful ingredients, being a pure vegetable extract. If you suffer from some form of female trouble, get Cardui at once and give it a fair trial. "CARDUI J 35 It Will Help You Mrs. W. W. Gardner, of Paducah, Ky., tried Cardui and writes: “I think Cardui is just grand. I have been usir.g it for eleven years. I am 48 years old and feel like a different woman, since 1 have been taking it. I used to suffer from bearing down ains, nervousness and sleeplessness, but now the pains are all gone and I sleep good. I highly recommend Cardui for young and old.” Try it. AT ALL DRUG STORES DOES THE COLLEGE GRADUATE “FIT” The question has often been raised throughout the United States, “Does the college graduate “fit” in to life.” However, attention is here called to the fact that the question is never raised concerning the gradu ate of a technical college such as the Georgia School of Technology. On the contrary, it is a question of how to fill the demand, for it is a | fact that the demand is greater than the supply of technically trained young men, and it is to train our Southern boys for exactly this oppor . tunity that the Georgia School of *FSa<hnology is striving. The new erea of prosperity and de velopment in the South which is so widely and enthusiastically predict ed by the leading men of the coun try, is purely technical and textile, and the richest rewards awaits the I young men most capably trained to “fit” into the demand. The Geor gia School of Technology is better prepared and equipped than ever be fore in its history, offering advanc ed courses in Mechanical, Textile, Electrical and Civil Engineering, En gineering Chemistry, Chemistry and 1 Architecture. The cost is very rea- ( sonable, placing within reach of any ambitious young man knowledge which enables him to take full ad vantage of a period of unpredecent ed opportunities. Write at once for illustrated catalog, etc., to K. G. Matheson, President, Atlanta, Ga. Good intentions are seldom negotiable for cash. Ask the lazy schoolboy why he doesn’t study and advance with his class. He will tell you that he intends to —some time —but he never does Ask any improvident man or wom an why they don’t save and lay up something for a rainy day. They will tell you that they intend to —some- time —but they never do. Ask any slow, unprogressiye business man why he doesn’t discard his old antiquat ed ways of doing business and adopt new, up-to-date, progressive methods of sales and advertising. All such will tell you that they intend to, next week, or next month, or next year— but they never do. 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. ■■■ \ Kennedy’s Laxr've Cough Syrup CONTAINS HONEY AND TAR Relietea Colds by working them out of the system through a copious and healthy action of the bowels. Relieves Coughs by cleansing the mucous membranes cf the throat, cbsst and bronchial tubes. "As pleasant to the taste as Maple Sugar” Children Like It i.f/i WHERE THE WORLD’S REVENUES ARE PLACED It is about two years since the peace conference at the Hague, which had been conducted amid the derision of the military powers, end ed with little but amiable futilties to its credit. In the interval the pow ers which sneered at disarment have spent about two billion dollars in re serving the peculiar sort of armed ‘ peach to which they are committed. That is the price of two French indemnities to Prus sia—the cost of two great wars. There has been no dance of war yet a cheated world has paid the piper all the same. There are perhaps eight military I states of the first, rank in the world Each keeps pace with its neighbors in devising and perfecting the im plements of destruction so that every I time one spends an extra dollar, seve dollars more will be spent in the world. If one power adds fifty mil lions to its military budget the others must follow suit, and nearly half a billion dollars is wasted in the world. One-quarter of all the world's re venues was devoted to preparations l for war ten years ago; one-half now: three-quarters ten years hence —will it ever happen that the cost of de fense shall equal four-quarters of the world’s revenues, and there shall be nothing left for anything else? Just this thing will happen unless present tendencies are changed.—New York Mail. The Story of a Ten Dollar Bill A business man of Dawson sent The News this narrative of what a $lO bill did: Mr. Brown keeps a boarding house. Around the table sit his wife, Mrs. Brown: the village mil liner, Mrs. Andrews; Mr. Black, the baker; Mr . Jordon, the car penter; xur. Hanley, the seed and lumber merchant. Mr. Brown took $lO out of his pocketbook and Landed it to Mrs. Brown with the remark that, there was $lO toward the S2O he prom ised her. Mrs. Brown handed the bill to Mrs. Andrews, the milliner, saying, “That pays for my new bonnet.” Mrs. Andrews in turn gave it to Mr. Jordon, remarking that it would pay for the carpenter work he had done for her. Mr. Jordon handed it to Mr. Hanley, requesting his re ceipted bill for lumber. Mr. Hanley gave it back to Mr. Brown, saying, “This pays $lO on my board.” Mr. Brown passed it to Mrs. Brown, say ing he had now paid her the S2O he had promised her. She in turn paid it to Mr. Black to settle her pastry and bread account. Mr. Black hand ed it to Mr. Hanley, asking for the amount of his flour bill. Mr. Han ley again remarked that it settled for that month’s board, whereupon Mr. Brown put it in his pocket, re marking that he hadn’t supposed a greenback would go so far. But sup pose Mrs. Brown had sent to a mail order house for a new bonnet, then that $lO would have gone out and nev er come back. There is a moral to this: Spend your money with home merchants. —Dawson News. If you are making concessions to comfort in the matter of your shoes it is a sign that you are getting old er—and wiser. In this country about 16 per cent of the divorces are granted after litre* or four years of married life. THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1909 THE LAST VOYAGE. (Published by Request) I thought I stood with an immense I I concourse , on the shores of a dark rolling river, that met the open sea a short distance away to lose its wa ters in the great ocean. Tlie people were busy and active, | rushing to and fro, singing, shouting, moaning, cursing and struggling to : : gether as they pushed and pulled i each other about for the best posi tions on the crowded bank next to the river’s flow. Nearby was the boat house where they told me sailing craft were fasten ed always to take their cargoes on board. The timbers were black with age : and damp, and the multitude seemed to shun the inside with its weath er-stained walls and floor. I asked the reason of the great gathering, for there was no ship in sight. “It is always so,” said one. Those people have a voyage to take and they must come here to embark. They must come. This line of boats is strange, sin gular. They never fail to come in dock some time, but no man knows the schedule time nor does this crowd know, whether they will sail by night or day, they only know[ they must go on board when their “own bell rings.” I wondered at the indifference of: the multitude, for there seemed to be no preparation for an ocean jour ney. Some were even building houses on the sand, painting the out sides and gilding the domes, as if they were to live here and enjoy a lifetime of pleasure. Even the aged and helpless were intent on their own gratifications of appetite and amusement. Men and women were playing games to divert, their minds, while the giddy pleas ure seekers danced, shouted and drank to debauchery and forgetful ness. A middle-aged couple stood near me. The man said: “I hear the bell Mary. I must go. Come with me. I cannot bear to leave you! We must go together. I can’t leave you.’ The woman replied: “This wind is chill. I must have a warm cloak, and my money is in my trunk. Let me go after them.” and she went away. Just then I saw a ship coming to-I ward us. It had no banners float ing, nor music playing as it drew nearer and nearer to the great, gloomy boat house. I saw the ship’s crew bring out great rolls of cordage and make 1 ready to fling the line to the boat house sailors that waited. I heard the gang plank roll across the lower deck, but when the vessel slowed up and turned her side to the wharf the gang-plank appeared to be a hearse with black nodding: plumes of crape streamers instead of decoration and gilded banners. Then I saw a strange sight. The sick in the boat house were picked out carefully, leaving some who had been bedridden for years, and taking others who came in but yesterday and some today. Mothers carried infants to the gangway, left them and returned to the shore. The lilly-whitemaiden and the veteran soldier took step togeth er. The strong man cried out in agony: “Why must Igo and leave my helpless family?” Nevertheless his bell had rung, and his place was ready for him and he went. I saw children cling to a fond mother’s neck, screaming in their grief at the sore parting but the moth er went on board without delay. A terrific splashing suddenly at tracted me. The black waters were in commotion. t" “Those people sometimes get des perate,” said my informant, “and take their own lives, rather than wait for the ship’s bell and regular depart ure. Hilly people. They only fall into tho net below the water lino, and are carried like driftwood, to be beached on the other shore.” As I turned from the wild faces of the suicides I saw a mother in Is rael as she was gently carried by her family down to the hearse. Calm and patient, she said: “I’ve waited long for this release from pain God has been merciful to give me lov ing friends, and I go to the mansion prepared for me where I will wait you. coming.” These children sung, at her request, “Some Sweet Day," j and the ship's crew took off their hats in reverence for this saintly farewell. One cried: “The last enemy is death.” Another said: ‘“Can death be an enemy which restores life, health, happiness and friends'” As I watched a great number hur ried across in a body. "What means this haste?" I inquired. ‘“A railroad wreck and an ocean steamer has gone down at sea.' said a listener. Then we saw a violent commotion i with pistol shots and blood, aye to the water’s edge. “A mob and madness,” remarked a sailor who pushed wide open the ; entrance way, that the victims might be crowded on board. I turned aside, sick at heart. The crowd that danced, that, gambled and frolicked on the shore was still reveling and carousing. They were in plain view of these partings and ' ghastly violence, but they laughed and made merry still. I touched one’s arm as I heard the warning bell from the ship, and he [said: “Be ye also ready, for ye know not the hour," but I was thrust aside by another with these words: “Why not eat and bo merry, for to- I morrow we die?” The great ship begun to move, j its huge black hull glistened in the i setting sun. Tho decks were crowd ed and the bell ceased to toll. As the leviathan floated from its moorings and pushed out into deep water, I saw the captain on deck for the first time. In a voice clear and sweet, these came ringing across the waves “I am the ressurrection and the ! life, he that believeth on Me shall not perish.” I As the rays of a morning sun dart :ed across my pillow I knew I had dreamed but nevertheless the dream was a reality to my mental con sciousness. MRS. W. H. FELTON. Tlie lot of tho average farm hand is stated by many to be a hard one. How does it compare with Consul Martin's description of the mine la borer in the larger mines of Mexico. The living conditions of the workers, Mr. Martin states, are extremely humble. The average man and his family live in a one-room shack, mud house, stone hut, or dugout, among some bank. Their food consistes of dried meat, fried flour cakes, beans and rank coffee. Stoves are found only in the better homes, the labor ■ er’s meal being cooked over a little fire between stones. At meal times the family gather around the fire, ; and sleep on blankets on the floor. This is the living condition in every [camp; the high-priced laborers alone have ordinary meals and sleeping cots. The man who has a family, and in most camps only men with fami i lies are desired, has the habit of con- I suming his wages the day after he j earns them. The company runs a stor only at which he can get provisions on credit, and to this store the ac count book is brought and his daily necessities charged against his wages Every operator has absolute control of the sale of all merchandise on his ground or within his concession; he keeps the store, he buys at wholesale in the cheapest market, and retails, in very small quantities, of course, at a profit of 100 per cent. Professional Advise. “I cracked a lawyer's bouse the other night,” said the first burglar disgustedly, “and tho lawyer was there with a gun all ready for me. He advised me ter git out.” “You got off easy," replied the oth er. "Not much 1 didn't. He charged tne $25 for the advise.”—Philadelphia Press. One thing a man can never under stand ami that is what women find to talk about so long over the back fem e. .. < Be good tempered. It pays in every way; it pays, if you are an employee; it is profitable, in every walk of life. And this is taking the most selfish view. You owe it to oth ers to be good-tempered; you owe it to your own manhood, to your own self respect, in making others com fortable you are making things agreeable for yourself; you are gain-, ing and keeping good will, which may be of value and help to you hereaf ter; you are accumulating a capital of popularity and good report which may be used to advantage, prehaps at a critical time. Good temper is a great factor in success. 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 Rocky Mountain Tea. —Summerville Drug Co. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTORIA [CASTOR I Al 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 pcr , Sonal supervision since its infancy. S-c&cc&tt'. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are hut 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 Diarrluea 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—Tho Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCNTAUn COMPANY, TT MUPPAV BinitT. NEW YORK CITV. WITH A FORTUNE, SEARS QUITS WORK. Once an Operator, He Formed Big gest Mail Order House in World. Chicago, Aug. 9.—Richard W. Sears a telegraph operator at. a wayside sta tion, seventeen years ago conceived the notion of selling $9.40 watches for $11.50 by mail. Today he retired from active business at tho age of 45, possessed of a fortune of $2,500,- 000. His practical interest in the busi ness he founded —Sears, Roebuck & Co. —ceased with the sale of the last half of his stock holdings in the big mall order house to a New York syn dicate. His resignation as chairman of the board is expected at tho direc tors’ next meeting. From telegraph operator at Red- surprising, What Kodol Will Do For you, when you need it. But the longer you neg lect Indigestion, the more you will suffer before Kodol can restore Good Digestion. And, of course, Indigestion if neg lected long enough, brings on seri ous diseases in which Kodol cannot benefit you. ~ these there is no help f There art At, '. ery few ail ments which vannot be traced di rectly to impure blood. And im pure blood is always due to a dis ordered stomach. Use Kodol and prevent Nervous Dyspepsia. Kodol will effectually assist Na ture to secure a complete restora tion of good digestion. It does this by at once digesting all food in the stomach and keeping It di gested, until the stomach is rested and can resume its own work. Ko dol removes the cause—and the effect quickly removes itself. When it is recalled that Apo plexy, Heart Disease, Cancer —and even Consumption are due to poor digestion ami poisons thus transmitted to the blood, and throughout the system—the Impor tance of maintaining good diges tion is at once realized. FOR SALS BY ALL DRUGGIST. {DOCTOR KING I THE 8L» RELIABLE DOCTORS QUEST IM AM ARD LONGEST LOCATES. REGULAR GUBUTU ■ HOWIM. B _ use neers Vfiii TUg i *Rf;C AMh VIIUARI F FIPERIFNCE OF Til LOGOUT h u L r R f « Fl . . c t-' r. U Ultll —.l I gNtriou* Debility and Weaknaim stricture Zumfuf IrtelrunMnaa. A new Home! Mam ths »s-».ts of youthful folly »nd Meet M® p®ln *nd no M»MNMk ■••••««• r|OT iWvili sea t ingloaoeo by dream* »r with . Louglea or sound*. No 4®Msrtfon from bu«L B urine, pimp'®* and blotch*® on the fan*. rushea of Thoueanda cured We fW—N*w ref nd Mbio-xl to th® head, peine tn the berk, confuted Meas w ,., n ey If not permiMatly cure*. By baa* nUlj •* Band furgetfainee* bashfulness, avereluo to society, thia disease. .. ~, „ , Bloeaol vital force lose of manhood eV , cured for j. . . Enlarged vatns IB the Eilft We 'an etnp nigbtleweee, ra«tor® lost vitality, ygriCOCvIV causing nervous debility. *•***.*?* Ir.levelopand mature young or middle aged who are of tbe ner vouecyetra*. ete., p ■ ■■■BMtny L£*eakly sod wrerke and make them fit for marriage ol ,e non. te Triable dleeaee. In all its form# dropey of the MMtBM owed Syphlnl' an i stages, cured for life Btood VQTO 00 I S withoutyoia. Hi’.r o-.ng sum Dlsees. ~ Ulcers, dwellings Bores / _ b ——g tea M Myw fl[(ior.or:Lo.a, <i.eet and all forme of private dUeasee D || I IH Q g | f "TthoJt M- lf rd te etay <u . i w. guaranteed refund your Fill mW •I • wltheorpata. ■ money if ar>t permanently cured QQ O K w7th* desert ptloa dieeaee, sKidney Bladder and ~.rs.rni, and p-rm«n»nt C... MUS6Um Yo« l<~:i -ben j Diseases „ «urT U .«... r I, ■„ —m-in-d.. mns. e r / u/nmOm. Stt. IDR. KING MEDICAL CO., ATLANTA. GA. wood Falls, Minn., to the millionaire . head of the greatest, mail order estab lishinent in the world and from that to a "gentleman farmer” —those are the great, divisional steps in his ca reer. As operator he got SSO a raontl Since he blazed a trail in the mail or ) der business, his savings have averag ■ ed $1,500,000 yearly. I i The secret of fashionable beauty. I asked the question of a beauty spe ' clalist.. In order to bo round, rosy and very stylish, take ’ Hollisters Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents. Tea or Tablets. Summerville Drug Co. The first bicycle with pedals was made about IS4O, Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTORIA Wa knew what Kodol would do - before ever the first bottle was t sold. If wo did not know just what a it will do, we would not guarantee it the way wo do. It is easy for you to prove Kodol - —the next (or the first) time you - have an attack of Indigestion. And i- you will certainly be surprised at the results. It is perfectly harm s less. There can be no barm In trying i- something that may do you a great deal of good—when it coata yoe b nothing if It doesn’t. Our Guarantee 1 Go to your drnggifst today and get * dol h lar bottle. Then after you have ueed the entire contentH of the bottle if you ran honestly say, that It has not done you any good, return the bottle to the druggist and he will refund your money without <iues tlon or delay. We will then pay the drug * glut for the bottle. Don’t hesitate, all D druggists know that our guarantee is good. This offer applies to the large brittle only , ami to but one in a family. The large bot □ tie contains 2% times as much as the fifty cent bottle. i- Kodol !b prepared at thr* laborer yjrieaof E. C. DeWitt & Co.,Chicago. Wt OFFER TOU THE URGE UluFait EirtßltßK W H UM. EJIRILUHEO Llto MOSI RELIABLE TRECIRUUI l» TSE USfIL Avtborlx.d by Ibe Hl.lo u> »re»l CHRORIC, REXTOSI Ml VRML OISU.tES. W» gu»r»Btee «»refund n>oue z It DOieurs*. Allmedl clu.e furnished reedy tor uee-no mercury or lnJuriM»«jdictnea u«ed No detention from beelneee. PatlenW »t A dleUnce treated Uy mill end eipreee. Medl.leee .ent eveerwhere tree from xare or breakage. No medicine ««l 0. O. D. unleee In structed. Cbergeelow. TUouaende of case, ourod State your case and eend for terms. Consultation FREE end confidential. In person, or by letter. Call or write today. EFon’t delay