The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, August 19, 1909, Image 7

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I Woman’s Beauty 1 Some women retain their beauty to an advanced ■ ■ age. But women, who regularly endure pain, age I fl rapidly, for suffering leaves its lasting marks on g| fl them. H Nearly all women suffer more or less with some ■ fl form of female trouble. It should not be neglected. E ■ Avoid the pain—treat yourself at home by taking ■ fl Cardui, as thousands of other women have done. fl fl Begin at once and give Cardui a fair trial. ,<K CARDUI J 36 fl I It Will Help You | Mrs. Katie Burlison, Goreville, 111., tried Cardui and writes :fl fl “I suffered with female troubles, and was so sick I could not stand fl fl on my feet. Finally I began to take Cardui, and soon began to ® mend. Now I am able to do all my housework and am in much l| fl better health than I was before.” Try it. AT ALL DRUG STORES J How They Spent Their Money. Selfishness — I kept all my wealth—and 1 mourn for my loss, For gold in a skeleton hand turns to dross; Love, friendship, and gratitude might I have bought— But I kept all my wealth till it mouldered to naught. Pleasure — I spent all my gold—l danced and I sang. The palace I built with hilarity rang; Plays, revels, and frolics from even to dawn — But I lie here with nothing—l spent it —it’s gone. Avarice— I loaned my good money—at grasp ing per cent — 'Twas I who got all that you kept and you spent; While I counted my millions, Death plundered me bare — And this grave that I sleep in be longs to my heir. Charity— It was little I had, but I gave all my store To those who had less, or needed it more; And I came with Death laughing, for here at the grave j In riches unmeasured I found what I gave! Robert J. Burdette. Once in awhile a man is too proud to beg and too honest to steal. Then the only alternative he has left is to go to work. 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 etfected 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. A LIGHTNING METHOD OF CAL CULATING INTEREST. One of the shortest and simplest methods krown for calculating in terest is to multiply the principal by the number of days, and divide as ' follows: For 4 per cent, divide by 90. For 5 per cent, divide by 72. For 6 per cent, divide by 60. For 7 per cent, divide by 52. For 8 per cent, divide by 45. Then point off four decimal places. For instance, to find interest on $360.00 for 92 days at 8 per cent, multiply $360.00 by 92, divide by 45, and point off four decimal places. The result is $7.36. —Implement Age. Kennedy’s Laxat've Cough Syrup CONTAINS HONEY AND TAR Relievos Colds by working them out of the system through a copious ; and healthy action of the bowels. Relieves Coughs by cleansing the mucous membranes of the throat, ebest and bronchial tubes “As pleasant to the testa as Maple Sugar” Children Like It A BALE TO EVERY ACRE. The time has come when the South ern farmer must recognize the fact that he cannot afford to plant an acre of ground in cotton that will not pro duce a bale (five hundred pounds) of lint. The idea of working three or four acres of land to get one bale of cot ton must be abandoned by the farm ers who expect to reach that plane of success upon which he should move. If you have no land that will pro duce a bale of cotton to the acre, go to work saving your stable manure, gather all the litter you can from your fence corners, pine thickets or oak groves, and scatter this on your land. Plant the land in peas and turn under peas, vines and all. Twenty loads of stable manure and twenty loads of trash, straw, etc., put on an acre of land reasonbly fertilized and planted in peas, will so improve any land as to enable you to grow a bale of cotton per acre, especially after one or two year's application, and there is not a farmer in Georgia, or in the South, but what had better work one acre of land to get a bale, than to work three acres of land to get a bale and a half. Thn how much better for him to work one acre and get a bale than to work four acres and get a bale.—Farmers Union News The best remedy we know of in all cases of 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 place of them. Sold by all druggists. The Crime of Idleness. Idleness means trouble for any one. Its the same with a lazy liver. It causes constipation, headache, jaun dice, sallow complexion, pimples and blotches, loss of appetite, nausea, but Dr. King’s New Life Pills soon ban ish liver troubles and build up your health. 25c at Summerville Drug Co. t Marriage is not a failure in the case of the man who isn’t afraid to take a friend home for dinner with out first notifying his wife. One of the hardest things in the world to do is nothing . A man never fights so hard for a principle as he does for results. Cholera Infantum Cured. ‘‘Something like two years ago my baby, which was then about a year old, was taken seriously ill with chol era infantum, vomiting and purging profusely, writes J. F. Dempsey of Dempsey, Ala. I did what I could tv relieve her but did her no good, and being very much alarmed about her went for a physician but failed to find one, so came back by Elder Bros. & Carter’s store and Mr. El der recommended Chamberlain's Col ic Cholera and Diarrhoea remedy. I procured a bottle of it, went home as quickly as possible and gave the baby a dose of the remedy. It re lieved her in fifteen minutes and soon cured her entirely.” For sale by Summerville Drug Co., Summer ville, Ga. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTORIA THE SUMMERVHuLE NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1909. PELLAGRA. Pellagra has been known in Italy and various Mediterranean coun tries for two hundred years. It ] was noted in his country only a few years ago. Doctors who have stud ied the disease are convinced that it results from eating bad corn, some of them claim to have proven this. What defect in corn causes the dis -1 ease, does not seem to have been \ learned positively. Corn is subject \ to rust, mildew, mould, and other pro ' cesses of deterioration. Horses and mules have long been known to suffer from eating bad corn, particularly, with black rust. Their disease used to be called blind staggers and its symptoms were not unlike those of human patients suffering with pellagra. In Itally and other countries of southern Europe pellagra is a dis j ease of the poor, who eat great quantities of polenta or corn meal 1 mush. Dr. Walter Lenahan, of Chatta nooga, Tenn., is quoted as saying, tlie disease appears first in the stom ach, next attacks the feet and final ly spreads over the v%hole body in the form of a red or copper colored rash. In its final stages, which are ( terrible in suffering, the nerves are at ! tacked. The eyes lose their luster and the body its elasticity, the shoul ders become stooped, the patient ' ‘"forgets how to laugh,” loses flesh and wals with shuffling gait. Pro ; gressive deterioration of the body is followed by exhaustion and death. . Now-a-days corn is handled by the carload and the milling in done in | vastly greater quantities. There is mu ch more opportunity for careless- j ness in the handling of the grain. It i is possible that pallagra calls for pre- i I vention in the form of the inspection ■ of corn offered the mills more than it does for cure by the medical men. High-Price Shoeing. General St. Clair Mulholland, veter an and historian of the Civil War, i tells on incident showing the utter worthlessness of Confederate paper money at the close of the war. ‘‘Shortly after Lee’s surrender,” say the general, "I was a short distance ! from Richmond. The Confederate sol diers were going home to become ] men of peace again and were think ing about their farms. ‘‘‘One had a lame, broken down ; horse, which he viewed with pride. J‘Wish I had him, Jim,’ said the other.; ‘What’ll you take for him? I’ll give you $20,000 for him.’ “ ‘No,’ said Jim. “ ‘Give you $50,000.’ “ ‘No,’ said Jim. “ ‘Give you $100,000,’ his friend said. “ ‘Not much,’ replied Jim. ‘I just gave $120,000 to have him shod.’ ’’ No fewer than 1,500 towns and vil lages in Germany still own, and have owned, down from the middle ages, so much common land that their inhab-] itants pay neither rates nor taxes.! Five hundred of those townships and villages derive as great a rental from their lands that they are able, in ad- , dition, to pay every citizen, on New ; Year’s day, a bonus of from $25 to \, SIOO as his share of the surplus rev- j enues. I' It is often harder to do right than it. is to refrain from doing wrong. Arithmeticians have not yet fig ured out the number of ways a girl has of showing a new diamond ring. ■ DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the pleasant, safe, sure, easy little liver pills. A salve you may always de pend upon in any case where you need salve, Is DeWitt’s Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve—especially good for Piles. Sold by all druggists. The foremost advertising virtue Is , persistent repetition. One can no more make a single effort, howev er large, serve for a year’s publicity, than he could get physical nour ishment for a like time from a single dinner. It always worries an absent-minded man to think he can’t remember what it was he was going to worry about. EXCURSION RATES Via Central of Georgia Railway. To Atlanta and return, account Ma sonic Convention, to be held August 10-12, 1909. Fares apply from points in Georgia. To Huntsville, Ala., and return, ac- . count National Convention, Primitive Baptist church (Colored) to be held August 18-24, 1909. To Valdosta, Ga., and return, ac-1 count Grand Lodge, Supreme Circle of Benevolence of United States, to I be held September 28, October 4, 1909. For further information in regard to total rates, dates of sale, limit, etc., apply to nearest tickpt agent, COTTON CARNIVAL The white staple with which the - South levies tribute upon all civlli -1 zation has developed a hundred new ■; uses and activities since the last ■ purely cotton exhibition several years ago recorded the progress then ■ achieved. It is now the proposal of the cotton ■ seed crushers of the South, put for i ward by G. S. Weaver, chairman of the publicity bureau of the Interstate i Cotton Seed Crushers’ Association, I to hold next fall a comprehensive • cotton carnival in some representa , tive southern city, possibly New • Orleans. The projected exposition is i to reflect in broad but comact scope ] ■ the myriad advances made by cotton ! ; itself and its innumerable by-prod-! ucts, ranging from more profitable ■ cultural methods to the latest com-; mercial application wrung from the substance of the cotton seed. I The suggestion was put forward a . year ago by L. A. Ransom, formerl . president of the Interstate Cotton; Seed Crushers' Association, and' prominently identified with the cotton seed interests. Its revival and ampli j flcation at the present time is au- { spiciously in line with the general and] persistent crusade to acquaint the peo ple of the United States with the endless possibilities of this dominant southern product. As tentatively outlined, the exhibit would bring together domestic and , New England and European cotton 1 spinners with specimens of their j wares; representing Southern farm-! ers, with actual illustrations of ex isting methods for cotton production, , government experts, showing the latest word from science in the mat- ! ter of tensive and improved produs tion; manufacturers and mill people,] demonstrating tile bewildering va-i riety of uses nowadays for by prod- ! | ucts of the cotton seed from the 1 so-callod “hogless” lard to medicinal I preparations and the finest toilet articles. Never before has so inclu sive an exhibition been projected, and its educative value must inevita bly be of the most effectual nature. 1 I Perhaps John is Still Running. j She is pretty and winsome and witli it all mischievous, and it. was tills i that prompted her to play a little ] ' prank that had all of the marks of a ! near-tragedy, though even the thoughtl ]of bloodshed was foreign to her mo tive. It w’as all fun to Mary—that may be her name—but. it caused her ] best beau much discomfiture and brought a rather sensational ending to what had been a most pleasant ! evening. John—we’ll call him by that name ; in the story—had been calling on Mary on this particular night, and was preparing to leave. They had reached the front door and John suddenly bent over and kissed her. Whether this was the first time he had turned this trick history fails jto state. At any rate, Mary blushed ; and exclaimed: ‘‘John, how dare you? I’m a good . mind to call papa.” ‘‘Oh, go on and call him. See if 1 i care,” bravely responded John as ;he planted another smack on those I cherry-colored lips. Just then the : girl pretended she heard her father calling and excused herself for a mo ment. Entering the room, she found her father reading a newspaper, and. with a twinkle in her eyes, said: “‘Oh, father, John wants to see your new shotgun. I was just tell ; ing him about it. Won’t you show it to him?” Now, father had just purchased a i now gun, and with natural pride, seized it and started toward the i young man at the door. John got a glimpse of father and i the gun, and one glimpse was all he needed. He shot out of that house ; with such speed that had he been an automobile a regulation speed motor would have been unable to keep tab on him. "What’s the matter with that crank is he crazy?” exclaimed father. Daughter merely laughed. Now Mary is trying to extricate ] nerself from her joke.—Atlanta Geor- j glan. In raising the displacement of its ; battleships to 26,000 tons, the Unit- i ed States government has produced a ship which far exceeds the largest I contemporary battleships built or building of any foreign navy. ! Oh! my stomach’s a very uncertain thing, I suffered the torment that cost tiveness brings, But now I am happy, normal and 4 free, / ' A miracle wrought by Hollister’s . Rocky Mountain Tea. —Summerville Drug Co. Over three thousand pounds of rose petals are used in the manufacture of one pound of atter or roses perfume. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTORIA UHiSiS T “jTm!■ I a.!■ ii~ m ■ o■■■'■'C, v"• i■ •■- ■ ' • 11 . |iJHL AVegelable Preparation for As | similating (licFoodantlßegula ting die Stomachs and Bowls of |ij Promotes Digestion Cheerful - ness and Rest Contains neither k Opium. Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. /.Kyr Sf/M Zfr-.0/W ZZ. /Y7T/Z£/? ill A'fttl ‘ » Mx Senna * j RocketU WAf- I -4flZw’.*AW -1 Jhxfrnninl - / tit Ciiritotuilr -Mr * I I (7rt/r/W. 'biqar Flavor. / Apetfecl Remedy forConsUpa lion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea ’.! Worms,Convulsions, Feverish i ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. | ...... . - z EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. . 7 j How to Get Rid of Galls and Gullies. Whenever we see a galled spot or ! a gully, bare of vegetation, we can't help v ondering how many land-own ers can get his consent to permit the continuance of such conditions. The ■ longer they exist the worse they be come. Why should any farmer permit I himself to be robbed of his “‘stock 1 in trade," his capital, his farm? Fur '. thermore, the time lost through the ! necessity of more frequent turns, or !in working over and around them, rightly employed, would prevent their i existence or restore them to a useful ! condition after they have been formed I We do not believe in filling gullies i with rails, brush or other materials I which are likely to be in the way la , ter on. For gullies or galled spots the best remedy is straw, coarse sta ] Ide manure or some other material I that will improve their fertility. Fol low this with some growing crop. If a gully, plow dirt into it, turn the ex- 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 bolleve that their misery of mind and body is entire ly due to “Ills of their sex.” Usually the kidneys and bladder arc 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 baqk, 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 ail such conditions of female organism affording the 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 111 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 KING THE QLO RtLIAHLE OOCTOHT. OLOEST IR AU AMO LOMAEH LOCATED. REGULAR GRADUATE! ■ ■DKiRL _ . _ . WE OFFER YOU THE LABBE AMO YALUABLE EIFERIEMCE Os IM LMRMT ESTABLISHED AMO MOSt RELIABLE SEECIALISU IM T« MUTI \ Y A Authorixed by HlsLe CHRONIC, NERVOtS AM •rUWL 44DISEASES W» guarantee to refund iDtrnty if not cured, ▲llmedi ■rtfi ” cinen furnished ready for use— do mercury or Injurtowmadiclneß used. No detention from baaineng. Patient* at a dtolanee 7 treated by mall and expree«. Medieiaee aent ereerwhere free from gate or breakage. No medicine seal Q. O. D. u&leea in Mby KT" etructed. Charfea low. Thousand* of oases ourad- Slate your case and send for terms. Coasultatlon FREI and oonfldeatlal. Id person, or bj leiur. CHI or write Aod./. Don’t Nervous Debility and Weiknosees|Strloturo Inetrumeata. A a«w Home. aF Man Woof youthful folly and VI a«ailf aba canning Joiaoe by drnarne or with b oU|fioe oraoonda. NodotoMloa &oen bu>i urine,pimplot and biotrhna on the face. ru*bes ihousanda cured. Wo aaaaaatoo to refund blood to the Load, pains in the back, confuted Ideae Ul ,, nßr if not permanently cures. My beek fully oa ynd fvnretfulnooß. baabfninaoa, arereioD to thio dlaeaoo. iOßtol Vital foroeoJoMof manhood.etc., cured tnlarfod voiao la the eoFOtoi- Hfe We ran atop nightlormr. restore loot vitality, ySriCOCvIV ceuaing norvouodeMllty.veakaOM develop and mature yonng or middle aged who- Ls th e nerveu oyotoen, Oto., permaaeatty ONt with weakly a»>d wrocke and make them St fur rnarrtaae | O1( . n Qwnklllo that ter nable djaeaeo, in all >to <'»’•«’*'« dropey of tha OSMhMB SWOd a>T PniiiSe and etairea, cured for ilfo. Hiood.|| V(]rOCrS|w wfthoatpaha. KodaoniriK, Skin Diaoaeea. Ulcers. Swellings. Bores. * a taw ters Uunorrbowa, Gleet and ail forme of private diseases, D h mQ t | .2? 01 ** *** -n.d refund yeurT" I »wl»e<llipga. cured BOOK .TieWSIX. Ifldney Bladder and Prostafic >'Diseases '‘film* t 2nd*«ur , TUßi' l «ur Free Muaeoin tu» iy^w wi» OR. KING MEDICAL CO., ATLANTA,GA. Betel.,,,uu i.eul irtortH.) I CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought I / Bears the f t Signature /Xy r Z/.IF of ZftALr (\ tfl’ In (V Use V For Over ■ Thirty Years iCASTORIA THF erNTkliß COMPANY, NtW YORK CITY. cess of water in another direction and sow peas; if a galled spot, plow deeply and keep something growing on it all the time. We have seen gullies ten feet deep filled and brought up to the most, productive parts of the field in three or four years by a liberal application of straw and leaves or coarse stable manure and tlie sowing of cowpeas. It will pay to fill them up for the crops they will bring, and if the fields are to be put in condition for the use of tlie implements necessary for econom ical cultivation, these scarred and gullied fields, so common in many parts of the South, must, be made to disappear.—Progressive Farmer. There is something wrong about, a man when it. is necessary to make him good by law. Tlie worry bug causes a lot of un necessary trouble. 1 Tit- ’ J aratlons are apt to do. E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, 11!.,'' 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 will be sent free by return mall post, paid. Do it to-day.