Newspaper Page Text
Do You Get Up
With a Lame Back?
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable.
Almost everyone known of Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and
. bladder remedy, be
ll — I cause of its remark
fCOp*’ able health restoring
I properties. Swamp
- i UhrA? I*7 Root fulfills almost
IF jin ever X w ’ sll ovcr '
' ■ VLI i ’ coming rheumatism,
S\£sa\ vi i pain in the back, kid-
iLzsjr“ — ijii'l neys, liver, bladder
aj—< | and every part of the
• U - urinary passage. It
M corrects inability to
hold water and scalding pain in passing it,
or bad effects follow!ng use of liquor, wine
or lieer, and overcomes that unpleasant
necessity of being compelled to go often
through the day, and to get up many
times during the night.
Swamp-Root is not recommended for
everything but if you have kidney, liver
or bladder trouble, it will be found just
the remedy you need. It has been thor
oughly tested in private practice, and has
proved so successful that a special ar
rangement has been made by which all
readers of this paper, who have not al
ready tried it, may have a sample bottle
•ent free by mail, also a liook telling
more about Swamp-Root, and how to
findoutifyouhavekid
ney or bladder trouble.
When writingmention J
reading this generous |g
offer in this pajicr and
send your address to
Dr. Kilmer & Co., h..... ~.
Binghamton, N. V. The regular fifty-cent
and one-dollar size bottles are sold by
all druggists. Don’t make any mistake
but remember the name, Swamp-Rorit,
Dr Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, ami the ad
dress, Binghamton, N, Y.,ou every laittle.
YOUNG MEN
LEARN TELEGRAPHY!
TELEGRAPH OPERATORS ARE IN
GREAT DEMAND!!
Boys, this Is your opportunity to
learn a first class trade that pays a
good salary every month In the year.
There will be a greater demand for
Telegraph Operators this fall and
winter than there has been for many
years past. The prominent railroads of
the south and other parts of the Unit
ed States are writing us to qualify
as many young men of good character
for their service as we possibly can.
We trust that the reliable ambitious
boys of the South will rally to his
golden opportunity.
Our students qualify for service in
only four to six months. Wo guaran
tee positions. Graduates begin on
145 to $65 per month; easy and pleas
ant work; permanent employment;
rapid promotion.
Our tuition Is reasonable, board at
low rates; Newnan Is extremely
healthful; fine climate; excellent
drinking water. Write at once for
our now illustrated catalog. A letter
or postal will bring It. IT IS FREE.
SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY,
Boi 272, Newnan, Georgia.
It's hard to get money, and It’s
harder to keep It after you get it.
Even If all that glitters isn't gold,
lots of people lire satisfied with it
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Weak
Heart Action
There are certain nerves
that control the action
of the heart. When they
become weak, the heart,
action is impaired. Short
breath, pain around heart,
choking sensation, palpi
tation. fluttering, feeble
or rapid pulse, and other
distressing symptoms fol
low. Dr. Miles Heart Cure
is a medicine especially
adapted to the needs of
these nerves and the mus
cular structure of the
heart itself. It is a
strengthening tonic that
brings sjtoedy relief.
Try it.
“Fur year* I mifTerod with what I
thought * wah vtomarh trouble, when
th* doctor* told me 1 had heart
trouble 1 had tried many rom«xhoa.
when the Pr Mtlea’ almaimo came
into my hand*, and 1 concluded to
tr> l>r Mile* Heart t'urr 1 have
taken throe bottle*, and now 1 am
not »ufTerhi< at alt lam cured and
thia medicine did it I write this in
the hope that It will attract the at
tention of other* who auffer 1 did.
MRS D BARRON.
RO4 Main St . Covington. Ky.
Your druQolat Dr. Mil**’ Heart
Cure, ano we authorise hoe to roturri
price of first bottle (only) if It faUa
to benefit >ou.
MUcs Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind
1100,000,000 I 8 URGED
FOR GOOD ROADS.
Department of Agriculture to Push
Matter at Next Congress
Washington, D. C.—Officials of the
agricultural department insist, that, no
subject is closer to the heart of the
farmer than that of good roads. In
the opinion of the department scarce
ly any one thing Is more conducive to
t he prosperity of the farmer, nor adds
to the value of land, as do first- class
roads. The best evidence that the
farmer has taken this subject up is
shown by the number of good roads
bills Introduced in the house during
the extra session of congress recent
ly adjourned.
More than a dozen bills were intro
duced each having for its purpose the
betterment of the highways of the
country. Representative Scott of
Kansas, who is chairman of the agri
cultural committee, is a strong bellev
er in good roads, and says that his
i committee will next winter take up
the subject and give it careful coneid
’ eration. It is not improbable that the
committee will hold hearings to ob-
I tain facts and data that can not but
have good effect on the house.
The agricultural department, which
! is the one executive department, repre
i senting the interest of the farmer, has
■ for several years been working up a
public sentiment in favor of enlarging
and extending the highways between
states. Tile department has been ably
assisted in this by the numerous auto
mobile clubs of the country.
I During the recent extra session of
1 congress thousands upon thousands of
petitions from every section of the
I country were received by members urg
ing legislation in favor of good roads.
Many of the petitions pointed ont that
in certain states, where first-class
> roadbeds prevailed, business was good
i and the population in the country dis
tricts prosperous and thriving.
The advocates of good roads in and
out. of congress say that it would be
economy for Uncle Sam to spend SIOO
000,000 or more with the states In the
improvement of national highways, in
\ that it would develop the business of
• the country ami add to the prosperity
o' the nation.
I metlfH.
II
HIGH PRICE FOR
COTTON THIS FALL
1 All eyes ill the south are now on I
cotton. A crop whose estimated value
is 1800,000,000, or as great as that
of wheat, will soon be on the market
In large quantities, and the prosperity
■ of the entire south depends on the
price It will bring.
•; That it will be high, despite specu
• latlve manipulations, is now generally
believed. In the southwest, including
Mississippi, Louisiana, Oklahoma. Ar !
kansas, parts of Texas, and Alabama
south of Montgomery, the richest cot
ton territory in the south, the crop
is as bad as It has ever been.
The prospect east of Alabama is bet
ter, but this will not keep tile crop
as a whole from being worse perhaps
than in ten years. The recent gov
ernment condition report was not ex
aggerati'd, if anything tt gave the
crop a better condition than it hud
and that report was of the worst
prospect in years.
Tile whole belt suffered from rain,
and this was especially true west of
Alabama, and those sections which I
did not suffer wont to the other ex
treme of too much drouth. Cotton
that is handicapped by weather con
, dltlon that results in the curtailment
the southwest is suffering from the'
boll weevil.
The plant Is generally late, a con
dition that resits in the curtailment ■
of the yield when frost forms.
People who have recently been in
the Delta report that conditions there
and In the southwest are little short
of disastrous.
Cotton was quoted in Atlanta yes
terday at 12 1-2 cents. There is no
predicting the limit to which it will
go as no crop of recent years has
been as bad as the present one seems
likely to be. Meanwhile the demand
for cotton and cotton products has
i increased the world over, and the for
ieign yield has for some reasons never
been able to compete with the Ameri
can.
Business the country over feels the
effect of cotton, and this of course is
particularly true of the south. No
j interest there is not affected by it.
Coupled with the prospective high
prices of cotton in the south, are
the bumper corn and wheat crops of
the west, with the price of wheat al
ready high. There is every reason
to believe that the farmer will bring
back the nation's prosperity.—Atlan
ta Journal.
WHY?
From a small beginning the sale
ami use of Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy has extended to all parts of
the United States and to many for
eign countries. Why? Because it
I has proved especially valuable for
i coughs and colds. For sale by Sum
| merviite Drug Co., Summerville, Ga.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1909.
gyruptffigs
“J'Senno
acts gently yet prompt- =
ly outlie bowels,cleanses s
the system effectually i
assists one in overcoming
habitual constipation
permanently. To got its
beneficial effects buy
the genuine.
flunulacturcd by the
CALIFORNIA
fio Syrup Co.
SOLO BYLEADfNC DRUGGISTS-60BOTTLE
VACCINATION FOR TYPHOID
Every Reason to Believe That Dis
covery Will Prove a Success.
The question of vaccination for
typhoid is at present deeply interest
ing the medical world, and military
authorities have taken the matter up
in earnest. While foreign troops
are being inoculated on a wholesale
stale in the United States the treat
ment has not yet been made com
pulsory. According to Col. Russell
who is in charge of the Army Medical
School, typhoid fever attacks about;
half million people in this country
annually, and kills 50,000. Very
little typhoid, in his opinion, is con
veyed today by water, owing to the
care exercised in protecting the
drinking supply from infection in
nearly all communities. The house
fly is a much more important agent
for spreadling the disease.
Typhoid in the Franco-Prussian
war attacked 73,789 men, and caused ;
8,798 deaths among the German
troops alone. In the Boer war it
snkened 31,000 soldiers and killed
5,877 on the British side. During
|our brief war with Spain there were;
[20,730 cases and 1,580 deaths among;
120,000 men—the bulk of the mis |
chief being undoubtedly due to flies.
Tile new preventive treatment by;
inoculation with dead typhoid germs
produces headache and malaise —
sometimes even a bit of fever. But I
t hese symptoms soon pass, and are |
followed by a feeling of unusual |
vigor and health. The stuff is simply
a "culture” of typhoid germs in beef
soup, the microbes being
Two doses, given with a
mic syringe, are supposed to renden
anybody immune to the disease — [
putting him, that is to say, in exactly
the condition for resisting attack
that lie would enjoy if lie had really
had typhoid fever and had recovered
from it. That the discovery will
enormously diminish mortality from
typhoid in future wars there can be
no doubt.
Dr. Abernathy, the great English
physician, said, "Watch your kidneys
When they are affeted, life is in dan
ger.” Foley's Kidney Remedy makes
healthy kidneys, corrects urinary ir- *
regularities, and tones up the whole [
system. Sold by all druggists.
Neptune takes over 160 years to
make one complete revolution round
tlie sun.
The bee is never too busy to ad
minister a stinging rebuke.
Many a man has won out by his
inability to realize that he was whipp
ed.
The hand of fate helps many a
man if he is willing to grasp his
opportunity.
O Wood’s Descriptive Q
Fail Seed Catalog
now ready, gives the fullest
information about all
Seeds for the
Farm and Garden,
Grasses and Clovers,
Vetches. Alfalfa.
Seed Wheat. Oats.
Rye, Barley, etc.
Also tells all about
Vegetable & Flower Seeds
that can lx* planted in the fall to
advantage and profit, and about
Hyacinths. Tulips and other
Flowering Bulbs. Vegetable and
Strawberry Plants. Poultry
Supplies and Fertilizers.
Kverv Farmer and Gardener should
have xKIm catalog Ills inva liable in
Its helpfulness, and suggestive Idea*tor
a profitable and sati>factory Farm ox
Garden. Catalogue mailed free on
request. Write for it.
T. W. WOOD & SONS,
Seedsmon • Richmond. Va. CL
CENSUS OF CHURCHES.
Roman Catholics Show the Biggest
Per Cent Increase.
Washington, D. C. —Advance sheets
of the bulletin now in course of prep
aration by officials of the United
States census bureau containing the
information gathered by the bureau
in the United States reveals that in
in the United States reveals that is
1906 there was invested in churches
in this country more than $1,250,000,-|
000.
The churches have a total member
ship of nearly 33,000,000, of which
considerably more than one-half are
women. It is also estimated from
the statistics that eight churches are
completed each day.
Out of the grand total of church
membership 61.6 per cent are Pro
testants and 46.7 per cent are Roman
Catholics, but in spite of this pre
dominance of Protestants, in sixteen
states a majority of the total
church membership is Roman Catho
lic.
It is stated that United States cen
sus statistics of church membership
!by sex were collected for the first
time in 1906. Os the total number of
members reported by the various re
ligious bodies and classified by sex
43.1 per cent jm~ l! males and 56.9
per cent the Protes
tants the difference was greater, only
' 39.3 per cent, being males. In the
Roman Catholic churches there were
relatively more males, the number
forming 49.3 per cent of the total
; membership.
Fewer males than females were
found among the Latter Day Saints,
the Lutherans, Disciples, Methodists,
Baptists, Presbyterians and Protes
i ant Episcopalians, the percentage of
male members decreasing in the or
der shown, and there being but 35.5
per cent male among the Episcopali
ans. Among the Christian Scientists
only 27.6 per cent were males.
Os the total estimated population of
I continental United States in 1906 the
i church members formed 39.1 per cent
; as against 32.7 per cent for 1890.
Os this 6.4 per cent increase, the
; Roman Catholic Church is credited
with 4.4 per cent and the Protestants
with 1.8 per cent.
It is stated in the bulletin that the
i total number of members reported by
; the various religious bodies for 1906
1 was 32,936,445, of which number the
; Protestants were credited with 20,-
; 287,742 and the Roman Catholics with
12,079,142. Os the Protestants bodies
; the Methodists numbered 5,749,838.
I the Baptists, 5,662,894; the Luther
|ans, 2,112,494; the Presbyterians 1,-
1830,555, and the Disciples es Chrls
tians, 1,142.359.
Os the total of 32,836,445 church
per cent Roman Catholics
/ 111.-llli" T'
.i'll' Til-- of in
' '‘ ■ IS
The Method
17.2 per cent.
THE FRUIT GROWERS
Effort to Get Lower Freight Rates
Through State Exchange.
Fruit Growers of the state are now
' considering an effort to get lower
’ railroad rates on peach shipments,
says an Atlantic special and this mat
ter will be brought up by the larger
growers who are members of the
Georgia Fruit Exchange when the
Board of Trustees and the Executive
Committee meet here on September
eighth.
The present plan is to ask the traf
fic officials to confer with the grow
-1 ers at some early date, with an idea
of obtaining a friendly adjustment
by which rates may be allowed. The
railroads during the past season
showed a disposition to co-operate
with the Exchange and to acontmo
date the members in every way pos
sible. It is believed they will recog
nize the justness of the growers’ re
quest for more reasonable rates.
It now costs the grower something
over S4OO to handle a car of peach
es. Os this amount $240 is for re
frigeration and freight. If peaches
sell at SI.OO a crate, it will be seen
that the growers have little or no
profit.
Freight rates have never been re
duced. although increased number
of shipments has made it possible
tor the roads to haul peaches at
less expense. The Exchange has al
ready solved the problem of distri
bution, and will devote its atten-
Many people delude themselves by
saying '"lf will wear away.” when
they notice symptoms of kidney and
bladder trouble. This is a mistake.
Take Foley's Kidney Remedy, and
stop the drain on the vitality. it
cures backache, rheumatism, kidney
and bladder trouble, and makes every
trace of pain, weakness, and urinary
trouble disappear. Sold by all drug
Kists 1
Not a Drop of Atcoholl
What is a “tonic”? A medicine that increases the strength
or tone of the whole system. What is an “alterative”?
A medicine that alters or changes unhealthy action to
healthy action. Name the best “tonic and alterative”?
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, the only Sarsaparilla entirely free from
alcohol. Ask your own doctor all about it. Never take a
medicine doctors cannot endorse. ],
Without daily action of the bowels poisonous products must be absorbed. Then you have
topureblood, biliousness, headache. Ask your doctor about Ayer s Pills for constipation.
SThe Berry School!
J ROME, GEORGIA. |
I MARTHA BERRY, FOUNDER AND DIRECTOR- *
t
*
i
A Christian industrial school for country |
Boys of limited means and opportunities t
| but unlimited determination and persever- I
t ance. Board and tuition $30.00 a term. |
t Bth Fall session begins August 31. Can- t
f didates for addmission should apply now. t
t Catalog and application blanks sent on re- |
I quest. Address, +
| Robt. H. Adams, A. m., Principal. |
Chattanooga Marble Works
A. W. HASSELL, Prop.
"Granite Monuments , ;;
1149-51 MARKET STREET
We have
CALL
STINGS OF BEES CURE
ATTACK OF PARALYSIS
Boston.—By allowing swarms of
bees to sting him on the bare arms
and legs J. B. Webster, of Roxbury,
is recovering from an attack of par
alysis, and already has regained the
use of his left arm and can walk a
mile. Four months ago Webster could
not walk at all, and had no use of his
loft band. He heard that bee stings ;
were an efficacious cure for paralysis ;
and rhematism. He hesitated for [
some time to try such extreme meas-1
ures but finally decided to do so, and ,
today apparently is a well man.
The total area of the United States ;
is 3,002,340 square miles. I
BY THE
WHERE OCEAN BREEZES BLOW.
EXCURSION RATES
VIA
(entrain Georgia
RAILWAY
QUICK AND CONVENIENT SCHEDULES.
SPLENDID SERVICE FROM PLACES IN
GEORGIA AND ALABAMA.
ASK YOUR NEAREST TICKET AGENT FQR TOTAL RATES,
SCHEDULES, ETC.
Electric
Bitters
Succeed when everything else fails.
In nervous prostration and female
weaknesses they are the supreme
remedy, as thousands have testified.
FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND
STOMACH TROUBLE
it is the best medicine ever sold
over a druggist’s counter.
K rsrl Cfcl For Indigestion
Relieves sour stomacK
j palpitation of the heart. Digests what you eat