Newspaper Page Text
Often The Kidneys Are
Weakeiiod hy Over-Work.
Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood.
Weak and unhealthy kidneys are re
sponsible for much sickness and suffering,
my. therefore, if kidney..
ThkaS trouble is permitted to
continue, serious re-
suits are most likely
Your other
t Q organs may need at-
IA tention, l et your kid-
iX/WTO k I ne -'’ s lnost ’ because
/I ' F ' < JC* they do most and
J. <£-" should have attention
——.' o first. Therefore, when
your kidneys are weak or out of order,
yon can understand how quickly your en
tire liody is affected and now every organ
seems to fail to do its duty.
If you are sick or “ fee! badly,” begin
taking the great kidney remedy, Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root. A trial will con
vince you of its great merit.
The mild and immediate effect of
Swamp-Root, the great kidney and
oladder remedy, is soon realized. It
stands the higlu ,t tiecause its remarkable
health restoring properties have lieen
proven in thousandsot the most distress
ing < i.k-s. If you need a medicine you
should have the bi t. , -
Sold 1 v druggists in
fill - <■:.! andone-dol
lar sizes. You may jf""2!S 7——mzXJ
have a sample bottle f
by mail free, also a
pamphlet telling you n ‘ ""J,,, kZa
how to find out if you have kidney or
bladder trouble. Mention this paper
when writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,
Binghamton, N. V. Don’t make any mis
take, but rememlier the name, Swamp-
Boot, and don't let a. dealer sell you
something in plan of Swamp-Root—if
you do you will be disappointed.
YOUNG MEN
LEARN TELEGRAPHY!
TELEGRAPH OPERATORS ARE IN
GREAT DEMAND!!
Hoys, this Is your opportunity to
Imtrn a first class trade that pays a
good salary every month in the year.
There will boa greater demand for
Telegraph Operators this fall and
winter than there has been for many
years past. The prominent railroads ol
the south and other parts of tl>e Unit
ed States are writing us to qualify
i s many young men of good character
for their service as wo possibly can.
V.’o trust that the reliable ambitious
boys of the South will rally to ids
golden opportunity.
Our students qualify for service in
only four to six months. We guaran
tee positions. Graduates begin on
>45 to >OS 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 new illustrated catalog. A letter
or postal will bring it. IT IS FREE.
SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY,
Boi 272, Newnan, Georgia.
Electric engines will luiul the ships
through the Panama canal when the
big ditch is completed. Tills will pre
vent serious accidents and collisions.
The electric engines will run on spe
cially constructed tracks on the bank.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
Tbi Kind You Have Always Bought
Bmts the xt/
JMgnatuioot Zc
Are You
Sick?
Much sickness is due to
a weak nervous system.
Yours may be. If ii is.
you cannot get well until
you restorererve strength
Your nervous system is
nature's power house; the
oigans of your hotly get
their power from it. If
the power is not there, the
action of the organs is
weak, and disease (sick
ness) follows. Dr. Miles’
Nervine cures the sick
because it soothes the
irritated and tired nerves
ibid gives the system a ,
chance to recuperate.
Try it, and see if you do
r't c iiikly feel its bene
ficial effect.
’I um vu«n up to die by a leid
i’ * dun.»r Cot uno of Th*. Miles
I <k> a: ! found that Dr Mibs Ner
vine <«< my en- F;«vu tht very st
<*. 1 tvok I get better. lam -et r
nr»w than 1 have then for yt-nrn .id
<3» all nay orm *.<»rk on the fartn.
*3 •. ; v .t 1’ M s N i vine ha*
.'.e tor n.< nn i 1 am glad to n»*m-
JOHN JAMES Riverton. Nvhr.
You. Jrti-ffU' Vet:* Dr. Miles’ Nerv
ine. and we aut . lx him to
P'-tee of *«;• t bo(lta (Only) If It falls
to benefit you.
Miles Medical Co., Elkhart. Ind
THE BOUTH 18 THE LAND
OF GREAT OPPORTUNITIES.
"The Developing South,’’ is the
title of an interesting and valuable
story from the land and industrial
department of the Southern Railway
printed in the Southern Field for this
month.
"The South is growing and build
ing along many lines and is devel
oping consistently In many directions
it is not only a great agricultural sec
tlon and produces a larger number of
crops than any other section of the
country, but it has a variety of re
sources utilized in the building of
manufacturing interests which are
commanding the widest attention.
■ Generally the South is the more wide
. )y known for its enormous production
[ of cotton. Not only is it the great
. cotton growing country, but It is a
leading manufacturing section and in
Its enormous factories ami mills con-
i verts the staple Into the many fab
ri< s and the numerous forms which
r arc demanded by the markets of the
entire world. The textile industries
make up the south’s leading line of
manufacture, one in which at has in-
. vested practically >300,000,000. The
industry Is building constantly, and
to the many enormous plants there
are steadily being added mills of
larger capacity and much capital ol
which gives the south greater prom
inenee in this important line of bus
i iness. About 10,500,000 spindles are
now installed in the southern plants,
j against barely 070,000 in 1880, a
I gain in less than thirty years of al
• most fifteen hundred per cent. As
i illustrating the extent to which cot-
I ton milling lias developed in the south
particularly in the territory of the
: Southern Railway, it is l only necessary
to repeat tile statement of the Ameri-
> cun Manufacturer that if all the cot
i ton mills between and including Char
lotto, N. C., and Greenville, 8. C.,
wi re strung out in a line there would
1 i be a mill every mile of track between
towns. This would mean that, in-
■' eluding tile mill villages, the South
ern would run through a solid com
pact line of cotton mills from Char
lotte to Greenville—a street of cot
ton factories one hundred and sev
’ en miles long.
"With the textile plants have come
many other lines of manufacturing.
1 Extensive iron and coal deposits have
< rented an industry which lias huge
' furnaces making pig iron, and large
plants which roll it into rails, or
make it into nails, stoves, ranges,
castings, and the numerous lines of
1 goods which are handled by the iron
tiade, and the great bodies of stand
! ing timbre form the base of a wood
working trade which employs thous
ands of men and millions of capital.
Some of the groat furniture centers
of the country are those in the
south which have veen built within
south which have been built within
last twenty years, and have grown so
1 rapidly and substantially that their
' fame is known wherever household
, goods are sold or mankind demands
some of the conveniences of living.
Great ledges of marble, limestone and
■ oilier valuable materials, an infinite
variety of kaolins, clays and other
j minerals of commercial importance,
1 together with other resources of much
value including water powers of which
(lie future commercial worth cannot
be estimated, are also leading factors
In an industrial development which is
building splendid towns and large
! cities.
, I "With all its other resources the
' south has large acreages of cheap
lauds, which are known to a great
er extent than ever before and are
bringing new residents from all sec
tions. These lands combine many va
rietles of soil and are adapted to
the growing of the widest range of
crops and the extension of the stock
and dairy Interests, in truck and
fruit growing there have been exten
sive developments. These are very
profitable lines of agriculture and
frequently return hundreds of dol
lars per acre in a single season to
the individual growers. The peach
industry is a very large one, and
there are also great acreage in ap
ples and in other fruits. New truck
ing districts are being continually
opened. Almost every variety of veg
etable is produced and the product
is shipped to all parts of the coun
try. There is increasing interest in
many branches of the fruit and
truck industry.
"These are the greatest opportu
nities in the south and it is diffi
cult to estimate the increases which
the growth of the future will show,
but they will be much larger than
those which are associated with the
remarkable progress which has been
made in the past three decades. There
is no better or wider field for the
young man eager to convert enter
prise and active, intelligent effort in
-13 the substantial things only recog
nized as having tangible value, while
tc the capitalist and Investor the
south is prolific in its offerings
which turn to greater wealth."
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER I, IHI.
TAKING THE CENBUB CHATTANOGA SOUTHERN
Some Facts About How the Job Will
Be Done in Georgia.
The supervisors who will have
charge of the work of taking the
next census will be about the most
popular men in Georgia for the next
few months.
Upon these elveen men devolves
the task of choosing the persons who
are to be walking interrogation
points. That they will be over
whelmed with applications for these
places goes without saying. The su
pervisors are to have complete dis
cretion in the matter of making se
lections. An examination of appli
cants is to be held, but as it will be
a non-competitive examination, its
main purpose will be to give the su
pervisor a line on the mental equip
ment and capacity of the individuals
who aspire to work for Uncle Sam.
The task of the supervisor will be
no light one. Unless the men whom
he selects as enumerators are effi
cient, and equal to the work, the
whole census work, for which about
$10,000,000 has been apportioned as
a starter, will be absolutely worth
less. Worse than that it will be a
positive detriment to the country.
The enumerators must be able to
find out how old is Ann; how much
money pap has invested in his busi
ness, the number of living progeny
of Uncle Quash; how many bolts of
goods, or cases of shoes, or pounds
of wire nails a cetarin factory turns
out; how many hogs, and chickens
and mules farmer Flshback has on
the farm; how much it cost to run
the city govrenment and where all the
money goes that the taxpayers pay
in.
Each congressional district in the
south Is made a census district under
a supervisor. Each militia district
having a specified number of people
will be constituted as enumorator’s
district.
In cities like Atlanta, Savannah,
Augusta and Macon the city wards
will be divided into districts. The
supervision in each congressional dis
trict is to lay out the district in sub
divisions and appoint enumerators
for each.
The actual house-to-house canvass
will not begin until some time next
spring. In the meantime districts
are to be carved out, enumerators
instructed in their work and supplied
with blanks for taking the statistics
called for by the law-making provis
ion for this enumeration. When the
forces have been trained and are
ready to begin work it will not take
over thirty days to complete the can-
I vasa.—Brunswick News.
RATS EAT UP >100,000,000 YEARLY
One of the most serious problems
the Department of Agriculture has
had to meet is the ridding the coun
' try of the millions of rats with which
it is Infested, and which are especial
ly the foes of the farmer. It is es
timated that the rat pest costs the
United States >100,000,000 yearly in
grain. The rat also polutes a great
quantity of food products which it
does by digging under buildings and
embankments, gnawing wood, cut
ting up goods and papers to make
nests, killing poultry and stealing
eggs. The most destructive species
says Leslie's Weekly, is the Norway
flit, which has been carried to all
parts of the world on ships. It is
calculated that a single pair of rats
would, in three years, under favor
ing circumstances, increase to 20,-
000,000. The Department of Agricul
ture has planned a vigorous crusade
against the vermin, and it re
commends rat-proof construction in
buildings, better protection of food
supplies, and the use of various pois
ons in localities haunted by rats.
Don't worry about anything unless
you know It is going to happen, and
don’t worry about it then if you can
help it.
□ Wood’s Descriptive Q
Fall 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 al! about
Vegetable & Flower Seeds
that can be planted in the fall to
advantage and profit, and about
Hyacinths. Tulips and other
Flowering Bulbs. Vegetable and
Strawberry Plants. Poultry
Supplies and Fertilizers.
Ererv-Farmer and Gardener should
have this eatalog It Is invaluable in
its helpfulness and suggeative Ideas for
a prof table and satisfactory Farm or
Garden. Catalogue mailed free on
request. Write for it.
T. W. WOOD & SONS, J
Seedsmen . Richmond. Va. O'
MAKING IMPROVEMENTS.
According to information that has
been received from a reliable source
the Chattanooga Southern railroad,
which has been in bankruptcy for
several years, is planning some im
provements, which it is believed,
means that the company will make
an extesion in the line in the near
future. According to the information
received there is some question re
garding the road being sold to anoth
er company and it now looks as
though when the bankruptcy proceed
ings are concluded the old company
will still be in control and yill carry
out the plans which were made be
fore the crash came.
Already it may be seen that the com
pany is planning on some improve
ments at least. Thousands of new
crossties are being put in, bridges are
being repaired and rolling stock is be
ing overhauled and put in running
j condition. The officials of the road
are taking a renewed interest in the
line and there is a spirit prevailing
that there are some good things in
store for the road.
A gentleman of Chattanooga, while
in the city recently stated that it is
rumored that Mr. Lamb, president
•of the road, who is now a resident
;of New York, may come south and
give his personal attention to the
road. It is said Mr. Lamb has be-
I come disengaged from business in
; terests at New York and that it is
now probable that he will come south
If this be the case it may prove that ■
the head offices of the road will be 1
located in Gadsden.
From the same source It is learned
that there is a prospect that the
Chattanooga Southern may take an
extension which would put Gadsden
on a through line of railroad. The
original plan was to build the road
to Pensacola, Fla., tapping on the
way several important cities and
much territory which is not now
entered by a railroad. In the case
of Gadsden the road would receive
large patronage as It would be the ■
only through line of road passing|
this city. In any event, some Im-1
portant developments are looked for ■
in connection with the road within'
the next month. —Gadsden Journal.
Work Day for Orphans Sept. 25th. '
Bearing the burden of the heart-brok'
en and neglected children of Georgia, I
we ask the friends of these, the most
helpless of the universe, to join in ob-:
serving the annual Work Day for the
orphans of Georgia. Let every man, j
woman and child give his day’s earn-1
ings or income to any Home he pre- ;
fers. One day’s unselfish work for i
humanity at its fountain head. Noth- j
ing can be nobler, nothing more far-1
: reaching than to save a child. Noth-1
I ing more dangerous than to neglect
j one, he becomes a criminal or a more
I fire brand.
The Methodist Orphans’ Homes at
j Decatur and Macon, the Baptist Home
■at Hapeville, the Christian at Bald- ■
j win, the Ga. Industrial at Macon, the
Hebrew In Atlanta, Dodge Memorial ’
at St. Simons’ Island, the Presby- ■
terian at Clinton, S. C., besides lo
j cal Homes, ask a glad days work and
a joyous gift to any Orphans’ Home on
Saturday, Work Day, Sept. 25.
Health and Beauty Aid.
Cosmetics and lotions will not clear
i your complexion of pimples and blotch
es like Foley’s Orino Laxative, for
indigestion, stomach and liver trouble
and habitual constipation. Cleanses
; the system and is pleasant to take.
\ Sold by all druggists.
The loftiest chimney in the world
was recently put into service at the
, large smelting works at Great Falls,
; Mont., where it will serve to carry
off the gases from the greater part
■of the large plant. The chimney
wihch is built of brick, is 506 feet
in height above the ground. It is 50
feet in diameter at the top, and in
creases gradually in diameter to the
base. The flue Includes a dust cham
ber in which vertically-hung wires
serve to take out the dust from the ■
smoke. The dust is removed from
the wires by shaking mechanism and
falls in hoppers in the floor, from ’
which it is loaded into cars in a pit 1
below. 1
i
The trouble about imposing taxes is
that the trusts can beat the govern
ment at its own game. • '
I
Brazil had to. import over $48,000,- *
000 worth of foodstuffs in 1908.
i
Many people delude themselves by s
saying ‘“lf will wear away,” when ‘
they notice symptoms of kidney and 1
bladder trouble. This is a mistake.
Take Foley’s Kidney Remedy, and
stop the drain on the vitality. It I
cures backache, rheumatism, kidney -
and bladder trouble, and makes every <
trace of pain, weakness, and urinary j
trouble disappear. Sold by all drug- t
gists. ■ 7
It May Be Pneumonia
“A hard chill, pain through the chest, difficult breathing.
Then fever, with great prostration.” If this should
be your experience, send for your doctor. You may
have pneumonia! If your doctor cannot come at once,
give Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. When he comes, tell him
exactly what you have done. Then do as he says.
No alcohol in this cough medicine. /. C. Ayer Co.,Lotnell,Mass.
teen the bowels in good condition. One of Ayer’s Pills at bedtime will caus
an increased flow of bile, and produce a gentle laxative effect tiie day followmi
MhHm|»hH^^^^^^^^+++++*+*+' , ‘+++*+***** + ** + ** + ******* <
The Berry Schoo!
ROME, GEORGIA.
: MARTHA BERRY, FOUNDER AND DIRECTOR-
■ ~~~
■ A Christian industrial school for country
‘ Boys of limited means and opportunities
I but unlimited determination and persever-
! ance. Board and tuition $30.00 a term.
I Bth Fall session begins August 31. Can-
! didates for addmission should apply now.
■
I Catalog and application blanks sent on re-
I quest. Address,
: Robt. H. Adams, A. m., Principal.
Chattanooga Marble Works
A. W. HASSELL, Prop.
i
Monuments 1
1149-51 MARKET STREET
We have Honuments in stock from SB. to $3,000
CALL ON OR WRITE US.
Life in New York City.
Every second four visitors arrive
in New York .
Every 42 seconds an immigrant ar
rives.
Every 42 seconds a passenger train
arrives.
Every three minutes some one is
1 arrested.
Every six minutes a child is born.
Every seven minutes there is a
funeral.
Every thirteen minutes there is a
wedding.
Every 42 minutes a new business
! firm starts up.
Every 48 minutes a building catch-
I es fire.
Every 48 minutes a ship leaves the
harbor.
Every 51 minutes a new building
is erected.
Every one and three-quarters hours
seme one is killed by accident.
Every eight and one-half hours some
pair is divorced.
Every 10 hours some one commits
suicide.
Every night $1,250,000 is spent in
restaurants for dinner.
Every day 350 new citizens come
to New York to live. —New York Mail
WHY?
From a small beginning the sale
and use of Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy has extended to all parts of
the United States and to many for
eign countries. Why? Because it
has proved especially valuable for
coughs and colds. For sale by Sum
merville Drug Co., Summerville, Ga.
“Keep to the right, and keep mov- i
iiig” was the notice displayed on a '
bridge on which a disaster had occurr )
ed because of the confusion of a
< rowd. It is a motto that every one ,
might well follow. Movement, not j
stagnation, is necessary for individual
progress but it must be a
movement in the right direction.
A great investment, absolutely safe,
brings returns that nothing else can: i
giving surplus earning power, securing
comfirt and health in your declining
years. That's what Hollister's Rocky
Mountain Tea does. 35 cents. Tea or !
Tablets.—Summerville Drug Co. 1
OUR CLUBBING RATES
The Summerville News and tlu
Atlanta Semi-Weekly Journal r n
year for $1.50.
The Summerville News, Atlan
ta Semi-Weekly Journal and
Home and Farm, all three papers
one year for $1.75.
The Summerville News and the
Atlanta Tri-Weekly Constitution
one year for $1.75.
The Summerville News, Atlan
ta Tri-Weekly Constitution and
Home and Farm, one year for
$2.00.
The Summerville News and
Home and Farm one year for
$1.25.
11 0 —j
Kennedy’s
Lax? ve
Cough Syrup
CONTAINS HONEY AND TAR
Reliavas Colds bv 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,
chest end bronchial tubes.
“Al pleasant to the taste
as Maple Sugar”
Like h
Electric
Bitters
Succeed when everything else fails.
In nervous prostration and female g
weaknesses they are the supreme I
remedy, as thousands have testified, n
FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AND 3
STOMACH TROUBLE |
it is the best medicine ever sold a
over a druggist’s counter.