The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, September 09, 1909, Image 7

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Woman’s Friend Nearly all women suffer at times from female ailments. Some women suffer more acutely and more constantly than others. But whether you have little pain or whether you suffer intensely, you should take Wine of Cardui and get relief. Cardui is a safe, natural medicine, for women, prepared scientifically from harmless vegetable in gredients. It acts easily on the female organs and gives strength and tone to the whole system. ™ CARDUI J 38 The Woman’s Tonic Mrs. Verna Wallace, of Sanger, Tex., tried Cardui. She writes; "Cardui has done more for me than I can describe. Last spring I was taken with female inflammation and consulted a doctor, but to no avail, so I took Cardui, and inside of three days, I was able to do my housework. Since then my trouble has never returned.” Try it AT ALL DRUG STORES AMERICA’S GREATEST WEEKLY THE TOLEDO BLADE. The Best Known Newspaper in the United States. Circulation 200,000. Popular in Every State. The seventy-fourth year of its ex istence finds the Toledo Blade more popular than at any period of its remarkable career. It is now read each week by more than a million pea pie. Its field is not circumscribed by State boundaries, but involves the length and breadth of the United States, giving it an unquestionable right of claiming to be the greatest national weekly newspaper in the country. The Weekly Blade is distinctly a family newspaper. The one object of its publishers has always been to make it fit for the American home, for the fireside, and of interest to every member of the family. To ful fill this purpose it is kept clean and wholesome. The news of the world is handled in a comprehensive manner and the various departments of The Blade are edited with painstaking care The Household page is a delight to the women and children; current af fairs are treated editorially without prejudice; the serial stories are se lected with the idea of pleasing the greatest number of fiction lovers; the Question Bureau is a scrap-book of information; the Farmstead columns are conducted with the purpose of giv ing the patrons a medium for the exchange of ideas and information on f.;rm topics. No department is neg lected, but every feature is taken care of with the idea of making The Blade worth many times the price of sub scription-one dollar a year. Sample copies mailed free. Address, THE BLADE, Toledo, Ohio. The largest tobacco manufacturing center in the world is St. Louis. Its annual sales aggregate $45,000,000, which is equal to 18 per cent of the total tobacco output of the United States. Fashions are for the most part in the interest of trade with followers for victims. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S oASTORIA Better Not Get Dyspepsia If you can help it. Kodol prevents Dyspepsia, by effectually helping Nature to Relieve Indigestion. But con’t trifle with Indigestion. A great many people who have trifled with Indigestion, have been sorry for it —when nervous or chronic dyspepsia resulted, and they have not been able to cure it. Use Kodol and prevent having Dyspepsia. Everyone is subject to indiges tion. Stomach derangement follows stomach abuse, just as naturally and just as surely as a sound and healthy stomach results upon the taking of Kodol. When you experience sourness of stomach, belching of gas and nauseating fluid, bloated sensation, gnawing pain in the pit of the stomach, heart burn (so-called), diarrhoea, headaches, dullness or chronic tired feeling—you need Kc dol. And then the quicker you take Kodol —the better. Eat what you want, let Kodol digest it Ordinary pepsin “dyspepsia tab lets,” physics, etc., are not likely tn be of much benefit to you, in digestive ailments. Pepsin is only FOB SALE BY ALL DRUGGIST. Pellagra—the Cause and the Remedy Corn has been one of the staple food crops of the human family too long to warrant the hasty assump tion that the ravages of the malig nant new diseases to which physi cians have given the name of pel lagra are due to any inherent causes within the grain itself, says the At lanta Georgian. For the wholesale and indiscriminate abuse which this member of the veg etable kingdom is getting nowadays there is absolutely no justification. Such hasty judgment fails to take note of the fact that from time im memorial corn has furnished suste nance both to civilized and to savage man. So long, as the simpler processes for curing corn were in vogue no one ever heard of this new entry into the list of maladies. Consequently we must look else where for the seat of the trouble. Dr. William T. Woodley, of Char lotte, N. C., seems to have reached the correct conclusion. He attributes the rise of this new disorder to the use of corn that has been shock cured ed. He says that before it is given time to dry it is husked and marketed whereas 60 days longer should be allowed to corn in the shock than to corn in the field. In view of the fact that the corn season is much shorter in the North than in the South, he says that the farmers hurry to clear the fields be fore winter. As a means of precaution, he sug gests that the mills be required to use only corn that has been cured under supervision. And since the amount of corn ground for human food is small in comparison with the annual yield, this requirement will entail no very great hardship. The inference that this new epidem ic is to be attributed to the steam rolling mills is entirely without sup port. From the layman’s point of view Dr. Woodley appears to have found both the cause and the remedy for pel lagra; and recent fatalities make it urgent that the prudent safeguards which he suggest be adoptde. Wanting what you can’t get is about as much fun as getting what you don’t want. a partial digester—and physics are not digesters at all. Kodol is a perfect digester. If you could see Kodol digesting every particle of food, of all kinds, in the glass test-tubes in our laboratories, you would know this just as well as we do. Nature and Kodol will always cure a sick stomach —but In order to be cured, the stomach must rest That is what Kodol does —rests the stomach, while the stomach gets well. Just as simple as A, B, C. Our Guarantee Go to your druggist today and get a dob lar bottle. Then after you have used the entire contents of the bottle if you can • honestly say, that it has not done you any good, return the bottle to the druggist and he will refund your money without oues- • tion or delay. We will then pay the drug gist for the bottle. Don’t hesitate, ail druggists know that our guarantee is good. This offer applies to the large bottle only and to but one in a family. The large bot tle contains 2# times as much as the fifty ’ cent bottle. Kodol is prepared at the labor*. ' toriesof E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. TUB BUMMWVILLE NBWS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1909. Some Advantages of Good Roads, The question of good roads is one that should be the concern of every good citizen. The value of good roads was appreciated by the old Romans who built one of the great est empires of the centuries. The ■ continuation of the old Roman em pire was as dependent upon good roads as it was upon the bravery of , the soldiers. It was necessary for Rome to have the cohorts, but these ■ same cohorts could have done very little to hold rebellious provinces in subjection if it had not been for the ■ magnificent roadways along which the Roman soldiers would hurl I their phalanxes. But with us it is a far greater question than that of; merely holding a nation together. Here are some of the benefits that' our people will be able to get from good roads. Better mail service in our rural districts. It is a big task to drive niost of our rural routes day by day. As a matter of fact they are fre quently well-nigh impassable. Good : roads will bring better mail facili ties to every country district. Good roads will help our schools, , especially our country schools. If there were better roads there could be fewer schools and as a result better schools. Children could be carried to school three miles with but little loss of time on the farm during the cold, winter months if there were good roads from the farm j home to the school house. Good roads will help our country . churches. It is a plain fact that for four or five months in the year the country church and the country Sunday school have a hard time to j keep going. Good roads will help enlarge the cold weather attendance in every one of ‘them for the reason that it would not only increase the number of attendants within a given I radius, but it would lengthen the ' radius of the territory that could at- I tend. | Good roads would save the farm • ers thousands of dollars each year ■in the matter of hauling to and I from the town. Two miles over properly constructed roads to do the I work of four over our present hilly ' and muddy roads. One bad place l in a road makes it necessary to 1 load only as heavy as can be carried i over that bad place. Good roads will overcome in a I large degree the isolation that is one of the drawbacks to living in 1 the country. One of the hard things about being in the country lis the loneliness. The unprotected women and children in the country j districts is one of the greatest agen ; cies for driving men to town to live. Good roads appeal to the man, [ seeking a home. They draw men who are seeking to make investments —Union (S. C.) Times. A new microphone, the invention of two Swedish engineers, is report |ed to have greatly increased the ■ range of long distance telephones. It's the highest standard of quali : ty, a natural tonic, cleanses your sys | tem, reddens the sheeks, brightens the eyes, gives flavor to all you eat. Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will do this for you. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. —Summerville Dru.g Co. The boy or man who is always ■ scrupulously punctual at quitting I time never rises very high in the world. A NAROW ESCAPE. Edgar N. Bayliss, a merchant of Robinsonville, Del., wrote: ‘“About two years ago I was thin and sick, and coughed all the time and if I did not have consumption, it was near to it. I commenced using Fo ley’s Honey and Tar, and it stopped my cough and I am now entirely well and have gained twenty-eight pounds, all due to the good results from tak ing Foley’s Honey and Tar. Sold by ; ail druggists. Uncle Sam’s postage stamps are | manufactured by the bureau of engrav ing and printing at Washington, the stamped envelopes and newspaper wrappers are made under department supervision, under contract, by a private corporation, whose factory is located at Dayton, 0., while the pos tal cards are made under similar con ditions at Rumford, Me. The Rock of Gibralter rises 1,439 feet from the sea. Testifies After Four Years Carlisle Center, N. Y., G. B. Bur hans, writes: "About four years ago I wrote you that I had been entire ly cured of kidney trouble by tak ing two bottles of Foley’s Kidney Remedy, and after four years I am again pleased to state that I have never had any return of those symp toms, and I am eveidently cured to stay cured." Foley’s Kidney Remedy will do the same for you. Sold by all druggists. The Habit of Kindness. A large part of our unkindness is sheer thoughtlessness. Few peo ple mean to be unkind. In fact,' most people are kindly disposed towards others, and would be glad ;to help them; but they simply do not think. They are so Intent upon their own affairs, their minds are so focused upon themselves, ; that all thought of others or t heir needs are crowded out. There is no other thing which will give greater satisfaction than the forming of a kindly habit, the habit of holding a kindly spirit to ; and encouraging others. If we persist in this habit it I will drive out. all petty little jeal ousies, all moroseness and gloom. ' envy and selfishness, everything that would seriously mar our lives. I If we hold the right mental at titude, sow the right mental seeds,, sow the right thoughts, we should get the right habits. What a splendid opening there j is in the cheering up business for ! all sorts of people. Everybody ought ; to be in it. It is the grandest occupa- J tion in the world. See what a harvest i it brings of satisfaction, joy and help-, ‘ fulness. In addition to all this, it is a , real money maker, for it increases one’s power of efficiency wonderful ly. It keeps life’s machinery lubricat i ed so that it runs more harmoniously j j and consequently can turn out a grea ! increase of product. How many good things this kind ly spirit brings to us, and how many ; unpleasant things it keeps away from us. No efforts we ever make can bring such splendid returns as the endeav or to scatter flowers as we go along, to plant roses instead of thorns; no I investment will pay such fat divi dividends as the firm effort put into kind words and kindly acts, the es- s fort to radaiate a kindly spirit to-' ward every living creature. Do not be discouraged, even if the people you try to help and encourage ; are ungrateful and unresponsive. You will be enlarged by your own shining J by your efforts to help others, just as i is the life of the one who is not al ways enriched, even if the love is j not appreciated or returned. Such ef forts can never be lost, no matter ’ how coldly they may be received. No I one can honestly try to help anoth- | er in vain. He is sure to be a lar ger, richer man himself for the ef fort. —Success Magazine. Making Pea Hay. Let the peas grow till the pods turn yellow, and then there is no hay more easy to cure well than j cowpeas, notwithstanding all the talk about the difficulty in curing i them. They will cure if you just j let them, and do not go to monkey -1 ing with all sorts of contrivances to spoil them. I had a letter to-day from a farmer I | who said that he would not have barn| room for his pea crop and wanted to I know if they would keep well stacked. He really answered his own question ' , as he said that a neighbor had stack ed some when well wilted and limp, and they heated and steamed. But to his surprise, he found that they ; cured perfectly, If he had opened s the stacks and tried to cool them off, he would, doubtless, have had moldy hay. Mow the peas in the morning, and, I if possible, put a tedder behind the ( j mower to keep them tossed up and ! ' hasten the wilting. Rake the morn- ' ing moving into windrows that after noon. Turn them the next morning and let lie till afternoon while cutt-; ing more. Cock them that after- j noon, and when the hay in the cocks ! ' can be taken and twisted hard, and ' nc sap runs to the twist, haul them in. If to go into stacks, make the stacks, well, and rake down the sides ; ; but cover the tops of the stacks with straw or dry hay. This hay will cure even if the stacks heat. Put some; rails under the stacks to keep the hay off the ground and prevent, its absoring moisture from the ground, and you have as good hay as in the I barn. —Raleigh (N. C) Progressive Farmer 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. Twenty million false teeth are sent to England from this country every year. Even those who have an aim in life waste a lot of ammunition. DeWitt’s Little Early Risers, the safe, sure, easy, gentle little liver pill The original Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve is DeWitt’s. The name is plain ly stamped on every box. It is good for cuts, burns, bruises, sores, boils and sunburn —but it is especially gooc for Piles. Sold by all druggists. M The Kind. Yon Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne tho signature of h ;iS hecn. made under his per z Sonal supervision since its infancy. Wux/yj; Allow no one 1 o deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “Ju st-as-good” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—-Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR!A Casforia 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 Diarrhoea and W ind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy ami natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTOR IA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of __ The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. ''J- ' ... " ■' r, ~ ‘ WHEN YOU CAN GET RELIEF ■ I EiOis a I cures When All Others Fail ~ BREEDEN’S | RHEUMATIC CURE ! NEVER FAILS ■ EVERY BOTTLE GUARANTEED Salisbury, Sub Station, No. 2, Aug. 16, 1903 North Carolina, Rowan County I, J. L. Rusty, the Deputy Sheriff of Rowan County ; M have been suffering with Rheumatism for ten years, have been confined to my bed part of the time, cbuld not sleep j at nights and went to Hot Springs, Ark., for six weeks but » still got no relief. I h.-ive used five bottles of Breeden’s Dj® Rheumatic Cure and after taking same 1 can sleep at nights, KN walk as good as ever and do all my work. ? | J. L. Rusty, Deputy Sheriff. jg Sold Everywhere. Ask Year Deafer ter a Sample Bottle SI.OO PER BOTTLE, OR SIX BOTTLES FOR $5.00 j.?oz further information, write Information Dept. I B3EE6 I j ; ......... I The News job department in well equipped to do all kinds of commer cial printing. The work turned out is of the highest quality, and the prices are always found satisfactory by those who favor us with their or ders for printing, When in need of printed matter of any kind come in and let us figure with you. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM 'llcftiigcg and beftutifiet thn hair, ’tonioU-a u luxuriant growth. Falls to Restore Gray i I.iir to its Youthful Color. ( u, ~ <1 & I'.air falling. • . . r , .nndfl-hQat Druggirts HOLLISTER’S Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets A Busy Medicine for Busy People. Brines Golden Health and Renewed Vigor. A speci fle for Consll pat I» >n, I ihl Igc Htion, Liver and Kidney troubles, Pimplew, Eczema, Impure Bhxxl, Bad Breath,HluggiHh Bowels, Headache and Backache. Ils Rocky Mountain Teain tab let form.3s eentH a box. Genuine made by Holijmtek Drug Company, Madison, Wis. GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLfi , (doctor kingl U THE OLD RELIABLE DOCTORS. ELIEST !R ME Ml LOWEST LOCATE!. HEGULA! MABIATU ■ MOtCLBL H -—WE OFFER TOO THE LARGE AHO VALUABLE EXPERIENCE_*T TRW LOAWEIT ESTABLISHED AKO MOST RELIABLE SPECIALISTS l« THE Winj Zd/**;l \ Authorized by tie state to treat CHROHIC, HERVOM MS VUUL •4 <z"'..'t) OISEASLS. Wa guarantee to reXund money It not oureo. Au meal- M ’^T*rVLF T ' ""“ furnuhed ready tor uae-no mercury or InJurtWAmoAiclneß 8 V.'A kfi Hi need. No detention from bualrieae. PatlentA at » dutance H r H treated by mall and exprcaa. Medlelaea aent avwAywnero tree B k from gate or breakage. No medicine aeat O-O. D. nnlaea In- B > f etructed. Charges low. Thousands of caaes ejrad. State your -1 - case andseud for teima. Consultation FREE and aoafideatlal. In S person, or by letter. Call or write today. Don’t delay, pilsrvous Debility and Weaknesusistrioture instrumsat*. ▲ new Bom* tint the ie*uita of yt>uthful folly and excea Irofttn)ent No pain and no expoonre. Mo eaneti'o , M kIoMj bo* vausing !"*•** by diearns er bugles or sound*. NodeUßtlo* from bu>i ** rlne, pimples and blotches on the face. rushes o'; neag> Thousands cored. We <•**«*tee to refun » blood to the bead, pains in the bncfc, confused M*»«». mo noy if not permanently cured. My boob t»Uj ex FBL,ndf-.Tzetf'Jlno*B. bashfuines*, aversion to •<'Clety.| l(l|ung this disease. _ a. .sol vital forcca ■ *"» of manhood etc., cur ,® <! 11 r ' ,r iy _ _l. ___| A Kb larged la tt* *•*•<««»- U g.jfc We ran p nightioMMß, restore lost vitality,| gs |QqCwIO causing nervous deoility, weaheesr >4'i«'-eiop*n'l ">»• rt young or mind leaded who are Qf norTOTl> gygtem. •!«-, permaa«aUy mmw wlw K er.akjy and wee-<• arid n aue thexo nt for marriage | t eruakUnir that terrs able disease, in ail it* forrnw dropsy of tba s<rodjCi 1 ' p.liA |3< and stages, cuied for life. Blood || WQfQ QQ | without pala* tj y i-toT'ing, ‘■ktiz Diset'-en, Llcers, Swellings, UorBS, 1 J hook «*>■< tea taw daju, t; , > I; rin -ua. G.*et ar. ; aii form* of private diseases. PhlmAwl* H .i -jredtestay Cu. F-d w,. guarantea to refund your I 01 I » withouvpaia. appltotJonßH . < T y S f not cured. BO O K w?“ {.dnay Bladusr and Prostahc "<*.-£ our, ’ (> r°i^ 1 « 7 u i!rMX r '1 jismes Free Museum J . Sii. KING MEDICAL CO., * Atlanta. GA. (Th.ro., gl., Log.. -, A g Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera & Diarrhea Remedy .■ j ■ . .•> ur 11 1 w- i I !!■■■ Almost every family has need of a reliable remedy for colic or diarrhea at some time during the year. ■» This remedy is recommended by dealers who have sold it for many years and know its value. It has received thousands of testimonials from grateful people. It has been prescribed by phy sicians with the most satisfactory results. It has often saved life before medicine could have been sent for or a physician summoned. ' It only costs a quarter. Can 8 you afford to risk so much for so J little? BUY IT NOW.