The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, September 16, 1909, Image 7

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I Get Well I If you are sick, you wish to get well, don’t you? I lOf course you do. You wish to be rid of the pain and g I misery, and be happy again. If your illness is caused by female trouble, youg lean quickly get the right remedy to get well. It’sK I Cardui. This great medicine, for women, has re- H ’llieved or cured thousands of ladies, suffering likeß ■ you from some female trouble. kCARDUI j 3 98 For Women’s Ills Mrs. Fannie Ellis, of Foster, Ark., suffered agony for seven M years. Read her letter about Cardui. She writes: “I was sick for H K seven years with female trouble. Every month I would very nearly |g H die with my head and back. I took 12 bottles of Cardui and was o: ■ cured. Cardui is a God-send to suffering women.” Try it. AT ALL DRUG STORES M 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, ing Foley's Honey and Tar. Sold by ail druggists. What a good thing it is for most of us that money is not the only thing that will purchase happiness. A lot of men claim credit for good judgment every time they make a guess. ■ It’s the highest standard of quali r ty, a natural tonic, cleanses your sys tem, reddens the sheeks, brightens the eyes, gives flavor to all you eat. I Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tea will I do this for you. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. —Summerville Dru.g Co. We get little credit for being good when there is no temptation to do wrong. Money will build a mansion, but it takes love to make it a home. Dr. Abernathy, the great English physician, said, “Watch your kidneys. ■•When they are affeted, life is in dan- Foley’s Kidney Remedy makes kidneys, corrects urinary ir- and tones up the whole system. Sold by all druggists. A Sunday contribution will not atone for a Monday sin. Take care of your stomach. Let Kodol digest all the food you eat, for that is what Kodol does. Every ta blespoonful of Kodol digests 2 1-4 pounds of food. Try it today. It is guaranteed to relieve you or your - iiopey back. Sold by all druggists. A fit of the blues often makes the victim feel pious. Love that lasts seldom, makes much noise about it. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTO RIA 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 believe that their misery of mind and body is entire ly due to “ills of their sex.” Usually the kidneys and bladder are 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, ( tagging pains in back, 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 all 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 ill 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-1 FOR SAL£ BY ALL DRUGGIST. Charged For It. Fanny Kemble, the celebrated actress of years ago, once spent the summer at a small country town in Massachusetts. While there she en gaged a neighbor, a plain farmer, to drive her around. The farmer, desiring to entertain his guest, ex patiated freely upon the state of the crops and to neighborhood gos sip until Miss Kemble remarked somewhat testily, “Sir, 1 engaged you to drive for me, not to talk to me.” The farmer said no more. When Miss Kemble was ready to leave town she sent for the man and asked for her bill. One of the items therein she could not under stand and asked for an explanation. “That?” said the farmer. “Oh, that’s ‘Sass, ss.’- I don’t often take it, but when I do I charge.” Butter From Birds. In South America is to be found a bird from which a species of but ter can be obtained. This animal is known as the “oil bird,” and one of its favorite haunts is the island of Trinidad. It breeds in rocky caves on the mainland, laying its eggs in a nest constructed of mud. The young birds are extraordinari ly fat, and the fat, having been melted down in clay pots, produces a kind of butter, says London Tit- Bits. This butter is used by the natives. The caves inhabited by these oil birds arc usually accessible only from the sea, and the hunting of these feathered creatures fre quently affords exciting sport to the adventurous in spirit. A Hurry Up Call. Quick! Mr. Druggist—Quick!—A box of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve —Here is a quarter—For the love of Moses, hurry! Baby’s burned himself, terri bly—Johnnie cut his foot with the axe —Mamie’s scalded—Pa can’t walk for piles—Billie has boils —and my corns ache. She got it and soon cured all the family. Its the greatest healer on earth. Sold by Summerville Drug Co. There are a lot of people hunting trouble out of season. Budding genius is seldom found be hind a blossoming nose. The man who fails never claims to be self made. \ B'fe! 11l arations are apt to do. E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago, ID, 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 mail post paid. Do it to-day. THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1909. Eight Million Dollars Appropriated to Prevent Tuberculosis. Appropriations of over $4,000,000 for the suppression of consumption have been made by twenty-eight state legislatures in session during the year, according to a statement is sueld today by the National Associ ation for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. Since January 1, 1909, forty-three! state and territorial Igeislatures have been in session. Os this number, 28 have passed laws pertaining to tuber culosis; eight others have considered such legislation , and in only seven states no measure about consumption were presented. In all. 101 laws re-[ luting to the prevention or treatment of human tuberculosis were consid ered and out of this number 64 were passed. Os the sixty-four laws passed, four teen were in reference to building new state institutions. New state san atoria for tuberculosis will be built in Pennsylvania, Connecticut, where three will be erected, Arkansas, Ore gon, South Dakota, North Dakota and Florida. In New York, North Caroli na, Indiana, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Maine, appropriations have been made for enlarging san atoria, already being built or in opera tion. There are now 27 states where [ such institutions have been estab lished. Every state east of the Miss issippi, except Illinois, West Virgin-! ia, Kentucky, Tennessee, South Caro lina, and Mississipi have provided hospitals for tuberculosis patients. Five states, Illinois, New York, Ohio, Minnesota and lowa, passed laws giving their county officers pow er to erect tuberculosis sanatoria without resorting to a special vote. I .In Maine, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Michigan, lowa and Kan sas, laws providing for the strict re-; porting and registration of tubercu losis were passed. Only five other states, including the District of Co lumbia, have such laws. The Nation- ’ al Association considers laws of this character as the first requisite in an organized movement against tuber culosis. Laws prohibiting promiscuous spit ting in public places, were passed in Maine, Pensylvania, New Jersey, Kan sas and Connecticut. Spitters in these states will be prosecuted and fined. Ten states have this year granted nearly SIOO,OOO to be spent only for the education of the public about tu berculosis. In some states traveling i exhibitions will be used, while in oth ers lectures and literature will be the chief means of education. The states making provisions of this sort are Cal ifornia, New Jersey, Kansas, New York, Rhode Island, lowa, Minnesota, ! Porto Rico, Deleware and Texas. The statement of the National Asso ciation calls particular attention to one fact which shows the remarka ble interest in anti-tuberculosis work, evoked during the past year, namely, I that fully one-third oj the $4,000,000 appropriated this year is by special| legislation and for new work. The last Congress appropriated, in addi tion to this sum, nearly $1,000,000 for the maintenance of the three fed eral sanatoria in New Mexico and Colorado. It is estimated besides that the numerous county and munic ipal appropriations made or to be I made for tuberculosis work for next year will aggregate at least $3,000,000 making the official public expendi- [ tures in the United States for the wiping out of tuberculosis at least $8,000,000. i - . 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 gooo for Piles. Sold by all druggists. Next fall Mars will come within 251,000,000 miles of the earth. Pre pare to gossip over the back fence with your neighbors in that planet. In order to give the London po licemena day of rest each week it has been necessary to add 1,500 men to the force. The only chronic kicker who accom plishes anything is the mule. During the year 1908 the telephone ■ was adopted on 2,357 miles of rail road. It is all right to be selfish with your troubles. 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 syrop tems, and I am eveidently cured to stay cured.” Foley’s Kidney Remedy w ill do the same for you. Sold by all druggists. THE NORTH POLE Dr. Cook, we are told, has plant ed the American flag on the North Pole, that is to say, has marked the mathematical point called the North Pole by the pole of his flag. There is, of course, nothing seen on or around the point found by Dr. Cook and marked by him that would in any way characterize it as the North Pole. It is just a surface covered with ice. It is determined, like oth er geographical quantities, by careful observations of. and c omputation [ from, the position of the altitude of the sun or stars in that region. The North Pole is the most north ern point on earth —the highest north ern latitude of 90 degrees, everywhere equidistant from the equator. On the North Pole there are no cardinal points save one. Wherever you point over the surface of the earth, all around, is south. At the North Pole, owing to the peculiar shape of the erath —(it is not a perfect sphere, but slightly flattened at the poles)—a traveler is 14 miles near er to the center of our planet than at the equator, and nearer to that point than any other point on i earth save the South Pole. This fact, in conjunction with the , other, that the centrifugal force is ■ | equal to zero, causes a body there to [be heavier than at any other point.[ on the surface of the earth except. i again, on the South Pole. The North Pole would be the most exquisite location for carrying out i Foucault’s pendulum experiment to demonstrate the rotation of the earth around its axis. The plans of oscil lition would shift completely around in a direction opposite to the rota tion of the earth. On the other hand ! it would be the poorest place for car ! rying out the experiment, first sug j gested by N.ewton, and since that, [time successfully performed, of as-, certaining the rotation of the earth by the eastward deviation of a body i falling from a great' height. On the [pole such a body would not deviate 'a hair's breadth from the plumb-line. For the star-gazer the motions of the heavenly bodies offer a spectacle on the North Pole seen nowhere else i except at the opposite pole. On the North pole stars do neither rise nor set. They move in circles parallel to the horison, except the polar star, i which will be stationary in the ze nith. The same stars will be visible all the time. In the language of the astronomer: The celestian equator will coincide with the horizon and all the fixed stars of the northern celestial hemisphere will be eircum- I polar stars. The most striking feature, however ! will be the behavior of the sun. i Half a year the sun will be above and half a year it will be below the horizon. It will rise only once a year and set only once. The sun, moon ! and planets will, apparently, follow [ the law by which the stars move in | circles parallel to the horizon, but only apparently. When observed ! several days in succession their cir | cular path will be seen to rise or | fall, as the case may be; in realitw, I their apparent path describes a spiral like the thread of an immense screw, having a very small pitch. It takes | the sun two days, two rounds along j the horizon, until the disk becomes j visible from the moment that the ■ first rays reached the observer. The yearly progress of the sun’s motion will appear about as follows Let us begin with Thanksgiving day. It is night—the dark, polar night— I and it will last for two months. At the end of January tho first indica -1 tions of down become visible and it dawns, and dawns, and dawns, for over a month and a half. In the mid ( die of March tho upper edge of the sun becomes visible above the hori zon and now' the great day begins that will last over six months. I It takes the sun two full days, two rounds along the horizon, to extri ! cate itself from that line from the mo ment'the first direct rays reached the observer. Now the huge, red ball will be seen coasting along the hori zon for days, day and night, in a di rection which is here described from left to right of the observer, for the terms “east” and “west” are not found in the vocabulary of the man on the North pole. Slowly onward it rolls, and around and around and imperceptibly upward for three monthns ulti the time of the summer solstice, when it begins to descend again on its circuitous path, with the same dignity and regularity. At the solistice the sun was only 23 1-2 degrees above the horizon, that is to say, the highest position of the sun in that region is two degrees lower than its lowest noonday posi tion in midwinter is for our latitude. About the end of September the sun sets as tardily as it rose, and now follow's a twilight as long as was the dawn half a year ago. The rea son why twilight and dawn are drawn : out to such length is this, that twi light ends and dawn begin when the i sun is 18 degrees below the horizon ■ and the polar sun sinks only 23 1-2 i degrees below that line in midwinter. The discovery of the pole by Dr, WIA .3I UnlH Fhe Kind You Have P** 3 Always Bought | AScgctablePr ? ■ ■ I similatingihc FikxhwiU ■’•'. ' # ! lingiheStomacivaiLlk. of h BCftrS tll6 f, \ ■ i Signal ZW‘ Promotes DigcsliouLhivr! up ; i nessaiiillksi.CtbiLiiii'UV'iiiuT i A. /f t-p l Opium,M< qphi.ie nor Miner-'d. i ,| M Bi ' k/ i Not "NAit cotic. > mM % *** thXlM'ELnm.m ■' iY/yU /‘hnifjrbn SaJf' v j/'i 9 * > il ft 111 jit (ttiu-xirthwa * I J|!, iil ■ li l - A? J* Use A perfect Remedy for Cops lipa ! !r lion, Sour Sloiiiacli.Diairlioci qLr Worms .Convulsions .Feverish f, i 111 3f n F | nessmnl Loss of Sleep- uVul | Facsimile Signature of _ i 11 Thirty Years V * iKBES | EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. O H lL® IHW . _..'Z ’ • ■' - r r NTAI , n NFW YORK CITY. Cook is not likely to add much to, the sum of human knowledge. Its chief Interests lies in tho triumph of man over natural obstacles. For hundreds of years the daring spirits of the race liave braved the terrors of the Arctic and one after another they failed. At last one of them is successful and has shown what pluck and perseverance can do when they’ arc intelligently directed.—Fred J. Hillig, in Toledo Blade. Yesterday’s mistakes are at toned for wlieti we profit by them to day. HOLLISTER’S Tea Kuggets A Busy Medicine tor Busy People. Bonus Golden Health and Renewed Vigor. A spec tile fort 'onntlpul 100, lixllgr-Hllon, LI vet I arid Khln.-v Ir.inhl -h, Pliuplen, Eczema , Impure ; Hlo.hl, Hail Hrcalli slm-'i’isli Howclh.Heuda. he i anil Biii kaehe. 11 s Itnclry Mountain Tea in tab- | let for - m, 35 cents a box. Genuine made by i iliu.i.r-TiiK Darn CoMI-axT,Nadiion, Win. GOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPI E I . XaiaißK«Eft2 'JUZ s•> <A.«aL«.i’M*lKKBSek? y- '"■ so-F T ,?’”?■ CTWHF.H YOU CAN CET RELIEF ■ b'.-L’d 2 it cures When All Others Fail K ADEN’S | IC CURE “.<•.! X< ■ EVL. RY bOTTLE GUARANTEED g || ""“ ■ Sale bury, sub Station, No. 2, Aug. 16, 1908 . North Sheriff of Rowan County ' . have b ••’■•l tuff.'Tij/witl, Kb< umatism for ten years, have ■ K* : ; boeneo 'itu.d .<, :-iy b-l p-.H <>f die tune, could not sleep K s#* at Hi.’.i'went to Hot DpHngn ArY, tor tax weeks but ■ S-O| .«>t U'l relief, lhav.s :■.•• I ■I ve bottles of Breeden s ■ p , vui.-. Cure and after taking same lean shop at nights, j f g ' ■ t jj . inrsd as ever and do all my work. pt* |r - - J. L. Rulty, Deputy Sheriff. ui-irinn imin .ui r S i ;«< a hr.ra, Ask V k Deale? lor a Sample Cottle ■ £X- -w , ■■»■■>■ nun . nmar *ww« -• ear .iw**‘ri m*ws**wß»«lßlS* SI.OO PER BOTTLE, OR SIX BOTTLES FOR $5.00 Fcr further information, write Information Dept. ; P BraESK 1 Jfflj-BSLUO.,Shaiiancoga,Tenn | 3 ■ wa- iBaaMWWI ; ? bC ' ' '• S 3 TIE s o Hutu mstos*. oldest id *ce m i omsr locked, regular « wd «™ I Bwe a<.3 B_iißi.it. you W£ UKE J(!0 mMBU nremacE w ™ ujmi * m «>W ? t- !s».Kra““, rax Jrxsjtasaa-gj-ti / * * ** j. J f rl rn or awG medicine sent 0.0. 0. , onltM i j p jJ- ■ s low. Thousands Os cw» MW*- J, 0 "! M 1 ■ '• . A,. »n<J aend Tor te: n». COBSulUtion FREE »ad »tUI. IB J y » JUfe-.W-.-f*. pemon. or by letter. Call or write wd*y. Don tool*/ f Nervous~bebiiity and Weaknsasaaistriatura unr' ™«“. A -“*T Z « J tie .<,r,ou.Mu>r.er -ul M»p»lo» D <lno wpjjwo •’■, ■• .jv.-hi .in the park. :.f--e.i 1 . n^y jf ny t per manantiy cured. My >*•* «•**/ • 4,j_ '' !r ,elop 4-Id -■ r., '"•' ;7« \ ’lrXtV' c ‘ lh< ’ lJ « rTOUB •>•«•»’•*° ‘ ***** * Mr ** ‘ hSlOhillSra- '" s for bf ’' 11 ' ! jCllOClllirtWOtlAla. ley. -kui - ! -' r!rt /’VJ'VfV X r e'- book i • C t■ 2 • '< ’■‘- Le r. ■ . !■•- «•» c >- pr. •<■' ’• H I Hl 0 S > 3 without IlHdjsay Biadtisr rnd frostatic ~e.« <. r .. ' r>- Twr sue ’ ’ ■ a tH-rrcan-t -qq You »r« •. .■. .r u ' TU " £ 7 .'■ ®" FZ7I : K;’/?r ' T-DiCM. GC»» i weww. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera & Diarrhea Remedy Alinott every family has need of a reliable remedy for colic or diarrhea at aome time during the : year. ; Illis 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. i ? It only costs a quarter. Can you afford to risk so much for so little? BUY IT NOW. . -*ir*~-'-* t .^*— —