The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, November 18, 1909, Image 4
SUFFERB) WE TEARS '
WITH (MC CATAKRB.
Mr. Ditch, »f Louisville, I'ives )’t-ru-na j
the Credit fer /lit Recovery, and
Recoenntends it to Hit Prien is.
rant
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KWT.. JOSEPH U. I - H. 414 W. Jof-
Lvl fcraoe RL. Ixir.iavilla, JCy., writes:
“I take great plaasaro iu rMnnuii uding
j<;:r valaable Prruna M a catarrh
remedy.
“I have been Buffering f'»r tlie past
three yenra with catarrh, and bad need
almost arery thing in the juarl.i t unUl
l ad of your wonderful f’. runs rem
«-■ •>’. After using two bottles of X’< ;u
--na I can cheerfully recommend it to
at.y one havlrg the ra~ <i disease.
“I wan almost compelled to giva up
Bty nnalnara, until I used yorr remedy,
ar.d T hare n<v<r been bothered with
eatnrrh Bface,”
Hon. C. biorrp, Congress man from
V rglnia, write ; “1 can chcerfnily
say thr.t I haver. »d year yainahlorem
e, v, Pcrwna, w th beueflr.r.l reunite,
and can nnhe :tat.ingly r< commend
your remedy to i-y friends aa an Invig
or: ting tonic and an effective and per
manent erne for eatarrh.”
People who object to llqnld medicines
ran now n-rnre Ternna Tablets. Sold
by drugrlrtn, and man«f»cl::i<-<! by The
T ran* Thug Mfg. Co., Cellin'bn , Ohio,
Ftir.n-a-lin an Id'.a! La-.ttive.
In the annual report of the auditor
of the poatofflce department is shown
that during the last twenty years for
elgners in the United States have
sent to their homes by means of mon
ey orders, the sum of 1431,956,623,
In »sc«M of ths amount thay receiv
ed from abroad.
Our real friends gently tell us of I
onr faults—and then we no longer
consider them our friends.
T utt’s Pi I Is
This popular rsnssdy aavar falls t»
effectually aura
Dyspepsia, Sick
Headache, Biliousness
And ALL DISEASES arising from a
Torpid Liver and Bad Digestion
The natural result is good appetite
and selld flesh. Dose small;elegant*
ly sugareoated and easy to sw allow
Take No Substitute.
Me WILLIAMS SHUE CUMI AIN I, KUlVin, Urihvwjiri
I Here are the Very Prettiest of Pall Shoes, AH Ready and, Eager to Make lour Acquaintance
i u 41
yhere is more real style to a pair of McWilliams, Shoes than you'll find j Jk
in any pair of women's shoes of equal price, and style is not made to play /
second fiddle, either. McWillams' Shoes are not only good, they are good looking
’ ’ in all Leathers, Pat Leathers, Gun Metals, Russian Calf, and Suede, button or lace
! <
| FOR THE GENTS - ' FOR THE LADIES—
-1 Get connected. A live one hot off the wire. This shoe will sell ; Every pair of misses and children’s shoes in our store whatever size
largely in all stvles once the trade have tried it because it fits. I shape or price, are gauranteed good value and satisfactory service.
■—Ml ll■ Ml HI I———- -J——
» TOUGH SHOES FOR LIVELY BOYS Don’t scold your 'oy for wearing out sjhoes BUY HIM GOOD SHOES
h Stout material, Strong in make. We have the right kind, made for us and warranted by us. Tans, Gun Metal, Wme, Patent Leather
—.NO OLD STOCK CARRIED OVER FROM LAisT YEAc- -
| Telephone 587 McWILLIAMS SHOE COMPANY Polished Free
2!BBrradSt., ROME shop of quauty
The Summerville News
.’vblishfcti Every Thursday
BY
ri!E NEWS PUBLISHING CO.
0. J. Espy. Editoi and Manager
Terms of Subscription:
One Y>-ar SI.OO
Six Months 50c
Three Months.. • 25c
Advertising Rates will be Made
snown on Application.
Entered ai the Summerville Post
Office as Second Class: Mai) Matter.
Summerville, Ga., Nov. 18, 1909.
"From all indications the price of
cotton will reach 18 cents by spring,”
says Commissioner of Agriculture
Thomas G. Hudson. "It may come bj
Christmas, maybe not before spring,
but there are many reasons to pre
dict the advance to this high figure.
The shortage ol the crop and the
general conditions will be responsi
ble for the advance. I do not think
that the Georgia crop will reach over
1,6000,006 bales. It may be 1,700,000,
bales but the first figures appear to be
correct 1 do not think that the to
tal crop will be over 10,000,000 bales
while the conservative estimate will
be that Georgia will produce one-sixth
of the entire output. There will be
no second crop this year and cotton
is all about in."
The supreme court of the United
States has sentenced Sheriff Shipp
of Chattanooga, to 90 days in the
Federal prison at Washington, for
contempt of court in failing to pro
tect from mob violence the negro,
Ed Johnston, convicted of assault in
State courts of Tennessee.
According to Census Bureau off I
rial reports, the Western states lead
in number of divorces. The state of
Washington has the’ highest number
and Delaware the lowest. The di
vorce rate has grown steadily with
the Increase of population. Two
thirds of the divorces granted be
tween 1887 and 1906 were granted to
wives. Actors, showmen and musi
cians lead in the list of divorce ap
plications; farmers are seldom rep
;resented.
Branch banks within the state of
Georgia are in violation of the state
banking law, declares Attorney Gen
'oral Hart, in a written opinion. Judge
Hart holds that one bank, no mat-
I ter what the amount of paid-in cap
' Ital stock may be, cannot organize
a branch bank in the same city, or
in any other city, although it may
1 open a branch office at which depos
its may be received. The
matter grew out of an application
from a Tennessee bank firm to es
tablish a branch bank in Georgia
without being incorporated under the
laws of this state. The attorney gen
eral holds tl*t this cannot be done.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1309.
The Disaster at Cherry, 111.
The latest news from Cherry, 111.,
states that efforts to enter the St.
Paul coal mine where 300 men are
entombed, were abandoned at 1
■ o’clock Tuesday, and the mine was
flooded with water to extinguish the
. fire.
Four hundred and seventy four
men were officially in the mine and
266 are officially missing. One hun
dred and eighty families are involv
: ed in the disaster, many of them
' with young children.
The attention of rescuers and of
-9 ficials is now turned to the wid
ows and orphans who are left in a
pitiful condition.
t
President Taft and Woman Suffrage
Among the many speeches which
President Taft made during his re
cent tour, one made on the campus
of a Mississippi Womans’ College, in
the presence of 800 bright, young
girls, will gladden the hearts of
3 Woman Suffragists. “While not a
’ rabid suffragist,” he said, "I am in
favor of the suffrage for women
when they desire it. I believe that
one of the advantages in giving them
that kind of influence will be to
' open more avenues of self support
to them than has heretofore been
done. The trouble has been
that we have not given the women
a fair show. We have not opened
’ all the avenues to livelihood that
1 they are quite as able to fill as we,
1 and in certain respects, better than
we.” These are brave , outspoken
1 words, and the women of America
have a right to count Mr. Taft
as an ally. He may yet prove to be
a very servicable one.. —Christian
’ Herald.
J
Congressman Gordon Lee was in
Marietta Wednesday and had spent
’ some time at other points in the
1 county. Mr. Lee’s friends are urging
him to again run for congress and
we hope to see him do so. He has
buen in congress just long enough to
1 reach the acme of usefulness to his
f constituents to obtain important com
mittee positions that a new man
would not get in years no matter how
1 brilliant he be; places that will re
’ redound not only to the Seventh
District’s good in repute, but also
’ in actual dollars in the w’ay of appro
priations. Mr. Lee has made a
strong impression on hie Cobb county
friends and they do not believe he
should lay down the work at the very
moment when he is best prepared to
give good results. Other candidates
may be as competent when years of
service have made them so, but now
none can do the work of Mr. Lee.
Marietta News.
, Why get up in the morning feeling
p blue,
Worry others and worry you;
Heres’ a secret between you and me,
Better take Rocky Mountain Tea.
‘ Summerville Drug Co.
> I
Mis Alice Weathers is spending a
v few days with Mrs. Gordon Wheeler
in Lyerly.
Mr. W. S. McClelland, of Menlo,
was among visitors here Wednesday.
McWILLIAMS SHOE COMPANY, ROME,
SOUTH SUMMERVILLE
, Mr. Broom moved Tuesday from
. Trion to his residence on Congress
■ street. We welcome these good cit
! zens to our town.
s Mr. and Mrs. J. A. League had |
■ as their guest Sunday J. P. Dillard I
■ of Trion.
J. H. Harlow is planning to erect i
I an addition to his residence in the 1
- near future.
Henry White of Dry Valley spent
i Saturday night here with friends.
| Our Sunday school seems to be
- composed of earnest, faithful mem- i
- bers, judging from the good at
i tendance and keen interest in the
work. There were 65 present Sun
day and plans were formed to carry
5 on the school all winter. A committee
was appointed to collect money for
i a heater and after Mr Cash takes
- possession of the house we now use,
s will meet in the house used for the
i literary school.
; D. W. Mahan and family spent
f the week end with relatives in Ross
i vllle.
i Mr. Lowry of Wilson Switch will
i build two cottages here for rent at
t an early date.
i S. C. Hall is Indisposed.
> Wes Gray and family of Trion
t spent Sunday with relatives here.
1
i Mr. Frank F. Smith, Great Sach
i em of the Improved Order of Red
1 Men, of Atlanta was in Summerville
t Wednesday making arrangements co
, organize a lodge of Red Men at this
i place. Mr W. S. Wright, of South
i Summerville has charge of the work
i and as soon as a sufficient number
t of applications are secured, Mr.
s Smith will return and organize the
i lodge.
DRY VALLEY DOTS
( The singing at this place Sunda
, afternoon was very good and enjoy
, ed by a right good crowd.
Mr. Walter Martin and sister, Miss
I Nora, were visiting Miss Mattie Jones
. Sunday.
' Mrs. Ella Tucker of Summerville
. was visiting her parents h re Lit
week.
] Miss Flora Kellett is on the sick
v H’t .
Misses Carrie Cochran and Anglo
j Kellett visited Miss Mattie Jones last
5 Sunday.
Saturday and Sunday is our regu
x lar meeting day. Let every one who
can, come and bring some one with
, them.
THE HUSTLER.
>1
s Forced Into Exile.
f Wm. Upchurch of Glen Oak, Okla.,
i’ was an exile from home. Mountain
■ air, he thought, would cure a fright
ful lung-racking cough that had de
fied all remedies for two years. As-
5 ter six months he returned, death
dogging his steps. “Then I began
to use Dr. King’s New Discovery,”
> he wrties, “and after taking six bot-
■ ties 1 am as well as ever.” It saves
thousands yearly from desperate
lung diseases. Infallible for Coughs
i and Colds, it dispels Hoarseness and
r Sore Throat; Cures Grip, Bronchitis.
Hemorrhages, Asthma, Croup, Whoop
ing Cough. 50c and SI.OO, trial bot
, tie free, guaranteed by Summerville
. Drug Co.
Stops
Minim Neuralgia
The shooting, tearing pains of neuralgia are caused
by excitement of the nerves. Sciatica is also a nerve
1' Sloan’s Liniment, a soothing external application,
stops neuralgia pains at once, quiets the nerves, relieves
that feeling of numbness which is often a warning ot
paralysis, and by its tonic effect on the nervous and
muscular tissues, gives permanent as well as immedi
ate relief. .
One Application Relieved the Pam.
Mr. J. C. Lee, of noo Ninth St., S. E„ Washington, D. C.,
“ I advised a lady who was a great sufferer from neuralgia to ‘7. Sloa “ ®
ment. After one application the pain, left he* and she has not been troub e
with it since.”
Sloan’s -
Liniment A
is the best remedy for Rheumatism, Stiff I |
Joints and Sprains and all Pains. | |
At All Druggists. Price 25c., 50c. and SI.OO. ff ijjjLfeijLlEl ||
Sloan’s Treatise on the Horse sent Free. Address H I
DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS.
CITATION.
Georgia, Chattooga county.
To all whom it may concern: Mrs. !
Dora Henry, administratrix of W. F.
Henry, Jr., deceased, has in due
form applied to the undersigned for
leave to sell the lands belonging to
the estate of said deceased and said
application will be heard on the
first Monday in December, next,
the 6th day of December, 1909.
This Ist day of November, 1909.
• J. P. JOHNSTON. Ordinary.
Mayor Wm. H. Echols, one of the
founders of the first Cotton Mill op
i erated in Alabama, died from a
i stroke of paralysis Saturday in
’ Huntsville, Ala. He was born in
Huntsville in 1834, graduated at West
; Point in 1854, resigned his commis-
■ sion in United States at the be
i ginning of the Civil war and served
I as Major of Engineers on the South
. Atlantic Coast defenses throughout
- the war as a confederate soldier.
■ ' Mr. T. N. Greeson of Valley Store
was here Tuesday.
Petition to Require the Administra
tor to Make Title to Land.
Georgia, Chattooga county.
A. J. Lawrence vs. J. J. Norton
administrator of Mrs. Willie L.
Norton. Petition to require the ad
ministrator to make titfe to land.
Court of ordinary, Chattooga coun-
Ga.
To J. J. Norton, Joseph Norton,
Lawrence Norton, Non resident de
fendants, Take notice.
A. J. Lawrence has filed his pe
tition in said cause alleging payment
of purchase money under bond for
title to certain lands in said petition
described in said state and county.
You are therefore hereby command
ed to be and appear at the Decem
ber term, 1909, of said court to be
held in and for said county on the
first Monday in December, next, to
show cause why the prayer of the
petition should not be granted.
This November 3rd, 1909.
J. P. JOHNSTON, Ordinary.