The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, November 25, 1909, Image 2

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Tloosaads Hove Kidney Troalilo and Never Suspect it Era To Find Cut. Fill n bottle or c ommon glass with your water and let it stand twenty-four hours; . » -''T'. 0 brick dust sedi- /EJW i'T’O mcnt.orsetthug, 1 (W/'-'.'vJ) *••• ;i sy or ,nii| -y Fm I O 1 V a P; ,earanceo f tcn IE- i 1-TJg' /I.A t indicates an un ’ 1 olthy condi dj? I' //TyJ/ /? tion t ’ ,e kid 4hv//lfriw ne y r ; fr e * " . pass it or pain in the bn' k also < mptonis that toil you the kidneys and bladder arc cut cf order and need attent :•••!. What To I?o. There is comfort in the knowledge so o', u c..j»rcr.ji:d. tb-.t 1... Kilmer s Swamp-Root, the gr l.i . .cy re medy, fulfil!:, al::: >..t t■ ' / vi -i in correcting i!;c’.m:.ti m, j "l.i : i tl: brick, kidneys, 1.. r,blad 1 r. :id< very part of the urinary par ..:;e. Corre. :; i:in ;!:tv to hold water OU.:? f.<-al<li::g : lil t. l it, or bad es. 'C.sf .1 ' ..•in;, u : < . Lyuor, wine or lx< r, :.nd ov;-rc->:r, ■> t!. ;t i nplcasaiit ne ces.ityof ;ir:," ' d to go often thr-iii, h I!:-. < y, : :id to s" t tip many times during 1' . i.i l.t. Tl • mild and in aciliute i of 5". ntap-Root is ro ai di.'.ed. i. .: . <!., th: highest be- * .1 ert-.s. If ■;■i:- d•• ; ;;; :U.S JXMj-S r: Heine you ■ hc-.lcl fS!!:.SZSS-SgggSsgSß hive- ;lieb ■■ .. ;.old by r'< d»u“gi«ts in fifty-ccnt a:: I • i.,r sizes. TSAIS'* V i liny i.a\ a< nripl Isittlc sent free by :•!!. Add c .-i Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing bimton, N. Y. Mention tl is paper - id rcmctnlx r the name, Dr. Kilmer’s Swcmp- R ' t, and Ibn iiddrcss, Binghamton, N. V., on eve ry bottle* ANOTHER LIQUOR DECISION High Court Says it Can’t be Kept In Business Places. Atlanta, Ga.— In a decision handed down in the Morris Cohen and Sam Loeb cases from the Fulton county criminal court the Court of Appeals holds that It is a criminal act to keep liquor on one’s business pre mises, entirely irrespective of the pur pose for which it is kept. To show that the said liquor is kept for sale, the court declares, is ■nilri ly irrevelent and Immaterial to the proof of the occasion. The opinion in part is as follows: “The prohibition statute of 1907 declares that it shall not be lawful for any person to keep on hand at his place of business any intoxicating flhuor. The criminal a; t is the keep Ing on hand and it is wholly imma terial for what purpose that intoxi cating liquor is kept. "Consequently, the accusation which charged that the defendant did keep on hand at his place intoxicat ing liquors wits good in form and sub stance; and on the trial any evidence as to the defendant’s purpose In keep ing the Intoxicating liquor on hand in his place of business was irrelevant | and Immaterial." Tile world's estimated steam power in use today is 12,000,000 horsepow er. Among the suicides, men predomi nate. MONEY TO LEND ON REAL I STAIE Safe Loan Investments secured for those desiring to lend. And available tunds tor those desiring to borrow. No loans under 11,000.00. Apply to Lipscomb, Willingham & Doya) Attorneys at Law i-2-3-4-5-G-7 Clark Bldg. Rome, Georgia. Are You Sick? .Much sickness is duo to a weak nervous system.. Yours may be. 11 it is, y.ou cannot get well until you restore nerve strength lour nervous system is nature's power house: the organs of your body 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 and gives the system a chance to recuperate. Try it. and sec if you do rot quickly feel its bene ficial effect. • 1 um ;;hx»u up to dl* by a Ing doctor. Got one of Dr M les b.' and found that Dr M’h\< Ner \h e fit my oa r From the very xlrst t.’e c ‘ took 1 got better. I am lu t-r new tTan 1 hn\v t>- n for ye«rs, . J do 1E mv own *w!c on the f in. That - w at Dr M ’ ? N. i vine • <L ? *r me. and 1 am glad to rrx m lacrd l» to nt » J- MX ? > UiwrV'n N ’r. YeA.r vnifjfii s< O -s’ ► ' • Ine. -nd a ;h fre h‘« t rn \ °at‘' u >U ’ it it f-»»» Miles Mtdical Co., Elk'-'.art, Ind LETTER FROM J. V. WHEELER. • Says Farmers Will Experience Hard Year In 1910. It is common practice amongst far mers to feed mules most if not all the feed for night and morning at night. Is not the principal wrong? You feed a mule when he is worn out, tired and desperately hungry and he no doubt will clean up at dark the entire feed for night and morning at one eating—overcrowding and over loading his stomach in the fore part of the night; and putting him to work next morning or an empty stomach, then giving him a light dinner ami over feeding him again when night comes. I have traded for mules and horses that, required months to get them out of this habit. Giving them a proper feed at night; and they would not eat next morning. The principal in my judgement, is all wrong. What, would be true with a man should be true with a horse in that respect. I presume their diges tive organs work about the same way We know, that when we eat an ov er supply of rich viands for supper, we not only feel very tough next morning, but to a smart extent are incapacitated to do manual labor dur ing the day. Doctors tell us that our digestive organs work more ef fectually while we are at rest, but notwithstanding this fact, we know we feel much better when we eat a light supper and a hearty breakfast j than we do in the reverse practice. ' I always give actual experience pre ference over theory when they are antagonistic. I don’t see how it is that business men and secular papers get the idea that the farmers are at present in the swim and wallowing in , luxury and wealth. News papers giv ing cuts of farmers sitting back cross • legged wearing bland smiles smok ing meerschaum pipes and greenback dollars curling up in the smoke in profusion. Nothing is farther from ihe truth so far as north Georgia is concerned. It is a lack of Information or a desire to give a fectltious boom to business which would in the end result more disastrously than to real ize the fact and face them. I love to be an optomist and look upon the bright side of the picture al ways, but not to that extent to de sire to mislead the public about facts In my Judgement, the farmers will ex perlence the hardest year of their lives in 1910, more especially those ; who depend upon the market for general supplies. The situation is this way. Last year it was 100' bushels of corn and 2 bales of cotton at 9 and 10 cents per pound. This , j year 50 bushels of interior corn and ; I 1 bale of cotton at 13 and 14 cents 1 per pound. If that puts a fellow to wallowing in wealth and smoking • green back dollars their figures have | gone to lying dead sure. I see where recently an editor of a religious paper visited north Georgia |and was happy over the prosperity of’ I the farmer, but full of fear and mis- ‘ : givings, that the farmer in all his glory would do like the rich fellow in olden times, he would forget his God in tearing down old barns and building new ones. 1 respect the i reverened gentleman’s solicitude but 1 he should have no fear In tills respect j lor should they tear down old barns i ami build new ones it will be for the purpose of building smaller ones to meet more properly the capacity of Hhe present crop. No lie should rest Ino uneasiness, the farmers of north Georgia are going to feel mighty !humble for the next twelve months. Fancy prices on a very limited sup ply of cotton has lead a good many astray from the actual facts. It the usual crops lias been produced with ‘the prevailing prices, then these char acterized cuts of farmers in all sorts lof grotesque positions hampered and isurfeited with currency as the im i niaginative minds of these reporters i would have us be. might be true. I I We certainly appreciate their happy I concern for us, but di plore their bad Judgement. I see farmers occasion ! ally smoking. Hut not seated in an upholsted rocker but upon the end of a pine log. Not smoking a nicer ischaum pipe, but a clay, not with a bland smile but a perplexed expres sion, not green back dollars curling, up In the smoke, but serious me i unions winding about their heads o. . how they are to pay up old scores and meet new ones. J. V. Wheeler. Thanksgiving is the people's a. ; the day that stands for home and ha piness: for gratitude and benevol. tie I for pleanty and peace. Young Girls Are Victims. lof headache, as well as older w<> en, but all get quick relief ..b j prompt cure from Dr. King's Life Pills, the world’s test rem I for sick and nervous headaches. Th make pure blood, and strong nerv and build up your health. Try th t 25c at Summerville Drug Co. THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1909. in iJ 7 ■ y- Cv 5 A W 'w - hl For sore throat, sharp pain in lungs, tightness across the chest, hoarseness or cough, lave the parts with Sloan’s Liniment. You don’t need to rub, just lay it on lightly. It penetrates instantly to the seat of the trouble, relieves conges tion and stops the pain. Here’s the Proof. Mr. A.W. Price, Fredonia, Kans., says: “Wehave used Sloan’s Lini ment for ayear, and find it an excel lent thing for sore throat, chest pains, colds, and hay fever attacks. A few drops taken on sugar stops cough ing and sneezing instantly.” Sloan’s Liniment is easier to use than porous plasters, acts quicker and does not clog up the poresof the skin. It is an excellent an- 4NI* tiseptic remedy for asthma, bronchitis, BVffl and all inflammatory diseases of the throat and chest; iSKr Ya' will break up the IgfefeyWSWß deadly membrane in “ an attack of croup, | ■ and will kill any kind *• of neuralgia or rheu- D matic pains. All druggists keep tli'.tikjL! J Sloan's Liniment. i* - jn Prices 25c., EOc., 4 SI.OO. , tl Dr. Earl S. Sloan, BOSTON. MASS. hicks succeeds LATE W. W. KENT Announcement has been made that E. Hicks had been appointed general manager of the Chattanooga Southerr railroad, vice W. W. Kent, deceased. Mr. Kent was also a joint receiver of the system. Mr. Hicks does not suc ceed him in that capacity, as all the duties of the receivership have fallen to E. C. Osborne, of Rochester, N. Y. It Is also announced that Herman Rhor, for some time chief clerk to Mr. Hicks, is appointed general freight agent of the line. There will also be other minor appointments in the office. All of the appointments date from November 1. Mr. Hicks has for some time been general superintendent of the rail road. That office is now abolished. The new general manager came to the Chattanooga Southern from one of the large eastern systems. Since his connection with the line he has been a factor in its development. It is said that no new changes for the operation of the line or its devel opment is expected at this time. The work started by Mr. Kent will be followed as far as possible.—Chatta nooga News. Germany’s four super-dreadnoughts will each have a crew of 1,000 men. - - - - I M Neglected Colds and Coughs are the cause of many cases of Pneumonia and Con sumption. No matter how slight your Cough or Cold may be, cure it before it has a chance to do any harm. DR. D.JAYNES Expectorant is the eldest and best known medicine in the world for reliev ing and curing Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Pleurisy, Croup, Whooping-Cough, and diseases cf this class. Your drus gist will supply you. In three size bottles. SI.OO, 50c. and 25c. Dr. D. Jayne's Tonic Ver mifuge is an excellent tonic for both adults and children. It is also a safe worm medicine. MADE 8 BALES ON THREE ACRES Mr. C. S. Pope of Laurens County Holds Record For Fine Farming. The Dublin Courier Dispatch re ports that on three acres of land Mr. C. S. Pope has this year raised eight bales of cotton averaging five hun dred pounds each. This cotton was worth $75 per bale, or S6OO for the eight bales. It is probable that Mr. Pope is en titled to the blue ribbon for the entire state. His total yield was I more than two and a half bales of ; cotton per acre. Os course the land was highly fer tilized and has been highly fertilized for some years. It is situated In a < part of the county where there is more or less sand, thus showing what ; < can be done in the way of Improving land. That high fertilization and quick cultivation is the best way to farm successfully has been shown time and again. The farmers who are adopt ing that method are the farmers who i are making money in big wads farm- ; ing. DANGER FOR NEXT YEAR’S COTTON PRICES Daniel Sully, king bee of former 1 speculators, is predicting twenty ■ cents for cotton. Down in New Or- ■ leans the leader of the bulls says fifteen cents is entirely too cheap. Other speculators on that side of the market unite In the expression of a similar opinion. All, or nearly all, of these men never handled a bale of actual cotton in their careers. They ure speculators, gamblers, to put it accurately, in the south’s great staple product, and are not governed in the slightest by special interest in this section or any genuine desire to promote the welfare of its farm ers. This year they may be for high 1 prices, and next year they may be , endeavoring to unduly force values i down. There is nothing stable in their friendship for cotton. Tem porary personal interest govern them entirely in every act of their business lives. But while Sully and his coadjutors f on the bull side of the market are 1 doing their level best to create the impression that even the present ’ ' phenomenal values are tdo low the feeling Is becoming widespread that '; there is an acute danger In the situ ation for the cotton planters. The 1 fear Is general that out of the high ' I prices, the result entirely of a less -1 ened production, there will grow an ’ enormous crop in 1910 and a return 1 to 7 or 8 cents cotton. The danger I is not a purely imaginary one. If I I a falling off in the crop can put the : price up to 15 cents a proportionate 1 increase in the crop can Just as easily put it down below 10 cents. If cot ton planters from one end of the south to the other, forgetting the les sons of the past, turn cotton wild | again, ignore corn and oats and hay and vastly increase their acreage in potton, and if weather conditions In addition prove favorable a record breaking crop is a foregone conclu sion, and prices will be disastrously lowered, not only for 1910, but for |l9ll as well. The evils attendant on over-production are not confined to the year of excessive acreage. The ! next year’s values are almost in variably affected by the heavy stocks carried over to meet the new crop and hold down its value. The dan , ger that threatens the south next season will accordingly not only hang like a cloud over it in 1910 but also in 1911. The cotton planters have the situ i ation entirely in their hands If they can be brought to see it as a unit and to act in accordance with the dictates of sound judgement and theii personal interests. With no heavy stocks carried over from this crop to next year, and with | the acreage held down so that pro duction cannot exceed say 12,000,- 000 bales what is there to prevent the south from marketing the crop of 1910 at 13 cents and better? Cer tainly nothing. The world wants the j cotton; it must have it, and if pro duction is clearly beneath the prob ; ili les of the world’s consumptiv< | .era? s highly profitable prices must ensue. It is time tb it the south waxed rich " m its great staple crop. It can r a! 1 • do so in the next few years 2 it ats wisely B. holding dowi , pr Auction of its food supplie i s farmers can, inside of the n x three years, make themselves th most prosperous agriculturalists 1. the world. Will they do it. or will they reduce themselves once m r to a state as financial desp.ra-.ot ignoring the lesson of this year ar the lesson of the past years, an j bumper crop of cotton in 1 1< i mortgages galore upon th ir a and debts innumerable as their den? It is solely up to them to ia cide and to act. —Americus Times Recorder. ELDER HENRYCUNNINGHAM I & Recommends Yinbl For Weak, Run-Down People. “ I was run down and weak from indigestion and general debility, also suffered from vertigo. I saw a cod liver preparation called Vinol adver tised and decided to give it a trial, and the results were most gratifying. After taking two bottles I regained my strength, and am now feeling unusually well.” HENRY CUNNINGHAM, Elder Baptist Church, Kinston, N.C. Vinol contains the two most world-famed tonics—the medicinal, strengthening, body-building elements of Cod Liver Oil and Tonic Iron. Vinol contains no oil, and is by far the Best Strengthening Tonic obtainable. We return your money without question if Vinol does not accomplish all we claim for it. SUMMERVILLE DRUG CO., Summerville. UNLIMITED SCHOLARSHIP FOR $25 Until the 20th of October, we will sell our Unlimited Scholar ship in either Bookkeeping or Shorthand with the related studies for $25 In our Commercial Department, we teach practical Book keeping from start to finish. Our Penmanship is not equaled in the South. We teach the famous Chartier Shorthand —a system so sim ple that a child can learn it, and best of all, can read it. You can learn it in three months. Satisfaction guaranteed. For full information address: THE MOSS BUSINESS COLLEGE, A. C. Moss, Principal Rome, Ga. SEARS & ROEBUCK -of Chicago-- Sell Goods and Guarantee satisfaction THE EDISON LAND CO. ...0F... MENLO Will sell LOTS with the specific agreement to refund every dollar at any time within five years from time of purchase if not satisfactory. Call on or write to A. J. LAWRENCE, Mgr. Mnlo, Georgia. n mo and hides Jgaßgjlffl I■ Sw HIGHEST MARKET PBIC3 IH ■ I ■ PAID ICE R.'W ri'2S KsHmW 9 E lEcLJIB AND BIDES. KjS Wl y Wool Commission. Write ior price-list Elea turning this ad established 1837 WHITE & CO.> LouisYu-La, Kx. db -A. -A. dB. sßh A dbi dßk. dk Low BresA On the Ist and 3rd Tuesd-.. 1?w fare round trip tickets whiles ... .. ton Ik It Route to points in Ai lxr.sar, L ~ Texas d Oklahoma. Takeadvant . csand .estigate the wonderful c;\ : - CII j n t h e athwest. The 25 day:.. y. u ample ■ and you can step ever I ’ returning. B The Direct Line tos he Cotton Belt is the direct line fro;. . .;..fhis ■ > the Southwest, through Arkansas. It vrates J • o daily trains, carrying through sleeps , < ’ - Jr g A :s and parlor-case cars. Trains from all ; i.ts ’Wiskr yy ake direct connection at Memphis with Cotion -It trains for the Southwest. • not delay your trip to the Southwert until tig opportunities are gone—write me to-day "xK § ere you wan. to go and I will show you hew T leap you can make the trip and give you complete . hedule. etc. I will also send you free our books 1 exas and Arkansas, with County map in colors. W9r H H. SUTTON, District Passenger Agent. ' ‘h a H. E. ALLEN, Passenger Agent 109 W. 9th St, Chattanooga. Tenn.