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What makes you nervous? It is the weakness of yoor I
B womanly constitution, which cannot stand the strain of the I
Eg hard work you do. As a result, you break down, and ruin ■
B your entire nervous system. Don’t keep this up! Take I
Is Cardui, the woman’s tonic. Cardui is made from purely E
I vegetable ingredients. It acts gently on the womanly organs, I
B and helps them to do their proper work. It relieves pain I
|| and restores health, in a natural manner, by going to the I
B source of the trouble and building up the bodily strength,
U TAKE Tk«
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Mrs. Grace Fortner, of Man, W. Va., took Cardui I
I This is what she says about it: “I was so weak and B
I nervous, I could not bear to have anyone near me. 1 had I
R fainting spells, and I lost flesh every day. The first dose B
II of Cardui helped me. Now, I am entirely cured of the I
H fainting spells, and I cannot say enough for Cardui, for 1 I
I know it saved my life." It is the best tonic for women.
"1 Do you suffer from any of the pains peculiar to women? B
Take Cardui. It will help you. Ask your druggist
Write te: Ladle*' Advisory Dept. Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Tenn.. ■
® for Special Instructions, and 64-page book, "Home Treatment for Women." eent free. JSO I
Hdad Notice.
Geongia, Chattooga county.
All persons interested are notified
that if no good cause is shown to
the contrary, an order will be grant
ed by the Board of County Commis
sioners of Roads and Revenues of
said county, at the regular December
Term, establishing a public road
from the Broomtown valley road to
the Neal crossing. Road as marked
out by the Road Commissionerg for
Teloga district, commencing at a
point on the Broomtown valley road
South of S. O. Sitton's land running ,
west on the land line between J. S. |
Hood, T. L. Sitton, J. T. McWhorter,
D. A. Hemphill, J. S. Sitton to the
tbp of the ridge near Telbga, di#-- ■
rancfe about 3-4 Os a nille, thence <
down the right of way of the T. A.
6 G. Railway Co., tb the Neal crOss- ;
ing, about one-half mile.
Given under hand and seal this
18 day of Nov. 1912.
W. H. PENN, Chairman.
T. J. SIMMONS, Cleric.
Road Notice.
Georgia, Chattooga county.
AH persons interested are hereby
notified that if no good cause is
shown to the contrary, an order will
be granted by the Board of County
Commissioners of Roads and Rev- I
enues of said county, at the regular |
December term, 1912, establishing a i
change in the public road leading
from Broomtown valley road to Sum
merville via C. C. McConnell’s. Road
as marked out by the Road Commis
sioners for Teloga district, commenc- j
ing at a point 200 yards south of
the Gilreath place running through
C. A. McConnell’s to the top of
Hawk ridge, about 300 yards south
cf old road, thence through Alt I
Stephens' land an east course to the
corner of the field where it inter- i
sects the old road, length of change I
about 3-4 of one mile and through '
the lands of C. A. McConnell and Alf '
Stephens.
Given under hand and seal this 18
day of Nov., 1912.
W. H. PENN, Chairman.
T. J. SIMMONS, Clerk.
LOANS
Negotiated on Real Estate at 6,
7 and 8 per cent Interest, depending
upon size of loan and character of
security.
Parties desiring to borrow or lend
apply to,
LIPSCOMB & WILLINGHAM,
Rente, Georgia.
OCT OUT THIS AD.
MOLES and WARTS
MOLESOFF
for the removal of MOLES and WARTS without
pain and leaving neither scar nor mark
is the same remedy that we sold your grandmother, and has since
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MOLESOFF was the best in pioneer days, is still the best today.
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Letters from personages we all know, together with much valuable
information are contained in an attractive booklet, which will he
sent free upon request.
If you have any trouble getting MOLESOFF, send one dollar di
rect to the undersigned.
One hundred dollars in gold will be paid to the party mailing to u«
a picture of themselves before and after using MOLESOFF; these
pictures to be accepted, and used by us, for advertising MOLESOFF.
One million people will see your picture with and without an ugly
growth on your person.
FLORDIA DISTRIBUTING CO., Pensacola, Florida. Dept. G 322.
TAX NOTICE.
I will be at the following places on
dates named below for the purpose of
collecting State and County taxes for
the year 1912:
Teloga, Oct. 14, Nov. 4 and 18.
Menlo, Oct 15, Nov. 5 and 19.
Dirtseller, Oct. 16, Nov. 6 and 20.
Lyerly, Oct. 17, Nov. 7 and 21.
Seminole, Oct. 18, Nov. 8 and 22.
Dirttown, Oct. 21, Nov. 11 and 25.
Haywood, Oct. 22, Nov. 12 and 26.
Subligna. Oct. 23, Nov. 13 and 27.
Trion, Oct 28, Nov. 14 and 28.
Coldwater, Oct. 29, Nov. 15 and 29.
Gilreath’s Mill, Dec. 2.
Chelsea, Dec. 2.
I will be in Summerville every
Saturday until December 20th, at
which time my book* will close.
D. P. HENLEY, T. C. C. C.
Geo. A. H. Harris, Sr.
Geo. A H. Harris, Jr.
E. Crampton Harris.
HARRIS, HARRIS & HARRIS
Attorneys at Law,
Rome, Ga.
A member of firm will be in Sum
merville Thursday of each
week at Hale Hotel.
Please notice the label on your
paper and see how much you are
in arrears. This is the time when
we expect our subscribers to pay us,
so when you are in town, drop in
and settle with the News.
Pumps for a song and we
do the singing.
Standard Supply & Hwd. Co.,
Rome, Georgia.
fXIIEY KIDNEYiHLLS
FOR BACKACHE KIDNEYS ANO BLACOSS
CHICHESTER SHLLS
DIAMOND BRAND
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ladies :
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Gold metallic boxes, sealed with Bluet*?/
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DIAMOND BRAND PILES, for twenty-five
years regarded hs Beit,Safest, Always Reliable.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS
EVERYWHERE
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1912.
MAN
It seems like Mr. J. V. Wheeler
■ alias Jim Fowler’s Boy, is set in
1 his way of finding fault.
It is sad to think some people nev
er change for the better. All. would
have felt better if Mr. Wheeler had
written a cheerful piece just for the
Thanksgiving number of the paper,
showing a spark of gratefulness in
his own heart for the many bless
ings God has bestowed upon him.
thereby showing he was trying to
repay him just the least bit of look
ing over some of the faults and
mistakes of some of the poor, weak
creatures God has made in his own
image.
He seems to have his mind occupi
ed at the present in the same way
it has been occupied in the past, see
ing all the bad qualities in others
and casting stones sometimes at the
weaker sex and some times ait the
stronger, but it is the same old
way the stones are still flying.
It seems to me like people who
live in glass houses should be a
little more cautious about throwing
stones. He says he does not care
personally, except that it is better
for the women not to vote. That re
minds me of two children I saw walk
ing on stilts; one fell down and did
not get up for some time; the oth
er asked if it was hurt. It did not
want to admit it was hurt ands said
it was not. The ether said, ‘‘lf you
are not hurt what makfes you do as
you do?’’’
If he does not care for them vbt- j
ing why does he say so much about;
it. We can’t believe it is for the
good of the women that he opposes
them voting, for if he is a true friend,
to the women why does he find so
many faults and say so many harsh
things about them. If it is mean
women you are looking for, that the
kind you will find. As it is said, a
man who once went to India spent
most of his time when he returned, [
abusing missionaries until some one I
who had spent several years in In
dia aSf a missionary asked him what
he was doing in India. “I was there |
W hunt lidtas.” Did you spend any |
time with the missionaries? “No." i
"Well,” said the missionary, “in all
the years I was there I did not see
a lion." We generally find what we
are looking for.
You need not trace one selfish wom
an to Europe then wait to see what 1
happens in her home before she re
turns if the nurse did kill her baby
with carbolic acid. A quick death was
a blessing to the child when compar
ed to the way some fathers treat
their children. Fathers have been
known to desert them and let them
slowly die with hunger, and he can
vote the same nothing said about it.
I am not afraid to say where you
will find one mother that will for
sake her child you will find twenty
fathers.
It is true we have good men, a
great many of them who are perfect
ly devoted to wife and children,
would sacrifice their life for their
wife and children and I know there
are good wives and mothers in this
world if you would only look for
them, as close as you are looking for
bad ones and to be candid I must,
say some of them want to vote too.
I am surprised to think that any
man, at this day of progress, could
even think such absurd things a
bout women, much less say it. Yes,
you day you think women want to
vote and make laws to force men to
marry them or pay taxes, because
they don't marry, I will say I have
got my first woman to see yet, that
could not have married if she had
wanted to bad enough, but some of
them are too wise to marry when
they know their suitor is not worthy
of them. Some of the best, bravest
and most noble women we have are
single women, they have the oppor
tunity of doing more for the uplift
ing of humanity. In away they i
have a broader field of usefulness
than the woman who have the cares
of her home and the responsibility of
her children.
While many of us are perfectly I
happy and contented with our own
homes and family, that does not
make us not want to lend a helping ,
hand to our more unfortunate sisters
whose lives are darkened in the
home by their cruel, egotistic bus- ;
bands, or the single or married worn- i
en who are out in the world, and
are robbed of their rights by mans
injustice. We may do what we can
to cheer them and make their bur
den seem lighter, but we can never
remove the wrong man has imposed
upon woman except by ballot. If
j man wants woman to have her rights
without her voting we know he has
ample time. We also realize the
wrongs and gain our rights we will
have to fight for them, but the bat
tie has begun and will continue un-1
til the long pdeserved victory has
been won.
Think of the injustice of saying
that an individual who has stood a
brilliant examination and is just as
I capable of holding a position as any
other is disqualified just because she
lis a woman brought about by the
injustice of man with the so-called
I respect and high esteem; (or at
I least we have been told many times
when we go to voting we will lose
I that high esteem and respect) We
have not voted yet. If ywe get a
law maker who has the true re
; spect for women, not the so-called,
'if he tries to give women their rights
he does not get to go back the sec-
I ond time. Here is where we need a
man with firmness who would dare
[ do the right.
I know we have plenty of women
who would stand up for what they
felt in their hearts to be right re
gardless of politics, money or public
opinion. They would die for the right
rather than be owned by anybody. 1
believe there is a good woman be
hind every good cause, some men are
willing to help. Why should men and
; women take the same examinations
i be required to teach the same studies
i if there is to* be a difference in their
! salary? Where is the right of that
discrimination? The tifne is coming
! when their will be nd question of
J sex, but the individual who is best
fitted will get the place.
Think of the injustice of the men
who downed their legislators last
year and in 1907. The men and
women who go to California and the
other states granting equal suffrage,
get what they are looking for, but
when men and women, active work
ers in the uplift of humanity in those
I States say it has proved a blessing
ito liufHahity we will accept, their
words for if. Everyone of the can
didates fdT the presidency put a worn
an on their campaign program. Miss
Powell, a Georgia?!, Who has made
a name for herself Ih New' York has
the honor of being the first woman
to speak for a president in Georgia.
The old doctrine that the sphere
of the woman is the home, is calmly
smiled at by the suffragette. She re
alizes that she has duties in home
and every true wife and mother ex
pect to perform the home duties and
the suffragette understanding better
than the critic the nature of woman
knows she seldom forsakes her fam
ily or necessary domestic cares for
politics so far as the moral Influence
of the home it will only be increased.
The son will be made to feell that
his mother has influence in politics I
as well as in the home. If a woman
does become a suffragette it is not
likely that the courtesy shown her ,
by a gentleman will be diminished,
though in matters of conviction and
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Greatest Display of Dolls and Toys now on exhibition in our store Ever
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For Infants and Children.
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strong determination for the benefit
of woman-kind she rivals many men j
fn force. Still that old outcry against
the suffragettes is that equal rights j
will strip her of all inherent charm ;
and cost her the price of losing all I
gallantry of men. It, is a question
whether men who thought a woman's
purpose in life was to stay in the
home, wash the dishes and mend her
husband's clothes, had the highest
ideal of gallantry. I can’t think they j
have. There Is no doubt but what I
equal rights will Carry with It an
added amount of courtesy and con
sideration from the opposite sex. The
power to vote has given value to the |
negro and Mormon, it is only to be
supposed that it will accelerate, the I
value of woman, it will at least give |
her the power to stop some of the
great wrongs that have been Impos
ed upon her by man. The time is
sure to come when this question of
equal suffrage will seem as absurd
|as burning witches or a man claim
ing his wife’s inheritance.
Mollie Rich Mallicoat.
To Mothers in This Town.
Children who are delicate, fever
ish and cross will get Immediate re
lief from Mother Gray's Sweet Pow
ders for Children . They cleanse the
stomach, act on tthe liver, and are
recommended for complaining chil
dren. A pleasant remedy for worms.
At all Druggists, 15c. Sample Free-
Address, A. S. Olmsted, Leßoy, N.
ft. .<
I Y.