Newspaper Page Text
Mistaken Diagnosis-Doctors
Guess Wrong Again
About fire years ago I wrote to
flUBt had been a
fldney bladder
fl fl ■
pflleft fl
,„ • flr tlia ' there " as il( 'pfl /
I was advised to t V yflg
b.v. Btloot as a last resort.
/■ four fifty-cent sizeJg
flI passed a
Whed ten grains. Wl o'/i
you this gjß _
fl.<- had no return of
■ im<- that time and cannot
snuch in favor of your
paration, Swamp-Root, which
after physicians fail.
Very truly yours,
F. H. HORNE,
Route 3, Box 30. Roseboro, N. C.
Personally appeared before me,
this 31st day of July, 1909, F. ,H
Horne, who subscribed the above
and made oath that the
in substance and in
MAi»fl* James M. Hall,
Notary Public.
to J
MRS|lflilmer & Co., J
flimton, N. Y. fl|
flwhat Swamp-Root Wifl|
flflfl For You.
S’fll to Dr. Kilmer & Co. Bing
N. Y., for a sample bottle.
■ anyone. You will
Bfa booklet of valuable in
flnion, telling all about the kid
|Kys and bladder. When writing, be
sure and mention the Summerville
Weekly News. Regular fifty-cent and
size bottles for sale at all
fl*ug stores.
k W. S. Skelton, a merchant at Stan-
Bey, Ind., says he would not take
SIOO.OO for the relief a single box of
Foley’s Kidney Pills gave him. “I
had a severe of kidney trou
ble with through my back
and could up. A
single box of Wfly Kidney Pills en
tirely relieved me.” For sale by all
dealers.
»
FOR SALE.
Half interest in two stores and
upper apartments on best corner
in town of Menlo. It is a corner
with a future. Apply to
A. J. McCOY, East Point, Ga.
Conductor S. L. Miller, Norfork,
Nebr., on Bonesteel Division of C. &
/N. W. Ry. Co., recommends Foley I
Kidney Pills and says: "I have used
Foley Kidney Pills with very satis-1
Bactory results and endorse their use j
Bor any one afficted with kidney trou
ble. They are all right.” For sale
by all dealers.
READ THIS
The Texas Wonder cures kidney
and bladder troubles, removing gravel
cures diabetes, weak and lame
rheumatism, and all
the kidney and bladder in
and women. Regulates Madder
les in Children. It not sold by your
druggist, will be sent by mail on re
ceipt of 1100. One small bottlte is
two months’ treatment, and seldom
a curejßftend fortes
flaßrom this aißßther states
!lall 2J " 6 ° iiVe S!rcv '
BTake
One
Pain Pill.
then—
Take
it
Easy.
Dr. Miles’ (
Anti-Pain Pills
will help you, as they
have helped others.
Good for all kinds of pain.
Used to relieve Neuralgia, Head
ache, Nervousness, Rheumatism,
Sciatica, Kidney Pains, Lumbago,
Locomotor Ataxia,
Stomachache,
■k- :• l . . ■
i: f r ;■
:i!.d r , * yH "
attae’cs. he br ~ . tn?
Dr. Miles' Ant V*i> AnTm. 1
them as dir ; r taStng P
them ft was tb ' in years I
the neuralgi of I
W.C. LU. DEPARTMENT. Ii
l J
OF TWO KINGDOMS” |
ft J.n . 11'1.:.
■ flltld.ex. \\ ho .1 "! ! .■!!-
fl on g I
\\ hili- i’ i-ho in
* < jM/jflr i- Called Back a< the
flßflpfl :i '■l-eat House
fl ' !i' I ' , ‘- l it!/--
r -' something to make the
Hd tingle m tin- kind of invita-
which calls Caleb A. Ridley
■flPk from his Atlanta pulpit to his I
' i old “baliwiek” in Beaumont, Tex.,
’ this week to address a city-wide |
rally on Christian citizenship. Hej
speaks at the Grand Opera House, !
and is the special guest, not only of
’ the “old guard, ’ as he calls them, i
’ who stood by him in the famous i
L “cleaning up’’ fight, which charac
! terized almost the whole of his
k I
' I stormy, but victorious’ pastorate
j UAk, but is supported in this re
j by many inagnif
whose he
j. i ■ n ■ •
Bl
fl
|r ■'
battle against
. municiuai guardianship of licensed j
. i wrong.
1 From the subject, "A Citizen of
- Two Kingdoms” we give the fol-
- lowing lightning flashes:
s “When Adam fell he lost Eden,
s both himself and his fellows, for
1 the whole race went down w ith him
1 From the efforts of
n
man’s and soul.
We have been dull disciples in read
■ ing His will for our good. He first
! sent His patriarchs and prophets,
r but We would not listen to them.
1 He then gave us His written word,
but we refused- to read it. He then
1 gave us Jesus, the Word incarnate,
1 and we put Him to death on a cross
while the earth tottered, the heav
-1 ens opened and the sun was sham
ed into shadow. But now He says
to Christian men everwhere: “Ye
are my epistles, known and read
of all men. God s men can not be .
I neutral." • 1
“I often think of the young man
Moses, facing the simple issue of
right and wrong. The modern man
in politics could see no harm in
allowing his name to be associat
’ ed with great business enterprises,
no matter if they were not very
religious; but this young man had
a conscience as well as a liver,
land when conscience declared the
institution evil, Moses said, ’Here
, is where I brake with it.’ and he
did; He turned his back upon
- position, power and prominence,
and lost. by but
--ii ■ ■ I
-111, . I '
’ Bl
life is to be lived as unto Gol®
is as religious to paint a p h flH|
a- |<> prepare a sermon; to plflHl
furrow as to preach; to
to pray. Sacredness exits, not in 1
things, but in spirit. God did not .
reject Cain’s offering because it
| was fruit, nor accept Abel s be-;i
cause it was meat, but rejected
Cain’s sacrifice because he had no 1
respect for Gain. A sermon may 1
be sacriligious and a social may be 1
spiritual.
“God s man lives under the pres-
I ure of great responsibility. He
must face every moral question as,
a citizen to two worlds, for morals j
extend on into eternity. He must
-oppose graft because his Father’s.
ißook says: ‘Thou shall not steal.
I Lying is to be rebuked, because h
oed’s curse rests upon it. The city <
■ fathers who make crime easy and
| wickednA^ are to beacon- 1
is to be foujjfl
from pulpit and from pew,
and platform, furnace and firesidej'
college and counter, field and fo
rum alike, because it fattens upon
i the red blood bf our men and the;
' destroyed virtue of our toomen.’’
“Like Samuel of old, we are wag
ing a holy warfare, and should feel ;
k that when we contend wb are fight 1
battles al- Lord.. No
JflrSUMl^R VILLE NEWS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1913.
Ml
is probably due to uric
acid in the system —the
blood must be purified—
the poisonous acid driven
out and general health
must be improved.
Thousands testify that
E Scoff’s Emulrion rids the
stem of poisonous acid
r enriching the impover
bed blood, and its con- "
intrated nourishment is d
inverted into red blood i
)rpuscles which drive |
it rheumatism.
It is especially valuable |
aged people. J,
Ask for and insist on I
COTTS.
□tt ii Bowke. Bloomfield, N. J 12-60 B
.u raSSjKSHMSfIKCw
monarchs often fought when king
[ doms were the stake, but we fight
for righteousness for righteousness
sake.
“Under the influence of Christ’s
religion, man is beginning to stand
erect in the great empire of
thought. He is tearing away from
superstition and ignorance, and
ceasing to the mandates of
t radii of looking back
vistas Io see
what used to be, we are
spurred the inspiration—glo
ry to look down the
bi
lo be. Hod S
man
-:" -: 1 1 ■ I■< 1
fl
James K. 1
igfl' -
Carol
fl
’S',
in I he
tains. His father cut logs |
the house in what was then irwii
derness. j
Abraham Lincoln was the son of
a wretchedly poor farmer in Ken- ,
tucky, and lived in a log cabin uiG .
til be was old. .
h ie.'.l I
flrked up all the education he evefl
S. Grant lived as a vil-|i
lage boy in a plain house on the II
banks of the Ohio until seventeen.|j
James A. Garfield was born ini
a log cabin. He worked on a farniß
until he was strong enough use h
.-arpenlers tools when Efljftriied U
He afterwa^^^flked h
■«ii
• i-s.-r
- <iai-x i
to
to his
Hied, that he has
P. Gaines estate. This is to Hfl|
al; persons concerned, kindred W";
creditors, to show cause, if
they can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from his '
and receive Letters'
B z Di-,mißsior first Monday! l
IMafcii. Wk .
flrtubFn ,
. p.
f1...
THIS AND THAT
Conducted by John B. Hutchins, Jr.
• Today in Hiatory.
Feb. 15. Madison
proclamation. 1815; Gen. iflflfll
lace died, 1905;
11780; Senator Marcus A Hanna died
1904; Lyon Griswold trouble, 1798;
; The battleship “Maine” blown up,
1898; Galileo born, 1564.
16. Commodore Foote and Gen.
i Grant take Fort Donaldson, and 13,-
1300 men,/1862; Jay Cooke died 1905.
[Russian Empire began, 1727; Dr.
Kane died, 1857; Samoan treaty
i 1900.
17. Treaty of Ghent ratified,
■ peace with England, 1815; Colum
bia burned 1865; Francis Elizabeth
Willard (American temperance re
former and lecturer. Founder of
the world s W. T. C. U- and its
I first presidenet) died 1898; Martin
| Luther, German reformer, died 15-
46; Alice Roosevelt married Nich
olas Longworth, 1906; Michael An
gelo died, 1564.
18 Vermont admitted, 1791; Geo.
Peabody, American philanthropist,
born, 1795; Charelston captured,
1865; Duke of Guise assassinated,
1563; King Christian of Norway
buried, 1906.
19. Nicholaas Copernicus, Ger
man astronomer. Founded and de
monstrated the theory that the sun
is the center of the “universe”,
born 1473; Florida bought from
Spain, 1821; American Institute or
ganized, 1828.
20. Clark floated Stars and strip
es over Vincennees, 1779; General
Beaurgard died, 1893; Earthquake
in ChHi, 1835; Frederick Douglas
died, 1895; Battle Olustee, 1864;
Smoot of Utah seated in U. S.
Senate, 1907; Voltaire, French phi
losopher, poet, historian, humorist,
and skeptic, born, 1694; Cuban rev
olution began, 1895; first through
train, Atlantic coast to Chicago,
1852; Joseph Jefferson born 1829.
21. Washington monument ded
icated, 1885; Edgar W Nye born,
Sidney Smith died, 1845; San-
|flna born, 1798; Indians burned
Tnniull
I
a fl' ■
RJx 111
a Harrison izlfl
home Saturday
time was enjwed.
Mr. and Mrs. T. spent
Sunday in Dry
of
the
ngr.
;
|flhe was buried
fl
Ib '
- ■
fl
fl highly
I as being a medWne worttfl
in cases of colds, coughs and
Hflfl' Give Chamberlain's Cough
a trial and we are confident
"illflfcill find it very effectual and
continue to use it as occasion require
for years to come, as mani others
have done. For sale by
We have some very JhH fl
pi Ices to offer our
and investigate.—J.
•MX) barrels oil
BANK OF TRIONI
Trion, Georgia.
t Paid In Capital - - $25,000.00
Deposits Over - - $20,000.00
Mr. Planter:-
We a general banking
business and willglad to open an
account with you how small it
may be, and need assistance, call
to see us very attractive.
B. D, C. B. CAPERTON
President. Vice President.
W. R. REECE, Cashier.
Local Directors:
C. B. Caperton, J. H. Thomas, J. L. Hammond,
W. H. Penn, C. P. Thompson.
! F. E. Walling, a farmer living near ;
Yukon, Mo., strongly recommends Fol
ey’s Honey and Tar Compound and
says: “I have been advised by my
! family doctor to use Foley’s Honey ■
and Tar Compond for my children
[ when there was a cough medicine
needed. It always gives the best of
satisfaction and I recommend it to
others.” For sale by all dealers.
CITATION.
, GEORGIA— Chattooga County.
; Whereas, W. J. Hogg, admlhis-
[ trator of Isaac Hogg, represents to
the Court in his petition duly filed, ■
that he has administered Isaac
’ Jlogg s estate. This is to cite all.
! creditors, to show cause, if any
they can, why said administrator
should not be discharged from his I
administration and receive Letters)
of Dismission on the first Monday
in March, 1913.
This 3«Lday of February, 1913.
J. P. JOHNSTON,
ordi, o|ifl ttooga County, Georgia
'Efr. in Washington
amps in
a l<i
I
The urgent rifl
co-npeiate in .-■-.IJ
:hat -'fl
ucts of the farm of ■
consumer. This may
be termed outrageous.
It is proposed to
paign <1 It-.’.i- 'ln winor . A
"
<y of th. <■: x - 1 ‘
king mwan! ill.- ■?-.?: ?hna 3
R- a r- fl
Isued in so far as possilfl
Wie agem y r s 'I '- • x'-
fltat and the farmers' isl
in particular
fljastltutes are organized on a R
but there could be lo- 1
, 'i, flu'-s in ' very county whuh ;
: S’’fl ■- ■ • . '■! ’ ' r
’ or.-a: ■>
fli with one state in> titan-, u
flkill be a line of com s
K
S’-’-. CARTRIDGES WITH
bMmL )B A
'■X ■ . •
fl n
he ra j se( j p
the p
! The roa - n -JKT'enjoyed huming ! .
1 E
I flen succfl I
flfl: t.-
IKent usualy given hen
i present difficulty is in raising the i
tiny fellows after they are hatched,; j
for they require much more careful;
handling and feeding than does the j (
little chick. | (
At present the game laws of most; f
of the states are such that partridges s
not be reared and sold for food > t
the open market,flt if it is found
a partridge far^^is a success. I j
and raised on a
1
Hastings Prolific 4
Corn Yielded 214 '
Bushels On I Acre
If you are going to plant corn this
spring, either for the corn club con
tests, or to fill your own com-crib,
the com to plant is Hastings' Pro
, lific.
Official United States government
records show that this com has
yielded more to the acre than any
other corn planted in the Southern
states. Hastings Prolific won the
Georgia record with 214 bushels to
one acre. Hast Inga’ Prolific won the
Mississippi record with 225 bushels
to one acre; the Arkansas record with
172 2-3; the Florida record, 129 1-4.
Hastings' Prolific bas won five-sixths
of the corn club prizes in Georgia. It
has made records in every Southern
state.
This corn is not only Immensely
prolific, but produces a grain and for
age of the finest quality. It la not
merely a prize-winning corn. It is
the com that It will pay you best
to plant year-ln and year-out, for sale
and for your own use.
Prices: Packet, 10 cents; 1-2 pint,
20 cents; pint. 30 cents; quart, 50
cents- postpaid Peck, not prepaid,
H; bushel, |3.50. Order today, or it
you want more information write for
our big free catalogue. It 1* full ol
agricultural Information. It is a good
book to have on the farm.
H. G. HASTINGS A CO.,
Ga.—(Advt.)
Remedy
flxrr
cut Wf
Fing
B
flflfl '
-v .’.IL' I ‘’ r
‘ !• Hi
x R ■a 4 ’ #
BBf it •' :• i'. ’lpj
11 <.gifl
xx a charing lion*:"
. ' ■
1 ' 'ln- xx' ifar. iif •a-
■ rim him m p:< p. r n-
S’X’Yf' '' < -i.-'iiH’ r \l:
mad. to distribute litei
will be of assistance. A
flrof articles on co-operation will
and given as wide pub
licity as possible through the press.
An endeavor will be made to have
this important subject discussed
through the schools and thus impress
upon the youth of the sttae the es
sential facts relative to this import
ant subject.
VETERINARY INQUIRIES.
W. M. Burson, Professar cf
'■'s* -i? xL« w
• SOT.*!
or by ex
fl.
' • fl
j
in
- Je > _
a flO»
bran slop.
Q :">• apop’exfl ;
Ape nj> may bo
cord, ‘ofl