Newspaper Page Text
DON’T FORGET THAT
I am Agent for the National
Newspaper Agency, and
if you will let me, I can save
you a little money on your pa¬
pers and magazines,
Respectfully E. L. OSBORN.
J. \Y\ Anderson, j E<ll(»r ao<l
Proprietor.
WE ARE READY FOR SPRING. •£?€? *L*-& vD“0- TaT vi.
0 Cl
& BIG SHIPMENTS (p)
Our line of White Piques is OF 6)
$ complete. WANTED—A thousand lit¬ 5
* tle feet for our slippers.
A Our clothing fits the purse Our line of Ladies Neck¬ &
and person. r
wear is attractive to the eye
>-* All styles of Linen Crash and purse. CO
5 Z 5 for Any skirts little 15c. boy looks well in MILLINERY, DRESS GOODS, CLOTHING, LACES 1 Embroideries Big shipment to of short at 65c length in £=»
suits. go cm
one of our (he dollar.
full line ofijlut- Am £=n
We have a Our line of Dress Dimities
terick’s Patterns in Stock. will adorn
fetrj»a S8imita your person and fill
CO Our line of 10c Ginghams your purse. CO
ocj is other people’s i2>4c quality. See that stuff
EMBROIDERIES AND RUGS new we are
We sell the best Cottonade selling for Boys’ waists and J 3 C 3
made at 15c. Others get 17^0 Men’s shirts.
CO era
w> We guarantee every pair of Have been received by this week and See our line of White Or¬ CO
CD Krippendorfs’ Shoes and Slip¬ us are marked to gandies, Persian \Y ash Chiffons and co
pers. Lawns.
who Sell. Don’t be so reckless as to buy J before .< seeing these We have the largest and
CCS Any young man press¬ # cheapest line of Parasols t*S
es his suit in oue of our suits Goods. in
wins. the city. All colors.
9 && && ©=© @-€1? ^=©■ €$r-©’€U€» CfaS £r -r $
0 - Rn
f; We Imve every thing % 0 dMIK'S HEW STORE, | ¥ I)o not fail to examine 0 (}
0 in Ginghams Linens
0 .. .. • • © v 0 * • .. our 0
rsnaiscT :doo rr O IPOEI s X a OFFICE, COVXK'GTON, U-Jb*. ....
X © ©
(ESt €•»■«* d-C* C €#■■€#■ C/HOF Ask ’C£FC& : ’O b '^€l*=^‘| 2 r : 3 =S T«r :
rS’ T5-JJ
FIRST GLASS,
RIGHT GOODS al the RIGHT PRICE
-
MY MOTTO IS ALWAYS
THE VERY BEST GOOGS FOR THE
LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE,
AND WE ARE NOW
-
RIGHT IN THE FRONT OF THE BATTLE.
With Larcresf and Best Line ever before Purchased.
! j °
New t Millinery, # New Shoes, New Clothing, Mats,
Shirts, Neckwear, Jewelry, Watches, Spectacles,
and many other Items too numerous to mention,
BUT ALL AT THE RICHT PRICE.
€. E, COOK 9
East Side Public Square, Covington, Ca.
W ANTED 1 Young „ 1 j- . lady • . • or iv- gentleman in J
to correspond and . receive . subscriptions . lor r the .
Covington Star. Write for terms. Address,
Covington Star, Covington, Ga.
Iu,EWIS FlfHELANI),
Near Georgia Railroad Depot
General Wood and Repair Shop
COVINGTON, GA.
BEDINGF1ELD BROS • )
DEALERS IN
NONE BUT PURE
5IC TOPlILAIl STREET MACONGA.
lesppothilly solicit (lie trade of Covington ami vieinily, and if intru/trd
w ith y.mr orde rs, promise to strive to give satisfaction, by sending yon what
yon order, We are doing a legitimate business and w ill ticat von faiily. Be
low finil our prices of pure liquors :
'Vilson Pure Bye, ver gallon 350
Southern Boxtiet, per gallon 3 00
'.It. Bipy, per gallon... 2.50
Nelson County Bye.........
Old North Carolina Corn 2 00
XXX Corn and Bye...... 1.50
XXX Gin and Rum...... 1.50
The Covington Star.
Covington, Ga., Tuesday, April 30, 1901.
Interesting Items.
To he great is to ho lonely.
A man is wise before his w 00s and
afterward he is woozy.
If tumbled Gy a weak digestion,
; loss tf appetite, or eonsiipatiui , try
a few doses <•! Ciiambuil in's Stom¬
ach and Liver Tablets. Every box
warranted. For sale by Brooks A
1 Smith, druggists.
When :i girl's heart collides with
! her ideul, there is a tollable explo
i sion.
It is n funny thing that no baby
| ever looks really healthy, like a lit
; tie dog does.
The Best Blood Purifier
The blood is constantly being pur
I died by the lungs, liver and kidneys.
Keep ibe.-e organs in a healthy con
ditiou and the bowels regular and
you will have no need of a blood pur
tti.r. For this purpose there is
I Stomach and Liver Tablets, one dose
i f them will do you more good than
a dollar bottle of the best blood
Ih-r. Price, 25 ecu U Samples free
at Bn oka & Smith's diug 6toie .
__
A huiidred years ago girls livid
for marrying. Nowadays they mar
rv for a living.
Caught a Dreadful Cold.
Marion Kooke, manager for T. M
Thompson, n largo iropor er of fim
j | miiuiiYry tit lboo ^lilwtiUKoe “During AVt*
nUtS> (; 1 )lca g, b „ ft y S;
j I i a ie severe weather l caught ..
dreadful cold which kept me awuki
al night and made mo unfit to at
tend my work during the day. One
I of my milliners was taking i hiin
! tierlutn’s Cough lie met] 3' fora st vue
1 cold at that time, which se< ined In
1 relieve her so quickly that J bought
1 some for myself. It icted like m g
ic and I began to improve at once.
1 am now entirely well and fiel vety
j pleased to acknowledge its merit*."
For sale bj - Brooks & Smith, dtug
: "isls.
| Kit-sing babies is probably Iik■ ■
eating simib; you have to be brotighi
up (<i it not to mind it.
The Best Remedy for Rheumatism.
QUICK RKI.IKF FKOJI PAIN.
All who use Chamberlait 'a Pain
! Balm for rheumatism nro dulichted
j with the quick relief from pain
which iu a thirds. When speakine
of this Mr I). N. Sinks, of 'J'roy.
Ohio, says : “Some time ago i Imd
» severe attack of rheumatism in
my arm a nd slumIdi i'. 1 tried num
j erou- remedies but got no relief un
I (jj j was recommended Co., druggists 1.3- Messrs <d
i Geo F. Parsons &
this place to try Chamberlain’* Pain
Balm. Thev lcconniiciidcd it so
highly that 1 bought a Imtlle 1
was soon relieved of all pain. I have
sibCd recommended this liniment to
1 of friends, bo with
many my " agree
me that it is the best remedy for
muscular ihenmatirm in the mar*
ket.” For sale by Brooks & Smith.
druggists.
Trade With Home
The practice of sending away
every • little article of
one may want to buy, instead
trading with home merchants,
not show much public spirit
home pride on the part of
who do so. The home merchant
the man who helps to pay
taxes, keep up your churches,
lie schools, and nmneious other en
terprises, and he should have
patronage.
Plant Broom Corn.
The Star would like to see
1 farmers of Newton county
more attention to the cultivation
; broom corn. There is always
j demand for this commodity, at
p r i ces ranging Ts from $so to
aud the yield is from
one-half a ton to a ton and a
per acre, it is easily 7 seen that there
is more money j n broom corn than
; 1 requires * no
“ '
more work or does
COrn '
Although an artistic
the dentist does not go to an
i store for his drawing materials.
A mean thing—the temperature.
i
H 5 ? ^ ^
! : €?
>
i ss
Al
V/t
. A
WM\
Women Like \
are
Healthy and strong
B IUtt vi they blossom
and bloom. Sickly, they v/uher and
die. Every woman ought to look well
and feel well. It’s her right and duty,
but she might as well try to put out a
fire with oil as to be healthy and at¬
tractive with disease corroding the
organs that make her a woman. Upon
their health depends her health. If
there is inflammation or weakening
drains or suffering at the monthly Don t
period, attend to it at once. the
delay. You’re one step nearer
grave every day you put it off.
I Women can stand a great deal, but
they cannot live forever with atsease
dragging at the most delcate and
*
vital organs In their body. You may
have been deceived in so-ca'led cures.
We don't see how you could help it—
there is so much w worthless stuff on
the market. Hut you won't be dis¬
appointed in Bradfield’s Female n.e<fi- Reg¬
ulator. We believe it is the pne
cir.eoncarthfor womanly il-s- 1 . e
is as much difference between it and
f2S2S the Rotator d ”‘v^r,Tnd ella^es i
stops strengthen-., purines t
£r eaiil> . and
does R ltisf f women alone tode
naturallj. » healthy or
:de whether they flI be
C et. Hradfield s „ Kr *. „ ulator u lies at
s bottle at dru» , store. Btor
hand. *1 p.r
a Send O: i» trf Ga.
BRAW 1 UD HmXATOB CO- Atla.ta.
m
Headquarters Georgia Division U. C.
Atlanta, Ga., March 20,
Gen. Orders, Series 1901.
1. The eleventh annual
! of the United Confederate Veter
: ans will be held in Memphis,
1 «»««»•» on the oSfb, Opt/! -“> J ^a|L
of May, and for the proper accont
tnodatiou of ail confederates and
their friends that city is
the most arnpte arrangements.
! Railroad rates for delegates and all
visitors are one cent per mile trav¬
eled, and boarding is secured at
| the lowest rates. All expectations
1 as to the generous hospitalities
Memphis, and many
confederate exercises, will be fully
realized by the vast
who will attend.
1 ( he Georgia ^ ..... division is
2 -
by called to meet in convention at
the assigned headquarters of
i division at Memphis ,.t 8. 0 o a. .
Wednesday, May 2S, aud a the
same place and time the two fob
lowing days for the transaction
business . Calup commanders
cause their canlps to elect
gates and alternates to the
tion and reunion. Where any
does not elect delegates the
niander w jH appoint. A list of
! egates and alternates must be
nished these headquarters, and
so ^ le roster °I camp officers. It
the privilege of each camp to se
lect a camp sponsor, aud each bri
gade commander to choose a bri¬
gade sponsor, and any number
maids of honor, but as stated in
orders from general headquarters
i i with the distinct understanding
that the reunion committee will
only entertain the sponsor and one
maid of honor” from division de¬
partment and general headquar
ters.
3. Brigade commanders will at
i once prepare their brigades tor this
reunion. All staff officers, includ
! ing the aides of the division, will
assist in the execution of these or
ders.
j 4. Let us all meet again in a re
union as survivors of the valiant
! and patriotic armies of the confed
eracy, whose eminent leaders are
admired for their noble qualities,
and whose soldiers are honored for
their unsurpassed bravery, Let us
grasp each others’ hands once more
in token of a comradeship that per¬
petuates and passes to posterity the
dearest memories known to south
era manhood.
Clement A. Evans,
Major-Gen. and Div. Com.
Jxo. A. Miller, Adjt.-General.
Garden work can be pushed now.
VOL. XXVI No. 18.
Will Close at 6 O’clock, P. M.
We, the undersigned merchants
of Covington, agree to close 0111 .
J ! o’clock, various places from of business at 6 !
May 1 st until Sop
tember 1 st, Saturdays excepted: ,
J. * 5 b z V 1 1 viw ;
\V. II. Pickett
J. J. Corley,
J. W. Peek,
A. Cohen,
Fowler Bros.,
Jno. L. Stephenson,
\V. L. Adair,
C. C. Robinson,
J. J. Bearing,
C. E. Cook,
Heard, White & Co.,
T. C. Swann.
Camphor and Lice.
The ordiuar.v camphor balls,
such as are used for packing doth
mg have , 1 been found r j very . good for
destroying lice on fowls, the pnn
cipal difficulty being to find a way
to administer the remedy. The on
ly way to successfully use them is
when the hens are setting, one or
two at most, dropped among the
eggs, will insure the death of every
mite thereon. T hev are perfecth
harmless aud will in 110 wise in
jure the lieu or chicks. ■
It is enough to make "our mouth
l water, »y to read Mr P. J J. Moran’s
letters in the Atlanta Constitution
about Georgia’s big peach orchards
and luscious peaches. Just think
of Judge Gober’s orchards, of 300,
000 peach trees, in north Georgia,
with Editor Ben Perry’s orchards
still to hear from, and it is enough
to make a fellow’s mouth ‘slobber’
like a horse after eating green
clover. Ship us a box of Elbertas,
j U( -K e -
Atlanta will goto work for a new
passenger depot, when she gets her
franchise.-, a. se t ec. .
j you are prophet enough to tell us
j i» "hat century she will get her
; franchises all satisfactorily settled ]
! then we can tell you when work
I will be started on the new depot. j
A Testjm(mial from 01d Eng i ans i. [
--
“I consider Chamberlain's Cough '
Remedy the best in the world for
bronehiti-*,” says Mr. William Savo
ry, of Warrington, England. ‘ It
has saved my wife’s life, she having -
been a martyr to bronchitis for oVei .
six years, being most of the lime
eoti fined to her bed. She is now j
^ Sold by Brooks &
jjlI8 !
_
Not much picnic weather yet.
WHEN YOUR TIME EXPIRES
on your Papers and Maga¬
zines, I will appreciate it if
you will let me RENEW them
for you.
Very Respectfully *
E. L. OSBORN.
Starlight Items.
T! c want oT money is the root oT much
evil.
They behead a man fur smoking opium in
Korea.
Getting rich won’t remove all s'ains from
character.
it n n d always wfiofesSme to drink "the
hea!lh”of another.
Boston women now rule astride. But that
is nothing—for Boston.
An Omaha man, at last accounts, had 16
wives, and was still open for proposals.
The Observer thinks divorces are the result
of too much brimstone in the matches.
The English say that DeWet is mad. Well,
yes, he docs fight like he was pretty mad.
11 England and Fiance would abolish their
earls and counts, "Sir, all would be forgiven.”
A northern woman recently bequeathed her
entire fortune cf flo,ooo to a dog. Now,
then .'
Kitchener ought to send for the “boss
American scout,” Freddie Funston, to catch
DeWet.
A New York preacher has married 3,000
caup’.cs, * and vet ’ he docs not think that mar
. .
rta^e is a success.
The work of railroad combina
j tions goes steadily on, and every
! week some line or system is gob
! bled up by a bigger one. The
great systems will steadily increase
in size and decrease in number,
Congressman LeArmand, of Mis
souri, says: < 4 Williatu J. Bryan is
i a remarkably able man, who com
^! nes niore 8^1 with
fe " er taa 'l llll,,RS tba " other
man in public life to day. ”
Augusta Chronicle says that
tbe p 0sd office department has ruled
that, when letters are received in
the United States from foreign
countries, addressed to ‘‘Augusta,
America,” which is often the case,
they are to be sent to Augusta, Ga.
T ba t. would seem to indicate that
' t he government regards Augusta,
Ga,, as the most important of all
the Augustas in the United States,
Q f which there are a great many.
,«—-- -
The Augusta Chtouicle tells the
story of two young Greeks, who
left Sparta, Greece, for Augusta,
and through the blunder of
.
somebody, they were carried to
Augusta, Maine. They could not
speak a word of English, but they
had through tickets to Augusta,
Ga., and it is a mystery how the
ra jl r oad conductors carried them to
Augusta, Maine, on tickets for Au
» '- ,a - But they found one
Greek iu Augusta, Maine, who
CO uId understand them, and who
soon learned their story and trou
ble. A correspondence was open
ed with the friends of the young
men in Augusta, Georgia, and
they have now arrived iti that city.