Newspaper Page Text
i'T FOROETTHAT
m Agent for the Nation ax,
Agency, ami
will let me, I can save
K Br a little money on your pa
s and magazines,
E. L. OSBORN.
J| VV\ Anderson, | Editor and
Proprietor.
ADAIR’S CASH STORE. =©=©€►€> Jgfcigs 9
jr We sell Coats’ Thread at 4cts. Our Straw Hats fitting 9
are a Cli¬ GET YOUR a The price on our summer Coals We have all sorts of Baskets. 9
We keep Buttericks Patterns in max Our to line gentlemen. of Curtaiu goods is too A ROD READY. A is rather breezy. , 9 9 .
stock. large for small 0 Below few of the large We are showing a beautiful jline We have all styles of R. G.
a place. are a J of Ladies’ Neckwear. Corsets.
Have line of Lace Kid We Gloves. are agents All for colors. Marshal Fields j| fish we have put into the com¬ dip v----—---- 2,coo yards of ■;}■> cents Per- I -
you seen our (/Jj cale to at
Curtains. go 5 cents. We make money 1 >\ 1 saving von
| quality Our Cotton and inferior Ades are in price. superior in mercial stream during the past 9 Have you seen our line of Wash money.
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If you can’t find it elsewhere We better ] week. They are all good things t* Silks. They are very pretty. e*3
look here. are prepared than ever 9 0 Our old ladies’ slippers are a sure
to turn out first-class Millinery. and fisherman if I foot case. CT 5
you are a poor rt> We are prepared to supply you
Our 59 cents Wash Chiffon is the ($ in Bed Spreads at small
\\ e have Panscosting fiom noth- I that others get cents for. can't make good haul cost.
same 75 you a you Call on us weekly for Butterick’s
ing to $1.50, We have pooS* val« fi 1 fashion sheet.
never seen ai know that the The line of shirts received
Our price on Rugs makes it rug- j ties as we are offering in Hosiery. 9 biggist fish bite $ this week are for gentlemen we only. '~n
ged for competitors. Our reduction prices on Shoes 9 first. So fish early. The Best Checks and Sheeting
should shoo bargain seekers our 9 1I1 If you buy Lap Robe of made sells here at 5 cents.
9 your us C %3
| way. 9 jj you can kick up a dust and not get OO
Another shipment of Laces and ONE PRICE-SPOT CASH TO ALL-110 FAVORITES. (
No young lady should appear on ^ dust}’. A visit to ottr Embroidery and CO
Embroideries receive. the streets without one of our urn- (jj) ji Lace counter will lie profitable.
brellas or parasols. 9 The Deed is done. Sentence has We have acquired from the great j
been passed, and high prices have Cloitin fire sale, one solid case of
Some ol the best things of the Happy and unhappy are eondi- v Dimities that formerly sold at Our
just into tious that belong to the ladies who 9 9 7) . line of Ladies’ Slippers are
season have come our and who 9 been beheaded. 9 cents. These goods are offered at absolutely unequaled in value and
Dress Goods debartment. buy their hats of us those yards
do not. 5 cents. 20 to the customer. quality.
[fa® €>€* €§•■€> @=€S> -A A-V 9
55
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9 9
9
9 9
9 — 9
sS D V NEXT door to post office, covikgton, 9 9
9
FIRST CLASS,
GOODS at the RIGHT PRICE.
MY Mono IS ALWAYS
THE VERY BEST GOOOS FOR THE
LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE,
AND WE ARE NOW
RIGHT IN THE FRONT OF THE BATTLE.
With Largest and Best Line ever before Purchased.
New Millinery, New Shoes, New Clothing, Hats,
Shirts, Neckwear, Jewelry, Watches, Spectacles,
and many other Items too numerous to mention,
BUT ALL AT THE RICHT PRICE.
■
1. COOK §
East Side Public Square, Covington, Ga.
^ \ A I 7 / A |\j \| r 2 rT7T'\ Jlj \j, Young lady or gentleman in
each district in Newton county
111 y to correspond and receive subscriptions for the
J>vington Star, Covington Star. Write for terms. Address, The
Covington, Ga.
ILiBWIS l^RKMltAND t
Near Georgia Railroad Depot
lieneral Wood and Repair Shop 5
COVINGTON, GA.
BEDINGFIELD BROS • J
DEALERS IN
J NONE BUT PURE LIQUORS
516 POPULAR STREET MACON GA.
We respectfully solicit (lie trade of Coiinglon and vicinity, and if intruded
with yunr orders, promise to strive to give satisfaction, by sending you what
you order, We tire doing a legitimate business and will treat you fairly. Be
low find our prices of pure liquors :
Wilson Pore Rye, per gallon, 3.50
Southern .
U B. Boxuet, per gallon 3.00
Kipy, per gallon.... 2.50
M'lson County Rye.......... 2.00
Old North Carolina Corn 2 00
AXX Corn and Rye...... 1.50
XXX G >'» Mnl Rum...... 1.50
TAR.
Ga, June 1901.
LOW RATE ROUND TRIP TICKETS
---VIA-
Central of Georgia Railway.
i Low rates to Buffalo, N. V., via
Central ot Georgia Railway, ac
cuum ori-aii-/\iucit<-au exposition.
Choice of routes via rail or water,
Call on any agent of the company
for full information, rates, etc.
TYBEE, the queen of Seashore
resorts on the South Atlantic coast,
As the summer approaches, and the
) | heating rays of a summer sun de
scends upon the earth, withering
the flowers, searing the leaves,
1 bringing into view the laid by
| “Palmettoes and sun shades,” and
I “the shirt waist maiden” and
“shirt-sleeve youth,” it is then
that those seeking rest, recreation
| and pleasure, begin to look around
for the resort offering the most ad
vantages.
The northern coast may have its
charms for some, the mountains for
others, but for the joys of summer,
where gayety and gladness reigns
supreme, there’s no place like
4 4 Tybee by the Sea;” eighteen
miles from Savannah. Its gently
shelving beach of snow white sand,
swept by ocean breezes, its restless
billowy ocean, its moonlight, its
, dancing
glorious surf, magnificent
: pavilions, splendid hotel accommo
J dations, cozy cottages, what could
be sweeter or grander than luxuri
ating the happy hours away by the
sea.
i The Central of Georgia Railway,
! operating as it does, magnificent
! trains, perfectly equipped with com
I fortable coaches, parlor and sleep-
1 ing cars, the journey from any
point in Alabama and Georgia can
be made in comfort and ease, to
this delightful resort within a few
hours.
Low rate excursion tickets are
j on sale during the summer months.
Any agent of the Central of
| Georgia Railway furnish will full sell partic- you a
j ticket, and you
i ulars, schedules, etc., upon appli¬
cation.
J. C. HAILE,
Gen’l. Pass. Agent, Savannah, Ga.
It seems like the Pennsylvanians
are getting to be real up to-date—
jlynchers !
_
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Han Alwajs Bought
Baars the
Signature of
Minister Won the Day,
A minister was one day walking
i along a road, and to his astonish
" VM a crowd of boys silting
in front of a ring with a small dog
' in tVi** optifer U’hftu bp ramp up
i to lheiu he P ut lhe following ques-
1 tiou : i . What are you doing with
the dog ? ' I One little boy said ;
“Whoever tells the biggest lie wins
it. I ' “Oh * • said the minister, “I
am surprised at you little boys, for
when I was a boy like you I never
told lies.” There was silence for
a while until one of the boys
shouted : “Hand hitn up the
dog.”—Exchange.
C ASTOniA.
Bean the The Kind You Haw Always Bought
Signature
of
-
/ A juryman gave some good ad¬
vice to mothers, at an inquest at
Norwich concerning the death of a
child, whose clothing caught fire
from a lighted stick flung by an
other child. If people, he said,
would only rinse clothing, after
washing, in a solution of alum
au d water, they would never take
fire. If they came in contact with
| a flame they would merely smolder.
j
j
Healthy Mothers
Few mothers »re healthy, because
their duties are so exacting. The anxiety
cf pregnancy, the shock of childbirth,
ir.d the care of young children, are
severe trials on any woman. But with
M ine of Cardui within her grasp, every
mother—every woman in the land—can
pay the debt of personal health she
owes her loved ones. Do you want
robust health with all its privileges will and
pleasures? Wine of Cardui give it
to you.
; strengthens the femtle organs and invig¬
: orates weakened functions. For every
female ill or weakness it is the best
medicine made. Ask your druggist for
$1.00 bottle Wine of Cardui, and take no
substitute under any circumstances.
Mn Edwin Crwm. Oormtt. Mich-t >
commenced mini Vine of Cardui I w* haroiy able
to wiA ac.-oaa Ow house. Two weeks she-1 walked
half a mile and pickod scr.wber-ie*. wiita my
other child was bom 1 suffered with labor pains 2t
hours, wsdhsd to rsise him on a bottle because 1 had
no milk. Alter using the Wine during pregnancy
this time, I gsre birth Last month to a baby girl, and
ww in labor only two hours, with but little pain,
i and l hare plenty of milk. For this grr* miprorr
mtnt in my health 1 thank God and wine oi Cardui.'
For ad-rice in symptoms. ewes rsquiring "The specul L^ieS directions, Adtriaory
address. pos| Dcpartiacui. f 1 aeChat
JL. tanoog* Medicine Co..
1 M ChattjQOOgA. Tenn.
L
Hell Changed to Hades
At the general quadrennial con
ference of the United Brethren
Church in Christ, at Frederick.
Maryland lact wo*»U,
u-pre made in the bishops’ districts
lor work.
After a heated discussion 0,1
church discipline, a resolution was
adopted to the effect that hereafter
no minister of the church should
be allowed to use tobacco, in any
form, . and those who
are now ad
dieted to it must discontinue its
In the apostles’ creed, the word
‘ t hell” was modified, and will here¬
after be rendered as “hades. s 1
Now if they had abolished the
place entirely, it would have been
much more pleasant.
CASTOniA.
Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature
of
Interesting Items.
The jury that convicts is not al
ways the most popular.
General DeWet seems to have
gone into “winter quarters. y t
There is scarcely 100 difference
in the population of Scotland and
Ireland.
The New York public schools
have 1,209,534 pupils and 34,000
teachers.
^^rt'wlthou^ptun ot
“"dornopLy.
itarium, Man'gr Uthia Springs San¬
Bo* 3. Austell, Ga.
London now claims a population
of 6,500,000. That is about as
large as the entire state of New
York.
The Rome Tribune wants to
know if the house fly ain’t a great
scavenger? Well, if it is, we
think the remedy is worse than the
j disease.
New York is to have a hotel on
Fifth avenue 25 stories high, In
that case, those who occupy the
top room can truthfully say they
are “living high > »
The Chinese have petitioned Gen.
Chaffee not to wove the American
troops from Pekin, and he has re¬
ferred the matter to the govern¬
ment at Washington.
The public debt of France is now
said to be 30,050,000,000 francs, on
which the interest is $1,2 50,000,000
francs. These are figures under
which the mind staggers.
VOL. XXVI “m- 2:-
Emory Commencement.
Friday, Tune 7, id a. m. Annual
meeting of the hoard of trustees.
S p. m.—Declamation by mem
i bers of the sub-freshman class.
Sat nr Jar, June 9 8 p. 111. Dec
,
lamations by members of the fresh
man class.
Sunday, 9, 11 a. in. Commence¬
ment sermon, by Rev. John Mat
thews. D. D., of Nashville, Tenn.
Sunday night, sermon by Rev.
^v. C. Byrd, D D of Atlanta
V[ , .
Champion debate between repress,,
I talives of Few and Phi Gamma so
cieties. Question is: ••Resolved,
That state prohibition is the best
solution of the liquor problem in
Georgia. » t Followed by delivery
of medals for scholarship and
essays.
Tuesday, June u, 9:30 a. m.
Junior orators, lollowed by annual
literary address before the literary
societies, by Rev. I. S. Hopkins,
D. I)., of St. Louis, Mo. 8 p . m.—
I Annual alumni reunion and ban
quet. Alumni orator, Prof. M. L.
j Brittain, of Atlanta.
Wednesday, June 12, 9:30 a. m.
Senior orators. Baccalaureate ad
dress, and conferring of degrees.
Arrangements will be made with
railroads for reduced fare and an
nouuced later. All ministers and
Phnory college men, who are en .
gaged in teaching, are specially in
vited. Entertainment will be pro
cured f °r all who notify the presi
den t of their intention to attend.
\ C. E. Dowman, Pres.
Oxford, Ga., May 11, 1901
It is just like Connecticut to en
act a law, making it a misdemean
or to pull a mayflower up by the
roots. But that is what Connecti
cut has “gone and done, > >
I / 11 1 aida ur S Ear has learned
his big dog to “burgle. • » Now, if
you were to wake up in the night
and find a man and big dog in your
room wouldn’t that sorter jar you ?
Bears the Inn Kind You Have Always Bought
“ °
Signature _// f/t J
of
The Atlanta Journal is going to
take a number of school girls to
the Buffalo exposition, with Gov
ernor and Mrs. Allen Candler as
chaperones. It will be a fine ob
jeet lesson for the girls, and the
Journal is entitled to much credit
for its enterprise and liberality.
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WHEN YOUR TIME EXPIRES
on your Pai-kes and Maga¬
zines, I will appreciate it if
you will let me RENEW them
for you.
Very Respectfully,
E. L. OSBORN.
The Lay of the American Hen,
We have read of Maud on a sum¬
mer day, who, barefooted, raked
1 the new-mown hay ; we have read
of the maid in the early morn who
milked the cow with crumpled
horn; and we have read the lay the
poets sing of the rustling corn and
and the flowers of spring ; but of
' a11 the lays of ton R ue or pen, there
is nau R ht Lke the lays of the Amer
ican hcn ’ Lon S’ lon £ before Maud
• ra ked her hay, the American hen
had begun to lay ; and ere the milk
” a,d st,rs a lhe h en is U P and
^dropped '“'UmV her egg : the , JT”!’ corn must
h °' d ° w n w *» U * barn
! yard ring. Long live , the Ameri¬
can hen. May her cackle never
grow less. May her comb grow
red with prosperity, and may her
eggs roll the mortgages way from
|inanyafarm ! _ Ex _
j A Bridegroom at 87.
An interesting wedding took
place in New York Friday, at 70
Washington Place, when Dr. I, R.
E. Couturier, 87 years old, was
united in marriage to Mrs. Marga
ret E. Shaw, who is 86. Rev. Dr.
George Alexander, of the Univer
s ' f y Place Presbyterian church, of
ficiated. The bridegroom, who
lives in Brooklyn, comes from a
prominent South Carolina family,
Ee retired from active practice
years ago with a competence. The
bride is the widow’ of William E.
Shaw, who was a prominent insur
a,,ce nian - Dr. Couturier’s first
wife was Julia Anthony, daughter
of the founder of Georgia Medical
■ College. The couple met about
two years ago and proceeded to fall
i* 1 love at once. They became en¬
j gaged only a short time ago.
Kansas wants 20,000 laborers to
come out there and harvest her
100,000,coo bushels of wheat at
$2.00 per day. It seems like Mrs.
Nation ought to shoulder her hatch
e t and proceed to business.
The new Christian church, in
Monroe, will be dedicated on the
first Sunday in June. The state
evangelist, Rev. Mr. Combs will
1 be there, and will conduct a series
of meetings from that time, with
the pastor, Rev. J. H. Wood.
Vital statistics in New England
show a continual decline in the
birth rate of the native population.
They indicate that but for foreign
reinforcements that part of the
United States would be losing
ground—becoming less populous
from year to year.