Newspaper Page Text
DON’T FORCETTHAT
I am Agent for the National
Newspaper Agency, and
if you w ill let me, I can save
you a little money on your pa
pers : and magazines,
Respectfully E. L. OSBORN.
W. Anderson, } Editor and
Proprietor.
m
6 ADAIR’S CASH.STORE.
P REDUCTIONS! $
0 '
P
Our entire line of Mens
Fine Shoes and Slip¬
11 o ca iff Reductions! cost. pers to close at actual w CO
pej C/2 REDUCTIONS! CO *-*a
C/2
® ® Reductions ! CO CO
I 1 o
All Children’s Slippers
p to go at Cost. *
flMIR’5 L
NEW STORE, P P
§ HXTEZSCT DOOR TO POST OFFICE, COVINGTON. --- — * — GA — — 0 0
, 0
-
FIRST GLASS,
ilGHT GOODS at the RIGHT PRICE
MY Mono IS ALWAYS
THE VERY BEST G000S FOR THE
LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE,
AND WE ARE NOW
IGHT 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 RIGHT PRICE.
t
East-Side Public Square, Covington, (la.
Wanted U each Young district lady subscriptions in or Newton gentleman for county the in
1# to correspond and receive
Y T Covington Star. Write for terms. Address, The
■Covington Star, Covington, Ga.
_______
9
Near Georgia Railroad Depot
General Wood and Repair Shop,
COVINGTON, GA.
BEDINGFIELD BROS t>
DEALERS IN
none but pure liquors
316 POPULAR STREET MACON GA.
We respect fully solicit the trade of Covington and vicinity, and if intrusted
"ith your orders, promise to strive to give satisfaction, by sending you w bat
>°u order. We are doing a legitimate business and will treat you fairly. Be
* ow fi*"! °ur prices of liquors :
pure
'ilson Bore Uyo, per gallon.... ... . 3.50
'""itheru Boxuet, per gallon.... 3.00
• 1>- Ripy, per gallon......... ..... 2.50
-Nelson County Rye................... ____ 2.00
G.d North Carolina Corn...... 2.00
XXX C orn and Rve 1.60
XXX Gin and Ruin 1.50
The Covington Star.
Covington, Ga., Tuesday, July 9, 1901.
LOW RATE ROUND TRIP TICKETS
--VIA-
Central of Georgia Railway.
Low rates to Buffalo, N. Y., via
Central of Georgia Railway, ac¬
count of Pan-American 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,
bringing into view the laid by
« < Palmettoes and sun shades,’’ and
i i the shirt waist maiden I } and
< i 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
“Tybee by the Sea;’’ eighteen
miles from Savannah. Its gently
shelving beach of snow white sand
j swept by ocean breezes, its restless
billowy ocean, its moonlight, its
glorious surf, magnificent aancing
pavilions, splendid hotel accommo¬
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¬
fortable coaches, parlor and sleep¬
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.
J. C. HAILE,
Gen’l. Pass. Agent, Savannah, Ga.
Covington needs an “Alcova
House, I » with 75 large, airy rooms »
and then we will have as fine a
I summer resort as there is in the
country. If an effort was made in
that direction, Covington could be
made a summer resort for southern
people, and a winter resort for
northern people.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
: I The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of Sff
1
WEEK-END EXCURSION TICKETS
TO
T Y B E E
Week-end excursion tickets, at
very low rates, are on sale via
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY,
for noon, afternoon and evening
trains, Saturdays, good to return
leaving Tybee and Savannah not
later than Monday night following
date of sale.
Tybee is the most delightful sea¬
shore resort of the South-Atlantic
Coast. Splendid hotel accommo¬
dations. New and magnificent dan¬
cing pavilion, with splendid restau¬
rant and buffet attached, good mu¬
sic and delightful surf bathing,
boating and fishing.
Low rate excursion tickets are
on sale during the summer months.
Any agent of the Central of
Georgia Railway will sell you a
ticket, and furnish you full partic¬
ulars, schedules, etc., upon appli¬
cation.
J. C. HAILE,
Gen’l. Pass. Agent, Savannah, Ga.
\ t
j. <11 / l
^ 1 n ,
• -
j ^Questibns>
for Women
j V Are you nervous?
r Are you completely exhausted?
Do you suffer every month?
If you answer “yes" to anv of
these questions, you have ills which
j Wine of Cardui cures. Do you
appreciate what perf ect health would
be to you? After taking Vine of
Cardui, thousands like you have real¬
ized it. Nervous strain, loss of sleep,
cold or indigestion starts menstrual
disorders that are not noticeable at
first, but day by day steadily grow
into troublesome complications. Wine
of Cardui, used just before the men¬
strual period, will keep the female
system in perfect taken condi quietly ition. home. This
medicine is at
There is ncihing like it to help
women enjoy this good remedy, health. which It costs
only $1 to test 1,000,000 cured is
endorsed by women.
Mrs. Lena T. Frieburg, Cast St Louis,
III., says: "I am physically of Wine a new
woman, by reason oI mv use of
Cardui and Thedford s Black Draught.”
In cases requiring special directions, ad¬
dress, giving symptom*. “The Ladles’ Advis¬
ory l>epartment,” Tbs rhattanooga Medi¬
etas Co., Chattanooga. Tenn.
! »
I
Women Considered ‘Poor Pay.’
Most of Them Fail to Settle Their
Bills Promptly and So Cause
r> '"'-reat Deal of Trouble.
< 1 Tradespeople, in general, con
sider ., women as‘poor < pay,’” , ,, writes
Edward Bok, in the Ladies Home
Journal for June. “The vast ina
jority of sheltered women seem to
have no conception of the anxieties
trouble, poverty, suffering, priva¬
tion, injustice and positive cruelty
which they directly inflict upon
hard working women by a careless¬
ness in promptly meeting their
bills. If this practice were confin¬
ed to the few one might dismiss it
with a shrug or a sigh that it ex¬
isted at all. But it applies to the
majority of women. Let a woman
look into this matter carefully and
she will be surprised at the evils
which result from this careless dis¬
regard of obligations. Wherever
you find a feminine industry there
you will find a ledger full of un¬
paid accounts. » »
New Books in Library.
We print below a number of in¬
teresting books reeeived last week
at the library:
What Will He Do With It?—
Lord Lytton.
My Novel—Lord Lytton.
A Strange Story—Lord Lytton.
liienzi—Lord Lytton.
Bleak House—Dickens.
David Cooperfield—Dickens.
Little Dorrit—Dickens.
Pickwick Papers—Dickens.
Martin Chezzlewit—Dickens.
Queen Hortense—Muhlmach.
Henry VIII and Cathrinne Parr
—Muhlmach.
Napoleon and Blucher—Muhl¬
mach.
Goithe and Schler—Ballads of
Robin Hood.
Gulliver’s Travels—Swift.
Advantures of Tom Sawyer’s—
Mark Twain.
Hunch-Bach of Notre Dame—
Hugo.
Mill On The Floss—Elliott.
Children’s Books. —True Story
of George Washington—Eidridge
S. Brooks.
The True Story of United States
—Brooks.
Word’s Natural History. Three
Little Daughters of the Revolu¬
tion—Nora Perry.
Bonnie Priuce Charlie—G. A.
Hinly.
New York has a new woman’s hotel. Sow r
can you tell whether it is a new hotel for wo
men, ot is a hotel for the new wjm-n ?
#
VOL. XXVI No. 28.
The Married Man.
Man piarfiwt u> -woman is of
many days and full of trouble. In
thfr morning he draweth his salary,
and in the evening behold, it is
8°^ ■! ■ It is a tale that is told. It
vanisheth. vaui - utl > and no one knoweth
whither it goeth. He riseth cloth¬
ed in the chill garments of night,
and seeketh the somnambulent par
e S oric "’herewith to soothe his in¬
fant posterity. He cometh forth
as the horse or ox, and draweth the
chariot of his offspring. He spend
eth his sheckels in the purchase of
fine linen to cover the bosom of his
family, yet himself is seen at the
gates of the city with but one sus¬
pender. Yea, he is altogether
wretched.—Robert J. Burdette.
OASTORZA.
Bean the The Kind You Haw Always Bought
Signature
of
Value of Correct Poise.
i * When one has acquired a cor¬
rect poise, the body suggests
strength, power, self command,
grace and culture. With perfect
poise, deep, full breathing becomes
possible and the energy of the vis
eera is quickened ; more and better
blood is manufactured, the pro
cesses of digestion are stimulated,
and the balance between the sup
ply and waste in bodily power is
regulated and preserved, because
all the vital parts are in position to
perform their functions properly.
When the vital organs are lowered
and crowded upon each other, the
vital tone must be lowered of ne
cessity ; indeed, many of the most
common and annoying ailments of
the body can be relieved and often
entirely cured by acquiring perfect
bodily poise.
I
O AST ria.
Bears the llw Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature
of
Some of the Cuban papers are
already advocating annexation to
the United States. That is the only
way they can ever prosper and be
happy. But they must petition for
annexation. That is the only way
they can get in.
The Walton News and Messen¬
ger says Mr. Jesse Baxter, of High
Shoals, has a threshing machine
with a record for threshing three
bushels of wheat per minute. That
is a good one. We mean the ma¬
chine, and not the story.
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. ’
Hope for Consums^-eo.
A New York official has recently
made a report, showing what is be¬
ing done for consumptives by the
different states and nations. He
says that in Germany nearly ioo
sanitariums have been established
in the last few years for the treat¬
ment of consumptives with a
combined capacity of 5,000.
England has probably 3,000 beds
for consumptives in her various
sanitariums for their benefit.
In France about 2,800 beds for
tuberculosis subjects existed when
the present movement began, and
sanitariums in nine of the cities of
France have been built, while the
French government is about com¬
pleting a sanitarium at Agineourt
at an outlay of a million francs.
Five sanitariums have been es¬
tablished in Russia, under the lead
ership of the czar, and a nnmber
are under way.
In Italy, in Norway, in Den¬
mark, in Sweeden, in Switzerland,
in Austria, in Hungary, in Poland,
in Spain, in Portugal, in Holland,
and in Canada, sanitariums for the
treatment of consumptives have
been established.
In the United States the national
government has established sani
j ar j ums j n New Mexico for the
treatment of tubercular marine
bospital pati e n t S) and foreonsump
tives of the amjy
The state of New Yor k has at
present IO sanitariums for co n .
sumpt j ves under private manage -
men t > and one projected sanitarium
tQ ^ SU p por ted by the State. They
bave an aggregate of 600 beds,
Of the above named 10, three
are situated in the city of New’
York.
The board of estimate and ap¬
portionment appropriated for these
three institutions in 1901, $70,010.
Of this amount the Seton hospital,
Spuyten Duyvil, received $30,000;
St. Joseph’s hospital, 143d street
and St. Ann’s aveuue, $34,010,
and the Brooklyn Home for Con¬
sumptives, Kingston avenue,
Brooklyn, $6,000.
The state of New York appro
priated $50,000 during the last ses
sion of the legislature for the hos
pital site, and is asked to appro¬
priate $100,000 during the present
session of the legislature for build
ings and maintenance.
The Rome Tribune says the
death rate in New York has been
reduced from 34-92 to 21.04, ia 35
years, If that be true, can’t it. be
reduced to nothing in about 75
years ? It looks that way on paper.