Newspaper Page Text
DON’T FORCE! THAT
I am Agent for the National
I Newspaper Agency, and
if you will let me, I can save
you a little money on your pa
p;rs and magazines,
Respectfully, E. L. OSBORN.
i. \V. Anderson, j Proprietor. Eilit«r and
ADAIR’S GASH STORE.
s REDUCTIONS! Our entire line of Mens
V* Reductions! Fine Shoes and Slip¬
HP pers to close at actual
o
cost.
o C /2 REDUCTIONS! CO
JA¬ SSO
C /2
C=> Reductions i CT3
o C /2
o CO
C3
PCS
All Children’s Slippers
§
<$> to go at Cost.
AMIR'S NEW STORE, i
* t
I 0
NEXT DOOR TO POST OFFICE, COVINGTON, GA. 9 I
0
AILORING
IN M EW GOODS
0W READY,
or Your Spring and Summer Suit.
If you intend supplying yourself with a
[new suit or an extra pair of trousers, it will
be to your interest to see me before you buy
Emory Tailoring Co •>
J. ROB’T- JONES. Manager.
Below The Harrison Co.
BEDINGFIELD BROS • 5
dealers in
NONE BUT PURE LIQUORS
516 POPULAR STREET MACON GA.
If
We rtupectfully solicit the trade of Covington and vicinity, and if infracted
with your orders, promise to strive to give satisfaction, by sending you what
you order. We doing legitimate business and w ill treat vou fairly. Be¬
are a
low fiml our prices of pure liquors :
Wilton Pure Rye, gallon. . 3.50
per
Southern Boxuet, gallon 3.00
per
T. B. Ripy, gallon...... 2.50
per
kelson County Rye............... 2.00
Old North Carolina Corn...... 2.00
XXX Corn and Rye............ 1.50
XXX Gin and Rum........... 1.50
Lewis Fkeei,ani»»
Near Georgia Railroad Depot.
General Wood and Repair
COVINGTON, GA.
The Covington
Covington, Ga., Tuesday, July 23 , 1901 .
LOW RATE ROUND TRIP TICKETS
---VIA-
entral of eorgia Railway.
Low rates to Buffalo, N. Y., via
Central ot Georgia Railway, exposition. ac
count of Pan-American
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
i < Palmettoes and sun shades,” and
< ( the shirt waist maiden and
“shirt-sleeve youth, I > 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
glorious surf, magnificent dancing
pavilions, splendid hotel accommo¬
dations, cozy cottages, what could
be sweeter or grander than luxuri¬
ating the happy hours away by the
sea.
The Central of Georgia Railway,
operating as it does, magnificent
trains, perfectly equipped with com
fort able coaches, parlor and sleep
ing cars, the journey frotn any
point in Alabama and Georgia can
be made in comfort and ease, to
this delightful resort within a few
hours. HAILE,
j. C.
Gen’l. Pass. Agent, Savannah, Ga.
CASTOR IA
For Infant* and Children.
R» Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Sig nature of
If you lend a man grass seed,
the next thing he will strike you
for is your lawn mower.
The Covirgton soda fountains now
finical comfort every <lay in the
Sunday. You must da without the
beverage on that day.
o 0 TORIA.
Bear* tb. - The Kind You Haw Always
Bign.toi*
WEEK-END EXCURSION TICKETS
TO
T Y B E E
Week-end excursion tickets, at
very low rates, are on sale via
CENTRAL OF E3R5 IA RAILWAY,
for noon, afternoon and evening
trains, Saturdays, good to return
leaving Tybee and Savannah uot
later than Monday night following
date of sale.
Tybee is the most delightful sea¬
shore resort of the South-Atlautic
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.
Healthy Mothers
Few mother* arc healthy, became
their duties are so exacting. The anxiety
of pregnancy, the shock of childbirth,
and the care of young children, art
severe trials on any woman. But with
Wine of Cardui within her grasp, every
mother—every woman in the land—can
pay the debt loved of personal Do htalth want she
owes her ones. you
robust htalth with all it* privilege* and
pleasures! Wine of Cardui will give It
to you.
WIECM
strengthen* the female organ* and invig¬
orate. weakened function*. For every
female Hi or wtakne** It I* the belt
medicine made. A»k Y*ur druwgirt and fo,
SI.00 bottle Wine of Cardui, take no
substitute under any drcumitance*.
-J rj- Ln Crm i. Gortnrr. Miciu "Vhco !
w- boro I ^Hrrrd «
hc&M had to rat»e him 00 ■ tome feccauac 1
noLmfc. .UwroMgth. 4uno, or lt o»CT
Imu birth Last roooth to a baby ftrl and
ooly Hro hour*. bul link *uo.
“To 1 _ -¥ cl cJk. For lh»jnat impon
For ■■»”*» rruui.nge *p^, direcioor Advttory
» yu *
•JL tanoofa Median* Tcna Co.,
Tm Ghattaooofci.
Ti V'*r;
A
What the Children Cost. I
The following from the Philadel
phia Times suggests an interesting
line of thought :
I« Do you suppose I’m worth it ? i »
handed me a neatly bound account
book. “From June iq, 1880 ,” it
said on the cover. Opening to the
first page, I found a list of expen¬
ses, including such articles as rub¬
ber rings, patent food, etc. “That
is a record of every cent that has
been spent for yours truly since the
date of her birth,” she explained.
“Mamma started the books for
both Fred and me, and kept them
till we were sixteen, then she made
us do it. You see, turning the
leaves, “she put down everything,
even to our baby photographs, and
its been a wholesome revelation for
us to count up the totals once in a
while. »»
This account was incomplete.
The cost of a child could never be
put ois paper.
If some children could know
what they cost, not in dollars and
cents, merely, but in sacrifice and
heartaches, they would be a trifle
more considerate of the old folks.
But they are children, let them
be children—light-hearted and free
—and let not the joy of childhood
be filched from them by care. They
will have enough of that later in life,
Another view of it would be—
what does it all cost the child if he
is cheated out of childhood’s joys?
It may make him a dullard for life,
—Atlanta Daily News.
Much Reading for Little Money
-
The New York World has got
the cost of printing down to a
imum. Its latest offer of its
monthly newspaper-magazine is in
teresting if from no other cause
than that it shows the acme of
44 how much for how little. ) >
The Monthly World is a 32 -page
magazine with colored cover. Its
pages are about the size of the La¬
dies’ Home Journal, and it is copi¬
ously illustrated in half-tone. The
illustrations are the result of the
best artistic skill, aided by all the
latest printing-press appliances,
making a magazine unrivaled in
the quality of its contents and its
appearence.
Each issue contains stories of ro
mance love, adventure, travel;
stories of fiction and fact; stories
of things quaint and curious, gath
ered from all over the world ; the
results ot scientific research, and
editorial reviews. It numbers
OSBORN.
VOL. XXVI No. 29 .
among its contributors the leading
literary men and women of the
day.
A. feature each month is a full
page portrait of the most famed
man or woman of the moment in
In collecting and preparing lor
publication the literary matter and
art subjects for the Monthly World
no expense is spared.
The New York World will send
six numbers of this newspaper
magazine on receipt of fifteen cents
in stamps. Address, The World,
Pulitzer Building, New York,
Beautifying the Home.
Mrs. S. C. Jackson, of North
® roa ^ street > Philadelphia, is a
well-known critic in house decora
bug, and it is said that her own
home is a marvel of comfort and
attractiveness, in spite of the fact
that the lady is not overburdened
with this world’s wealth. In a re
cent conversation with a reporter
Mrs. Jackson said:
4 i It is really very easy to deco
rate one’s home artistically and at
absolutely no actual cost if one
goes the right way about it. Pic
lures are th e best ornaments, in
my opinion. They strike the eye
at once and relieve the dreary mo
notony of bare walls. If I could
have expensive pictures in rich
frames I would do so, but, not be
ing wealthy, I have to curb my
; ambition. Yet there are really
beautiful and artistic productions
which make a S reat impression on
the beholder, and their cost is in
fiuitesimal, in fact they can be had
for nothing. 1 »
“How may they be obtained for
nothing, Mrs. Jackson?” the
porter inquired. “That must sure
ly be a valuable piece of
edge, » >
4 4 Oh, I don’t know ! There
hundreds of thousands of
in the country doing the same as
am, I suppose. Anybody who
a habit of thrift and who
a little common sense, has the
opportunity. You see myself
family are great coffee
but we are particular about
brand we use. My husband
not touch the glazed or coated
fees under any consideration,
has an abhorrence of them, and
this respect we agree. We
not let our children drink such cof¬
fee either. As we are great coffee
j ronxA.
B«antb* The Kill Yw Hitt Alwiys BlU|W
j , Sijaatur*
4m
WHER YOUR TIME EXPIRES I *
on your Papers and Maga- g
zines, I will appreciate it if <
you will let me RENEW them “JJ
for you. tTfl
Very Respectfully,
! consumers we naturally want the
purest, most fragrant and health
ful. Consequently we buy the
Lion brand all the time, »>
« 4 Perhaps you are aware that
paclcagesfm tlfe'frea’n only. Every
pacjcagc lias a jyivu xxvau uii line
wrapper, and by saving up these
heads, I can get my choice of beau
tiful pictures, or other household
ornaments and necessities, by send¬
ing them to the Woolson Spice Co.,
Toledo, Ohio, indicating from the
premium list just what article I
want, and inclosing a two-cent
stamp to pay for postage of my pic
ture or other article. i >
4 4 And are these premiums given
away all the year round, Mrs.
Jackson? I 1
! '‘Yes, but a new premium list is
i issued by the Woolson Spice Co.,
every year, by-tbe-way, there will
be a new one published September
i t 1901 . It is claimed that thb
; one is to exceed all the previous
ones in the quantity and quality of
the presents. This will be an ex*
; cellent opportunity for careful
j housekeepers to commence buying
. Lion Coffee. Apart from the pre
miums, though, those who take
’ this bint will thank for giving
me
it, as they are sure to find Lion Cof¬
j fee to their liking, and there is no
purer brand on the market.”
The reporter thanked Mrs. Jack
j j son for her information and with
drew. ,
i
I Reunion of the 38th Georgia.
-
The annual reunion of the vete*
rans of the 38 th Georgia regiment,
Evans’ brigade, Gordon's division,
| Stonewall Jackson’s corps, will
j take place at Ponce de Leon spring,
Atlanta, July 31 .
A fine program has been arrang¬
ed, and all who attend may expect
a good time,
----- i-»
The Ordinaries to Meet,
The annual convention ofi-the
Georgia ordinaries will be held at
Indian Spring, on the 24 th Inst.
It will be a business meeting,
and ought to be well attended by
the ordinaries of the state.
They met at Indian Spring last
year, but the meeting was not very
largely attended.
Judge J. M. Belcher, of Coving¬
ton, is a member of the Ordinaries*
Association.
o
j feanth. «n»KMtalaa 'staffd
it