Newspaper Page Text
The Covington Star.
f J. W. Anderson, } Proprietor. Editor ami Covington, Ga., Tuesday, September 3, 1901. VOL. WVl No. nr>.
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IT WILL PAY YOU o
TO KEEP A CLOSE WATCH
........ON THIS SPACE........
0 As it the
is property of MR. W. L. ADAIR,
proprietor of the One Puice Cash Store. $
who has Leen for the past two weeks, and
is yet in the EASTERN MARKETS, to¬ 0
'I gether with Miss Lola Young, his Milli¬
ner, and Miss Eula Taylor, his leading 0
Sales Lady, purchasing his stock of—
Fall and Winter Goods.
The facts above mentioned coupled, with
the experience and ability of these buyers,
assures the lact that Adair’s will be the 0
\ place to go to purchase your entire bill of
fall and winter goods, if you desire the
latest and most up-to date styles and pat¬
terns in Millinery, Dress Goods, Shoes,
Men’s and Boys’ Clothing, Hats, etc , etc
Remember that this space belongs to
VV. L. ADAIR, and wall be used by him
in announcing to the public the facts of 0
t his trip abroad, which will no doubt be
0 profitable reading to them. So keep your
zLK
eyes on it.
ADAIR’S One Price Cash Store.
Next Door to Post Office, Covington, Ga.
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Recognized at Washington.
The only instance on record of a post
office being named after a patent medi¬
cine, was last year, when in Wetzel
county, \V. Va , a new post office was
established and named Kodol, after the
famous Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, manu¬
factured by E.C. DeWitt & Co., of Chi¬
cago. It had given such satisfactory re¬
sults that the name was unanimouMj
felected by the people for the new office
and adopted by the department at
Washington, 1 ). C. This action was en¬
tirely yoluntary on the part of the peo
pie of the community, w ithout any so¬
licitation whatever from the manufac
teivetl a lette. bearing I Ire post mark
A preparation so highly prised by
community must be worthy of
greatest confidence.
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
FARMING, TIMBERED
OR MINERAL LANDS, OR WATER
POWER, FOR SALE.
Nashville, Chattanooga A St Lonl ' Kali
The rrr-
or ''"mining property. It and therefore the ftssistanceo solicits the
support, the co-opertlon
the people of every county throng i »
Hnes pass. The management earnestly request
w,,ttr
mineral lands for sale, will send a
powers or the
brief description of the■ aarne to r.^
^
merit does not propose i»tive
tssrrj:-......... , nprn
.
Industtml and Immigration
H. F. SMITH. TratHe Manager
Xashvilte, Tenn.
Notice! Notice!!
I have the exclusive sale of the
Zfd^Mrl V ™ formerly
iiaWRins.
t ver
Mas.
fa HWELLS, Covington, Ga.
W
ADJVllY thrive o HOUSE, uuu oo,
£5 AUbllTIl A\S.f
ATLAllI M M „ GEORGIA
Walk Ift tar Shfll. ,
Fonr HI
Only Tbrre Doors from \ M C A ® Ul!d *" ?
_- « $1.00.
t „ bv the we ek mails wn application,
a. j. w
j h 'j increase ts in «*,.«,•; the taxable prop
y »».
b$ *^-—
Boston now has sacred clam bekes—on
l Sundays.
r
LOW RATE ROUND TRIP
---VIA-
CENTRA L OF
RAILWAY
Low rates to Buffalo, N. Y., via
Central of Georgia Railway, ac
j 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
l i Palmettoes and sun shades,” and
l < the shirt waist maiden” and
it 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
eiielving 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 con;
fortable coaches, parlor and sleep¬
ing cars, the journey from any
point in Alabama and Geoigia can
be made in comfort and ease, to
this delightful resort within a few
v
hours. 1:
J. C. HAILE,
Gen’l. Pass. Agent, Savannah, Ga.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
Oar new jail will be completed next week
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
I
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PENNSYLVANIA PURE RYE.
EIGHT YEARS OLE
OLD SHARPE WILLIAMS,
four Pull Quarts of this Pine Old,
Pure Rye.
$ 3.50 Express Prepaid.
We ship on approval in plain, sealed boxes,
no marks to indicate contents. When
receive it and test it, if it is not satisfac
return it at our expense and we will re
your $3.50. We guarantee this brand to
eight years old. Eight bottles for f'6 50,
prepaid ; 12 bottles for $9 5°, express
; I gallon jugj exp-ess prepaid, #3 00.
gallon jug, express prepaid, $ 5 - 5 °. o' 10
for boxing.
We handle all the leading brands of Rye
Bourbon Whiskies in the market, and will
you 50 per cent, on . our purchases.
Gallon. Quart.
Star Bourbon....... 1 25 35
Bourbon.............. 1 50 40
Hollow Bourbon.......... I 60 45
Mellwood Pure Rye,........... 1 90 5 °
Monogram Rje.................. 2 00 55
McBrayer Rye.................. 2 25 60
A^^^r Pepper^ 2 40 65
65
Crow........................... 2 20 75
Fincher’s Golden Wedding... 2 i t £
Hoffman House Rye 3 oo
Mount Vernon f8 yrs. old,)... 3 50 t oo
Dillinger fio yrs. old;. ... 4 00 i 25
The above only a few brands ol the
^ in stock. Send for a catalogue.
All other goods by the gallon, such as corn
whisky, peach and apple brandies, etc., sold
equally . n „a\lv as as low low, from I rom * St 25 5 pergallon P S and up
Wa
\Ye make a specialtyofthejugtr.deand.il
or ders by mail or telegraph will have onr
prompt at tendon. Specialinducementsoffered
order.
«”«■
'PHONE 205.
Vegetables are not so
here as they have been.
Ice cream is now made
glue. Give your girl plenty of
if you want her to stick.
The Atlanta depot question
broken out in a new place.
city council is wrestling with
now.
The English hotels in London
not serve beefsteak for breakfast
That seems curious to
but it is a fact.
An Atlanta man has patented
machine tor counting money.
guess he will have to go north
sell it. Nobody here will need it.
Some one is suggesting Admiral
Schley for president in 1904. That
is too bad. Please don’t do it any
more. Let the poor man get out
of his present trouble before get¬
ting him into another. Please let
him have a rest.
Lieorgta is now unc ur >a
gold fields of the world, and will
soon be an oil gusher, also. Geor¬
gia produces everything needed or
wanted by mankind. Come to
Georgia, young man, and grow up
with the Empire State of the
South.
Everybody in Newton county,
who lias dwelling houses, barns,
tenements, as well as the school
houses and churches, would do well
to insure in this company, and can
do so by applying to the local
agent, R. L. Cook, at the store of
Heard, White & Co., in Covington.
As an evidence of how well sug¬
ar cane raising pays in Georgia, it
is stated that some Brooks county
farmers produced i ,000 gatlonn of
syrup to the acre of cane last year.
They got 32^2 ceuts per gallon, or
$325 per acre. From 800 to 1,000
gallons per acre can be obtained
anywhere in south Georgia with
proper care and diligence in pre¬
paring the soil.
The man who raises cotton this
year and has to buy bacon at 10^
cents per pound, and lard at 10
cents and corn at 70 cents per
bushel, is sure to come out in debt
aud without anything to show for
his labor. These articles are sell
ing at the above prices, and good¬
ness knows what they are selling
for on a credit.
It would not surprise us if all
the candidates for gubernatorial
honors, who are now in the race,
or who may hereafter come into it,
would not all drop out but two, be¬
fore the primary comes off next
year. We do not pretend to say
this will be the case, but it will not
surprise us if it is. Now watch
the course of events and see.
O JB 1*
Bean the Tha Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature
of
WEEK-END EXCURSION TICKETS
TO
TYBEE.
Week-end excursion tickets, at
very low rates, are on sale via
Central of Georgia Railway.
for noon, alternoon 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
hotel accom mo¬
cing pavilion, with splencHWltsbuL
rant and buffet attached, good
sic and delightful surf bathing,
boating and fishing.
Low rate excursion tickets are
on sale during the summer months.
Any agent of the Central
Georgia Railway will sell you a
ticket, and furnish you full partic¬
ulars, schedules, etc., upon
cation. j. C. HAILE,
Gen’l. Pass. Agent, Savannah,
Kodol Dyspepsia what you oat.
Digests
Notice to Veterans,
The committee on public
tainment in Macon wants to
how many from this section are
ing to the confederate reunion
Macon, in October, in order
they can provide entertainment
them.
All confederate veterans in
ton county, who expect to
the reunion in October,
are requested to give their
to Judge Capers Dickson,
der of Jefferson Lamar camp,
he will furnish the list to the
con committee.
The committee also wishes
have the names of all veterans
are unable to pay their own
ses while attending the reunion,
that provision can be made for tak
ing care of them.
All veterans who expect to
tend the reunion should give
names to Judge Dickson as
as possible.
CASTOniA.
Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature
of
Starlight items.
"The pay of the American
dier,” says the Rochester
York) Herald, "is about $180 a
year, and his rations come to $110
more. If we call these two items
of pay and food $300, and deduct
this sum from die $1,014 which he
annually costs his government, we
have leit $714 per man, which must
go for other items. Hence, the
American soldier costs his govern¬
ment, for certain unexplainable and
unascertainable items, nearly five
times as much as the total expense
of maintenance of the Russian and
three and one-half times as much
as the German. Why is this, and
where does the mnoev en ? are
questions that may wisely be made
the subject of congressional or
other inquiry. y y
A census of the Boer prisoners
confined on the island at St. Helena
has revealed the fact that of the
entire number but 17 per cent, are
native-born Boers. The others are
military adventurers from all parts
ot the world. Two motives have
aided in drawing them to the help
of the burghers—hatred of En¬
gland and the lust of gain. They
wanted to see the British lion hum¬
bled and to bury their hands in the
gold dust and diamonds of South
Africa. In the latter ambition, at
tcaat, they have }>een woefully dis
appointed.
There is to be a contest of rival
beauties in the state of Colorado.
The figure of a typical—and that
means a beautiful, western girl,
to adoru the dome of the new cap
itol, and there are a number of
pirants for the honor. Among
many we can quite realize that
will be difficult for the
to make a choice, but it should
solaced by the thought that
whichever of the candidates
honor falls, Colorado is certain
find a representative worthy of
self and of its new house of state.
.Since the French count left a con¬
siderable fortune to stimulate the
growth of big Frenchmen, by nat¬
ural selection, giants are emerging
from their lairs. From the south
of France has come a man 22
old, 9 fe<;t 2 inches tall and still
growing. Weighs 445 pounds,
measures 98 inches around the
chest, and he is to marry an En
glish girl 8 feet, 6 inches high.
Vive la France ! Vive 1 ’Angleterre !
Jack Winters, the man who tun¬
neled under the gold room of the
Selby smelting works, near San
jc.co^a few weeks ago, and
wbo a ftervvardsT?c 5 TTKfab- 4
last week sentenced to the
itentiary for 15 years. The
stolen has been about all
and so j ack w jH „ot enjoy the
of his biR steal very much.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The KM You Hate Always Bought
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Signature of
[
MUI
EMORY COLLEGE THE
STATE FEDERATION.
First Scholarship Received for the
Education of a Club Son.
The board of trustees of Emory
college honored the executive board
of the Georgia federation of wo
men’s clubs by presenting it with a
scholarship in the old and distin¬
guished college at Oxford, Ga.
The club women ot Georgia ap¬
preciate deeplv this honor, and in¬
deed as much for the gracious man¬
ner in which it was conferred as for
the gift itself.
Jesse P. Williams, of Savannah,
made a motion that the Georgia
federation of women’s clubs be
given a scholarship in Emory col¬
lege.
Without discussion, the motion
was carried unanimously in the
face of the fact that Emory has
always stood upon record as pre¬
fen ing to assist eduealion through
a loan fund in place of giving
scholarships direct.
For this courtesy the women of
Georgia are both pleased and proud
A •« k\A c*A. a\\ uorea itmcmner
with gratitude the noble men who
showed themselves so willing to
aid the club work.
And in regard to the manage¬
ment of the educational fund of
Emory, the Georgia federation will
do well to inform itself. As many
times there are those in need of
assistance to obtain an education,
who, upon leaving college, are only
too glad to return the entire
amount of the tuition in order to
help some one else then in need.
In many respects it is a pleasant¬
er way to receive a free education
and much more far reaching in
good results.
Another proof of the value of
co-operation. The scholarship ob¬
tained from Emory, and the mior
mation thus learned, may be the
cause of the founding of a loan
fund in the Georgia federation,
which, as it grows and progresses,
will always date its foundation from
the conversation held by some of
the club women and the trustees of
Emory.
The first scholarship given by an
exclusively male college will per¬
haps be the seed from which will
germinate a plant ot immense use¬
fulness to the young men and wo¬
men of the state. When that hap¬
py time arrives the club women of
the day will not forget that it arose
through the generosity and inter¬
es im shown by the present board of
t.ustees of Emory college. t
C A. TORIA.
Bears the Ite M You Ham Mvrajs Bought
Signature
of
The worst ‘‘spell of fad” we have ever seen
is that of a St. Louis girl, who writes her
name Miss Ethlynne Dyckyson. Now what
girl can heat that ? I
Teddy is now out looking after his fences,
while your Uncle Ilanna he lie low and say
nothing, hut he gets there all the same.
/
p Healthy Mothers
Few mothers arc healthy, because
their duties are so exacting. The anxiety
of pregnancy, the shock of childbirth,
and the care of young children, are
severe trials on any woman. But with
Wine of Cardui within her grasp, every
mother—every woman in the land —can
pay the debt of personal Do health she
owes her loved ones. you want
robust health with all its privileges will and
pleasures? Wine of Cardui give it
to you.
j
strengthens the female 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 circumstance*.
tow awi pTcXcif 1 RI r_ “When I
hall a mile 1 sunered wttn
other child was born bottle because , had ,
w had to raise him on a i
l „
using the Win. dunng pregMncy girl,
SrArtwo , • I cave birth last month to a baby and
hmr with fcut little pain,
1 lours,
plenty ot thank milk God .For and Wine of CuHux.
Mt in my health I
For advice in cases requiring special directions,
g-g symptom*.
{ -fL tanooga Medicine Co..
M Chattanooga, Tena.
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