The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, December 16, 1914, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3
icd from Pas:e Six. ) ! paddle it ... , sent the canoe I well out >rous thrust, Two ! it to the middle | the immediately the of t tec little craft in jin current and eped it smoothly urg eTU 1 irrovv and eiglior through moment more :and the aiouth c ■fi norns was yawning for them clean balance of an ex *'a tl; up. oemai*, Alan rose to IPs peri instantaneous reconnois feet ;• r.vard and astern. He san< first, and groaned in his loot Hi sharp prow of the t /, ; > fli- a cut from the banns, looked ahead and groaned aloud. ■ rapids were a wilderness of (;il0L waters, white and green, worse anything- he had antiei lte d or ever dreamed , of. , ,. 1 was now no escaping that But there ord eal. The canoe was already spin r, between walls where the water jU niTdeep and fast with glassy I a sur¬ face. instant it in the jaws; The next was an d the man settled down to work v ith grim determination, pitting coup ,‘ ae an( i strength and. experience againtit the ravening waters that tore at the canoe on every hand, whose mad clamor beat ba- k and forth be¬ tween !’••• walls of the gorge like vast bellowings of infernal mirth. He fought like one possessed. There was never an instant’s grace for judgment or execution; the one must be synchronous with the other, both instantaneous, or else—destruc¬ tion. The canoe wove this way and that like an insane shuttle threading some sataniu loom. Now it hesitated, nuz¬ zling a gigantic boulder over which the water wove a pale graen and glistening hood, now in the space of a heartbeat it shot forward twice its length through a sea of creaming waves, now plunged wildly toward what promised instant annihilation and cheated that only by the timely plunge of a paddle, guided by luck or instinct or both. The one ray of hope in Alan’s mind, when he surveyed before committing himself and the woman he loved to that hideoui gauntlet, sprang from the fact th , however rough, the rapids were 1 art. N >w, when he had been in the grasp a minute, he seemed to tu here hours, His laborii tremendous, un¬ believable. inspired. In the end they were all but successful. The goal of safety was within thirty seconds’ more,of quick, hard work, when Alan’s paddle broke and the canoe swung broadside to a boulder, turned turtle and pre 3 d both headlong " into that sav minutes passed he was fighting tike lad thii overwhelming od Then, of a sud den, he found him df rejected, spewed forth from the ca; ract and swimming mechanically in t e smooth water of a wide pool bo; ni the lowermost eddy, the canoe ating bottom up near by, and Ros supporting herself with 0116 hand on it. Her eyes met bis, clear with the sanity of her adorable courage. He floundered to her side, panted in¬ structions to transfer her hand to his shoulder, and struck out for the nearer shore. • both found footing at the same time and waded out, to collapse, ex¬ hausted, against the bank. Then, with a sickening qualm, Alan remembered the pursuit. He rose and looked up the rapid just in time to view the last swift quarter of the canoe’s descent: Judith in the bow, motionless, a rifle across her knees, in the stern an Indian guide kneeling and lighting the waters with scarcely perceptible effort in contrast with Alan's supreme struggles. Like a living thing the canoe seemed to gather itself together, to poise, to leap with all its strength; it hurdled the eddy in a bound, took the still water with a mighty splash, and shot downstream at diminished speed, the Indian furiously backing water. As though that had been the one moment ehe had lived for, Judith lifted her rifle and brought it to bear —upon her sister. Hith a cry of horror, Alan flung himself before Rose, a living shield, aatiiupauag nothing but immediate heath, ibis was not accorded him. f or a breathless instant the woman ir > aey Found a Footing. canoe stared along the sights, lowered her weapon and, turn spoke indistinguishably to die £*• v ulii instantly began to ply a To :v /.'t 1 1 ; Gme, Alan voiced his > xrn : i d amazement: ■ ; i 1 name of heaven! Vhy i ' e h-'i said dully: “Don't you hn° ’ And when he shook bis head .-'lerrrde told mine you had saved 1;( ’ ' ou the dam at Spirit Lake. ' do you see?’’ 1 countenance was blank with wonder: “Gratitude?” / W < smiled wearily: “Not grati ' but something more ter- 1 ■ • • ” She rose and held • out her hard. “Not that I can blame ■ - Tit come; if we strike mreumi Here we will, I think, pick up ?. M *H1 bring us to Black L' t'a or settlement by dark." CHAPTER IX. Forewarned. The thing was managed with an in genuity that Alan termed devilish—it was indisputably Machiavellian. The lovers had come down from the North in hot haste and the shadow of death Two days of steady traveling by canoe, by woods trail, by lake steamer-—forty-eight hours of fatigue and strain eased by not one instant’s relr ation from the high tension of :gi mice upon which their very lives depi ivied — wore to a culmination through this tedious afternoon on the trai front Moosehead—a trap of phys¬ ical torment only made possible by Alan’s luck in securing, through sheer acci lent, two parlor-car reservations tun ;d back at the last moment be¬ fore leaving Kineo station. No matter—the longest afternoon must have its evening: the pokiest of trai- 3 comes' the more surely to its deed ition; in another hour or two they vould be in Portland—free at last to draw breath of ease in a land of law, order and sane living. A: ii in answer to this thought, the train slowed down with whistling brakes to the last hill-station, and as the .rucks groaned and moved anew, a lout of a boy came galloping down the aisle, brandishing two yellow en velc cs and blatting like a stray calf: “Mista Lawr! Mista Lawr! Tel’ grams for Mista Lawr!” A :m had been expecting at every station a prepaid reply to his wire for reservations on the night express from Portland to New York. But why two envelopes superscribed “Mr. A. Law, Kineo train southbound, ■Oakland Sta.?” H tore one open, unfolded the in closure, and grunted disgust with its curt advice, opened the other and caught his breath sharply as he with¬ drew—part 'way only—a playing card, a trey of hearts. Thrusting it back quickly, he clapped both envelopes together, tore them into a hundred fragments, and scat¬ tered them from the window. But the fiendish wind whisked one small scrap back—and only one!—into the lap of the woman he loved. Vainly he prayed that she might be asleep. The silken lashes trembled on her cheeks and lifted slightly, dis¬ closing the dark glimmer of question¬ ing eyes. And as she clipped the scrap of cardboard between thumb and fore¬ finger he bent forward and silently took it from her—one corner of the trey of hearts, but inevitably a corner bearing the figure “3” above a heart. “The Pullman agent at Portland wires no reservations available on any New York train in the next thirty-six hours,” he said with lowered voice. “Couldn’t we possibly catch the New York boat tonight?” He shook a glum head. “No—I look I that up first. It leaves before we get in.” She said, “Too bad,” abstractedly, reclosed her eyes, and apparently lapsed anew into semi-somnolence^ but without deceiving him who could well guess what poignant anxiety gnawed at her heart. He could have ground his teeth in exasperation—the impish insolence of that v arning, timed- so precisely to set their nerves on edge at the very mo- He Could Have Ground His Teeth in Exasperation. ment when they were congratulating themselves upon the approach of a respite! insanity of the whole The sheer damnable business—! 1 TO BE CONTINUED, t Hi: tjj T is STORY AND THEN GO IT AT THE LYRIC. ! COUNGTON NEWS, WEI) N ESI) AY, DECEMBER 16, 1914. ADMINISTRATORS SALE. Georgia, Xe^vtou County: Under auu by virtue of an order granted by the Court of Ordinary of ■iasper 11 unity, i will sell at public out¬ cry on (he property lierinafter descri¬ bed on t lie first Tuesday in January '915, the following described property to-wit: Those fifteen vacant lots as surveyed by W. A. Adams recently in what is known as the Nettie Miller property belonging now to tin- estate of Cody (". Bryant and bounded on the West by Carrol steert., and on tin- South lty an alley separating said property from the Tony Baker property, on tin noi-.li by lot of Oscar Hinton and oil the west by several parties, names uni.novvii, which several lots separate said prop¬ erty from West sirem.. L i -h of sHd lots being seventy-five t\t £•• •iitmg on Corrol streU and on a new street sur¬ veyed and marked out by said Adams also: One vacant lot sixty byone hundred fronting on the street rmiying from Carrol street to West street and lying in the corner of said tract •and West St ret, also: One lot fronting on said street run¬ ning from Carol and West, being one hundred and thirty-five feet front and running back two hundred feet, the the back line being one hundred and twenty feet upon which is situated the li use known as the Tony Baker house. Said sale will be had by the une.er signed for the purpose of paying debts of the estate of said Cody C. Bryant Terms of sale, cash. This third day of December, 1914. WILLIE BRYANT. Admit of the ro¬ tate of Cody ('. Bryant, deceased. DR. D. H. PARLIMENT Physician and Surgeon Special attention given to the eye, ear, nose and throat. Nurse furnished in all surgical cas¬ es; bed and room furnished when it is needed. Eyes examined and glasses fitted with John L. Moore’s lens. Special weekly or monthly rates. Rooms 19, 21, 23 Star Bldg. Covington Phones 42 and 47. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. State of Georgia, Newton County: Under and by virtue of an order granted by the court of Ordinary of said county, wil be sold 1 etwen the le¬ gal hours of sale on the First Tues¬ day in January next. 1915, the Blow¬ ing described property, towit. All that tract or parcel of land ly¬ ing and being in the 1513 Disk G. M. of said. State and County, said to con¬ tain seventy seven (77) acres more or less ami hounded ns folows: On the North by lands of J. A. Grant East by lands of rublie road leading, from Covington to Monticello. Fa. South by lands of -T. M. Lassiter; and West by lands of A. .J. Parker and Swann estate. Said hinds sold as the property of J. M. Barker late of said county, de¬ ceased. for the purpose of paying debts and distribution among the heirs ;.t law of said deceased. Terms of sale cash. This December 1 1914. H. M. PARKER. Administrator of the estate of J. M. Parker deceased, APPLICATION FOR CHANGE OF CHARTER. State of Georgia, Newton County i To the Superior Court of said coun¬ ty. The Almand Supply Company, a cor¬ poration, brings this petition to the court and shows: That it was duly incorporated by order of this Honorable C6urt grant¬ ed January 15th, 1905, for a term of ten years, which term is soon to ex¬ pire, that at a meeting of the stock¬ holders duly held on the Sth day of September 1914 the following resolu¬ tion was unanimously passed, towit: lu view of the fact that the charter of the Almand Supply Company will expire in January 1915, therefore BE IT RESOLVED that our attorney be instructed and authorized to apply to Superior Court of Newton County for a renewal of said charter for another term of ten years, said term of renew¬ al to begin with the expiration of the old charter. Wherefore petitioner prays the Comt that an order be granted renewing said charter for a term of ten years, giant iug to petitioners all of like the corporations rights, pow-1 j ers and privileges according to the laws of this state. IL W. MILNER, | Petitioners Atty. j I, John B. Davis. Clerk off the Su i perior Court of Newton County, Ga., ] | do hereby certify that the above and J foregoing is a true copy of the petition j ,of the Almand Supply Company tiled in for J j renewal of charter this day mv ' office. j Witness my hand and official seal, j : this Nov. 11th. 1914. .1X0. B. DAVIS, Clerk of Superior [ Court of Newton County, Ga. PAGE THREE if TILL HAD THE S7.85 Rastus was on trial charged with stealing seven dollars and eighty-five cents, lie pleaded not guilty, and, as he was un¬ able to hire an attorney, the judge ap¬ pointed Lawyer Clearem as counsel. Clearem put up a strong plea in defense, and Rastus was acquitted. Counsel and client met a few minutes after outside the court room. , / “Now, Rastus,” said Clearem, “you know the court allows the counsel very little for defendingthis kindofease. I worked hard for you and got you clear. I am entitled to much more pay than I am gettingfor my valuable services, and you should give up a good sized fee. Have you got any money?” "Yes, Boss,’’ said Rastus, “1 still d< ne got datseben dollahs and eighty-five cents.” We did not get the Chero-Cola like Rastus got the $7.85 but we are still making the same kind of Chero-Cola we started to making last January, we are also making that good Ginger Ale called Gary’s Ginger Ale. » It is now nearby Christmas and times have been too hard to order that gal¬ lon of rye or corn you looked forward to having Xmas, so get you a case of Chero-Cola, the whole family will enjoy it and will not be hurt by its use, try that Good Ginger Ale too, you know ginger is another harmless healthful drink, and when you want either call for the kind with the label on it. We wish here and now to thank the public in general for the loyal sup¬ port of our business during this , year and wish for each and everyone A Pleasant Christinas and a Happy New Year and Don’t forget to Drink Chero-Cola and Garys Ginger Ale. Chero-Cola Bottling Works Joseph N. Gary, Mgr.