The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, December 16, 1914, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4
PAGE FOUR iSljf (Emtimjtnn ^Ji'uts Published Every Wednesday. OFFICIAL ORGAN NEWTON COUN TY AND CITY of COVINGTON, GA. R. F. TAYLOR, Editor and Publisher SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Year ..................... $1.00 Six Months .................... 50c Three Mouths ................. 25c Advertising Rates on Application. Entered as second-class matter De¬ cember 2, 1908, at the post office at Covington, Ga., under the Act of March 3, 1879. All obituary notices, cards of thanks, and announcements, other than of a public nature will be charged for at the rate of one cent a word. COVINGTON, GA.. DEC. 16, 1914 If your label reads 1-1-14 it should not. Pay a dollar and make it read 1-1-15 Now is the time to get ready to draw up your new year’s resolutions. Make a few good ones and stand by them. We are thinking very seriously of taking a week off Christmas. Pay us that dollar you owe us and maybe we t an enjoy that week. Otherwise--. Do your Christmas shopping now. You will have more to select from and more time to see the goods displayed. Do not wait until next week. Every¬ body will be busy then. The Atlantic cle and Coal Corpora¬ tion seems to believe that times will get better, for they are building a big ice plant here and getting ready for next summer. Lot’s of Georgia towns are having warm city eletqions. It has been a long time since Covington had a good race for the city offices. Why not have one tills year? Do your Christmas shopping in Cov¬ ington. There’s plenty of everything here for the holidays and the prices are right. Come and inspect the lines of the different merchants. Lot’s of newspapers fighting about a lietter equipped army aiul navy, but we believe like Mr. Carnegie—in world peace—they woGn’t need any better equipped army and navy. Read the advertisements in tht News. The people who advertise are the ones who want your trade and they tell you that they want it. Patronize the jieople who want your business. Why not make the newspaper man happy Christmas by paying a dollar on your subscription? We have sever¬ al hundred that we will be compelled to discontinue about the first of the year unless they are paid. Editor Bacon of the Madison Madis¬ onian was in Covington last week on business and came down to see us. He is one of the brightest editors of a weekly in Georgia and gives the peo¬ ple of Morgan county a first class pa¬ per- .vES This session of congress will try to get through the rural credit bill, along with other bills of the present ad¬ ministration. If they get the rural credit bill through and adjourn they will have done more good than most anything they could do. Have you carried your neighbor a fruit tree or vine yet? Prof. Adams plan of exchanging trees and vines is a good one and one that should ap¬ peal to every man. It is not much trouble to carry a small fruit tree to a neighbor when you go by his borne and it is something that they will all appreciate. Try it." The Emory Weekly, under the man¬ agement of Joe P. Fagan, editor and S. C. Candler, manager, is a bright sheet. They are getting out a sheet that would be a credit to any college. It is full of live reading matter of in¬ terest to the college boys and others. They are receiving a good advertising patronage and they deserve it. Sending shiploads of provisions, clothing, money, etc., to the foreign countries is a mighty good tiling, but there’s plenty of things that can be done here. Thousands of people in the United States and especially in the south need help and what’s more they need it now. Help the people at home first and when that is done, send your money to foreign lands. There is not as much free advertising in giving at home, but there should be more satisfaction in giving to people that are close to you. Henry Odum, one ofthe best knowi as well as one of the most popular of the young men of Covington lias au nouneed for the City School oBard. Henry is a good, substantial citizen and will make an excelent member of the board if elected. wssesbokiz .i«£»a The Trey Hearts A Novelized Version of the Motion Ficture Drama of the Same Name Produced by the Universal Film Co. By LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE Author of "The Fortune Hunter," "The Brass Bowl,'"'The Black Bag," tic. Illustrated with Photographs from the Picture Production Copyright, 1814, by Louis Joseph Vance He quickened his pace, but the next bullet fell closer, while the third ac¬ tually bit the earth beneath his run¬ ning feet as he gained the dam. Exasperated, he pulled up, whipped out his pistol and fired without aim. At the same time, he noted that the distance between dam and canoe had j 1 | i ; i j j j A Tremendous Weight Tore at His Arms. lessened perceptibly, thanks to the strong current sucking through the spillway. i His shot flew wide, but almost in¬ stinctively his finger closed again upon the trigger, and he saw the pad¬ dle snap in tw’ain, its blade falling overboard. And then the Indian fired again, his bullet droning past Alan’s ear. As he fired in response Jacob start¬ ed, dropped his rifle and crpmpled up in the bow of the canoe. Simultaneously earth and heavens rocked with a terrific clap of thun¬ der. He turned again and ran swiftly along the dam, toward two heavy tim¬ bers that bridged the torrent of the spillway. Then a glance aside brought him up with a thrill of horror; the suck of the overflow had drawn the canoe, within a hundred yards of the spill¬ way. The dead Indian in its bow, the living woman helpless in its stern, it swept swiftly onward to destruc¬ tion. His next few actions were wholly unpremeditated. He was conscious only of her "white, staring face, her strange likeness to the woman that he loved. He ran out upon the bridge, threw himself down upon the innermost tim¬ ber, turned, and let his body fall back¬ ward, arms extended at length, and swung, braced by his feet beneath the outer timber. With a swiftness that passed con¬ scious thought, he was aware of the canoe hurtling onward with the speed of wind, its sharp prow apparently aimed directly for his head. Then hands closed round his wrists like clamps; a tremendous weight tore at his arms, and with an effort of incon¬ ceivable difficulty he began to lift, to drag the woman up out of the foam¬ ing jaws of death. Somehow that impossible feat was achieved; somehow the woman gained a hold upon his body, shifted it to his belt, contrived inexplicably to clamber over him to the timbers; and some¬ how he in turn pulled himself up to safety, and sick with reaction sprawled prone, lengthwise upon that foot-wide bridge, above the screaming abyss. Later he became aware that the woman had crawled to safety on the farther shore, and pulling himself to¬ gether, imitated her example. Solid earth underfoot, he rose and stood swaying, beset by a great weakness. Through the gathering darkness—a ghastly-twilight in which the flaming forests on the other shore burned with an unearthly glare—he discovered the wan, writhen face of Judith Trine close to his and he heard her voice, a scream barely audible above the com¬ mingled voices of the conflagration and the cascades: “You fool! Why did you save me? I tell you, I have sworn your death!” The utter grotesqueness of it all broke upon his intelligence like the revelation of some enormous funda¬ mental absurdity in Nature. He laughed a little hysterically. Darkness followed. A flash of light-, ning seemed to flame between them like a fiery sword. To its^ crashing thunder, he lapsed into unconscious¬ ness. When he roused, it was with a shiv¬ er and a shudder. Rain was falling in torrents from a sky the hue of 1 HE COVINGTON NEWS, WED NESDAY, DECEMBER 10 , 1914 . twinkled far below. The shelving moss-beds afforded treacherous footing; Alan was glad now and then of the support of a ce¬ dar, but. these grew ever smaller, and more widely spaced and were not al¬ ways convenient to his hand. He came abruptly and at headlong pace within sight of the eaves of a cliff—■ and precisely then the hillside seemed to slip from under b»m. His heels flourished in the air, his back thumped a bed of pebbles thinly overgrown with moss. The stones gave, the moss-skin broke, he began to slide—grasped at random a youngish cedar which stayed him imperceptibly, coming away with all its puny roots— caught at another, no more substan¬ tial—and amid a shower of loose stone shot out over the edge and down" a drop of more than thirty feet. He was instantaneously aware of the sun, a molten ball wheeling mad¬ ly in the cup of the turquoise sky. Then dark waters closed over him. He came up struggling and gasping, and struck out for something dark that rode the waters near at hand— something vaguely resembling a canpe. But his strength was largely spent, his breath had been driven out of him by the force of the fall, and he had swallowed much water—while the field of his consciousness was stricken with confusion. Within a stroke of an outstretched paddle, he flung up a hand and went down again. Instantly one occupant of the canoe, a young and very beautiful wo¬ man in a man’s hunting clothes, epoke a sharp word of command and, as her guide steadied the vessel with his paddle, rose in her place so surely that she scarcely disturbed the nice balance of the little craft, and curved her lithe body over the bow, head¬ foremost into the pool. * * * * * ¥ * Mr. Law had, in point of fact, en¬ dured more than he knew; more than even a weathered woodsman could have borne without suffering. Forty eight hours of such heavy woods : walking as he had put in to escape the forest fire, would have served to prostrate almost any man; add to this (ignoring a dozen other mental, nerv¬ ous and physical strains) merely the fact that he had been half-drowned. He experienced a little fever, a little delirium, then blank slumbers of ex¬ haustion. He awoke in dark of night, wholly unaware that thirty-six hours had passed since his fall. This last, how¬ ever, and events that had gone before, he recalled with tolerable clearness allowing for the sluggishness of a drowsy mind. Other memories, more vague, of gentle ministering hands, of a face by turns an angel’s, a flower's, a fiend’s, and a dear woman’s, trou¬ bled him even less materially. He was already sane enough to allow he had probably been a bit out of his head, and since it seemed he had been saved and cared for, he found no rea¬ son to quarrel with present circum¬ stances. Still, he would have been grateful for some explanation of certain phe¬ nomena which still haunted him—such as a faint, elusive scent of roses with a vague but importunate sense of a woman’s presence in that darkened room—things manifestly absurd . . . With some difficulty, from a dry throat, he spoke, or rather whis¬ pered: “Water!” In response he heard someone move over a creaking floor. A sulphur match spluttered infamously. A can¬ dle caught fire, silhouetting—illusion, of course!—the figure of a woman in hunting shirt and skirt. Water splashed noisily. Alan became aware of someone who stood at his side, one hand offering a glass to his lips, the other gently raising his head that he might drink with ease. Draining the glass, he breathed his thanks and sank back, retaining his grasp on the wrist of that unreal hand. It suffered him without re¬ sistance. The hallucination even went so far as to say, in a woman’s soft accents: “You are better, Alan?” He sighed incredulously: “Rose!” ■the voice responded “Yes!” Then the perfume of roses grew still more strong, seeming to fan his cheek like a woman’s warm breath. And a mir¬ acle came to pass; for Mr. Law, who realized poignantly that all this was sheer, downright nonsense, distinct¬ ly felt lips like velvet caress his fore¬ head. He closed his eyes, tightened his grasp on that hand of phantasy, and muttered rather inarticulately. The voice asked: “What is it, dear?” He responded: “Delirium . . . But I like it . . . Let me rave!” Then again he slept. CHAPTER VI. Disclosures. In a little comer office, soberly fur¬ nished, on the topmost floor of one of lower Manhattan’s loftiest oflice-tow ers, a little mouse-brown man sat over a big mahogany desk; a little man of big affairs, sole steward of one of America's most formidable fortunes. Precisely at eleven minutes past noon (or at the identical instant chos¬ en by Alan Law to catapult over the edge of a cliff in northern Maine) the muted signal of the little man’s desk telephone clicked and, eagerly lifting receiver to ear, he nodded with a smile and said in accents of some relief: “Ask her to come in at once, please.” Jumping up, he placed a chair in in¬ timate juxtaposition with his own; and the door opened, and a young woman entered. (Continued on Page Six.) slate. Across the lake dense volumes of steam enveloped the fires that fainted beneath the deluge. A great hissing noise filled the world, muting even the roar of the spillway. He was alone. But in his hand, tattered and bruised by the downpour, he found—a rose. CHAPTER V. Tha Hunted Man. That day was hot and windless with an unclouded sky—a day of brass and burning. Long before any sound audible to human ears disturbed the noonday hush, a l. beat sunning on a log in a glade to which no trail led, pricked ears, rose, glanced over shoulder with a snarl and—of a sudden was no more there. Perhaps two minutes later a succes sion of remote crashing® began to be heard, a cumulative volume of sounds made by some heavy body forcing by main strength through the underbrush, and ceased only when a man broke into the clearing, pulled up, stood for an instant swaying, then reeled to a seat on the log, pillowing his head oq arms folded across his knees and shud¬ dering uncontrollably in all hie limbs. He was a young man who had been and would again be very personable. Just now he wore the look of one hounded by furies. His face was crim¬ son with congested blood and streaked with sweat and grime; bluish veins throbbed in high relief upon his tem¬ ples; his lips were cracked and swol¬ len, his eyes haggard, his hands torn and bleeding. His shirt and trousers and “cruisers” were wrecks, the latter scorched, charred, and broken in a dozen places. Woods equipment he It Was a Rose. had none beyond a hunting knife belt¬ ed at the smail of his back. All else had been either consumed in the for¬ est fire or stolen by his Indian guide who had subsequently died while at-* tempting to murder his employer. Since that event, the man had suc¬ ceeded in losing himself completely. In seeking shelter from the thunder¬ storm, he had lost touch with his only known and none too clearly located landmarks. Then, after a night passed without a fire in the lee of a ragged bluff, he had waked to discover the sun rising in the west and the rest Of the universe sympathetically upside down; and aimlessly ever since he had stumbled and blundered in the maze of those grimly reticent fastnesses, for the last few hours haunted by a fear of failing reason—possessed by a no¬ tion that he was dogged by furtive enemies—and within the last hour the puppet of blind, witless panic. But even as he strove to calm him¬ self and rest, the feeling that some¬ thing was peering at him from behind a mask of undergrowth grew intoler ably acute. At length he jumped up, glared wild¬ ly at the spot where that something no longer was, flung himself fran¬ tically through the brush in pursuit of it, and—found nothing. With a great effort he pulled him¬ self together, clamped his teeth upon the promise not again to give way to hallucinations, and turned back to the clearing. There, upon the log on which he had rested, he found—but refused to believe he saw—a playing card, a trey of hearts, face up in the sun glare# With a gesture of horror, Alan Law fled the place. While the sounds of his flight were still loud, a grinning half-breed guide stole like a shadow to the log, laughed derisively after the fugitive, picked up and pocketed the card, and set out in tireless, cat-footed pursuit. An hour later, topping a ridge of rising ground, Alan caught from the hollow on its farther side the music of clashing waters. Tortured by thirst, he began at once to descend in reck¬ less haste. What was at first a gentle slope cov¬ ered with waist-deep brush and car¬ peted with leaf-mold, grew swiftly more declivitous, a mossy hillside, as steep as a roof, bare of underbrush, and sparely sown with small cedars through whose ranks cool blue water It will scon be time to h< 1o turn your bind mid gut r r nd\ for inti: grain. Wo have just received n hi• applv of Vulcan plows mid p r s. j>, s ' e plows arc known by t voiy o ( f <•, mcr as the best chilled plow irm You take no dhance in buying t | n * 8 plow. We guarantee eve ry p v* give satisfaction. We also have a full st< ck < {* S' . euse plows, Drag barrows, Dbr h;« rows and grain drills. Como p, mi( ] look through our • < k. . nramaWM.rn. jm.n gn i. ——■ M ii et--.—>-. <Mmon ..' ■■ .‘..'-T* ???**''• “*‘ "** « Norris Hdwe. Co. Covington, Ga. Beware'ot Substitutes Has the distinction of being imitated by 156 different drinks. Call it by name and you will have just cause for comDlaint if served a substitute. Conyers Coca--Cola Bottling Company GUY ALEXANDRER, Mgr. It stops the tickle. S 0. bottles sold in days Highly praised by lead¬ PineTari Honey Each ounce contain* 4 minimi-Chloroform ing citizens of Coving¬ A Throat most or valuable Lunga. remedy fdkvlng Id obstinate affections coutfii of (be by promaWaj expectoration and serving as a carminative io Bronchial or ton and Aewton County THIS FORMULA REMEDY AND Laryageal JS WILL PREPARED GIVE Trouble*. EXCELL PRO* A ENT WPG- BESUlty TB ' ED DIRECTIONS FOR USE Price 2 ; > Cents for 25 Doses. Tin ififoi rwuifts w ewt'i. a* msmibmib MAMU*ACTU*IO ONt* ■ CITY PHARMACY. COVINGTON. GEORGIA.___ MANUFACTURED ONLY BY City Pharmacy Georgia. t Covington, •S^SmSmW ** *' - v MAHONE’S CAFE Barbecue, Brunswick Stew, Oysters, Etc., Etc. Pure 1 ooC ' Quick Service. Everything Clean. SPOT CASH TO EVBUYBO^ East Side Public Square. Parker’s Old S taI ‘ l ’ - - - M^HONE & SWANN Prop. - Covington, Ga. v ......... v .......j. ,v.v 4 Have You Poultry Troubles ? Cure the liver and you cure the bird. Nearly all poultry troubles are due to a disordered liver. Thousands of poultry raisers who use it all year isasplend.dcureonvc, round to keep their flocks in good health, highly trouble, roup and ch.c recommend cholera. Given h-ed-JVA re* ^ with the fa 1 an Dpa TV»p STOCK doses, it also ' - JJCC SJCC & POULTRY excellent tomt owej MEDICINE Purcell OH* It’s a liver Medicine. and Sl’ P^ " an ’ Also 25c, 50 c dealer s. a strengthing Tonic. At your p gj.