The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, April 06, 1916, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
PAGE SIX SOUTHEAST ENTERS ACTIVE SPRING AND SUMMER ALL INDUSTRIES IS FORE¬ CASTED—MANY NEW EN¬ TERPRISES START. The Industrial Index, published Columbus, Ga., for the Southeast, says: “The Southeast will enter the sec ond quarter of the year with full steam ahead. “With the ending of the first quarter there is a great volume of substantial Industrial and construction activity throughout this section, with pros¬ pects for an exceedingly busy Spring and Summer. Important construction operations are under way and a larger number are definitely planned for the immediate future. New industrial en¬ terprises are being established upon a larger scale in numerous instances than in months before. “Total of twenty-two corporations have been formed in the past week with minimum capital stocks aggre¬ gating $1,416,500. “A lumber company lias been organ¬ ized at Savannah, Ga., with capital stock of $1,000,000, and will begin ex¬ tensive operations soon. Ground has been broken for the foundations for the sugar refinery to be established in Sa¬ vannah at a cost of about $3,500,000. “A company with capital stock of $500,000 will operate sawmills in the vicinity of Gulf Pine, Fla. “A contract has been awarded for the erection in Clarksdale, Miss., of a six-story bank and office building to cost $146,500. “A company has been formed to build an electric railway between Birming¬ ham, Aia., and the Warrior River and Jasper. “A Jacksonville, Fla., bank building will be remodeled at a cost of $160,000 or more. “Among the items of construction work to be done, as reported this week, are: “Apartment house, Miami, Fla.; courthouse, Wheeler county, Ga.; courthouse and roads, Lee county, Ga.; church buildings, Greenville, S. C., three, Miami, Fia., Jacksonville, Fla., and Thomasville, Ga r ; bridges and road, Manatee county, Fla.; a district of Broward county, Fla., has voted $150,000 of bonds for building roads and bridges and a district of DeSoto county will expend $130,000 for the same purpose; factory building, Grant ville, Ga., and Laurel, Miss.; paving, Clearwater, Fla.; roads, Hinds county, Miss. ;school buildings, Leslie, Ga., Martinsville and Wesson, Miss., New Decatur, Ala., and New Smyrna, Fla.; hotel building to be completed, New Decatur, Ala. Contracts have been awarded for an apartment house in Atlanta, Ga., bridge, Hall county, Ga., and paving, Birmingham, Ala., Colum¬ bia, S. C., and Ft. Pierce and Starke, Fla.” Splendid For Rheumatism. “I think Chamberlain’s Liniment is just splendid for rheumatism,” writes Mrs. Dunburgli, Eldridge, N. Y. “It has been used by myself and other members of my family time and time again during the past six years and has always given the best of satisfaction.” The quick relief from pain which Chamberlain’s Liniment affords is alone worth many times the cost. Ob¬ tainable everywhere. S. D. HAYNIE. Veterinarian. Office at City Pharmacy. Day Phone 4 or 5. Night Phone 1S4-L Calls answered day or night. FITZHUGH LEE LAWYER Abstract and Collecting Work Solicited. Room 18 Star Building. EXTRA GOOD COTTON SEED FOR SALE at D. A. Thompson's Ware¬ house, $1 per bushel. W. A. ELLING¬ TON.—Adv. (4-6, 2 QUICK SERVICE 2 MONEY *—* O 0 2 - z H TO LOAN H On desirable Farming *< H Lands. Long time and H O Easy Payments with C reasonable rates. - - H r o J. L. NEWTON c > Social Circle, Ga. > 1 2 i EASY PAYMENT s DR. EDWARDS NOW PROMINENT GEORGIA PHYSICIAN NOW GIVES MASTER MED¬ ICINE HIS UNQUALIFIED ENDORSEMENT. Dr. J. T. Edwards, of Fayetteville, Ga., one of the best known members of the medical profession in the state of Georgia, makes a statement that will undoubtedly produce a profound impression throughout the South. “In my thirty years of active prac¬ tice as a licensed physician in the state of Georgia,” says Dr. Edwards, “I have never seen anything to equal Tanlac as a medicine to produce re¬ sults. I hear iteople on all sides tell¬ ing of the benefits they have derived from its use. “Tanlac is simply the talk of my town. I have no hesitancy in recom¬ mending the medicine; and as a matter of fact, I am prescribing it for my pa¬ tients almost every day. “Only a few days ago a well known woman of Fayetteville came to me and told me about the remarkable relief her daughter had gained from the use of this medicine. She said her daugh¬ ter had been confined to her bed for three years with what had been pro¬ nounced pellagra, and that after us¬ ing Tanlac for a short time she was able to be about, and was on the road to recovery. “But this is only one instance. Peo¬ ple in all walks of life in and around our little city are giving similar in¬ dorsements to the medicine. Seldom a day passes that someone does not coiue to me and say something about the good results they are getting from the use of Tanlac. "Several unusual gains in weight have been reported by some of our most prominent people, and I have treated some stubborn cases of indiges¬ tion, catarrhal conditions, and organic disorders and secured splendid results, with Tanlac.” Commenting upon this statement, Mr. G. F. Willis, southern distributor of Tanlac, said: “Coming from the high source it* does, and especially from a member of the medical profession, this straight¬ forward utterance of Dr. Edwards is more than a recommendation. It is a triumph! Tanlac, Nature’s great vegetable tonic, corrective and system builder, is truly one of the greatest discoveries of the decade, and the best evidence of this is the confidence and high esteem in which it is held, not only by the great masses of the peo¬ ple, but by leaders and public men everywhere. No other medicine has ever established the reputation Tanlac lias, nor has any other received the high indorsement of medical men and laity.” Tanlac is sold by the City Pharmacy in Covington, Ga.; by Johnson’s Phar¬ macy in Mansfield, Ga.; by J. T. & J. W. Pitts in Newborn, Ga.; by H. I. Weaver A Co., in I’orterdale, Ga.; by C. C. Estes at Covington, Ga., R. F. D. No. 4; by Hitchcock & Campbell, Mansfield, Ga., It. F. D.—Adv. EARLY TRIUMPH AND GOLDEN sweet potato plants, ready April 1st. Plants drawn and shipped day order received. No disappointment. Barnes Plant Co., Milledgeville, Ga.—Adv. should be "nipped in the bud”, for if allowed to run unchecked, serious results may follow. Numerous cases of consumption, pneu¬ monia, and other fatal dis¬ eases, can be traced back to a cold. At the first sign of a cold, protect yourself by thoroughly cleansing your system with a few doses of THEDFORD'S BLACK DRAUGHT the old reliable, vegetable liver powder. Mr. Chas. A. Ragland, o Madison Heights, Va., says: "I have been using Thed ford’s Black-Draught for stomach troubles, indiges¬ tion and colds, and find it to be the very best medicine I ever used. It makes an old man feel like a young one.” Insist on Thedford’s, the original and genuine. E-67 THE COVINGTON NEWS. COVINGTON, GA., APRIL 6, 1916. STATEMENT of the Ownership, Management, Circu¬ lation, Etc., Required by the Act of Congress of August 24, 1912., of The Covington News, Published Weekly at Covington, Georgia, for April 1st, 1916. State of Georgia, County of Newton. Before me, a Notary Public iu and for the state and county aforesaid, personally appeared Frank Reagan, who, having been duly sworn accord¬ ing to law, deposes and says that be is the Editor and Publisher of THE COVINGTON NEWS, and that the fol¬ lowing is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statement of the ownership, managerment, etc., of the aforesaid publication for thedateshown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in section 443, Postal Laws and Regula¬ tions, printed on the reverse side of this form, to-wit: 1. That the names and addresset of the publisher, editor, managing ed¬ itor, and business managers are: Publisher, Frank Reagan, Covington, Georgia. Editor, Frank Reagan, Covington, Georgia. Managing Editor, Frank Reagan, Covington, Georgia. Business Manager, Frank Reagan, Covington, Georgia. 2. That tlie owners are: The title is in Messrs R. R. Fowler, Covington, Ga.; R. E. Stephenson, Cov¬ ington, Ga.; T. J. Harwell, Washing¬ ton, Ga.; ,T. O. Martin, Covington, Ga.; Dr. Luke Robinson, Covington, Ga.; 3. That the known bondholders, mortgagees, and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortagages, or other securities are: None, except the equity in the same owned by Frank Reagan, under a conditional purchase, on which the sum of One Thousand ($1,000.00) Dollars has been paid. 4. That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the own¬ ers, stockholders, and security hold¬ ers, if any, contain not only the list of stockholders as they appear upon tlie books of the company but also, in where the stockholder or security holder appears upon the books of the as trustee or in any other relation, the name of the per¬ or corporation for whom such trus¬ is acting, is given; also that the two paragraphs contain state¬ embracing affiiant’s full knowl¬ and belief as to tlie circumstances But it takes Virginia to give cigarette “character 9 7 a 4 ‘ p HARACTER’ * !-that’s what every smoker wants in his cigarette. But it takes Virginia to give a cigarette that life and zest called “character”f That’s why Virginia is called “the tobacco man’s tobacco. ” Piedmonts have in them only the highest-grade Virginia—ALL Vir¬ ginia! Golden, lively, mellow as southern sunshine! NOTE : Virginia tobacco pays for no duty, no ocean freight, no losses why If you want a cigarette that will from wasteful handling. That is Piedmonts, for instance, made of satisfy you—that will say “char¬ highest-grade Virginia, grown right here in the U.S.A. can afford to give acter” in every puff then next you better quality than a cigarette of foreign-grown tobacco w'hich has to time, ask for Piedmonts ! carry ail those wasteful expenses. fLfj&U<tjttif&i±dc£xzcco Car. =1 The ALL Virginia cigarette— The Cigarette of Quality lO £oy 5 $ ioi eAlso Packed 20 for lO£ VALUABLE COUPON IN EACH PACKAGB ami conditions under which stockhold¬ ers and security holders who do not appear upon tlie books of the com¬ pany as trustees, hold stock and se¬ curities in a capacity other than than of a bona fide owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, association, or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in said stock, bonds, or other securities man so stated by him. (Signed) FRANK REAGAN. Sworn to and subscribed before„me this 30th day of March, 1916. Witness: Witness: T. F. AIKEN, C. N. I*. Newton Co. Ga. (SEAL) My Commission expires Jan¬ uary 31, 1917. HIS AGE IS AGAINST HIM. “1 am 52 years old and I have been troubled with kidneys and bladder for a good many years,” writes Arthur Jones, Allen, Kuns. “My age is against me to ever get cured, hut Foley Kidney Pills do me more good than anything I ever tried.” Rheuma¬ tism, aching hack, shooting pains, stiff joints, irregular action, all have been relieved. For sale by C. C. Brooks. NOTICE. I have been appointed Local Cor¬ respondent for a strong company, to place Jong time farm loans at a rate one per cent cheaper to tlie farmer than for several years. I would like to have a few choice applications from Newton, Walton, Morgan or Rockdale counties. R. W r . MILNER, Attoreny. Covington, Ga. WANTED —Several fresh milch cows. Apply to S. P. Thomas, Cov¬ ington, Ga., Call 161-6.—Adv. Men’s Spring and Sum¬ mer tailoring books have arrived and the same big values as we offer you in other lines fit styles quality workman¬ ship fully guaranteed come and see them. J. I. GUINN. Told That There Was No Cure For Him. “After suffering for twenty years with indigestion and having some of the best doctors here tell me there was no cure for me, I think it only right to tell you for tlie sake of other sufferers as well as your own satisfaction that at 25 cent bottle of Chamberlain’s Tab¬ lets not only relieved me, but cured me within two months, although I am a man of 65 years,” writes Jul. Gro bien, Houston, Texas. . Obtainable everywhere. FOR RENT —A good five-room house with water and lights. Apply to Adv. tf.) j. H. CAMP. A GOOD DINNER and Supper and Breakfast too are what you easily get with OUR SPLENDID STOVES AND RANGES. Cooking become a pleasure when done on THE ENTERPRISE. Good cooking is the cheapest. You make it easy to secure by buying an Enterprise. Any size, and style, any price, and every one worth the money. Stephenson Hardware Co. COVINGTON GEORGIA. Potato and Tomato Plants Best and purest varieties, weather hardened and well pack¬ ed. '3000 or less $1.75; 4000 more $1.50 per thousand. P bage Plants $1.00. Up, staple cotton seed and Velvet beans. Discriptive catalogue. We gill give you a fair deal. Ask about us. H. & R. Ballard Ashbum, Georgia.