Newspaper Page Text
m
Hg jSfiyi I.
O Q AY, you’ll have a streak of smokeluck that'll
put pep-in-ymir-smokemotor, all right, if you’ll
ring-in with a jimmy pipe or cigarette papers and
nail some Prince Albert for packing!
Just between ourselves, you appealing all along the smoke line.
never will wise-up to high-spot- Men who never before could
smoke-joy until you can call a pipe smoke a pipe and men who've
by its first name, then, to hit the smoked pipes for years all testify
peak-of-pleasure you land square lo the delight it hands out! P. A.
on that two - £1 rted-tr.an -tobacco, can’t bite or parch! Both are
Prince Albert 1 cut out by our exclusive patented
Well, sir, you’ll be so all-fired process!
happy you’ll want to get a photo¬ Right now while the going’s
graph of yourself breezing up the good you get out your old jimmy
pike with your smokethrottle wide pipe or the papers and land on
open ! 'Talk about smoke-sport! some P. A. for what ails your
Quality makes Prince Albert so particular smokeappetite !
You buy Prince Albert everywhere tobacco is sold, Toppy red bans,
t'dymd tinu, hand tome pound and half pound tin humidor *—■and
- that cfescy, practical pound crystal gloss humidor With sponge
Copyright J. Reynolds 181U laoizteacr tjp that keeps &he tobecco in such perfect condition *
Ly Tubucco R Co,
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C,
J. I. GUINN’S GASH 8 T 0 HE
SPOT CASH! Now goods of sea¬
ONE PRICE! son am vine even
BIO VALUES! fV w days.
-V’ T 1, f
'■La . 2 b
©
Cc \
Remnant See
a! t:io \(1 »}r (j» tii and the
Covington Oil Mill. . . ,
Rpq l M hid* on any amount.
Partertfata Oil
Covington Cotton
mmmmmmmmmBsmmsi
IT’S NOT YOUR HEART
IT’S YOUR
Kidnty disease is no respecter of per
*o»s A majority of the ills afflicting
j | People kidney today can be traced back to
trouble.
The kidneys are the most important
irtrana of the body. They are the
llterera, the purifiers, of your blood,
KMney disease is usually indicated by
rearineas, sleeplessness, nervousness,
geapondency, se. pain in loins backache, stomach trou¬
til atones, and lower abdomen,
ad lumbago. gravel, rheumatism, sciatica
[All these derangements are nature's
Ignals to warn you that the kidneys
>®d S.UA1, help. you should use GOLD
Haarlem Oil Capsules imme¬
Job Work 110at.lv and quickly
* * *
THE COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGTON, GA„ THURSDAY, JANUARY 9. 1919
“UNCLE SAM” AND
THE HOME GARDEN
Well Known Civlo Leader Showe Hew
a Vegetable Garden Will Cut The
Family Store Bill In Half
Atlanta, Ua.—(Special.)—“Few peo¬
ple realize the actual money-saving
power of the home vegetable garden
and what it can be made to contrib¬
ute in the way of food for the fam¬
ily table,’’ pays President H. G. Has¬
tings, of the Georgia State Chamber
' of Commerce, and the Southeastern
Fair, in discussing the matter of food
■ supply for the South in 1919.
j “Uncle Sam, through the United
! States Department of Agriculture,”
I said Mr. Hastings, "estimated the
value of the vegetables produced last
I year in home gardens of the United
j States at three hundred and fifty mil
i lion of dollars. This means that much
actually saved by the garden makers
! from their store bills,
j “Whenever there is lack of food or
; money to buy food, no matter wheth¬
er it be due to world wide food scarc
| ity, boll weevil word ‘Uncle damage Sam’ or other cause, out
the first passes
| to the sufferer is to make a good big
home garden. Why? Because the
right kind of a home garden is the
diately. The soothing, healing oil stim¬
ulates the kidneys, relieves inflamma
tions and destroys the germs which
have caused it. Do not wait until to¬
morrow. Go to your druggist today and
Insist on GOLD MEDAL. Haarlem Oil
Capsules. ._In twenty-four hours you
should feel health and vigor returning
and will bless the day vou first heard
of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil.
After you feel that you have cured
yourself, continue to take one or two
capsules each day, so as to keep in
firet-class condition and ward off tha
danger of other attacks.
Ask for the original imported GOLD
MEDAL brand. Three sizes. Money re¬
funded if they do not help you.
food supply there is.
“The great trouble here in the South
is that our people don’t take the home
garden seriously enough, or give it
the attention that its importance as a
food producer and mouey-savar Justi¬
fies. It is mostly made with a lick
and a promise’ and the cultivation and
replanting it gets during the growing
season is mostly of the unfulfilled
promise kind.
: -With the present and eertain-to be
continued high food prices on the one
hand, and the very great uncertainty
as to the price that cotton or other
cash crops will sell for next fall, it is
a time above all others to play safe.
“This is no time to gamble on cot
ton. None of us can tell within 15
cents a pound what it will sell for
next fall. The farmer who makes few
or no store debts for food, producing
his own and family needs on homo
acr~s, is safe regardless of cotton
■prices, and lie is the only one who
is safe.
’ The right kind of a home garden
maintained all through the season and
given a square deal in the way of cul¬
tivation, is the greatest store-biU-Cut
i ter on record, A quarter to half an
acre garden for the average family
will cut the store bill in half.”
DR W. C. WRIGHT
i DENTIST
i Ifn e Rhone No. 195. Residence l'hon*
No. 23C-W.
OTire in Anderson fluildlng.
The most accurate methods used In
all lines of dentistry. Work that pre
sonts an artistic api>enranoe and has
i
I lasting qualities. The later- methods
j employed. employed, Reasonable iteasouanie prices. prices. Satis ;
fflct,ocguaranteed Seeai ®* bout your
i sfonfral dental urArl* work.
! ! -j / I 1 7^*9
i, v! ' b i
Of ^ V if ! ''M
Outlook Of The Southern Farmer
CHARLE8 A. WHITTLE,
Soil Improvement Committee, Atlanta, Ga.
Prosperity glows on the horizon of the Southern farmer’s future—if
he will raise big crops.
And the cry of a needy world rises, urging the Southern farmer to
grow big crops of cotton a»d food. His obligation is to respond. He must
fight on, for peace brings no armistice for the farm.
Cotton is the hope of the ragged world. War-torn countries are look¬
ing to the fields of the South for help. It will not be in vain. The
Southern fanner will meet his responsibility.
Prices at which cotton crop will be sold will be such as will pay
the fanner well, for the fact jvill remain that the world must have the
cotton.
The food most needed in Europe is fat. Cotton seed, peanuts and
soy beans of the South will find ready market for the oil or fats that they
contain, Cattle, hogs and dairy products will continue to bring good prices
because of the heavy live stock losses of Europe,
The Southern farmer should plan with an expectation of improving
his labor condition, with the return of troops and the shutting down of
ammunition factories.
Immediate Preparation.
Preparation for spring planting should go rapidly ahead. Seed, fertil¬
izers and other farm supplies should be bought without delay. Materials
on which the government has fixed prices will continue to be stabelized
until they are consumed, so that there are no prospects of lower prices
before spring planting.
Delay means to face shipping difficulties. The railroads are going to
be overburdened with traffic for some time to come. They should J>e gives
Abundant time.
FREE PHOTO OF MARSHAL
HAIG IN NEXT SUNDAY'S
ATLANTA AMERICAN
Handsome Rotogravure Photo¬
graph of Field Marshal Sir
Douglas Haig, Commander
Of The British Armies,
In Next Sunday’s
Atlanta Amer¬
ican.
In each copv of The Atlanta Sun¬
day American of January 12th, will
be included a beautiful rotagravure
photograph of Field Marshal Sir
Douglas Haig, commander of the
armies of Britain, and one of the
greatest of British generals.
The name of Haig will rank with
those of Marlborough, Wellington and
Kitchener in British history.
It was Haig who took hold of the
British army and welded it into a
fighting machine which helped repulse
and defeat the Imperial German
Army.
It was Haig who won the Battle
ox the Somme iu the Summer of 1916,
the first victory of he Allies after
the defense at the Marne and at Ver¬
dun.
This Spring when the Allied cause
looked darkest, it was Haig who call¬
ed upon his men to fight with their
“backs against the wall”, and they
rallied as thev did under Wellington
at Waterloo and Nelson at Trafal¬
gar.
Be sure of getting your copy by
seeing The Georgian American News
Agent in your city today, and get
him to enter your order for the Sun¬
day American of Jar 12th. Delay
may mean disappointment, The as only
the issues of Sunday American
ordered in advance will be published.
■{*+
DR. W. B- STANLEY, *
Covington, Ga.,
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Office over WrighPs Drugstore
ft ' H 1 ♦
o>j®D Xwouooa u
pjOAy pue
9ujnue£> em 49$
'
NOT WISE ABOUT OSTRICHES
Grave Difficulties Seem to Surround
Scheme Devised by a Soldier Who?
Wants a Mascot
The machine-gun sergeant at Don#*
las who wants an ostrich for a mas*
cot and is willing to hatch it himself
if somebody will provide him with ail
egg, does not know much about os¬
triches or the task in which he pro¬
poses to enlist, in the opinion of the
Arizona Republican. If he gets the
egg and is not otherwise restricted, he i
might as well be mustered out of the
service. The Germans will be at peace
so far as he is concerned.
He has perhaps been misled by
stories he has heard of the careless, j
irresponsible way in which the ostrich ’
race is perpetuated, by the laying of
the egg in the sand, where it is left to
its own devices until it becomes an
ostrich. That may happen In Africa,
where there is plenty of sand and heat, \
but it will not work in the climate of I
Douglas, where, though there Is no
lack of sand the sun cannot be count¬
ed upon to assist in the business of
Incubation. The sergeant would have
to go to setting. !
Moreover, the ostrich Is a bird of
slow growth. It would be a long
time before one coming forth from
the egg could become a potent Influence
in the struggle between autocracy and
doz^oei-acy. By the time it would be
in readiness to Im jaken to Berlin the
w ar would be ovex an3 oniySfalstoriane
would yet be talking about it.
We would recommend some other
kind of mascot, one of quicker though
even of less sturdy and magnificent
growth.
Taking the Philo&ophlo View.
“I don’t see you out In your auto any
more,” said the first north aider to hl»
friend. Last summer you were gone
all the time; no day was too hot, no*
road too dusty, no storm too hard, no
discomfort too great to keep you at
home.”
“Well,” mused the second, "the price
of everything is getting so high that
auto riding for pleasure is really a
luxury and not a necessity, so that it
was no trouble at all for me and my
wife to find for the first time this sum¬
mer that the roads are hot and dusty,
that it is a whole lot of trouble to
clean up the machine after a long ride,
that it is much better to sit In your
own rocking chair on the cool front
porch at night, while the north wind
fans your cheeks, etc., ad in. So now
the car stays in the garage a great
deal more, there is no wear on the
tires and the mechanism is not sub¬
jected to such strain as it used to be,
and the car will last much longer.”—
Indianapolis News.
To Have House Painted.
It was a simple boyish letter writ¬
ten in London by a youth from Wor¬
cester, Mass., with a little bit of news,
a little bit of complaint, and a great
big bit of confidence in what %e and
the Americans were going to do; but
the better part by far was: **l have
saved my pay for some time now, and
I want to give dad a surprise by hav¬
ing the old house painted. Won’t you
please let me know how much it will
cost? and I’ll send you the money and
leave the rest to you, but you mustn't
let dad know who Is paying for it."
That same evening on a train, among
the missing anil reported as a prison¬
er, I read the name of the aviator who
wrote the letter.—The Outlook.
Portable Houses Form Hospitals.
The Unfted States navy, with knock¬
down houses contributed by the Amer¬
ican Red Cross, has been able to erect
a base hospital of 250 beds on an old
estate on the Irish coast. These port¬
able houses, ready to bolt together,
solved the problem of lumber short¬
age. The hospital has a staff of 123
physicians and attendants and main¬
tains its own vegetable garden, dalzj
and poultfy farm.
FOR SALE—Seven-room house, in¬
cluding bath and stoveroom. New¬
ly repaired. Four blocks of the
public square. J. M. Davis, Cov¬
ington. Ga. 49-tf
FOR SALE—Oxford, Ga., neat, spa¬
cious cottage, on two acre lot.
Good’orchard. Apply to D. Rum¬
ble, Oxford. Ga. 49-2t
DODGE FOR SALE—Five-passen¬
ger model in good condition. Will
sell at a bargain.—J. L. Elliott
Covington, Ga. - 6 ftf
STENO-B 00 KKEEPER—Wants po¬
sition in Covington in order to be
near home town, Swords, Ga. Ex¬
perience in wholesale busines.
Reference given. Get in immedi¬
ately. Address C. Jones, Cornelia,
Ga. Box 455. 49
WANTED—To learn of good farm or
business for sale in Newton or ad¬
joining county. State price and
particulars.—H. C. Denton, Hart
Seile, Ala
Notice Debtors and Creditors.
All persoins hoildling claims
against the estate oif Zeal Par
j ker, late oif said coiunty, de¬
ceased, are called upon to ren¬
der their demands in terms of
the law. and all persons owing
said estate to make immediate
1 payment.
r I, L. PARKER, Adm‘r.
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GET SLOAN S FOR
YOUR PAIN RELIEF
You don’t have to rub it in
to get quick, comfort¬
ing relief
Once you’ve tried it on that stiff
joint, sore muscle, sciatic pain, rheu¬
matic twinge, lame back, you’ll find
a warm, soothing relief you never
j thought a liniment could produce.
Won’t 6tain the skin, leaves no muss,
wastes no time in applying, A large sure bottle to
give quick results.
means economy. Your own or any
other druggist has it. Get it today.
Sloan’s Liniment
Ltills Pain
. ...... .... ....... . ...... . .................................
The News does all kinds of Job Printing,