Newspaper Page Text
. THE eovmamn saws, common, GA» man“. My 22, 1919. "
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M ;
WOULD YOU KNOWINGLY, AND WITH PERMIS¬ !
SION, ALLOW A SEVERAL HUNDRED POUND ROCK m,
TO BE TIED TO YOUR CAR ? OF COURSE NOT! Ifj •X % .-I
But when you buy at ran- into the oil case, and thence redistributed, until the bear
dorn, any sort of Motor Oil, inga and pistons and combustion chambers begin to cake '
you give the power m your up with carbon. Then you have a badly overheated engine. .
motor just about the same Ordinary oils can not stand the lest of heat, which the
‘‘knock out” blow, as if you fast working of the motor runs up to from 200 to 1000
had a weight dragging on be¬ degrees F. Ordinary oils break down under this terrible
hind. temperature, and leaves your engine and motor and their
The perpetual of intricate, close-working parts at the mercy of expansion;
its power your and the reaction of this sort cf doings will shortly leave
99 car, pulling efficiency, its your motor in the “rattle-trap” class.
“pep” io get up and step, de¬
pends upon the way you take Play safe, and not only buy the best oil—“GREEN
care of it; and that care in the MAIN is CORRECT LU¬ FLAG” Oil, but the proper body and consistency for your
BRICATION. particular car. The following well-known and reliable
dealers in this county are exclusive agents for “GREEN
When your engine bucks, knocks, loses power, and FLAG” MOTOR OIL, and will guarantee its quality, and
easuy overheats, ten times out of nine, there is a deposit- the correct body for your car. It will pay you to DRIVE
ing of destructive elements in the oil being forced through OUT OF YOUR WAY to get this very superior Motor
the lubricating channels of the oiling system, getting back Oil and accept no substitutes.
Weaver & Pittman
Covington, Georgia
l- '
■
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___ ..
[iiziatmeMust ,PleaseYou
|Make whatever no mistake.®At
price j^ou bet¬ pay,
you coffee cannot value get a than.
ter
Luzianne. farther S)IF and it doesn't
GUARANTEE go taste coP
tire esm IS, according contents after using of to en¬ the di¬ better than any
every grocer rection*, not satisfied respect.your will you refund are in tee the you merchant ever had,go who sold to
the money you paid
tor It.
EVERY POUND
SOLD IN AS AIR¬
TIGHT TIN CAN
J antee isyour prote<
1 coffee
The R eily-Taylor Company
New Orleans
No Wasting
of Bar Soap!
■\TO— decidedly no, when
GRANDMA is around.
No bar soap lying in
water wasting away. Nochipping,
slicing or GRANDMA shaving off more wonderful than you
need. is a
soap—and it is Powdered. That’s
the big secret. You just measure
out what you need, no more. Sprinkle like
it in the tub and presto—just
magic, millions of glorious, cleansing
suds in an instant. Then, the whitest,
fEEU cleanest, freshest clothes that ever
bung on a wash line.
Tty this Powdered Soap Today!
Grandma's Powdered Soap
Saves TIME—Saves WORK—Saves SOAP
Your Grocer Has It!
J. I. GUINN’S CASH STORE
SPO i CASH! New goods of sea
ONE PRICE! soil arriving every
BIG VALUES! few days. ;j
J. I. GUINN
Covington, Georgia
am*m
L%.VI
SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY
BRINGS SURE RELIEF
For 200 yeors GOLF MED AT, Haarlem
Oil hits enabled suffering humanity to
withstand ntlscks of kidney, liver,
bladder and stomach troubles and all
diseases connected with the urinary
organs and to build up and restore to
health organs weakened by disease.
These most important organs must be
watched, because they filler and purify work
the blood; unless they do their
you are doomed.
Wear in ess. aleeplesanesa, nervousness,
despondency, backache, stomach trou
bln, pains In the loins and Tower ab¬
domen, gravel, difficulty whsn urinat¬
all ing, rheumatism, of trouble sciatica with and your lumbago Kid¬
warn you MT5DAL Haarlem Oil Cap¬
neys GOLD
★ ★★★★★★ ★★ ★ ★ ★ ★★★★★★★ ★
* 2- harm
:
15ti acres in Rocky Plains district can sell von, worth the money
51 Almon, Ga. Well improved. $4,000,00 A(
acres near
100 acres one mile from Covington, on public road leading to ■
Aloovy. Will sell as a whole or sub-division.
* J. T. Swann, Codington, Ga j
sules are the remedy you need. Take
three or four every day. The healing
oil soaks into the cells and lining of
the kidneys and drives out the poisons.
New life awd health will surely follow.
When your normal vigor has been re¬
stored continue treatment for a while
to keep yourself in condition and pre¬
vent a return of the disease.
Don't wait until you are Incapable of
Haarlem fighting. Start taking OOL/D MEDAL
Oil Capsules today. Tour drug¬
gist will cheerfully refund your money
if you are not satisfied with results,
But be sure to get the original Import¬
ed GOLD MEDAL and accept no sub¬
stitute* In three sizes. Sealed pack¬
ages. At all drug stores.
GEORGIA, Newton County.
Will be sold before the
House door, in said county,
public outcry, on the first
day in June, 1919, within
legal hours of sale, the
described property, to-wit:
Automobile, Olympian
1918, model five, serial
3769. Said property levied
by virtue of a mortgage fi fa
sued from the Superior
1 of said county in favor of Agri¬
cultural Credit Co., Inc., vs. L. H.
Franklin.
This May 5, 1919.
S. M. HAY,
Sheriff Newton County, Ga.
CITATION.
Newton County;
C. W. Jackson represents in
his petition duly filed of record
that he has fully administered
the estate of A. L. Jackson, late
of said county, deceased, and
prays for Letters of Dismission
from his executorship. All per¬
sons concerned are hereby noti¬
fied to show cause, if any they
can, why he should not be dis¬
missed as prayed for, and said
application will be heard on the
first Monday in June, next 1919.
A. D. MEADOR, Ordinary.
CITATION.
GEORGIA, Newton County:
Marshall Lott has applied for
Letters of Administration to
issue to him on the estate of Mrs
Ella Lott, late of said county,
deceased, and all persons are
hereby notified to show cause,
if any they can, why letters
should not issue as prayed for,
and same will be heard on the
first Mondav in June, next 1919.
This May 5, 1919.
A. D. MEADOR, Ordinary.
CITATION.
GEORGIA. Newton County:
C. I. Ogletree represents in
his petition duly filed of
that he has fully
the estate of W. A.
late of said county,
and prays to be dismissed ^
his executorship. This is
( | all
fore to cite persons
ed to show cause, if any
can. why he should noa be
missed as prayed for: and
application will be heard on
first Mondav in June, next
This May 5. 1919.
A. D. MEADOR, Ordinary
CITATION.
GEORGIA. Newton County.
C. U. Skinner,
on the estate of N. J.
late of said county,
has applied for Leave to Sell
the real estate of said
for the purpose of paying
and distribution. All
concerned are hereby notified
file their objections thereto
or before the first Monday
June, next 1919, when said
cation will be heard.
This May 5. 1919.
A. D. MEADOR.
MARSHAL’ SALE.
GEORGIA, New ton County.
Will be sold before the Court
House door, in the City of
ington, within the legal hours
sale, on the first Tuesday in
June. 1919, the following
scribed property, to-wit:
vacant lot in Eastern part
City,containing one-half acre,
more or less, and bounded as
follows: On South by Conyers
street; on West by Carl Smith;
on North by Mrs. Pauline Jar¬
man ; on East by Butler Avenue.
Said property levied on as the
property of C. G. Smith, to sat¬
isfy a City Tax fi fa, issued by
the City Clerk, in favor of the
Oitv of Covington against C. G
Smith. Written notice served
as reouired by law.
This Mav 5. 1919.
B. BOHANAN,
Deputy Mar. City of Covington.
FOR SALE—Extra fine, six
week. Duroc pigs, from large
parents. Price SI0.00 each.
R. L. PAINE, Oxford, Ga.~2t.
A Cordial Welcome.
Awaits my friends and
tomers at the Greenfield
ing Soda Company, 136
ta Street. Atlanta, and the
tation is wide open, Call
i see us. Z. A. STEELE.
Moat people who try to make but¬
ter find that it is a very hard Job
to do right. When it is put on the
market they find oftentimes that it
does not bring the top price. The
reason for this is that it is lacking
in quality.
The following hints for making
good butter are given by Prof. Wil¬
liam H. Howell, Dairy Husbandman
of the Georgia State College of Agri¬
culture.
Use a floating dairy thermometer
and do not guess at temperatures.
Milk and cream should be ripened or
"turned” at SB or 70 degrees Fahren¬
heit. Stir milk or cream occasionally
while it is “turning” or ripening. Reg¬
ulate the temperature of milk or
cream (before churning is begun) so
the butter will come in about thirty
minuteB. NEVER pour warm or hot
water into the cream or milk.
Be sure to scald and cool churn
and other utensils before using.
Strain cream into church to remove
lumps of curd or clabber and add
enough color (a pure vegetable prod¬
uct) before starting the churn, to give
the butter a deep straw color. After
a few revolutions, open the churn to
allow the gas to escape. When the
butter particles have attained the
siae of grains of wheat or small gar¬
den peas, stop churning.
Draw off buttermilk through a
coarse strainer to catch particles of.
butter, which otherwise would be
lost. The butter should be wasjied
until the wash water is clear. Salt
the butter in the granular condition,
using a heaping tablespoonful of salt
to each pound,of butter. Work the
butter only enough to dissolve the
salt.
Mould the butter into brick-shaped
print# and wrap it in butter paper 8
inches wide and 11 inches long. Prac¬
tice shows that all utensils should be
rinsed with cool or lukewarm water
to remove milk, and washed thor¬
oughly with brush, using hot water
In which washing soda has been dis¬
solved. Never use soap. Scald all
utensils with boiling water and let
them dry from the heat that is left
in them. NEVER use a dishcloth in
the dairy work for washing or drying
any utensil.
GIVE THE DAIRY COW I
THE BEST Iff CARE
Feed Her Kindness And Watch
Results
Perhaps In Borne sections of the
country more attention, ha# been giv¬
en to the proper and scientific feed¬
ing of the dairy cow than In others.
The question of feeding a cow to get
a maximum production is by no
means a recent one. Fanners in new
dairy section# are constantly demand¬
ing the be#t ration to feed their cows.
The answer to this question is the ra¬
tion which has as its basis the idea of
greatest production at the least cost.
Oftentimes it may* not be necessary to
consider the matter of cost. This, of
course, only occurs where milk is con-,
eidered a hy-product of the business
rather than the main source of reve¬
nue. A breeder must provide favor¬
able condition# for his herd aside
from furnishing the right amount and
kind of feed. These conditions are
a# follows, say# Prof. T, Q, Yaxis,
Georgia State College of Agriculture:
The stables should be well lighted.
At least four square feet of glass apace
should bq provided f5r each cow.
Purs air is necessary. To obtain
this condition a proper system of yen-,
tllatleo should be installed. This is
very inexpensive and easy to install.
Every dairy should be provided with
the proper ventilation in order that
the health of the animals may be the
beet at all times.
Pure and abundant water should be
readily available. Water not only *»»
slats in the proper digestion of thy
diffetent feeds that the eow con¬
sumes, but it ia also necessary to fur¬
nish the large amount of water that
miik contains. Eighty-seven per cant
of milk is water. A cow need 15 as
much *e ten to twelve gallons of wa¬
ter a day.
Salt should be fed regularly, At
least one ounce a day should be given
either alone or mixed with the grain.
Perhaps the moBt important of ail"
the points given under conditions Is
kindness. Feed kindness to a cow,,
and you will reap wonderful results^
Unnecessary noise, pushing cow#/
roughly handling them, dogs and
clubs have absolutely no place in the
dairy stable If high production is the
goal.
EXTENSION SCHOOLS.
Pour-day extension schools will bf
held at nine of the eleven district agri¬
cultural schools during the month be¬
ginning July 8, announces the Geor«
gia State College of Agriculture. The;
dates for the meeting# are as follows:
Douglas, July 1-8; Statesboro and
Baraeavifie, July 8-11; Granite Hitt
and Madison, July 15-18; Monroe and
Carrollton, July 22-25; and Powder
Springs and Clarkesville, July 29 to
Aigqat 1, Boys’ and Girls’ club work
H 6 feature of the pro
The Mews does all kinds of Job Printing