Newspaper Page Text
ms $7?,oou
ON 1U LAW
reports to the state boarc
SHOW AMOUNT OF BUDGET
FOR YEAR .920
suit KEW£ or INTEREST
grief News Of Importance Gatherec
From All Parts Oi
The State
Atlanta.- Reports to Doctor Hay
good of the rural sanitation division
—state board ol health- show that
the fourteen counties now operating
under the Ellis health law hu\e laid
out budgets aggregating work $77,000 this to be j j
expended in sanitation year
Glynn county leads all tiie counties
with budget oi $16,000. The amounts 1
a
to be paid out by the others follow:
Baldwin, $4,000; Bartow, $4,000; Cobb
$5,000; Cokiuitt, $.>,000; Floyd, $5,
POO; Laurens, $3,500; Lowndes, $6,500;
Sumter, $2,400; Thomas, $4,000; Tift
$1.<M>0;' Troup, $9,600; Walter, Hart i-s also $4,.
you; ami Worth $4,u00.
operating under the law, but has not
yet furnished a budget of expenses
Dougherty will begin operations uu
iter the law this month.
New Banking Concern Proposed
Newnan.—A new banking company
which Las been organized with a cap
Pal stock of four hundred thousand
dollars and a surplus fund of on«
hundred thousand dollars, has closed
a deal with the Newnan Banking com
t.,:iy l\ which it has just purchased
tjshares of stock of a total number
of 1,250 shares, paying $250 a share,
which gives the new company a con¬
trolling interest in the bank. Applica¬
tion will be made to amend the char¬
ter of i lie Newnan Banking company
to read the Newnan Banking and
Trust company, tiie name under which
the new company will charter.
3,7C0 Acres Change Hands
Louisville.—One of the largest real
estate deals that has been transacted
in this section took place when W.
W. Ramsey of Augusta sold “Old
Town" to the t’arolina Loan and To¬
bacco company of W inston-Salem. It
has been impossible to learn the pur¬
chase price of this estate, hut it is a
very big amount. This tract of land
embraces something like 3,700 acres. It
is one of the oldest estates in this
section that lias not been previously
subdivided and sold to small farmers
This is a very historic old plantation,
as a good many early incidents in
Georgia’s history happened on this old
place.
Southern Metal Trades Dealers Meet
Atlanta.—A meeting of the South¬
ern Metal Trades' association was held
here recently and was featured by
several interesting talks by members
and a luncheon. This association is
composed of manufacturers of iron and
other metal products, owners of ma¬
chine shops and foundries from Vir¬
ginia to Texas and was called for the
purpose of discussing business condi¬
tions. „
Glynn To Have Demonstration Farrr
Brunswick.—Under the auspices ol
the Brunswick board of trade, Glynn
county is to have a demonstration
farm, conducted under the direction ol
the commercial body in charge of R.
V. Ciiue, farming expert. The farm
is located six miles from the city and
includes 265 acres, all cleared, and
ready for cultivation. iUr. Urine has
already commenced work on it.
Livestock Exhibit Planned For Macon
Macon.—Plan* for the first annual
Shorthorn International Live Stock
show to be held in Macon will be
discussed at a meeting of representa¬
tives of livestock breeders’ associa
Rons to be held at the Macon chain*
ber of commerce on March 3. In¬
vitations have been issued to all or¬
ganizations throughout the South in
t‘rested in the development of the live
: 1 1 k industry to -send representatives
>o the meeting here. Premiums, rules
ail(1 dates will be agreed on at the
meeting.
mwMm
THE COVINGTON, NEWS, COVINGTON, GEORGIA, ThuMARCH 4 1920.
IT SIA21
CALLED TO CONFERENCE
Interchurch World Movement Holds Great Gathering in Atlanta
The First Part Of March.
All evangelical ministers of this
> mnty have been invited to join pas¬
tors of all the Protestant churches of
Georgia In a monster conference which
i to be held in Atlanta March 10-12.
'* i* 3 i s the first time in the history of
Fie Christian churches of the state
.oat such a gathering has been held,
: nil great good to the churches is ex-
1‘ Cted to result from the meeting to
! other of denominational leaders from
; 11 the various churches.
1 he conference will be in session
for three days, during this time every
: vailable moment being taken up with
intensive consideration of church
problems, both as they affect Georgia
end the entire Christian field through¬
out the world. It will meet at 2 o’clock
i f the first day, and remain in session
with conferences morning, afternoon
and evening, until the late afternoon
of the third day.
One of the most vital matters which
will be brought up for consideration
will be the results of the religious sur
vpv of the state, which will be present¬
ed through the medium of graphic
charts, maps and picture slides. Al
ihough the survey will not be complet¬
ed at that time, there will be a large
number of the counties of the state
ready for exhibition, and these will
form the basis of consideration.
. The results of the surveys are said
to be very startling in their revelation
of church weakness throughout rural
districts, and they will show many op¬
portunities for concentrated action on
the part of the churches in this state.
The Interchurch World Movement, in
making its surveys, simply discovers
the facts which exist, and then refers
the findings to the churches of each
county and state for whatever action
is deemed necessary by the churches.
Present at the meeting will be some
of the great Christian leaders of the
Gouth and of the nation. Some of the
trongest men In the southern
churches will be in attendance as
speakers. There will also be one or
more of the directing heads of the
Interoliureh World Movement among
the speakers to speak with authority
on whatever features of the movement
TERRIFYING DISCOMFORTS
FROM SKIN DISEASE
Itching and Burning Eruptions
Torture Victims.
If vour skin seems ablaze with
the fiery Burning and itching of
Eczema, real and lasting relief can
only come fro.a treatment that
goes below the surface — that
reaches down to the very source
of the trouble. Skin-diseases come
from a disordered condition of the
blood, and search far and near,
THREE YEARS WITHOUT HOPE
A Story of Sickness and Suffering with Final Return to Health
It will do you good to read It
No matter how long nor how much you havo
suffered, do not give up hope. Do not decide
there is no help for you. There is. Make up
your mind to get well. You can. There is a
remedy In which you may place full reliance
as did Mrs. Rozalia Kania of 39 Silver Street.
New Britain, Conn. This is what she says:
“I had cramps for three years and thought I
would never be any better. I could not eat
without distress. Slept with ray mouth open
and could hardly breathe. No medicine helped
me. I had catarrh of the stomach. Now I
have no cramps and am feeling well and
^ healthy. I wish every suffering person would
take PE-RU-NA.”
*• Citarrh effects the mucous membranes in
T s any organ or part. PE-RU-NA, by regulating
the digestion and aiding elimination, a pure supply of blood
y. and nourishment to the sick and inflamed membranes and health
^ ^ returns.
For coughs, colds, catarrh and catarrhal conditions generally,
PE-RU-NA is recommended. If you are sick, do not wait and suffer.
The sooner you begin using Dr. Hartman’s well-known PE-RU-NA,
the sooner you may expect to be well and strong and in full possession
of your health. A bottle of PE-RU-NA is the finest emergency, ready
to-take remedy to hare in the house. It is fourteen ounces of pre¬
vention and protection.
Sold everywhere In tablet or liquid form.
I r hmpoush£s
BEST FOR HOME SHINES—SAVE THE LEATHER
THE BIG VALUE PACKAGES
Also PASTES and LIQUIDS for Black, Tan and White Shoes
THE F. F. DALLEY CORPORATIONS LTD.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
The conference will open with a
fifteen-minute devotional exercise at 2
o’clock of the first day. This will be
may be investigated by the,ministers
present.
followed by an address on the pur
| poses and scope of the remainder Interchurcli
World Movement. The of
j the the afternoon foreign will then during be devoted which the to
survey,
actual facts as they now exist in the
missionary fields of the world will La
placed before the delegates. The eve¬
ning session will be devoted to the
home survey, both in this state and in
the rest of America.
1 The second days’ session will open
at 9 o’clock in the morning with a de¬
votional exercise. The proceedings oi
the day will be divided into interval
of fifteen and forty-five minutt s f.u
the consideration of many important
subjects. First will come discussion
of religious education, then hospital
and homes and industrial relations
Fifteen minutes will he given to >
literature of the movement anal ah
a financial exhibit of the mover! at’
affairs. American education v. 1 b
allotted a proniinen! place.
In the afternoon, the subjects wil
include evangelism, the field program
financial organization and the < (Lira
tional group. The evening will be-de¬
voted to a general discussion of the
need for such a co-operative movent 1 -:!
as the Interchurcli among the Pros-vt
ant forces of America, especially i:
their relation to home affairs and
world conditions.
The final day will deal with organ¬
ization and the findings of the various
committees which will have been ap¬
pointed for investigation during the
course of the conference.
One of the most important proceed¬
ings of the meeting will be the smaller
conferences of ministers from each
do nomination during the course of the
main conference. There will be time
provided for such meetings in order
that the denominations may determine
upon denominational policies and uni¬
form campaigns covering the entire
state, and may take such action re¬
garding co-operating with other ile
lominational bodies as may seem ad¬
visable,
you cannot find a blood remedy
that approaches S. S. S. for real
the efficiency. S. S. S. has been on
market for fifty years, -luring
which time it has been giving uni¬
form satisfaction for all manner
of blood disorders. If you want
prompt rely and lasting S. relief, you can
upon S. S. For expert ad¬
vice as to the treatment of your
own individual case, write to-day
to Chief Medical Adviser, Swift
Specific Co., l)ept. 44, Atlanta, Ga.
■miip; ifflSltf
m
I
xip'j* • \\ |
-
vy "isao- - .-'A' - --. -A
WORLD'S LARGEST UNCUT GEM
''Black Opal,” Found In Nevada ir
1917, Was a Quarter the Size
of a Brick.
"hat is believed to'be the largeet
uncut gem in the world hag come to
light in a recently opened mining dis¬
trict in Nevada, where it was discov¬
ered in the spring of 1917. The stone
is a “black opal,” so-called because
dark tones predominate in It. It
shows mostly dark peacock blue* and
emerald greens, with a considerable
amount of red, and several less promi¬
nent shades.
In size this great gem approaches a
quarter of an ordinary brick, being
three and fifteen-sixteenths inches in
length, three and one-eighth in width,
and two and one-eighth thick at the
,
bulkiest point. Its weight is eighteen j
and six-tenths avoirdupois ounces, j
which expressed in getn diction is 1
8,136 grains, or 2.1WK5.56 carats. Move
than a pound of opal is surely some !
stone! flawless And it is material, all solid, free uncracked from j
gem i
matrix or adhering rock except for a
paper thin skin encrusting the two
major surfaces. Little specks broken
from this skin here and there reveal
the brilliant play of colors within,
while the exposed ends and edge ex¬
hibit the full refracting radiance of
the mass.
This stone is about half again as
large as the largest of the noted gems
of the world. The Cullinan diamond
was roughly the size and shape of a
small fist, and. If it had been an opal,
would have weighed but 1,72b carats.
It is compared with the new opal on
this basis since the specific gravity
of the diamond is 75 per cent greater
than that of the opal.—Archie Rice in
the Scientific American.
Crown mating From 1000 A. D.
The rumor, current in the European
press some months ago. when the Bela
Kun administration ruled in Hungary,
that the Hungarian crown was to he
sold, seems to have disappeared, and
the later government apparently means
to keep it. It was an odd circumstance,
says a writer commenting on that
rumor and its disappearance, that,
with so much talk of discarded insig¬
nia of royalty, the one crown actually
mentioned as being for sale should
have been the most ancient one, with a
single exception, in Europe. For
whereas the German crown, for exam¬
ple, is comparatively modern, and w as
made no longer ago than 1871 for the
former kaiser’s grandfather, this
crown of Hungary traces back, at least
In legend, to the year 1000, and the sum
of 100,000 Swiss marks, about $19,000,
which, last summer, was circumstan¬
tially reported as the price for which
it was to be sold, does not seem par¬
ticularly exorbitant. ut*
cr
Let’s Get
Acquainted
“Get better acquainted with your neighbor — you
might like him!" That’s a pretty good motto for a
community like ours, isn’t it? Town folks should get
better acquainted with country folks; the merchants
and the bankers should get to know the farmers—and
how they are farming. Speaking for this bank, we’d
like to get acquainted personally with every farmer
hereabouts—he might like us enough to deposit money
with us; we might like him enough to lend him some.
Anyway, we could swap ideas—and perhaps add his
name to the rapidly growing list of subscribers for
TRe COUNTRY
GENTLEMAN
the copy
everywhere
BANK OFJCOVINGTON,
R. K, FOWI-ER, President CAPITAL $100,000.00 J. E. PHILIPS, Casliier
Gentlemen:
(1) Because you know me, enter my name for The COUNTRY Gentl eman for one year and ) c
charge the cost, $1.00. to me. nr i \ out
(2) Here’s my dollar. I want The Country Gentleman. Please send it to me. J one
(My Name) ______________ _______
_
(My Address)____________________
(City)_____.___ (State)____
About 40,000,000 Tons of
Anthracite Coal Are Mined
Every Year by Wet Process
The rivers of Pennsylvania yield
about 250,000 tons of coal every year.
About 40,000,000 tons of anthracite
coal are mined every year by the “wet
process” in Lackawanna, Luzerne, Car¬
bon, Schuylkill and Northumberland
counties. The process requires the use
of vast quantities of whiter, which
when It is discharged carries in sus¬
pension millions of tons of culm or
coal dust fine enough to pass through
the smallest screen in a dry process
breaker. Much of the culm finds its
way into the rivers of (he anthracite
district, the Lackawanna, the Susque¬
hanna, the Schuylkill and the Lehigh.
They carry culm waste for many
miles downstream, to drop it at last
in shallows and eddies behind dams
and on valley bottoms. Much of the
coal thus scattered is recovered by
dredging with suction dredges or with
the more familiar bucket type o£
dredge. The machinery, which is usu¬
ally mounted on a stern-wheel, flat
bottom boat, dumps tbe coal into scows
that carry 12 to 14 tons. The recov¬
ered river c<5al brings from 70 to 90
cents at the wharf.
Rew Orleans Real Coffee
Luzianne Southern is coffee distinctly for
a
Orleans Southern is itshome.sir, peopleHew
and New Orleans has
thereputationof ing the best coffee mak
in the whole United
States. INDIVIDUAL EVERY POUND AIR-TIGHT SOLD TIN IN CAN AN
The Reily-Taylor Company
New Orleans
GUARANTEE
If, *fter ustnif the entire contents of
can according to directions, you are not
’*S9§58K? satisfied in every respect, your grocer
will refund the money you paid for it.
Sometimes banks get ac¬
quainted with farmers by giving
good advice, or urging good
roads, or organizing calf clubs
among the boys. That last was
the way of one whose story is told
in The Country Gentleman
dated March 6. And we’d like to
get acquainted with you through
this Great National Farm
Weekly itself. We know that
The Country Gentleman
To abort a cold
and prevent com«
plications, take
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure.
Medicinal virtues retain*
ed and improved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
helps farmers all over the
United States to make more
and more money. It would
please us to see you making
more money too, so we stand
ready to send in your subscrip¬
tion if you just say the word.
One dollar buys it for a whole
year—52 big, friendly, helpful,
weekly issues. Get acquainted
with The Country Gentle¬
man —you’re sure to like it.