The Covington news. (Covington, Ga.) 1908-current, February 10, 1921, Image 3
fViillicn Packets Of Flower Seeds Free We believe in flowers around the homes of the South. Flowers brighten up the home surroundings and give pleasure and satisfaction to those who have them. We have filled more than a million packets of seeds, of beautiful yet easily grown flowers to. be given to our customers this spring for the beautifying of their homes. Wouldn’t you like to have five packets cf beautiful flowers free? YOU CAN GST THEM! Hastings’ 1921 catalog is a 116-page handsomely illustrated seed book with twenty beautiful pages showing the finest va¬ rieties in their true natural colors. It is full of helpful garden, flower and farm information that is needed in every home, and. too, the catalog tells you how to get these flower seeds ab¬ solutely free. Write for our 1921 catalog now. It is the finest, most valuable and beau¬ tiful seed book ever published, and you will be mighty glad you’ve got it. There is no obligation to buy any¬ thing. Just ask* for the catalog. H. G. HASTINGS CO., SEEDSMEN, ATLANTA, GA. » YOU don’t use as much X of Calumet as you do of mogt other Baking than Powders. ordinary It has more leavening strength. You save about half. You don’t pay a big price for Calumet. It’s sold at a moderate price — that rep¬ resents another saving. ; You don’t feel uncertain as to fail—because results. Calumet Bi kings never falls never below the proven standard of “Beat by Test” l (b .. i It possesses the highest qual¬ ity ever put into a Baking Calumet Powder. Contains only such Gold Cake ingredients as have been offi¬ Recipe cially endorsed by United States Yolks of 8 eggs, Food Authorities. 1! 4 cups of gran¬ For weeks, for months, it ulated sugar, keeps as fresh, and full of cup of strength the day it left the c^p of butter, a3 V?. cups poetry Calumet Factories, the '7or!d’s flour, 3 love i tea¬ Largest, most Sar.i* .ry and Modern spoons Calumet Baking Powder plants. irate ■; For.. :r, It is important that you use only '1 tablespoon of straight whea t flou r (not set.-rising vanilla. T h e n flour) and taking powder if ir.i.x ;;i the rw£» pure iar way. you wish to obtain the gluten de¬ manded by sound health. A Few ' Bags “ of Good Cotton Seed This Year Will Stock Your Whole Farm With Good Seed For NEXT YEAR M AN") general fine farmers pedigreed have The seed most the are mistaken expensive too expensive idea seed that for of every We planter latesl have always place his of recommended, order seed each produce year however, for his enough that use. are our strains to plant¬ those that arc mixed, run-out or non-vital. Every ing seed for the following By doing this year we produce in quantity strains of well- year. our you can always keep up your seed to a very high known varieties that were introduced one year pre¬ viously. Iheses seed are grown under the nioVt standard of staple and production, l5e!fatype at a minimum s < arcful conditions by our experts and are graded cost. One bushel of our cotton seed and tested for germination. They are. however, should produce ample seed for planting a -tT suc ^ moderate prices that you Cannot twenty acre crop next year, and the staple pre¬ atiord to sacrifice the greater yield and better mium the lint brings will far more than pay for product they will give. the seed. . Our moderate prices are within reach of every planter—Write us today. PEDIGREED SEED CO., & . C DAVID R. COKER, President H. J. WEBBW. Gen. Mgr. ( HEART GETS HYDROPHOBIA ill MAD DOG Amos Johnson, Taxicab Driver Victim of Dog Which is Said to Have Bitten at Least Ha ! f Dozen More COLUMBUS GA., Jan. 30.— Amos Johnson Columbus tax¬ icab driver develop ed hydrophobia yesterday from a bite inflicted by a small dog at the office of tho .. o. r ..... o company on Sixth ave ...e-.ao i three weeks ago. The dog is said to have bitten at least half a dozen other persons, three of whom will begin treatment fo' lowing its arrival from Atlanta today. An examination of the head of the dog was.made by Dr. B. J. Fitzmorris. It was found that the dog had rabies. The per- THE COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGTON, GEORGIA so.s who had been reported bit¬ ten by the dog were notified, out only one, a n employee of F- inch’s garage named Staggs, began the Pasteur treatment. Ed Hill and Cliff Milan, two other victims of the mad dog, will-begin treatment as soon as it arrives from Atlanta, health board attaches state. .Little Chance For Recovery.. Sir. Johnson is suffering from ; ...tches on the face,'feet and ha ids. Although he was re¬ po, tod considerably better last i ;ht thaif during the early of Satui d ly, little hope I .o his recovery. He was .ols and able to be on h* feet. According to Dr. Fitzmorris, cures are occasionally effected whe the bites are inflicted on the extremities but victims bit¬ ten ffiout the face seldom recov¬ er. It is the first case of hydro¬ phobia reported here since last April when bites from a pet dog sustained by Hugh Baird, Jr., son of Tax Collector and Mrs. Hugh Baird proved fatal. . .. Dog was Stray Animal... The dog which bit Messrs. Johnson, Hill,, Milan and others, it is said, was a small animal, a cross between a poodle and a fox terrier. It* was observed fight¬ ing several other dogs in the vi¬ cinity of the taxi office and when it scratched Mr. Johnson, apparently in a playful manner, the taxi man said, “isn’t he game.” No atttention was accorded the incident until he was pronounced suffering from hydrophobia yesterday. Prompt treatment in the othe, sescases is expected to prevent oUie. victims developing rabies m e is no known cure for hy . ophobia after the rabies ap ■ . Friends of Mr. Johnso. P-3 so. his recovery. G •te- -icture, Top. ii ’ : <n "I china ware the I niCCSt mu cs use of the wil *)U trt-i ea : 'il'H Shanghai. -A Over fifty, years ago a young phys¬ ician practiced widely in Pennsylva r, rd became famous for his uni test success in the curing of disease. 1 ms was Dr. R. V. Piero* who a-fter blished himself in Buffalo, V., and placed his ‘‘Golden Med ' ! 1 mo very,” in the drug stores of - he ( ed S'. :ites. When you- feel r ’ '7 n, cut of sorts, blue and de : ■ . it try the energizing influence •i.Uen Medical Discovery in tablet or liquid form. Nearly a million •otties were sold last year. Cable’s Goat Got Cabbie (Unknown Author) There was a man named Joseph C„ ble, Who bought a goat just for his stable.. One day the goat, too prone to dine, Ate a red shirt just off the line. then Cable to the goat did say: four time has come, you die this day' And tok him to the railroad track, ' v -Aid bound him there upon his back. ihe train then came, the whistle blew, And the goat well knew his time was due; But he, with a mighty shriek of of pain, , Coughed up the shirt and flag¬ ged the train. CHURCH CALENDAR Methodist Church Conyers Street. Preaching Sunday, 11 A. M., and 7:30 P. M., by pastor, Kev. J. E. Ellis. Sunday School at 9:45 A. M., C. D. libson. superintendent. All are invited to worship with us at all services. Baptist Church Floyd Street Preaching Sunday, 11 A. M., and 7:30 P. in., by the pastor, Rev. Walker ornbs. Sunday school at 9:4o a. m., J, C. pshaw, Supt. B. Y. ,P. U. Sunday at -7:00 P. M 'layer meeting Wednesday evening at .30 p. m. Ladies Missionary Society meets Monday afternoon at 3:30, following irst Sunday of each month. A most cordial invitation is extend .1 to these services. Christian Science Church College Ave. Services Sunday morning at eleven o’clock. * Sunday school at 10 o’clock a. m. Wednesday Evening Meeting, includ¬ ing testimonials of Christian Science healing, at 8 o’clock. Public cordially invited. GEORGIA RAILROAD SCHEDULE Arrival and departure trains. Cov mgton, Ga. Effective April 25. 1920 Eastbound Eastern Time Westbound No. 2 8:31a.m. No. 13 6:55a.m.-d No. 6 2:30p.m. No. 3 6:45a.m. No. 8 5:30 p. in. No. 1 12:10 p. m. No. 11 8:58p.ni. No. 6 3:11p.m. No. 1 10:01 p. m. No. 7 7:45 p. in. No. 15 8:10a.m.-s “D” No. 13, daily except Sunday. “S” No. 15, Sunday only. • J. P, Billups, G. P. A. It. C. GUINN, Agent. All other trains run daily. Catarrh Cast Be Cured Catarrh is a local disease greatly influ¬ enced by constitutional conditions. It therefore requires constitutional treat¬ ment. HALL'S C.ATARKH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. HALL'S C A T A R A H MEDICINE destroys the foundation of the disease, gives the patient strength by improving the general health and assists nature in doing its work. All Druggists. Circulars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Tired “I was weak and run-down,” relates Mrs. Eula Burnett, of Dalton, Ga. “I was thin and just felt tired, all the time. I didn’t rest well. I wasn’t ever hungry. I knew, by this, I needed a tonic, and as there is none better than— Tiis Woman’s Tonic I . . . f began using Cardul," continues Mrs. Burnett. "After my first bottle, I slept better and ate better. I took four bottles. Now I’m well, feel just fine, eat and sleep, my skin is clear and I have gained and sure feel that Cardul is the best tonic ever made.” Thousands of other women have found Cardul just as Mrs. Burnett did. It should help you. At all druggists. mwss9smBaaaa _EJj 7 5 THEIR LAST FEAST Mohammedan Fanatics Paid Dearly for “Brain Stew.” Excess of Zeal Discouraged by French Authorities in Northern Senegal in Effective Manner. Boomba is not the seat of Moham¬ medan culture in Africa. Boomba lies in northern Senegal, behind the west coast of Africa, humiliated at the onward strides of Dakkar, a worldly seaport knowing neither re¬ ligion nor shame. And let it be known to all men that the natives in the hinterland nigh unto Boomba are as the “wee sma’ hours of the mornin',” in blackest darkness; but seeking the light of a great awakening. Last month, while the Clontarf, stout shipping-board vessel, now at pier 23, foot of Pacific street, lay to in the roadstead at Dakkar, a wave of revival hit the vicinity of Boomba, ac¬ cording to the assistant engineer. The blacks got religion and the blacklands resounded with the chant of “There is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is his prophet”—in fervent Senegalese. Now, the German found the Sene¬ galese a fiercesome soldier. On his native jungle trail he is even more so. On the warpath went the newly con¬ verted Mohammedans, with fire in one hand and the sword in the other, after the fashion of Saladdin’s host. They were bound to out-Mohammed Mo¬ hammed and great was their zeal. Furthermore, they were bound on a quest to show their brethren, unbeliev¬ ing dogs on the docks of Dakkar, that a warrior of the Jungles could acquire that polish which some say comes only to citizens of the worldly state, dwell¬ ing in a great metropolis. There chanced across their march a party of Frenchmen, hunting wild beasts of the field. The Frenchmen were, moreover, unbelieving dogs. The slaughter was swift, pitiless and al¬ most painless. Eleven dead Gauls were laid at the feet of the chief of the Boomba hinterland. “My children,” cried he, in a rolling brogue such as is bandied about in the jungle, “behold these men of culture and little faith. They have the wis¬ dom of them who sit in high places, but they have the faith of the grovel¬ ing jackal. We have done well to chop off their heads. Now we will do well to acquire their wisdom. Let us have brain stew, made from the brains of the Frenchmen, in whom there way wisdom but little faith.” And so the stew was eaten. About a week later, a dozen of these fierce seekers after a great wisdom were gathered in by the French au¬ thorities. And in another week they •were sent to > another land, far beyond the clouds, where the honris tread the mazes of the heavenly dance and wis¬ dom comes to all men who are true believers. At least, that is the tale as told by the assistant engineer. And thus endeth the quest of the converts of the Boomba hinterland, searchers of wisdom in the name of the prophet.-' Brooklyn Eagle. The World's Advancement. Those who, in retrospect, recall the days of the hand sickle may well marvel at the developments which have taken place within their secoilection! They have seen, besides the develop¬ ment in agriculture, the inauguration of almost countless devices and utili¬ ties. They have seen railroads built across the continent, the telegraph and telephone perfected, great steamship lines established and more latterly the motor car and the airplane utilized in everyday affairs. Until the hand sickle was laid aside it had been used since that time to which the memory of men runneth not to the contrary. And yet to them, It may seem the advent of the grain cradle and the crude horse drawn reaper was but as yesterday. Personified, those homely early devices seem almost like the explorers of the earlier ages who set out upon voyages of discovery with nothing to guide them but a vision of something grand¬ er and more beautiful than their eyes had ever beheld.—Exchange. New Discoveries in Crete. Excavations at Knossos, Psaetos and other sites In Crete have not mere¬ ly established the existence of a people whose form of civilization was the earliest in Europe, but have shown much about their daily life, games, amusements; their art, religion, writ¬ ing—though hardly yet their language; their physical characteristics, dress and the houses they live in. A huge palace, as big as Bucking¬ ham palace, has been unearthed at Knossos. It has a drainage system that an eminent Italian archeologist has described as “absolutely English,” and that certainly anticipates the hy¬ draulic engineering of the Nineteenth century. The men of science engaged in the work estimate the age of their discoveries at four thousand years.— Discoveries. Dehydrated Fish Valuable. Electrical dehydrating plants for fish are promised as a result of recent experiments In England, which demon¬ strate that it is possible with the aid of heated air to accomplish in a brief time results that now require many days of air curing, says Popular Me¬ chanics Magazine. Deprived of every trace of moisture, the fish meat may be kept-, for years, and then restored for three days in water. The dried flesh also may be ground Into a fine flour of high food value. The process hug been patented in all countries Popular Christie By MILDRED WHITE (©. 1920, Western Newspaper Union.j No one could define Chrissie’s popu¬ larity, but everyone loved her. Every¬ one, from the bent old man who car¬ ried out ashes, to Mrs. DuFunt, the town’s social leader. To be upon vis¬ iting terms with Mrs. DuPont was an open sesame to all other houses, while Chrissie, it seemed was herself the bestower of favor when she poured afternoon tea at Mrs. DuPont’s. Men flocked to Chrissie’s side like butter¬ flies to a sweet flower, and Chrissie never sought attention. Studied impersonally, the happy young woman was not especially pret¬ ty. True, her eyes were good, with a something in their depths which made you trust her instinctively. And Chrissie’s smile was bright and win¬ ning. But there were far prettier girls in Evansville, whom she eclipsed, and there were many more fortunate in this world’s goods. Christina Leighs’ family left her the old homestead and a modest Income for maintenance, while old Mamie Rose offered In the girl’s desolation to stay with “her baby free and for¬ ever;” so Chrissie continued her reign. “I wish I knew,” one of Chrissie’s young friends said, “just what it is about Chrissie that everyone likes? It can’t be her looks exactly, though she is sweet, and I know girls more entertaining—” “Reckon,” answered Mamie Rose dryly, “what folks likes most 'bout Chrissie Is— Chrissie.” And then, the throne trembled. It was a new arrival who, coming to the staid little town like a bright flash across their sky, claimed atten¬ tion. The young - men who had been Christina’s acknowledged adorers, flocked like sheep to the newcomer’s door. Young women, curious and envlouc, were next to seek admittance, but cau¬ tious and resentful parents held thlB desire in check. Miss. Shirley Wendell was the name the beautiful stranger gave, when rent¬ ing the newly finished bungalow. She was a teacher of singing it was an¬ nounced. with an advertisement In the town paper. And the coldness of the town’s people troubled Miss Wen del! not at all, as she continued to sing her songs to the town’s nicest young men at evening. The bungalow living room was kept ever gay with their presence. Chrissie, stunned at the unusual emptiness of her own “parlor” at eve¬ ning, for young women too had suffer¬ ed a sudden setback of interest there— gazed wondering through the window as Shirley Wendell went by. “.She is really lovely,” Chrissie said to Mamie Rose, “and I like her odd attractive clothes. It is not strange that we should seem dull, by com¬ parison.” “Dull!” grunted Mamie Rose. “Huh! I’ve seen bright lights that dazzle vour eves after awhile,. ’till they smarts. Reckon Mister Willie will be right glad to soothe his eyes again with something restful.” Chrissie’s fair skin flushed rose color. “Will Condon is free to go where he pleases,” she said, “there was no engagement between us, Mamie.” “Not ’xactly,” Mamie Rose replied unmoved. “Mighty close to it though, honey.” But Chrissie had gone flying up¬ stairs. Perhaps, after all, It was Will’s absence which made the parlor so very empty at evening. All that week the bungalow was si¬ lent, with blinds drawn close where bright lights had been. The defiant newcomer was ill. Doctor Benton pronounced her trouble the prevailing epidemic. Miss Wendell would be all right soon, he said, with proper care. But care of any kind seemed Impos¬ sible to procure. In her dark room the sick woman lay helpless and alone. There were many unopened boxes of flowers about Chrissie recognized them as she en¬ tered. Chrissie sat down on the bed at the sick girl’s side. "I have come to make you comfort¬ able,” she said gently, “and I will stay with you until you are better, If you wish.” Shirley wAdell reached up to switch on the lights, widening, her dark eyes stared into those other eyes that people trusted; then her Ups twisted a wry smile. “It’s rather strange, isn’t It?” she asked, “that you should come to do tliis for me?” Weakly, she sank back: tn her pillows. “Mr. Will Condon has been coming here a lot,” she said. “Mr. Condon,” Chrissie replied, “la free to go where he likes.” Suddenly the girl leaned forward. “But lie doesn’t like me,” she said excitedly. “He never really has liked me. One way or another, I’ve coaxed him here, and made him jealous of you, because you see—I was jealous myself, of your popularity. Just wouldn’t seem to understand it.” Impulsively the hot hands reached out to Chrissie’s warm and kindly clasp. “I understand—now*,” Shirley Wen¬ dell said softly. • His Practice. “The revenue agent who used tc bf a fireman seems singularly successful in moonshine raids.” “That’s because he is used to still alarms.”