Newspaper Page Text
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FIFTY YEARS AGO
A young man who practiced medicine
in Pennsylvania became famous and
was called in consultation in many
towns and cities because of his suc¬
cess in the treatment of disease. This
was Dr. Pierce, who finally his made medi¬ up
his mind to place some of
cines before the public, and moving to
Buffalo, N. Y., put up what he called
his "Favorite Prescription,” and placed
it with the druggists Favorite in Prescription every state. hag
Dr.Pierce’s for
long been recognized as a tonic
diseases peculiar to womankind. After
offering pain, feeling nervous, dizzy,
weak and dragged-down by quickly weak¬
nesses of her sex—a woman is
restored to health by its use. Thou¬
sands of women test i fy that Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Perscription has entirely
eradicated their distressing ailments.
More recently that wonderful dis¬
covery of Dr. Pierce’s, called An-uric
(for kidneys and backache), has been
successfully used by many thousands
who write Dr. Pierce of the benefits
received — that their backache, rheu¬
matism, and other symptoms of uric
acid deposits in joints or muscles have
been completely conquered Buffalo, by its N.Y., use.
Send 10c to Dr. Pierce,
for trial pkg. of any of his remedies, or
write for free medical advice.
ITS PFllGHTFUl'
v L
IF you serve our pastry to your
your guests they will say that it’s
delightful. It will help you enter¬
tain them. If you’ve never tried it
we’re sorry. After you have tried
you’ll be sory that you didn’t try
i; sooner. Begin now, call up the
food man.
Youngster —*‘Nny -Mis¬
ter—there’s a place up
at Vaughn Tire Bat¬
tery Co., where you can
gel that battery fixed.”
BATTERIES
Yauglm Tire - Battery Co.
Telephone 301 . ,
Westirighouse Attention is for all batteries
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CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children
lit Use For Over 30 Years
Always bears
the
Signature of
»»?•
HE t
K1 CABINET
Copyright, 1922 Western Newspaper Union.
,
"The love w-e give is the only love
we Keep. The greatest and noblest
men and women axe those whose lives
and actions are founded upon tender
sympathies and who never fall to
show kindness to the helpless who
come within the sphere of their influ¬
ence, whether a human being or an
animal ”
CAKE VARIATIONS; ONE BASE
Cream one-third to one-half cupful
of fht, add gradually one cupful of
s22 _ "2
'
. ‘
and two tablespoonfuls less of flour
with a half teaspoonful of cinnamon
and vanilla for flavoring.
Spanish Bun—Use one-half cupful of
currants or raisins and cover the top
with butter while hot and sprinkle
thickly with cinnamon and powdered
sugar well miked.
Spice Cake—Add one-half teaspoonful
of cloves, one teaspoonful each of
cloves, one teaspoonful each of cin¬
namon and nutmeg, with one-half cup¬
ful of raisins if desired.
Nut Cake—Add one-third of a cup¬
ful of chopped nuts, floured.
Italian Cake—Use strong coffee in¬
stead of the milk, and one-half cup¬
ful each of nuts chopped and raisins
floured.
Marble Cake—Add one tablespoonful
of cocoa and a teaspoonful of cin¬
namon to half the batter, putting it
by spoonfuls with the other uncolored
batter Into the cake tin.
Citron Cake—Use the yolks of four
eggs instead of two whole eggs and
one-fourth of a cupful of sliced citron.
Molasses Cake.—Take one-half cup¬
ful of brown sugar, one-half cupful of
New Orleans molasses, one-third of a
cupful of cold water, one egg, one
teaspoonful of soda, two tablespoon¬
fuls of butter and flour to make a bat¬
ter that drops like a veil from the
spoon. Bake In layers and use the
following for filling; Take one-third
of a cupful brown sugar, boll to a
sirup with three tablespoonfuls of
water, pour this when thick over the
beaten white of an egg, whip until
cool; add one-half cupful of chopped
raisins.
lltUM nt/bZ.
■zfeKucnm CAEFOpfl
Copyright, 192», Western Newspaper Union
1 wish I had my neighbor’s child for
Just six weeks or so;
I’d like to try to teach him all the
things he ought to know,
To guide his little footsteps in the way
that he should go.
I cannot try my theories out upon my
own dear three,
For deeply I regret to state that they
are “on to me”;
They know I’m never quite so tierce
as I intend to be!
—Marian Van Buren Cleveland.
DELICIOUS PINEAPPLE WAYS
Prepare the usual cottage pudding,
baking in a sheet; the mixture Is a
m
of flour; when well blended pour
over this one cupful of boiling hot
pineapple juice and cook long enough
to cook the starch in the flour; add a
pinch of salt and a generous table¬
spoonful of butter; serve poured over
each square of pudding.
Pineapple Pie. —Prepare the usual
rich pastry shell and fill with the fol¬
lowing: Take one and one-half cup¬
fuls of milk, scalded; a pinch of salt,
one-half cupful of sugar, two table¬
spoonfuls of cornstarch well mixed
with the sugar, two eggs lightly
beaten, one cupful of crushed or grat¬
ed pineapple and one-half teaspoon¬
ful of vanilla. The crust may be
baked and filled with the cooked fill¬
ing of both be cooked at the same
time. Cover with a meringue and
brown.
Pineapple Fritters. —Take one and
one-third cupfuls of flour, add two
teaspoonfuls of baking powder, one
fourth of a teaspoonful of salt, two
thirds of a cupful of milk, one egg,
one-half cupful of sugar and one cup¬
ful of crushed or grated pineapple.
Mix well and drop by spoonfuls Into
deep fat. Cook until brown, drain
on paper and serve with:
Richelieu Sauce. —Boil one cupful ol
sugar with one cupful of water five
minutes. Add a teaspoonful of corn
starch moistened with a bit of water;
cook until the starch is well cooked.
Remove from the heat, add one-half
cupful of grated pineapple and a table
i spoonful of maraschino. Mix well and
stir In two tablespoonfuls of chopped
maraschino cherries.
sugar, two eggs, two cup¬
fuls of flour sifted with
two and one-half tea¬
spoonfuls of baking pow¬
der and one-half tea¬
spoonful of salt, adding
one-half cupful of milk
alternately with the dry
ingredients and flavoring
to taste.
For chocolate cake add
one square of chocolate
simple, plain cake
recipe. Cut In
squares while hot
and serve with:
Pineapple
Sauce. — Mix to¬
gether one - half
cupful sugar and
one tablespoonful
f mc COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGioW,
STORIES OF
QREAT INDIANS
By Elmo Scot! Watson
Copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union
LITTLE TURTLE VS. HARMAR
AND ST. CLAIR
NCE upon a time George Wash
W ington flew into a towering rage, j
News of the defeat of Gen. Arthur St.
Clair had just been brought to him.
Striding up and down in his office,
Washington stormed to his secretary:
“My last words to him were, ‘Beware
of a surprise!’ And now he has al¬
lowed that line army to be cut to
pieces and his soldiers butchered!”
Had his excellency told the unfor¬
tunate general that he was being sent
against the craftiest and most ener¬
getic Indian leader in the country,
Little Turtle (Michikiniqua), chief of
the Miamis, the result might have
been different.
At the close of the Revolution, all
efforts to pacify the tribes in Ohio and
Indiana having failed, the government
sent an army of 1,500 men under Gen.
Josiah Harmar against the confedera¬
tion of Miamis, Wyandottes, Pottawato
inies, Ottawas, Shawnees, Delawares
and Cliippewas led by Little Turtle.
The next year Washington sent St.
Clair. Little Turtle launched a furi¬
ous attack upon the general’s camp
early one morning and forced him to
retreat. The retreat became a rout.
For four miles the screeching savages
raged at the heels of the stampeded
army. Then Little Turtle stopped the
pursuit. “We have killed enough of
the white men. Let us now divide
the spoils,” he said. Next to Brad
dock’s defeat, St. Clair’s was the worst
in the history of our Indian wars. He
lost 630 killed, 280 wounded and all of
his supplies.
Then “Mad Anthony” Wayne took
the field and offered the Indians either
peace or war. Little Turtle counselled
peace. “We have beaten the enemy
twice, but we cannot expect the same
good fortune to attend us always,” he
told bis warriors. “The Americans are
now led by ‘Black Snake,’ the chief
who never sleeps. Something whispers
to me that it would he well to listen
to his offers of peace.”
One of the chiefs accused Little Tur¬
tle of cowardice. Stung by the unde¬
served charge, the Miami chieftain con¬
sented to attack Wayne. His fears
were justified for “Black Snake” de¬
feated them so b.fcly at the Battle of
Fallen Timbers in 1794 that the next
year they sued for peace.
When Little Turtle signed the Treaty
of Greenville, he said, “I am the last
to sign it and I will be the last to break
It.” He kept his word. After that he
led his people In the ways of peace and
worked for their betterment. Little
Turtle died July 14, 1812.
STORIES OF
QREAT INDIANS
By Elmo Scott Watson
copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union.
CHIEF RED JACKET, SAGE OF
THE SENECAS
Y X THAT Demosthenes was to the
VV Greeks and Cicero to the Ro¬
mans, Red Jacket was to the “People
of the Long House,” (the Iroquois In¬
dians). He was a member of the im¬
portant Wolf clan, of the Seneca tribe,
and his Indian name of Sha-goie
vvatha, “He Who Causes Them to
Keep Awake,” referred to the most
marked characteristic of his clan
animal instead of the chiefs oratorical
powers.
During the Revolution, Red Jacket
tried to hold his people neutral, but
being overruled by his tribe, he en¬
listed under the British flag. His in¬
telligence soon brought him to the
notice of the English officers and one
of them gave him a scarlet jacket.
Red Jacket was not a fighter. He
was at his best in the council. “I am
an orator; I was born an orator,” was
his boastful declaration. He was a
ready and effective speaker; he had a
tenacious memory, a quick wit, and a
gift of biting sarcasm. He was
especially hostile to the missionaries
who came upon the Seneca reserva¬
tion. “If they are not useful to the
white people, why do they send them
to the Indians?” he said. “If they are
useful to the whites, why don’t they
keep these black gowns at home?
Surely the white men are bad enough
to need the labor of everyone who
can make them better.”
In 1831 a Seneca was placed on trial
for having executed an old woman as
a witch. Red Jacket spoke in his de¬
fense. “What? Do you denounce us
as fools, because we still believe what
you believed two centuries ago?”
thundered the old chief. “Go to
Salem! Look at the records of your
own government and you will find
that hundreds have been executed for
the very crime which has brought
down vengeance upon the warrior.”
One day Red Jacket met a crowd
of people on their way to witness a
hanging. When asked why lie, too,
did not attend the execution, the chief
replied “There are enough fools there
now. The field of battle is the place to
see men die.”
Red Jacket constantly warned his
people against the white man's ways.
He had abundant reason, for one of
the white man’s customs brought
about his downfall. In his later years
he became a drunkard and descended
to such depths that in 1827 his peo¬
ple deprived him of the chiefship.
Eventually the commissioner of In¬
dian affairs restored him to his po
sition, but he did not long survive
the humiliating experience. He died
January 20, 1830, and Is buried In
Buffalo, If. Y.
Taste is a matter of
tobacco quality
We state it as our honest
belief that the tobaccos used
in Chesterfield are of finer
quality (and hence of better
taste) than in any other
cigarette at the price.
Liggett Gf Myers Tobacco Co.
CIGARETTES
of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos — blended
20 for 18c
10 for 9c
j/acuum of 50 tins
- 45c
In Tf me 0 Jj Biscuits- T^, » ® a
i the Sack
(SELF RISING)
RINGLE
(PLAIN)
You will undoubtedly find
the reason why these
n flours are called “REPEAT’
and “RINGLEADER”
Your money refunded if a
finer or more uniform flour
ever entered your pantry .
SPARKS MILLING CO.,
MAKERS SINCE 1855
TERRE HAUTE, - - INDIANA
P. W. GODFREY
COVINGTON -:- GEORGIA.
Wholesale Distributors
rxt-r --
FOR OVER 40 YEARS
HALI/S CATARRH MEDICINE has
J>eer. of Catarrh, used successfully ia the treatment
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE con¬
sists of an Ointment which Quickly
Relieves by local aj,pl!< ation, and the
Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acts
through the Blood or. the Mucous Sur¬
faces, thus reducing rhe inflammation.
Sold by all druggists. ■
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
CENTRAL OF GEORGIA RAILWAY PASSENGER SCHEDULE
COV INGTON, GEORGIA
Arrives from Departs f° r ..
11:35 A. M. 8:55 ^ J
Macon, Athens, Gordon and Savannah 5:15 E |l
9:58 P. M. Macon, Athens, Gordon and Savannah A>|
12:15 P. M. Porterdale (Saturday only) ll:3»
, and 4# F
Porterdale 8:10 A. M.
For further Information phone *i.
, ROGERS, Age , ot .
i d. M.