Newspaper Page Text
SOUR STOMACH
Taedfor'Ts Black-Drauglit Highly
Piecoaamemied by a Tennessee
Grocer for Troubles Re¬
sulting from Torpid
Liver.
Er.st Nashvllle v Tenn.— The effic¬
iency of Thedford’s Black-Draught, the
genuine, herb, liver medicine, Is
vouched for by Mr. W. N. Parsons, a
grocer of this city. "It is without
doubt the best liver medicine, and I
don’t believe I could get along without
It. I take it for sour stomach, head¬
ache, bad liver, Indigestion, and all
other troubles that are the result of
a torpid liver.
"I have known and used it for years,
and can and do highly recommend It
to every one. I won’t go to bed with¬
out it in the house. It will do all it
claims to do. I can’t say enough for
It’’
Many other men and women through¬
out the country have found Black
Draught just as Mr Parsons describes
-—valuable in regulating the liver to
its normal functions, and in cleansing
the bowels of impurities.
Thedford’s Black-Draught liver medi¬
cine is the original and only genuine.
Accept no Imitations or substitutes.
Always ask for Thedford’s.
tuiiNG
Po< .•<> with bad backs and weak
itidno ar>: apt to feel old at sixty
Many ■ 1 f-.lks say Doan’s Kidney
Pills b p them keep young. Here’s
<l Covington case:
Mrs. M. H. Hollis. Ea*t St., says:
"I had terrible pains all over and if
( vould put my band on the small ot
n;y beck it seemed as if a knife were
ticking into my back. I had severe
: eadaches, was nervous and i t. table
and I had bad spells of dizziness, t
felt tired and languid all the time
anil I couldnt get sleep enough Hear
Ji:g to muck f Doans Kidney Pills.
1 bought a box and they made me
feel like a different person in a short
time. Soon 1 was entirely cured.”
_i -11 tie.: r . Poiter-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
Tke Circlet i* more than a Braiaiere. It’s
Self- Adjusting, and simply slips over
the head, clasps at the waist and under
arm, and smooths out ngly lines.
/Fyoor dealer can’* got it. tend actual
$*•* f n *?A°.r*. W* II tend name, the addrers Circlet and
paid. Suet 34 48. pre¬
to
Nemo Hygienic-Fashion Institute
1*0 Enat 16th St., New York. Dep’t M.
CATARRH
OF THE STOMACH!
u OU CAN’T ENJOY LIFE
with a tore, sour, bloated stom¬
ach. Food does not nourish.
Inttead it is a source of misery, causing
pains, belching, dizziness and head¬
aches.
*3 The person with a bad stomach
should be satisfied with nothing less
than permanent, lasting relief,
<5 The right remedy will act upon the
linings of tire stomach, enrich the blood,
aid in casting out the catarrhal poisons
and strengthen every bodily function.
*3 The large number of people who
have successfully used Dr. Hartman's
famous medicine, recommended for all
catarrhal conditions, offer the strongest
possible endorsement for
Pe-ru-nA
IN SERVICE FIFTY YEARS
D!T2r
0 TABLETS OH LIQUID
SOLD EVERYWHERE
NOTICE TO PATRONS OF THE
COVINGTON PUBLIC SCHOOL
All who desire to enter their
in the first grade of the city
school at the beginning of the
term are hereby notified to register
name and age of each child with
secretary of the hoard on or before
July 1st, 1922.
This is official and very
so please comply.
R. R.
4tc Secty. Board of Education,
. , Covington,
me • ET** ''
K!T CABINET ZHEN ■
es
((g). 1921 Western Newspaper Union )
.
If there were no such thine as dis¬
play in the world we might get on a
great deal better than we do. and
might be infinitely more agreeable
company than we are.
WELL TRIED DISHES.
_
When the early summer apples are
served
(6‘5 35...". 1;.-
apples, sprinkle with a little dour
and sugar, a sprinkling of salt and
paprika and add a little water from
time to time, as needed. Stir and
cook until well blended. Serve around
pork chops or steak.
Fried Apples. —This dish will take a
large firm apple which does not lose
its shape when cooking. Wash the
apples and cere them, then slice In
rather thick slices and cook in bacon
or salt pork fat until well browned
on both sides. Sprinkle while cooking
with a very little salt and a bit of
sugar. Ser e in overlapping slices
around pork chops, or sausages.
Those who have been forehanded In
sowing some mustard seed will have
the best of greens to cook or to serve
with fresh lettuce. The green mus¬
tard cut in bits and added to potato
salad Is especially appetizing. In fact
added to almost any vegetable com¬
bination, It Is fine.
Baked Bananas. —Remove the peel
from half a dozen bananas; scrape
them to remove all coarse threads,
and lay in a well-buttered baking dish.
Grate the rind of an orange and half
it lemon; mix together with the juice
of each and three-fourths of a cupful
of sugar. Pour over the bananas, dot
with two tablespoonfuls of butter and
bake until the bananas are tender.
Unripe bananas are best for this dish,
as they keep their shape when cooked.
Spiced Carrots.—Cook until tender,
very young carrots; sprinkle with
Hour, powdered clove, butter, lemon
Juice; reheat and serve with minced
parsley.
Flemish Apples With Onions.—S'ice
thinly unpeeled apples; sprinkle with
flour; add hits of butter and sugar,
and place In layers in a baking dish,
using buttered crumbs on each layer
wPh a Lew thinly-sliced onions. Bake
until well cooked.
•THE •
KITCHEN
CABINET
* Ci i'j21. Western Newspaper Union )
What we need mote than any other
H ality is an increase in patriotism,
more of the fighting blood of our an
-estots. The true patriot lives for his
country and dies if necessary for it.
We need mote of the kind that live
f t- it, who give time, thought, money
and energy in making the world bet
tv:. Wv may each hate a snare in the
great work.
SEASONABLE GOOD THINGS.
Now that strawberries are plentiful,
et us try this tempting recipe:
^
sugar; put
mixture slowly into a cupful of boil
mg water, stirring constantly. Cook
iti a double boiler until thick and
dear; add one-fourth of a cupful of
orange juice and remove from the
tire. Stir in gently a cupful of ripe
berries. Pour over the toast and
serve immediately.
Cherry Dumplings. —Remove
connecting tissue from a hnlf-cupful
of suet and chop fine; mix with
cupfuls of Hour, one-half-teaspoom’ul
of salt, ami cold water to make a
dough. Roll out an inch thick and
cover the surface well with pitted
cherries. Dust with sugar; roll
tie In a cloth; place in boiling water
and cook two hours. Serve with hard
sauce.
Banana Trifle. —A dessert which is
easy to prepare and is equally good
is made, using one-half cupful of
chopped peanuts, one cupful of
mashed bananas, and one half-cupful
of grated coconut. Arrange after mix
ing well, and serve on Individual
(dates with orange Juice for sauce.
Breakfast Bacon With Mushrooms
—Take a dozen gtmd-sized mushrooms,
clean anil lav aside; cook the bacon
until crisp; remove the bacon to a hot
platter and add the mushrooms to the
hot fat; cook until tender, season with
salt and pepper and serve with bacon
and buttered toast.
Prune Flip.—Take 30 prunes a Imlf
eupful of chopped nuts, the whites of
four eggs and four tahlespoonfuls <>f
sugar. Stew the prunes until soft;
chop with the walnuts; add sugar and
fold in the beaten egg white. B:\ke
in a well-buttered baking dish until
firm.
''HctCct vrtfiL
the COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGTUm,
STORIES OF
QftEAT Elmo Scott INDIANS
By Walton
Copyright, 1922, We.tern N«wspap«r Union
SATANTA OF THE KIOWAS, AS
1 ORATOR OF THE PLAINS”
^ QATANTA (Set-t’-alnte — "Whitt
Bear”), chief of the Klowas, ac¬
quired the sobriquet of “Orator of th«
Plains’’ at the famous Medicine Lodgt
treaty In 1867 where he made the
leading speech In reply to the gov¬
ernment commissioners. “I love tht
land and the buffalo and will not
part with them,” he declared. “I havt
heard that you intend to settle us od
a reservation near the mountains. 1
don’t want to settle. I love to roam
over the prairies. There I feel free
and happy, but when we settle down
we grow pale and die.”
He had uttered the creed of the
nomadic plains Indian and he backed
up his words with deeds. He was a
daring leader and a merciless foe.
He literally painted the southern
plains red, his favorite color. On the
warpath he daubed his face, hair and
the upper part of his body with
crimson and he painted his tepee en¬
tirely red, with streamers of the same
color at the ends of the poles.
“Satanta Is a fine-looking Indian,
energetic and sharp as a brier. He
puts on a good deal of style at his
meals and spreads a carpet for his
guests to sit on. He has painted flre^
boards for tables and a brass French
horn which he blows vigorously when
the food Is ready,” writes a govern¬
ment physician who was his guest In
1866.
with sliced onions. Use
a pint of sliced apples
and one cupful of sliced
onions, doubling the
amount if the family Is
fond of such wholesome
dishes. Cook the onions
in a little fat until they
are well softened and
yellow before adding the
T o a s t. —H a v e
ready some slices
of toast, well but¬
tered. Mix well
t w o tablespoon
fuls of cornstarch
and a cupful of
Satanta was a grim humorist. Ones
at Fort Dodge Gen. W. S. Hancock
gave him a major-general’s uniform
and the Kiowa showed his apprecia¬
tion of the gift by putting It on and
leading an attack on the post.
Some time later Satanta had the ef¬
frontery to visit Fort Harker clad In
his general’s uniform and riding In
a government ambulance, drawn by
eight mules, an equipage which he had
or ptured in one of his raids. With
a brawny Indian driver lashing the
mules to top speed, Satanta, dashed
into the fort and announced that he
had come to make a formal call on
Gen. A. N. Sully who was visiting
there.
In 1871 Satanta was sentenced to
life imprisonment in the Texas state
penitentiary for having killed several
whites in that state. After two years
he was released. In 1874 the Klowas
went on the warpath again and al¬
though Satanta had no part in the out
break, he was taken back to prison.
On October 11, 1878, he killed himself
by Jumping from an upper window- of
the hospital where he lay 111.
STORIES OF
QREAT INDIANS
9y Mmo Scott Watson
Copyright, 1(21, Weat.rn N.w.p.per Union.
ROMAN NOSE’S MEDICINE WAR
BONNET FAILED HIM
A CHEYENNE war party was attack
ing a Mormon emigrant train on
the Oregon trail. As one of Its de¬
fenders dropped to the ground mortal¬
ly wounded a magnificent pro¬
portioned warrior dashed forward to
“count coup” (touch the fallen
enemy). The hat of the dead man
had fallen off, exposing his bald head.
As the red man struck the dead emi¬
grant he shouted to the other Indians
“Your Roman Nose has counted the
first coup on the longest-faced white
man ever killed.”
In many respects Roman Nose
(YVoquini—“Hooked Nose”) of the
Northern Cheyennes was the ideal
type of tiie Indian warrior. Although
he was not a chief. Incidents of hla
great strength, masterful personality
and wonderful bearing are legion.
Once In a buffalo hunt his brother-in
law drew his bowstring so powerfully
that it broke. The arrow was thrown
high into the air as the sinew snapped.
Roman Nose happened to ride up close
behind his companion at this instant.
Reaching up he caught the shaft,
j snapped it against his own bowstring
j and shot the buffalo dead.
j A man of more reckless daring In
battle never lived. He had a war
bonnet, the wearing of which he
• fondly believed protected him from
danger. His faith in it was Justified
1 until the day of the famous fight with
* Gen. G. A. Forsyth's 52 scouts at
• Beecher's Island, Colo., on September
| 18, 1868. Before going Into the battle
Roman Nose told his companions that
he felt sure he would be killed that
day. According to the belief the
power of the war bonnet would fall II
he ever ate anything that was taken
from a dish with an Iron utensil.
That morning at a feast given by hie
friends the Sioux, one of the women
who served the meal had used a fork
to take the food from the frying pan
When his friends learned of this they
urged him to go through the ceremony
of purification necessary to restore the
power of the war bonnet, but For
syth’s scouts appeared before he could
do so.
Therefore with the certain knowl
edge that he would be killed, Roman
Nose assembled his warriors and led
them on a charge against Forsyth. He
almost rode over two of the scouts
who were concealed In some high
grass a short distance from the main
command. One of these men fired
The Cheyenne fell from his horse,
shot through the back and mortally
wounded. That evening at sundown
Roman Nose died. The strong medi
cine of his war bonnet had failed him
at last.
HABBONE’S MEDITATIONS
MtSTUJ SAY PE Boss
WORRY SO BOUT HARO
TIMET, HE PONE LOS' KB
APPETITE , BUT LA
PEARS T* ME LAK PATS
A 6000 TIME PWH T*
LOSE |T!
CopyrtgM, 19Z0 by McClure Newtpepw DrmflraQ
JUDGE POWELL ON PROHIBITION
(Commerce News)
Judge Arthur G. Powell, of Atlanta,
delivered an address on the prohibition
law in Savannah some days ago that
has made him famous, or infamous as
the ease may be. He denounced the law,
state and national, as the most “vicious
and universally debasing” that has ever
been placed on the statute books. He
made a plea for the old threadbare ap¬
peal for liberty-, by- saying “I am a twin
sister of liberty”. Judging from the gen¬
eral trend of his remarks, he might
have gone further and declared, “I am
a full-fledged brother of the man who
drinks liquor and sells it in defiance of
law—the law of God and man.” He
wants liberty. So does the blind tiger.
So does the man who gets drunk on
blind tiger liquor and goes home to his
family, beats his wife as if she were
nothing but a brute, and runs the chil¬
dren out of the home. So does the man
who gets drunk on mean liquor and
loses his reason and plunges a dagger
into the heart of his friend with deadly
results. The man who makes the stuff
wants liberty, and the man who sells it
wants liberty. We make no personal ref¬
erence to Judge Powell when we say
that in all our personal knowledge we
have never known an anti-pr jhibitionist
who does not like and take his dram.
We know many drinkers who are at
heart prohibitionists, hut we do not
know any man who is an anti-prohi¬
bitionist who does not at least like “beer
and light wines”. In that address the
judge lay-s all the present-day lawless¬
ness to prohibition. He drives by the
ehaingang and sees no one wearing the
chains but those there as a result of the
prohibition law. The logical conclusion
is that the chicken thief is led to visit
the hen house at night because we have
a law prohibiting the legal sale of intox¬
icants. The judge may be a temperate
man in his habits, but he is very care¬
less and intemperate in the use of lan¬
guage when he says, “Rum has killed
its thousands, and the prohibition law
its tens of thousands.” Who is it that
believes that statement? No blind tiger
believes it. No anti-prohibitionist be¬
lieves it. Judge Powell himself does not
believe it. Nobody believes it. This one
statement alone is enough to weaken, if
not refute every- other statement he
made. He expressed no sympathy for
that man who wants to rid himself of
the habit, but cannot as long as he can
obtain it. He cares not, -nsofar as his
utterance reveals, for the children who
suffer for food and clothing, and are de¬
nied the privileges of an education be¬
cause their father is the victim of a hab¬
it that clings to him like a cart rope.
The awful degradation and sleepless
nights and agonies of the mother of the
children are not on his brain when he is
making that address. He thinks only of
the unfortunate who has violated the
law and is wearing chains as a result,
and of the blind tiger whose oar is
searched by officials in an effort to en¬
force the law. He does not want the
tiger interfered with. He wants the ven¬
der to have liberty.
An Atlanta gentleman, commenting
on the address, expresses our senti¬
ments in the following:
“The negro bootlegger who retails
‘white mule’ in the alley and shoots
craps ‘on the side’ will say ‘.ledge Pow¬
ell is a man atter mah own heart. He
sure does give dem pro’s h—11’ ”
Yes. Judge Powell has made himself
famous.
FARM INSURANCE
GIVEN
SPECIAL RATES
MISS LUCY WHITE, AGENT
COVINGTON. GA
farmToans
I make Loans on Newton County
farm lands for five years time, interest
payable annually on November 1st. in
amounts from $ 1 , 000.00 to $100,000 00
O. H. ADAMS.
VI/HICH is the big mileage
v * tire of today? All over the
country men are talking right
now of the remarkable wearing
quality of Fisk Tires. The rea¬
sons are obvious. Look over
any Fisk tire and judge for your¬
self. You are bound to find
extra size, strength and resili¬
ency and with these, good looks
and a tread that gives real
protection.
There’s a Fisk Tire of extra value in every size,
for car, truck or speed wagon
Sliiti
llpfeii
'The Shingle that Never Curls’‘
10 inches by 15 3-4 inches
The big size of Carey Jumbo Shingles affords
these adv mtages:
1. The shingles can be laid with a 5 inch exposure
and give you the same thickness everywhere that
you get with standard size shingles. ( 12 % laid 4
inches to the weather.)
2. Fifty inches of the surface of the shingle is exposed
when Jumbo Shingles are used, as against thirty
two inches when standard shingles are used* This
makes a far more attractive roof.
3. In addition to the larger surface of the Jumbo
Shingle they are 23 per cent thicker. This creates the
stronger shadow effects between joints and at
butts, adding to the beauty of the roof.
4. They can be laid faster.
3. Being made by the same process as the non-curl¬
ing Asfaltslate Shingles, Jumbo Shingles will not
curl—and being thicker will last even longer. We
have them surfaced in red, green and blue-black
crushed slate. The best shingles money can buy.
McCord Lumber Company
DEALERS
Contractors and Builders
COVINGTON, GEORGIA
TO THE TRAVELING PUBLIC
On and after Thursday, April 27th, the following
new schedule of rates will be in effect:
ROOMS without bath ................ $1.00, $1-50
ROOMS with bath .................$2.00, $2.50, $3- t)l)
THE KIMBALL HOUSE
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
400 ROOMS CENTRALLY LOCATED