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THE GEORGIA ENTERPRISE. OOVINGTOS, GA., FRIDAY MORNING-
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BE SURE TO GET PRICES BUY OR TRADE FOR A PIANO.
From me beloie buying your Furniture. Good goods at cheap < tr Organ and make home pleasant. Best goods at lowest
prices and cheap goods lower prices. prices. Everything in stock you need in this line.
in Get a good Wheeler humor & and Wilson healthy. Sewing Machine and keep your wife C. A, Harwell, Covington, Ga.
a
gsBisssseis
JTWe
I Wedding tfreentss.
CUT GLASS, SILVER,
GOLD, CHINA,
PICTURES, ETC.
A large and magnificent
line just received.
i THE HARRISON 00.
CHINA, CROCKERY, LAMPS, PICTURES.
4-mSr T .« For a Complete House Keeping Outfit.
Payable $10 Cash, $8.00 per Month.
Our Easy Payment Plan Makes it Possible for You to Keep
on a Small Outlay of Cash. We will Sell You the Articles
Listed Below for $85.00, Payable $10.00 Cash, Bal¬
ance $8.00 per Month or $2.00 per Week.
Bed Room. Dining Room.
One solid Oak 3 piece suit, One 6 -foot extention table,
One combination mattress, 0 cane seat chairs, 25 yds
One folding wire bed spring, One 56-piece dinner set,
One center table, ; One set knives and forks,
One cobler seat rocker, j 1 set tea spoons, 1 set table
Two cane seat chairs, | Two window shades, 1 lamp,
25 yards matting, . Hall.
One large rug,
Two window' shades,
One lamp, One bowl and pitcher, j One hat rack.
ki roiaiEj jsr.
One No. 7, cook stove, I One kitchen table,
One complese list tin ' One lamp,
ware,
One complete list hollow ware, i Two window shades.
mmn ........STORE.
Broke into His House KILLthe cough
S LeQuinn of Cavendish Yt. and CURE the LUNGS
stipation health was robbed by invasion When of Dr ot his King’s Chronic customary Con¬ New i New WITH Dr.King’s Discovery
Life Pills broke into his house, his #
trouble was arrested and now he’s -n c /Consumption price
entirely cured They’re 1 OUGHS and 50c &$ 1.00
guaran- .0 LDS
teed to cure, 25 c at Brooks & I Surest and Quickest Cure for
Smith and The Covington Drug | j Q of all
L BA?K TRQUB '
Co LES, MON£Y
MR. CLEVELAND MADE
m HIS AUDIENCE WILD.
c r After Cheer Burst Forth
When He Entered Carnegie Hall
and When He Arose to Speak.
He Inveighed Against Republi¬
can Partisan Arrogance and
False Claims to Reward
New York, Oct. 21—Attracted
by the presence of Grover Cleve¬
land thousands of people struggled
to gain entrance to Carnegie hall
tonight where the former presi¬
dent of tile United Slates made
his first and only speech of the
campaign.
John G. Carlisle, secretary of
the treasury under Mr. Cleveland,
was also a speaker and shared with
Mr Cleveland the great burst of
enthusiasm at the meeting. Every
seat in the big auditoiium was
taken while the corriders and aisles
held their scores. Still hundreds
were unable to gam entrance
This big Democratic rally was un
der the auspice* of the Business
Men’s Parker and Davis associa
tiiou and J. Hampden Robb, prest
i dent of the organization, presided,
j Mr. Cleveland arrived at tlie
hall shortly after 8 o’clock and
immediately upon bis eifliance
cheers burst forth ; the demonstra¬
tion lasted seven minutes; ir, died
out and began again with renewed
vigor. Again and again Mr. Robb
attempted to quiet the crowd but
was forced to his seat
When Mr. Cietieland a s t la
Mr. Robb’s r> i u> efforts cc fruitless
wete
in quieting the de,no u 8 ,r„ti..„' „e
arose and held up his hand for si
lence, but thi people could not le
quieted for full two miuutes after¬
ward. Y
humiliating aspects.
The former president was ehair
man of the meeting. In his ad¬
dress he said in part:
i < There are in my mind touight
some aspects and incidents of this
of this campaign which seems to
me so startling and so humiliating
that they should arrest the alten
tion of every thoughtful citizen
and arouse the anxious solitude
of every patriotic American.
In a country like ours, whero par¬
ties contest Tor the direction of the
government, we must, of course,
expect party advocacy and honor¬
able personal ambitions for politi¬
cal honors, but who, among those
indulging in retrospect of political
campaigns, can recall one in which
the advantages of present party
control have been so palpably and
unblushmgly used for its perpetu¬
ation, or in which the function be¬
longing to the entire American
people have bee n moie insolently
forced to do partisan service.
^lctly'claimed t!mtalHh
all the patriotism and d aH dHh the ’
erning ability of e ° y -
one political p a rt y; 0 i,d when be
fore have those of „„ r citizeus
not among tin, chosen,”been
own lIlTwlTs^M darkness ‘IT 3 in , their Ut °
outer political wTh
thy to be e„ „sw ofii*rr/ ,he bePOWer
and responsibility
established by the peonR &U
the people? ° f
When in nil ° Uf ' 9
tory has a party bo nres presumptuous- i i *
-
.
ly as now claimed to be thodonors
of the gifts of God, or when has
one so persistently plumed itself
upon the creation of all the pros¬
perity that lias fallen to our coun¬
try’s lot?
CLAIMS OF INFALLIBILITY.
« t Never before have our people
been so belabored with party de¬
liverances winch in in every line
and every word, from platform
declarations to the last appeal of
party advocacy are so saturated
with conceited and tiresome claims
of iufallib'lity, and with supercil¬
ious disdain of all political efforts
such as are attempted under the
banner of Republicanism. Shall
this pass current at a time when,
at the parting of the ways in our
nation’s development we are espe¬
cially called to patriotic thought¬
fulness and careful contemplation
of party designs and to a vigilant
watch against dangers thut besi-t
us? My faith in my countrymen
will not permit me to believe this,
or to doubt that they will insist
upon examining for themselves the
accounts of party stewardship.
The party will be given credit
which early, or late, has endeav¬
ored to safeguard the soundness of
! the nation’s currency; but the
people will reject as savoring of
presumption the insistence that
only those belonging to one pariy
organization can claintto be the
:p o ec.o s and defen lers of our
financial integrity; nor will thev
I *■*«■***«#» .
«**
oil when many of the leaders of
1 ”“ ' y " J “ such an in
sistence, , were worse than luke¬
warm in the cause.
‘‘A party may indulge in self
congratulation when it was effec¬
tively defended the people in their
daily life from the rapacitv of
trusts and combination which
thrive as private enterprise is
strangled, and which grow tat as,
by their control ot the cost of liv¬
ing they cause the' homes of our
land to grow lean ; but the people
will hardly approve the vociferous
pride which claims that a success
ful attack upon the merger of the
stock of certain competing rail*
rocids has rescued them from their
oppressors. They will not fail to
observe that the huge combinations
which directly injure them still
flourish, and they may also recall
how the consternation among those
implicated in such schemes who
once feared a general pursuit was
quieted when the soothing assu
ranee reached them that the gov
ernment did not intend to ‘‘run
amuck.” Nor will they probably
accept the suggestion that repen
tence or a change of heart accounts
^ ^ ™ anUer by which the
powful T trust aild «™«osity magnets have 0 f many been
dispi ° ycdbytheir «
substantial support of the party
which seeks to convince the peo¬
ple of its trust-destroying procliv¬
ities.
“"’ ith le " Jen;ies “d
the8e blllde ^ in mind they will
^ il “ aux
,et ? « destroy harm
ful combinations why a protective
tari ^ P°*‘ cy should be considered
defiliately established, which, in
addition to its other sins, contrib- |
utc* t . a situation that permits a
CMinl’iiiut i<>n or monopoly to sell
abroad articles of our manufacture
at low^r prices than are exacted
from our own citizens at home.
They will s^e the sheer wrongful
ness of this condition so clearly,
and they will so firmly believe
that in this ;vay they are made to
the tariff burdens, in order that
they may be dberiminated against
in favor <;f foreign consumers, that
they will not be satisfied with the
assurance that the tariff lias noth¬
ing to do with trusts. They will
consign such an explanation to the
limbo of negation, to take its place
with the outworn deception that
the foreign exporter pays our tariff
tuxes, and with two other sadly
weak pretences—one that the tar¬
iff should be reformed only by its
friends, and the other party which
believes that a protective tariff
policy sought to be consipered as
definitely established, loves recip¬
rocity in trade.”
HOME CIRCLE COLUMN.
If wo would get the worst out
of life, we must learn not only to
lo ( k but to see. The sun is not
partial to the rainbow and the
ruse; he scatters his beauty every¬
where, the only defect is in our
vision.
* »
*
How we appreciate a boy who is
always on time. How quickly we
learn to depend on him, and how
soon you find yourself intrusting
him with weightier matters, The
boy w ho has acquited a reputation
for punctuality has made the first
contribution to the capital that in
after years makes his success a
certainty,
* *
A man is no better than his
wife will let him be. Oh, wives of
America, sway your scepters of
wifely influence for God and good
homes. Do not urge your hus¬
bands to annex Naboth’s vine¬
yard to your palace of success,
whether right or wrong lest the
dogs that come out to destroy Na¬
both come and also devour you.
Righteousness will pay best in
life,will pay best in death, will
pay best through all eternity.
***
As the future oak lies folded m
the acron so in the present lies
our future. Our success will be,'
can be, but a natural tree, devel¬
oped from the seed of our own
sowing the fragrance of the blos¬
som and the richness of the fruit¬
age will depend upon the liouish
ment absorbed from our past and
Present. The earth we tread be¬
neath our ieet is composed of clay
and sand and soot and water and
if nature lias her perfect work in
these substances, the clay will be¬
come porcelain and may be pain¬
ted upon and placed in the king’s
palace; then again it may become
cleai and hard and white and
have the power of drawing to it¬
self the blue and the red the
green and the purplo rays of the
sunlight and become an opal.
The sand will become very hard
and white and have the powers of
drawing to itself the blue rays of
of the sunlight and become a sap¬
phire. 1 he soot will become the
hardest and whitest substance
known and be changed into a dia¬
mond. The water in the summer
is a dewdrop, and in the winter
ciystalizeg into a star. Even so
the homeliest live, b,
hemselves the coloring {
sincerity, "faith 0 tr,
charity and
become crystals and gemsof
eet ray serene,” ■H
*. * 1 *
OUR grandmother’s BIBti
On one of the shelves of
brary oar
surrounded by volume
all kinds on various aubjects.
in various languages 1
book stands an
in its plain covering of bm
paper unprepossessing to the
and apparently out of pi;
among the more pretentious V
umes that stand by its side
the eye of the stranger it cert*
ly has neither beauty nor coa
liness. Its covers are worn;
leaves marred by long use;
pages once white havebecomtJ
low with age; yet worn andol
as it is to us it is the most bd
ful and most valuable book
ourselves. No otheranakensJ
associations or so appeals to
that is be 9 t and noblest withiuj
It is or rather it was our gni
mother’s Bible—companiouoll
best anil holiest hours source
her unspeakable joy and coraj
tion. It was the light to her fl
and lump to her path. It j
constantly by her side and as I
steps tofered in the advance j
grimage of life-and her eyes
dim with age more and morepi
ious to her became the well n
pages.
One morning just as the st
were fading into the dawn oil
coming Sabbath an aged piljt
passed on beyond the morning!
entered into the rest of the st
nal Sabbath—to look upon I
face of Him of w hom the law *
the prophets -had spoken J
whom not having seen, she a
loved.- - And now no legacy ii
us more precious than that old ball j
ble. Years have passed:
stands there on its shelf, eloffl
as ever, witness of a beautiful!
that is furnished. When
times, from the cares and cool
of eternal life we come 1 id
study weary of the world
ed of men that are so 'hard
selfish and a world that is so
feeling—and the strings of
sonl have become untuned
discordant we seem to hear
book saying as with the
membered tones of a voice I
silent. ‘‘Ret not your bad'
what is your hte- ^
troubled for ti
is even a vapor. > > Then our
bled spirit becomes ft cal®!
the little world that hadg|°*l
great so formidable sinks
place again. We are Fh
We are strong.
There is no need to take
the volutno from the sh ■■
it. A glance of the ej»
open id tlw W
suffient. Memory at
association supply the res
there are occasions when 1
erwise; hours in h !o
deep grief has troubled t 9
some darker heavier c.jii
the spirit and over the d* f
and it is coni fort t#
when a earch
down the old bible and s
Then for a ^
pages. origin# 11 ™
est editions the
the notes and comm ma* ^
all the critical aPP aratu3 UD<1
the scholar gathers aro
for the study of th e - cUI! ;
laid aside and the pla* u
glUh B,ble.that
mother’s is taken
hosiery at Allan' ir’S.
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