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FOR THE NEXT FEW DAYS
Fifty thousand feet of Common Flooring at $1.25 per hundred feet.
Fifty thousand feet of Common Siding at $1.25 per hundred feet.
FOR CASH AS HAULED, AT
Planters’ Warehouse And Lumber Company,
McDonough, Georgia.
Resolutions on Death
Of Mr. J. T. Lewis.
To the acting Master, Wardens
and Brethren, of Forest Lodge,
No. 399 F. & A. M. of Ga.
Whereas it has pleased the
Great Architect of the Universe
to remove from our craft our
esteemed brother and co-laborer,
the Master of this Lodge, brother
Joe T. Lewis. We submit the
following to be filed among the
archives of this. Lodge:
Brother Lewis was born in
Henry County Georgia, April 23,
1838. He united with the M. E.
Church South when a very young
man, and continued a member of
that church until the day of his
his death.
In 1862 he enlisted in Co. H.
27th Ga., Infantry in the Confed
erate Army, and served until the
surrender at Appomattox in 1865.
Brother Lewis was three times
married. First to Miss Mary
Rountree, second to a Miss Car
rol, and last to Miss Phebe
Clarke, January 11th. 1873. The
latter and five children still sur
vive.
He moved to Forest Park some
six years ago, and was soon there
after appointed Notary Public and
ex-officio Justice of the Peace.
He had served out one term and
had recently been commissioned
for another four years.
Brother Lewis joined the
Masons at McDonough, Georgia,
in 1860 or 1861, having been at
the time of his death 50 years a
Mason. From McDonough he
transferred his membership to
Stockbridge, and at that place
was several years Master of Har
mony Lodge 156.
On moving to Forest Park,
Clayton county, he united with
this Lodge, and has proven him
self a skilled and ever ready
workman. He has at sometime
filled almost every Station in the
Lodge. He was regulai ly elected
Treasurer, and after that Wor
shipful Master, from which Station
he was call d September 26th,
1911, by the all Wise Builder from
labor in this Lodge to refreshment
in that Temple not built by human
hands.
He was faithful in his Masonic
duties, faithful to his Church
duties and faithful and orderly as
a Christian citizens of the com
munity in which he lived.
W. E. Thompson,
Elroy Pettys,
W. H. Boyd,
Committee.
FOR SALE -Best horse in
Georgia, also almost new buggy
and a fine cow. E. J. Reagan,
McDonough, Georgia.
Central Dots.
(Last Week’s Letter.)
We have had more rain, and
cotton still in the field that never
has been picked.
Miss Ossie Barnett and brothers,
Hubert, Hansel, and T. J., spent
Saturday night and Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Clower and
family.
Mr. Kenneth Clower visited
McDonough last Monday.
Mr. D. W. Clower spent last
week in McDonough, as a juror.
'' 'ifj
If there was a better shoe value at the
price than Craddock-'] erry Co.’s Southern
Girl Shoe for women, we would never he
offering you Ihe Southern Girl Shoe,
Here is a shoe made of the finest, softest
leathers. The making is first quality,
We have th*m in high button and lace hoots, oxfords, pumps, slippers and sandals
—and what is perhaps the best feature of all —we have these styles in flexible soles
for those who want them. The wear and the style are all left in these flexible soles
hut the stiffness is ail *wken out. They are as soft and pliable as an old slipper.
The Southern Girl Shoe will make your feet look trim and neat, give you the
maximum of comfort and weai at a great saving in price.
Look for the Bell. It’s a small thing to look for hut a great thing to find.
T. A. Sloan & Company,
McDonough, ga.
Messrs. Z. T. Peeples and S. T.
Clower attended quarterly con
ference at Hampton last Tuesday.
Mr. Z. T. Peeples and daughter,
Miss Mamie, of Gadsden, Ala.,
spent Thursday in Griffin.
Mr. D. W. Clower visited Mr.
Z. T. Peebles Sunday afternoon.
Blue Eyes.
Flippen.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Powell,
of Rex, visited Mr. and Mrs. B. O.
Fields Sunday.
If
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bar tie 'feat* A. Id • itv
of CMa gSwo
All Styles $2.00, all Leathers
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Mr. Seaborn Pless spent Sun
day with Mr. Candler Dailey.
Mr. Lonie Phillips spent Satur
day in Macon.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. McCullough,
of Stockbridge, visited Mr. J. W.
Rountree and family Sunday.
Mr. Candler Dailey, and Miss
Lura Fields, and Mr. Lonie Phil
lips, and Miss Dennis Fields, at
tended preaching at Mt. Carmel
Sunday night.
Mr. Clarence Strickland and
family visited relatives in Duch
town Sunday.
linings, stitching, buttonholes, every little
detail all up to the highest standard. The
styles are perfect. Look as longas you please
among the shoes that sell for more money
and you v/ill not find a single mark of fash
ion that is superior to the style features of
Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Foster, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Glass, were the
the guests of Mrs. Cora Fields Sun
day.
A large crowd attended Sunday
school here Sunday afternoon.
JOYS OF HOME.
Sweet are the joys of home
And pure as sweet, for they
Like dews of morn and evening
come
To make and close the day.
The world hath its delights
And its delusions too.
But home to calmer bliss invites
More tranquil and more true.
—Anonymous.
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