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11 ii A Happy Home
To have a happy home you must have children,
as they are great happy-home makers, If a weak
woman, you can be made strong enough to bear
healthy children, with little pain or discomfort to
yourself, by taking
-n r*n CT3- 5^* % e- K ft ;
Woman's Relief
It will ease away all your pain, reduce inflam¬
mation, cure leucorrhea (whites ), falling womb, ovar¬
ian trouble, disordered menses, backache, headache,
etc., and make childbirth natural and easy. Try it.
At every drug store in $1.00 bottles.
WRITE US A LETTER
freely and frankly, telling us all your
troubles. We will send free advice (in
plakt sealed envelope). Address: La
dies’Advisory Dept.. The Chattanooga
Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn,
palmer Institute,
OXFORD, GA.
N. A. GOODYEAR. Principal.
MISS KATHERINE BUTLER, First Assistant.
MISS DESSA HAYS, Second Assistant.
Next Session Begins Sept. lift. 1906
TUITION: Seventh, Eighth and Ninth
Grades, $2.00 a month, The lower Gaades $1.00 a
month. Admission is by ticket, purchased at J. Z
i Johnson’s Store.
■I 1
I
Where it is safe you find place Shield to trade, Brand because Shoes | |
a
everywhere. they are sold by Be reliable to ask merchants for |
sure *
Kiser’s King $3.50 Shoe haw
for men, and you will get your CS?
fm money’s styles worth. Made in 37 JhM
and all the popular
Leathers, Patent Colt, Vici, *
■ Gun Metal, Box Calf, etc.
1 r ■
M. C. Kiser Company H Ji ,-jk
Manufacturers as*** - 1 yjgr ^ Style 373 .
JtTLAXTJi, GEORGIA Pat. Colt
§| Blucher.
kkkkk n kkkkk kkAAkkkkkkk
I J. C. WEAVER,
„ j: livery, Feed and Sale Stables
\t PHONE 1 n
Safe a
Horses, Tony Rijgs, and drivers that know the roads, j
i Quick Service and Reasonable Prises.
Bl t I will keep hand good lot of Mules Reasonable j!
on a at
e Prices on Time or for Cash.
1R t See Before You Ride. 3!
us
If a
1 i
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TTTTTTT ZKkkAkl ▼▼iff id
PROTECT YOURSELF.
* 1 Buy a Cyclone Policy tin your Dwelling and Furn
ture and Avoid loss by
f WIND STORMS,
# They only Cost Twenty-Five Cents per? 100.
H. T. HUSON, Agent.
..............
“DUE TO CASDUI
ar.d nothing else, is my baby girl, now
two weeks old,” writes Mrs. J. P.
West, of Webster City, Iowa, ‘‘She
is a fine, healthy babe and we are
both doing nicely.”
ENTERPRISE. COVINGTON, GA.
NEGROES USE GUNS
Attack Force of County Offi -
cers in Atlanta Suburbs.
DEATH LIST WAS FIVE
i One Policeman and Four Negroes Vic¬
tims of Fierce Fighting in the
Dark — The Officers Were
Ambushed.
The city of Atlanta was its quiet,
businesslike self again Monday morn
ing and afternoon, and it was not un
til the coming of night and the out
break of the negroes on the outskirts
that the city grew excited again.
During the day there was little law¬
lessness. Then it was the blacks near
the outskirts who kept the trouble
alive and the citizens on the qui vive,
fearing that their lives and the lives
of their families might be endangered.
A battle in the dark between officers
of the law and negroes was fought
Monday, night at Brownsville, a negro
town two miles to the south of the
city, and near Clark university.
The officers with their prisoners
were ambuscaded and the fight was
to the death.
When the battle was at its height,
one policeman, James Heard, fell
dead, and his companion, Policeman
Jordan, knowing that the officer be¬
side him was dead, used the dead
body as a shield as he poured a show¬
er of lead into the crowd of negroes.
He fired three rounds, and they were
with telling effect, for from the most
reliable reports at least a dozen ne¬
groes lay dead when the battle was
over.
There was not even a light of the
stars to throw a ray upon the battle
ground It was cloudy, and the officers
and their assailants were In total
darkness.
The negroes were holding an in¬
cendiary meeting. One of them was
making a speech, denouncing the
white people and advising the ne¬
groes to take their revenge for the
killing of negroes in the cty on Sat¬
urday night. Lieutenant Poole of the
county police force organized a posse
of nine county policemen and two
citizens and advanced upon the meet¬
ing. The negroes were ordered to de¬
sist, and they refused to disperse.
Ten negroes were arrested, and the
officers were on their way to take a
trolley car to the city when the battle
occurred. The officers were fired upon
’rom 'he dark, ami they returned tie*
are. At least a hundred shots were
fired on both sides. The negroes had
gone ahead of the officers and waylaid
them.
At the first volley Officer Heard fell
dead. He had been shot by a negro
who had a single barrel gun loaded
with buckshot.
The negroes continued to fire after
Hoard had fallen, and then it was
that Officer Jordan fired three rounds
behind the dead body of his friend.
The negroes at last turned and fled
to the woods, and the battle was
over.
While accurate reports were im¬
possible. the number of negroes killed
in the fight, was reported by many
as reaching twelve. Dr. o. N. Harden
stated that he saw bodies lying all
over the ground. It is certain, how¬
ever, that four negroes were killed.
A short time after the fight bad
ended, two negroes, Sam McGruder
and Wiley Brooks, both about 30 years
of age. w-ero shot tc pieces on the
front porch of Park Commissioner
Robert H. Manley, 491 Crew street,
having been taken from an incoming
Lakewood car, on which county offi¬
cers were holding them on the charge
of having been members cf the band
which had killed Policeman Heard.
By far the most dramatic incident
of the nieht was the tragic death of
Mrs. Robert C. Thompson of 495 Crew
street, who was frightened to death,
dying of heart failure, when the two
negroes were shot to pieces on the
porch of the Manley home, next
door.
Mrs. Thompson, who was soon to
become a mother. war; 35 years of
age, and In addition to her husband
is survived by two cons, 7 and 10
years old.
ly a forced march, the seventeenth
infantry, United States army, which
has been spending the summer at
r< amp Chicamauga, reached Fort Mc¬
Pherson 5? mday night, and reported
ready to give aid to the state troops
should that ever become necessary.
Colonel Van Orsdale, commanding
*he regulars, communicated at once
with rolonci Anderson of the fifth
Georgia infantry, and reported the
-CvU Of his regiment, offering their
■>' >'•' •' tor the protection of the city
hould they be n^dorl.
Never In the history or aress have
the styles been so hygienic as at the
present moment says The Boudoir.
i
TO WORTHY YOUNG PEOPLE
WV ‘ -r - > nil young persons, no matter
'■.‘f iin thOTWfh v«r n L'i.;ne«» ‘-armor IrairdnK jcation, snd who with to
' d i
tk trail fir y, xl ,„ s
‘ t; ir great half-rate
(rf-r de - m l probable fortune
r W r ito t/yJay.
j fie Kjt.net, loileie. Kacon, Ga
I PRAISED.
PERUNA
assi®
m
m m
33
«JHE| ; m m si
\ 1 4m m 1 mm ms
i: : v. ■■Mkiwmmti m m
—IMB 1
j s MM* ''
i i ' I' 1
j-V- dT* ip Sato
Mm I I III
MRS. ESTHER M. MILNER.
Box 321 , DeGiatf, Ohio.
Dr. S B. 'artinan, Columbus, Ohio.
Dear Sir: —
was a terrible stiff erer from
pelvic -weakness and had headache
continuously. housework I was not able to do my
for myself ami husband.
1 wrote you and described my condition
as Peruna. nearly as possible. You recommended
1 took four bottles of it and was
completely wonderful cured. 1 think Peruna a
-medicine and have recom¬
mended it to my friends, with the very
best of results.
Esther M. Milner.
Very few of the great multitude of pelvic wom¬
en who have been relieved of some
disease or weakness by Peruna ever con¬
sent to give a testimonial to be read by
the There public.
self-sacrificing are, however, who a few will for courageous, the sake
women
of their suffering sisters allow their cures
to be published
Mrs. Milner is one of these. In her
gratitude for her restoration to health she
i--is A GRATEFUL willing of the that whole the
! women
LETTER TO world should know
DR.HARTMAN it. A chronic inva
_--lid brought back to
health is no small matter. Words are in¬
adequate to express sold complete gratitude.
Peruna is by your local druggists.
Buy a bottle to-day.
An Artificial Language.
The idea of a universal commercial
language is not new. As a matter of
fact many such have been prepared
and a few have met with some suc¬
cess temporarily But an insuperable
objection to the universal language
has been the difficulty of mastering
it intelligently. It is usually compli¬
cated as to grammar, its vocabulary
is a hodge-podge of ‘meaningless vo¬
cal sounds, and the man setting him¬
self to the task of studying it, felt
that at best he was wasting his time
on what might be termed a linguistic
freak. Even when mastered it was
useless for the reason that commer¬
cial interests the world over would
not accept it for ordinary use. Hence
Volapuk and the other less preten¬
tious “new languages” have been
relegated to oblivion.—New York Fi¬
nancier.
Provoking Misunderstanding.
The new girl at the summer resort
was letting her arm hang idly over
the side of the boat and dipping her
fairy fingers in the cool, rippling wat
er.
“All this sort of thing i 3 new to
me,” she said. “How do you do when
you hook a big fish?”
“You have to play him with some
skill,” answered the girl who was
handling the oars. “Don’t let him
have his head too much. Yield a lit¬
tle to his impetuosity, hut keep a
firm grasp. Accept his presents, such
as candy and the like, hut-”
“I was speaking of a real fish, you
mean thing! ” indignantly exclaimed
;he other.—Chicago Tribune.
THE WAY OFT
Change of Food Brought Success nnd
Happiness.
An ambitious but delicate girl,
after failing to go through school on
account of nervousness and hysteria,
found in Grape-Nuts the only thing
that seemed to buiid her up and fur
n'sh her the peace of health.
“From infancy,” she says, “I have
not been strong. Being ambitious to
learn at any cost I finally got to the
High School, but soon had to aban¬
don my studies on account of nervous
prostration and hysteria.
“My food did not agree with me, I
grew thin and despondent. I could
not enjoy the simplest social affair
for I suffered constantly from nerv¬
ousness in spite of all sorts of medi¬
cines.
“This wr'’ched condition contin¬
ued until I was twenty-five, when I
became interested in the letters of
those who had cases like mine and
who were being cured by eating
Grape-Nuts.
“I had little faith but procured a
box and after the first dish I ex¬
perienced a peculiar satisfied feeling
that I had never gained from any
ordinary food. I slept and rested
better that night and in a few days
began to grow stronger.
“1 had a new feeling of peace and
restfulness. In a few weeks, to my
great joy, the headaches and nerv¬
ousness left me and life became
bright and hopeful. I resumed my
studies and later taught ten months
with ease—of course using Grape
Nuts every day. It is now four years
since I began to use Grape-Nuts, I
am the mistress of a happy home and
the old weakness has never re¬
turned.” Name given by Postum
Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
“There’s a reason.” Read the lit¬
tle book, “The Road to Wellville,”
in pkgs.
A Woman’s Back
Has many aches and pains caused by
weaknesses and falling, or other displace¬
ment, of the pelvic organs. Other symp¬
toms of female weakness are frequent
headache, dizziness, imaginary specks or
dark spots floating before the eyes,-gnaw¬
ing sensation in stomach, dragging or
bearing down in lower abdominal or pelvic
region, disagreeable drains from pelvic
organs,faint spells with general weakness.
If any considerable number of the above
symptoms are present there is no remedy
that will give quicker relief or a more per¬
manent cure than Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription. Ii has a record of over forty
years of cures, It is the most potent !
invigorating tonic and strengthening nor
vine known to medical science. It is made
of the glyceric extracts of native medici¬
nal roots found in our forests and con¬
tains not a drojt of alcohol or harmful, or
habit-forming drugs. Its ingredients are
all printed on the bottle-wrapper and at¬
tested under oath as correct.
Every ingredient entering into "Fa¬
vorite Prescription ” lias the written en¬
dorsement of the most eminent medical
writers of all the several schools of prac¬
tice—more valuable than any amount of
non-professional testimonials—though the
latter are not lacking, having been con¬
tributed voluntarily by grateful patients
in numbers to exceed the endorsements
given to any other medicine extant for
the cure of woman’s ills.
You cannot afford to accept any medicine
of unknown composition as a substitute
for this well proven remedy of knows
composition, even though the dealer may
make a little more profit thereby. Your
interest in regaining health is paramount
to any selfish interest of his and it is an
insult to your intelligence for him to try
to palm off upon you a substitute. You
know what you want and it is his busi¬
ness to supply the article called for.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets aro the
original "Little Liver Pills” first put up
by old Dr. Pierce over forty years ago,
much imitated but never equaled. Little
sugar-coated granules—easy to take as
candy.
TRAIN SCHEDULE.
Georgia Railroad.
TRAINS WEST.
To Atlanta..... .....8:16 a m
To Atlanta.... . .....6:00 a m
To Atlanta..... . ... 11:09 a m
To Atlanta..... .....6:50 p ir,.
TRAINS EAST.
To Augusta..... ...1:17 am
To Augusta..... • k * • . .. 9 :19 a m
To Augusta............4:88 p ir
Central Railway.
Depart to Macoi 9:17 am
Return from Macon . - - - 4:81 p m
Covington & Oxford Street R. R.
The following schedule of the
Covington & Oxford Street Rail¬
road will be run until further
notice •
Lv Covington Hotel at 5:40 a id
Lv Covington Hotel at 8:40 a is
Lv Covington Hotel at 10:50 a is
Lv Covington Hotel at 2:10 p *
Lv Covington Hotel at 4:10 p j*
Lv Covington Hotel at 6:25 pu
Lv C vington Hotel at 7:80 p m
T1 e Oxford car nwets all trains
at t e depot.
J. F. Henderson, Pres.
R. C. Guinn, Sec.
$ 1 , 281 , 600.00
Deposits in Bank
by Ihe Farmers in
South Georgia.
The Banks in the towns along the line at
the Georgia Southern & Florida Ry. aggregate
Capital of $ 904,000
Surplus of 530,000
Deposits of 3,204,000
Of these deposits the Banners have forty
per cent, amounting to §2,281,600.
These figures show the wondeiful prosperi.
ty of South Georgia, and that the Far mers
sr«
enjoying a large share of it.
If you are a Farmer and would like to have
1 snug balance in the Bank, get a farm in
South Georgia while land can be procured of
a reasonable price.
l’or list of lands and prices, and pamphlet
i'vmg full information, write to
W. L. GLESSNER,
Com. Immigration G. S. & F. Ry.
MACON, GA.
Land For Sale.
One Hundred and Nine¬
teen (119) acres good farm
land for sale. This land is in
good state of cultivation, lies
well, and has 25 acres fine
timber on it ; is within 2 miles
of Covington, 1 mile from O
ford, x
with a portion of it on
Georgia railroad. Good school
near by. Apply to
Charley Hunt,
Oxford, Ga.
JAS. P. COOLEY,
attorney
And Counsellor At [
Covington, aw,
G a
.
Office 11), Star Building.
G. II CORNWELL, s. a
CORNWELL & <,i:m
Attorneys and Couxceli ORS At
gsaPAVill Practice in all the Co nrts.
Covington, Georgia.
iWPITE
T0 US
■ u 11
about And tell us about your ailments and la J
Haggard’s Specific Tablets
and Suppositories
the old reliable cure for Indigestion, Net.
vous Bladder Debility, Troubles, Constipation, Lost Vitality Kidnev amj I j
and all
kindred diseases. Piles, etc. Druggistssdl
them at 50; per box, or they vili be sot
prepaid upon receipt cf price. Address
Haggard Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
For Sale by Dr. J. A. Wrigl
T'd Printing
THAT
PERRUADES
ATTRACTS
CONVINCES
RuilS: to Suit Your
Own Individual Needs
DONE BY
i IKE ENTERPRISE
I
* | i PRINTING CO.
( EAST SIDE SQUARE.
Phone 21.
j
1 j
ISi Zl
<5
'
■ m ■a
0 - hi i fi Ml
d
fi,
| ; inspection
t! Solicited.
I will appreciate your thr¬
ough inspection of niT
Photos. I have confidec*
enough in my work to be¬
lieve it is the best possible
to obtain at
Popular Prices.
Souvenir P“8t Cards aid
| I Kodak Finishing Death, a s|
Harry
Photo Car, Next 10 I
well’s Furniture St or 1 .
Wis )
SMOKE
The “ClNCO
The Best of cigar on earth
On Sale
H utchins Grocery Comp a!1
t OVINGTON’, GEORGIA
Bad
SCOTT’S EMULSION neither won'‘ w *J e
T hump back straight, but it feed* s v, s£
a short leg long, ,
the and few heals genuine diseased means bene 0? ^ r-> ,,T,— J
rickets and bone consumptif 11 -
Send for BOWNfc, tree samp;* V.»
SCOTT &
409-425 Bead Street, rll dru r*T;S"A
joc.and/ 1 . 00 ; -