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13
^URNITURE much AND UND ERT a k I N G GOODS. a
Owing to so rain and shortage in the cotton cron T will a
CASH, anything o+ai-tiv S? .v. h ® th f this month and continuing
ill sell FOR in the Furniture Line ° ’ 30 DA5fs
J S T. and on larger bills oyer and one better hundred dollars at 7 1-2 PerO^n amounting to 12^°“ . *" 10 PEB ° ENT ° N ACTTJAL - II
I have a assortment for the accommodation of the public
CL. e — oonriitmns. I mean exactly what I say. "Watch this g S enerally than ever before offered in Covington
a Yonrc- space for the next twelve months and see what I have to offer,
urs for -r-v-m m Trade, , and Especially Friendship,
o. n
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p ' ®* 1 wil1 con tinue to sell on a ny kind of terms the public wish ► ►
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.0. Smith,
L ESTATE.
, is, Star Building.
gton, Georgia.
j several residences in Ox
e
ds ot city property, see me
ii want.
_
lest >nlzed located, most reputable in the
hotel property
cheap
___
-eg for sale ranging from
E most desirable lots in city
imposes, on Conye rs street.
,hurch street, very desirable.
i one mile of court house,
iouse and a tenant h^use.
Can be bought reasonable.
tt near town, with about 12
| timber, balance in cultiva
[es well and in high state of
Liles of Covington, having
house.
bent in Oxford. Eight-acre
B, 2 acres fronting the street
4 acres deep Near Emory
Invenient to both Covington
pin Brewer’s district, facing
Well timbered.
( ol land two blocks from
P“ frontage on public street.
rm in Stansell’s district, in
cultivation; new 6 room
ppleted; 1 tenant house ot
acres in cultivation. 15 in
land 15 in old field pine and
In; fruit orchard will begin
hear. Facing two public
200 yards of good public
I community. One third
jee in 1, 2 and 15 years
well improved, 3$ miles
I having thereon a 7-room
Itcnant houses, barns, etc.
> in cultivation and CO
forest timber; 20 acres in
pasture Fine young or¬
is. Convenient to school
terms can be arranged.
I miles of Covington, with a
Le on Georgia railroad ; 60
f a tion> and practically all
peres in fine bottoms. 30
P torest heavily timbered.
P place. Terms easy— one
|nd pnt balance interest in 1, 2, 3 and 4
er Shop, with a 850
,^ ■ on Georgia railroad,
ee P- Another build
ln ’ear. Both build
i ,witli 18-inch walls,
repair, well construct¬
ed fllh on a 4-acre tract
a spur track of
running into the
nest location in the
’fgv factor he machine
■ ’ original cost
3111 d was $22,000.
an( a fine invest¬
ed hold. This prop
■ sta y on the market
•resent price.
farm of Cornie P
North of Coving
r er sey. « alnut-grove There and
e l )la are four
ce, two contain-
3ai each, 1 five rooms
rooms. All houses in
,a and the land in
Gtivation, a
mo re than some of
acre a bale of
|n ' 125 acres in
V** CS° in bermuda
1U ori S illal
saTe A p- Flne h0paud v a Pple and a11
j Si»TS Sa TiDeyard
-
Jurch mile of
S near by. A fine
y - Five dollars
: Present won’t buy
I yeara ’ Here is your
l »»►
FROM THE BELLMAN
TO MRS. DAVIS AND THE LOST CAUSE.
From “The Bellman,” a delight¬
ful weekly publication of Min¬
neapolis, the following beautiful
tribute to the cause of the South
and to Mrs. Jefferson Davis is clip¬
ped. It is gratifying to find such
a generous spirit in our Western
neighbors and bo true an apprecia¬
tion and reverence for the princi¬
ples and qualities of the South.
To Southerners this dark chapter
in our history is vital and uufor
getable and the significance of our
struggle grown each year in mean¬
ing, but to other sections its ro¬
mance may suggest “the quaint
flavor of something that has long
lain in sweet smelling lavender.”
We buote farther from the article,
regretting that space does not allow
us to give it in full. It says of
the “Lost Cause” :
“We associate it with thoughts
of an ill-starred flag, followed to
its finish by faithful and courage¬
ous soldiers clad in gray, battled
bruised and pathetically ragged,
but their honour untarnished ;
brave men conquered, but unafraid
and unashamed; our brothers of
the old, chivalraus South. The
poor ‘Lost Cause,’ lost these forty
years and more; we of the pros¬
perous and victorous North can af¬
ford to do revereuce to the beauti¬
ful ideal it typifiedand take pride in
the American spirit which, even if
mistaken, still marched so valor
ously with Robert E. Lee and
Stonewall Jackson and gave battle
for the principles it stood for.
11 All hatred and stiife; the sore¬
ness of combat and the bitterness
of defeat are long since faded from
the national heart. One flag alone
floats over our country, but loyalty
to the stars and stripes does not
lorbid pausing in our march of in¬
dustrial achievement to salute the
memory of that other flag which
went down before it, as one may
rightly and honorably pay tribute
of deserved praise to a gallent but
unsuccessful enemy.
The days of the Southern Con¬
federacy seem so long gone that it
start'es us when a living tie breaks
which connected our time with its
brief glory. This happened in the
death of Varina Jefferson Davis,
widow of the president of the Con¬
federate states of the America, who
passed away, 80 years old, in New
Y T ork city last week. Her death
recalls chapters in American his¬
tory which seem very remote to
those who merely read them and
took no part in their stirring
events. A wonderful woman, and
a grand type of the highest and
best in American wife and motber
hood, went to her well earned rest
when Mrs. Jefferson Davis died.
“What she endured and tri¬
umphed over her lifetime can be
bnt faintly imagined. She mar¬
ried Jefferson Davis just before he
was sent to congress from the state
of Mississippi; she saw him go to
the Mexican war and met him on
his return when he was severely
wounded. She accompanied him
to Washington and remained there
during his ten years in the United
States senate and his four years as
of war. She was mis
of the executive mansion at
Richmond during the bitter, dark
of the civil war.
i t She was his companion during
year of his imprisonment in For¬
Monroe; she went with him
Europe on his release from cap¬
tivity ; she returned to America
when he died, and, until his death,
in 1889, she was his constant and
faithful companion. Throughout
his notable career, she was beside
him, sharing his lot to its highest
and most briiliant pinnacle and
thence through the evil days, the
sorrow of disaster, defeat and
downfall. She not only endured
the tremendous vicissitudes of his
public life, but the even more
acute and heart breaking sorrows
of domestic affairs, for she was the
mother of six children, all of
whom, save one, she survived.
“The years ot care, sorrow, dis¬
appointment and regret; the anx¬
ious nights and sad, long, weary
days which came to the lot of this
American wife and mother were a
test of endurance such as few are
called upon to withstand Yet she
endured all, suffered all and lived
out her full four score of years, a
triumphant example and an honor
to her sex. Every true American,
North and South, will glory in her
indomitable soul and honor the
memory of this brave ladv who
has gone to her Jjust reward, for
she was American by birth and
lineage, her great-grandfather,
Governor Howell, of New Jersey,
having been a triend of Washihg
ton.
“The vanguard of the Confeder¬
acy marched gallantly to the front,
flags flying and bands playing the
strains of the ‘Bonnie Blue Flag,’
‘Dixie’ and ‘Maryland, My Marv
land. It made a brave and mar
tial show and stirred the hearts of
men The rear guard of the ‘Lost
Cause’ marches to the solemn
dirge of funeral music: it bears to
their last resting place the remains
of the widow of its president an
American woman, ennobled by
suffering, sacred by reason of sor
rows triumphantly endured. The
last scene in the sad pageant is
more glorious, more inspiring and
more beautiful than the first, and
the nation does well to bear its
reve rend head in honor ot it.”
THE ORSSSNAL
LAXATIVE GOUGH SYRUP
and assists in / The Red
For all Couchs the_sy Clover Blos¬
expellinc ^ Colds .rom t he —L som and the
tem by fently moving Honey Bea
A certain |
towels. and is on every
relief for croup bottle.
whooping-cough. all other Hr, 3£
Nearly xfiwmPLu- ▼UjKh-sMf
s£.t [h
m
the bowels, contains i
Opiates. n “
po
SIS
t c . -Ti'S.’SSSk
I Sol.1 at J. A. Wright’s drug store.
the ENTERPRISE, COVINGTON
GA
A Lazy Liver
May be only a tired liver, or a starved 1
liver. It would be a stupid as well as j
savago thing to beat a weary or starved I
man because he lagged in his work. So
in treating the lagging, torpid liver it is !
a great mistake to laah it with strong i
drastic Indication drugs. A torpid liver Is but an j j
of an ill-noorUhed, enfeebled
body whose or* a in art weary with over
work. Start with the stomaeh and allied
organs of digestion and nutrition. Put
them In working order and see how
quickly your liver will beeome active.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery
has made many marvelous cures of "liver
trouble " by Its wonderful control of the
organs of digestion and nutrition. It re¬
stores the normal activity of the stomach,
increases the sscroiion* of the blood-mak¬
ing glands, cleanse* the system from poi¬
sonous aceumnlstloiM, and so relieves the
Hvtr of the burden* imposed upon it by
the defection of other organs.
If you have bitter or bad taabe In the mora¬
les, poor or variable apeeUte, coated tneguev
foul breath, constipated or Irregular bowels,
feel weak. aeeUr tired, deapcsideut, frequent
headaehea, sain or distress la “ small of back."
gnawing or dlstrewed feeling (a stomach,
perhaps nausea, bitter or sour "risings" In
throat after eating, and kindred symptom*
of weak stonach aud torpid liver, ae medi¬
cine will relieve you more promptly or cure
you more permanently than Doctor Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery. Perhaps only
a part of the abovs symptom* will be present
at one time and yet point to torpid liver or
biliousness and weak alomach. Avoid all
hot bread and biscuits, griddlo cakes and
other indigestible food and take the "Golden
Medical Discovery " regularly and stick to its
use until you are vigorous and strong.
The "Discovery" Is non-socret, non-aleo
hollc, is a glyceric extract of native medici¬
nal roots with a full list of Its ingredients
printed on each bottlc-wrappor and attested
under oath.^ Its Ingredients are endorsed
and extolled by tho most eminent medical
writers of the age and are recommended to
cure the diseases for which it is advised. .
Don’t accept substitute of unknown !
a
composition for this non-secret siedicixk
OF KNOWN COMPOSITION. ~
GEORGIA 1LANE).
(Time Dixie.)
In Georgia land from whence we
came,
King Alcohol is growing lame;
Praise the Lord, praise the Lord !
Praise the Lord, Georgia land 1
Too long to Rum we’ve bowed the
knee;
But now we’ve vowed we will be
free;
Praise the Lord, praise the Lord !
Praise the Lord, Georgia land !
CHORUS.
We’ll drive saloons from Georgia ;
We will! We will!!
No longer shall they hold the
sway;
We’ll drive the awful curse away,
away;
Away from sunny Georgia.
When a woman wills she will, you
know.
And now she wills that saloons
must go—
Praise the Lord, praise the Lord !
Praise the Lord, Georgia land!
’Tis not by power, nor yet by
might,
But by His grace we’ll win the
fight.
Praise the Lord, praise the Lord !
Praise the Lord, Georgia land !
second chorus.
Prohibition’s on in Georgia;
It is! It is!!
From mountain top to sandy plain
Prohibition’s sure to reign ;
It is! It if! 1
Away down south in Georgia!
. C £S££
| ■
GOAL! ▲
Blue Gem and Red Ash
Jollieo Coal. Now is a good
time to have us put in your
winter supply.
I
Phone 20. Rock Marehouse.
. 13
COTTON STORED. t>3
B
Liberal Advances on Cotton Stored. m
BUGGIES and WAGONS b
B
For cash time. H
or on B
A. THOMPSON, B
ii D. & B &
ii COVINGTON, GEORGIA. B
ii B
IHEB M&JHNUk sMLUA"ST9n»jMBtUSHRUUAirV(.lQA
Come Investigate
NOT A
pI RE SALE
BUT A BONAFIDE
At & Below Cost Sale
We offer the public until December 1st.
■ our entire stock of Shoes. Clothing Dry
Goods Hardware etc. at WHOLESALE COST.
We are going out of business January 1st.
and this is your opportunity to get goods at
less than present values in the market.
Come and let us show you what we are
offering, that is all. We are satisfied you wilf
carry a bundle with you.
YOURS TO SERVE,
LEE & ANDERSON.
We Want Your Job Printing.