Newspaper Page Text
il m toes l
)L. 4? NO I.
fli-A XE shoes, sold onl y BV KEUABLE dealers. THEY ARE HONEST. E. E. PARKER.
For Church Goers and
Sabbath Observers.
;UGEN’E K . PENDLETON.—
leave til 1 the service is
,»t
creen the neck to look at
|t
iniers. church, particu
ft sleep in
j u a front pew.
’t whisper during prayer
lacking- give seat,
ft get up to your
a lady, because it causes
’o
io».
ft fail to sing: courtesy
es the effort, especially when
; another church,
- inat
f t show list-lessness or
n during the sermon.
,’ t make a display in dress
if church. Simplicity is the
iste and big hats an abomi
L’t wait for the minister to
I the “honors of the occasion
[ L’t a k to him after services.
absent yourself repeated
id then wonder why your
^ru are less cordial to you
io others.
b’t get your mail on the
I day.
b’t use the day for social
hres and license,
ji’t allow visitors or callers
Ip you from church.
ii*t take trips on the Lords
aoper observance of these
iimilar “Jon’ts” will not
a Christian, but the viola
jof them will shock Chris¬
and expose you to criticism,
pistian sui.tment crystallized
knell rules, and good taste
[r iper respect demand their
Litiou.
y are simply kept, and their
ranee »ill always make men
it you.
—*■ - - «■
•scribe to The Enterprise
<sP»<TN ©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©o 0
THE IMiiW OF #11 GLAIR IS Cl Cl
Cl
Tlie Latest, The Best, The Cheapest. 8 o
-X gAK$’i ' rsrrT^agrwa&Sg n: ~. 'X; -.-s. ./c cet...-^ ttst.*?™.". i: T17'~L n»ri L-ub Cl
: tr" .""ti'gji'gEaa EDSSS I . ' , ?^” 5 || » ya ! , ;g , ' , . ■
Don’t be led into error by good of inferior quality when You may have the best here at the same price or less. ci
7TWr --;r--r'w»-' -.';r~ -- iJn ! tutt&S£2!!i2 o
c: "ITT. -r--' -.1, i^).ii,'f i ■*-■*» ^ n-V'— ‘--- A -- c i it * ' . .., €1
, . „
£**✓«*•
r O rp“ Fine {ZaJjamw ©
■"p!« f — / >"* ei'jla * Millinery. f mW £ For fashionable women; beauti¬ 5 k' w ‘ <'■ i Cl
$6.50—not :
'■-1 I for children ; ful for scarfs, $2.50 to ©
New ideas in caps t? with cheap stuff. ded
r^fiL LERS • caps for misses, and. a great big lot of tistc to be compared t'i* isfofn ©
I a preferred by women -r^ ^v !?> %
\ of hats for ladies. and discrimination in urc^s of on V-. K \ Hjor! eSS
A HypOTMiii :s tiS Skeedoo hat, account of its Eics’acce nm. Ladies Coats. X *’ pe ©
-A-. The Peda Pan or Style, Fit, Finish and CO&.jfy c.
this We Superior Quality of
~'i Hsi Kfci f m tfrmu is quite popular season. Also Fabrics. You can The long ottered by us are i fffl TRW’. MARK 3$y- Y* :• ©
order these few days. buy them of us at ^ til coats M
vr |a m every the same price as finished and ©
> V the hood which is so very popular. from the largest city m < of nice material, well R >|k~//llTTU\ / /ou» \
dSs? lookout department stores. Wear \ j Ls handsomely designed, prices rang¬ #t N^/SAM&ON 1
We are constantly on the the latest styles and pur- ,/ 61
- i tipli 1 11 11 for new ideas, keeping right up f O chase them having at home. the In- i f‘;CAl \ I5.0G ing $1.50 to $12 50. Comparison 5°5
gist upon TO has that superior ©
} the minute. The pretty new things American J |-CM JI2,50 proven we carry
you want, we want you to have. quality. ©
11 o •§« i ti happier. This keeps us busy and makes you Girl Skirt / / PS . Clothing. ried/nm tlAOt J?/. ANt> Copy*‘6" Louis. r l0 6 r ©
fii Hip ;■ && m Shoes!! Wo locally. control anJ It* if un- sale Jjjl Ifatl Jit i J j j n ..i‘ I •: ■ fll Criterion the standard ot ©
i Shoes!- means m
im m aUe election to make from a Ujj> l]lj> ll Sj i \\\ ! judging, the fabric selected with a
% d Vl-yVf M '.'••2§Sr* r f - fc] view of conformity with the Crite¬ Underwear. ©
r / line shoes; great vab Sumpter
K I'V great, of logue and order rion idea, the workmanship to ex¬ ©
styles, and pleasure in we ll take your skirt. expectations of the The popular priced Ribbed Un¬
ires; • great ^ for a special or iDule-to-roearore ceed even the
wearing- The superior quality of greatest critic. To wear Criterion derwear sold by us will ktep you o
New high Telescope, Johnnie ill 1 ovr shoes are daily demonstra* Ask for Premium Cards means to be well dressed, and well warm ou a cold day and does not ©
'nes and other new ideas to tickle ted by long and comfortable went- pleased. sweat you to death on a warm day.
1 ‘ le fancy of swell dressers. ing. ©
COVINGTON, GEORGIA. o
C. E. COOK, o
«v ©©©©©©©©©©©©£©©©©©©£©©©©
T he Enterprise
COVINGTON, GA. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1906.
STATE ORGANIZER
LEE, TO SPEAK
HERE FRIDAY.
Mr. Lee, state organizer for
the Farmers’ Union, will ad¬
dress the people of Newton
county at the court house in
Covington next Friday, Nov.
30, at io o’clock a. m. Every
body invited to come out and
hear him.
-
Masons to Meet.
The Golden Fleece Lodge, No 6,
F. & A. M. will hold an impor¬
tant meeting on Friday night Dec.
7th. Work in the Third Degree.
All members urged to be present.
J. W. PEEK, Sec.
Bordert-Neol.
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Borders
of McDonough, Ga., announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Mary Elizabeth, to Mr. John
O. Noel, of Atlanta.
Miss Borders was formerly a
Covington girl, having passed
through both the Gratnmer and
High schools with much credit.
She has many f riends in Covington
who will be interested in her ap
proaching marriage.
Mr. Noel is a progressive young
business man, of Atlanta. The
niarnage will be solemnized at the
Methodist church at McDonough,
Ga. * * *
-*• --—
Olivei’s Fsrtnons Chilled Metal
Plows are light in weight, but
strong and durable. J hevare sold
Stephenson Hardware Co.
«*-••►**
When you are in town try a
meal at the Covington Hotel, tf
Where the Undertaker Loses.
At. an unr.ertakers’ banquet
■
man in black told a strange exp
rience, says the Minneapolis Jour¬
nal.
“This experience,” he said,
happened to me in '84. It is a
thing that I hope wont happen to
uone of you. 1 for, gents, it cost me
dear.
I was hired to bury an epilep
tic of 56 years. He had been rich,
and the ceremony was a costly
one, running well in the hundreds
Well, gents, in the middle of the
ceremony we heard inside the
gold-mounted coffin a ripping
sound. Scared, we opened the
coffin, and there was the man,
anve, tearing the white satin up
holstry in despair and fear.
“He had been a fit. He hadn’t
been dead after all And, if you’¬
ll believe me, he refused to pay
my funural bill—said he hadn’t
ordered no funeral, and he would¬
n’t pay for none.
I went to the heirs. They, in
their disappointment, were sore
and churlish. They were poor,
they said, and thier uncle was
rich. It wasn’t for them to pay
In fact, though I sued the man
who had come back to life, I lost
my money. The judge said it
wasn’t his funeral, and he needn’t
pay for it. There was no use
suing the heirs, since they had
nothing. I thought of suing the
doctor, but lie and I threw a good
deal of trade in one another’s way
professionally, and I refrained.
I bet, that, in every case of the
dead coming hack to life, the
undertaker, if you only knew it,
loses bis money.
Bring your chickens and'eggfc to
the Covington Hotel. The high¬
est market price paid. J. S. Lau
nius proprietor.
r-«—
Subscribe for The Enterprise,
CLUBBING OFFER!!
In order to increase our 8ub
scription and to help onr sub¬
sen hers we are able to made the
following liberal clubbing rates:
The Enterprise and Tom Wat
son’s Jeffersonian for $1.75.
The Enterprise and Tri-Weekly
Constitution $1.75,
The Enterprise and Semi-Week¬
ly Journal and a premium $1.75.
The Enterprise, Review of Re¬
views, _ Woman’s Home Compan
ion . Success Magazine $6.00, all
for $8.75.
The Enterprise and a standard
book of fiction, including such
works as Dickens, Scott, Thack
ery, Ruskin, for $1.15.
The Liquor Question.
A man must be totally blind
who can not see from the public
meeting held, from the declaration
of the secular press, from the
voice of the religious press that
the liquor traffic is bound to be a
live question in Atlanta and
throught the State. The pro bi
bitionists may not get all they
demand, but restrictions, with
more rigid regulations than have
heretofore existed in reference to
the sale of liquor in Atlanta and
tho jug trade in the coun¬
ties is as surt to c<>me as time is
to last. It may take a State cam¬
paign, Be that as it may, some
thing has got to be .done for the
relief of the people and for ttie
protection of the people against
capital and the iufiuentia.
lawyers that they can employ to
represent them can perpetuate
their predominance in Georgia
politics, and in the debauchery of
their virtues, but they are surely
deceived.— Ex.
$ C. A. COME TO
' POOL’S STORE
For Meats, Eggs, Chickens, Etc. I
Highest market price paid for f
Country Produce.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY.
Smith’s Drug Store llll
Next Door to Post Office.
EVERYTHING in Drugs, Toilet Articles, Stationery,
^ Family Fountain Syringes, Water Bottles, Etc.
Hot and Cold Drinks
at the Soda Fountain.
Cigars and Tobacco.
GEO. T. SMITH,
81 $ Bank of Newton County, H
81 COVINGTON, GA.
n 8 Our financial statements, issued everv now and th^n. 15 55
omit one of our strongest assets— REPUTATION. This 83
^ is an intangible part of our recources, whose vulue cannot
xs 81 be measured in dollars and cents. 83
It is one of the units of consideration supplied to the
^ selection of a bank, wh : ch helps to inspire the essential
confidence to open an account. 8*
>r Our REPUTATION is known to you. We would 83
81 A appreciate your account 0 83
1 BANK OF NEWTON COUNTY. I
T. A. PERRY, JOHN 13. DAVIS Jr., H
^ V
£<$ President. Vice Pres.
A. B. SIMMS, Cashier. 53
>A 83