Newspaper Page Text
Farm For Sale.
280 acres in Newton county
125 acres under cultivation,
40 acres bottoms, good pasture
splendid dwelling containing
six large rooms, 3 tenant
es, in excellent condit on. Five
good wells and excellent spring
Fine orchard. For terms and
prices, address,
W. V. VEAL,
Porterdale, Ga. Route 1 —2m
For Sale —Appier Rn*t Proof
Oats; Seed Wheat — puip'e straw;
Berkshire Pigs. • 1. W. Jarman,
Porterdale, Ga., Route* 2 .—8m.
For Sale
50 acres Land, 8 miles of trwo
$200 cash; balance 1 and 2 \ears
BSsTS e D o >«(>
f 1 INVITATION OF at* Turl
PIEDMONT nirniflAiiT HflTFI »
I ILUEviUli I II U 8 li L
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
N OT all the people who
visit . Atlanta under-!
stand that the rates at
the Piedmont Hotel
are so reasonable. With
__all its magnificence,
prices luxury and comfort,
the for rooms and meals
are moderate.
with A thoroughly 300 fire-proof hotel
guest rooms and 150
private baths, it has every
modern convenience. * Under
the management of Harvey &
Wood, it has rapidly gained the
reputation of being one of the
best kept hotels in the country.
Its snow-white cleanliness in
the summer season pleases all.
Wl
- =
Piedmont Hotel
The hotel is conducted on the Europ¬
ean plan, and the rates are as follows:
Rooms, Without Bath, $1.50 and
Rooms, $2,00 per day
With Bath, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50
and $4.00 per day
A liberal reduction is made where
two or more persons occupy the same
room.
Jamestown Exposition visitors
will find it pleasant to stop
over in Atlanta.
In the two Cafes all the season’s
delicacies can be found, cooked and
served in the very best style. For
those who do not like the a la carte
service, follows: regular meal* are served as
Luncheon Breakfast 30 c to $1.00;
50 c and Dinner $1.00.
A superb Boston orchestra delights
tne , guests of the
daily, hotel with three
concerts and will be a special
feature all the summer. Do not fail
to hear the music of this orchestra
the next time you visit Atlanta.
For any further information de¬
sired address, Manager
^PUDWr HOTEL, Atlanta Ga.
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LARGE SHIPMENT OF PIANOS AND ORGANS I
Ur ! have just received a solid car load of Organs and ass* ESS
Pianos, » S
1 i XvjY’N, i m (Ellington Make) any one needing anything in this ;
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F" Z ■ 3 w. R line can save money by coming to investigate before they Si »' I
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wm -• i buy. Every instrument guaranteed. WWBB § W‘’
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Si ^ tfl ^4 . A. HARWELL “ The Mo.t in the Comfortable Ho«*e ” 55 *.
j COVINGTON, i * J GEORGIA. T*»OC Vudor *»«» ■
, SHADES
0 & I ' C - ; r- ->w PORCH
£ f V. > *
■ rt” *
m&m, "t.
What is a Newspaper?
•. new spacer is the thing which
‘
|^ry persou in town knows how
j', should be he '• d " or ' “d* for
what ;, an oven
roasts „ U|1 everyone except him
I se! ^ members of your iamily and a
f,* w of your particular friends, for
whom it should be a sweet-scented
•'Oiiquet of praise.
It is a promoter of proianity if it
a not on the front porch when you
r«t down in the morning, and what
oil tell the man who works on it
-n’t fit to go into a decent per
son’s home.
It U what the young man who
borrows it from the saloon bar
■‘kicks” ab >ut because it contains
only one sp >rting page, and which
the woman tells her neighbor when
she takes it ba:k is not worth sub
scribing for, because it has but one
page devoted to fashions and mak
ing currant jam. t
It is what the merchant threat -1
-ns to null his ad. out of, because:
’
‘ 6 catt l,ot have the rU!l ° f lbe pa *
* r a,id what the old 9,ib8C,iber i
- ■
glares,* going to th" de™*™ i
bowwows, because it is getting hi
that nothing but advertising can j
get a position in it any more.
It is what you want to see the!
editor to keep your name out of as
soo i as you nave settled with the
police justice on the morning af¬
ter, and to get v< ur name into as
soon as the cards are issued two
weeks before.
It is what is just too horrid and
inquisitive for anything, and
« i please keep my name out” when
the reporter wishes to know about
bridge whi?t club, and which is
the mean old sheet that never
gets anything right when your
name is omitted from ‘‘among
thos-i present.”
Ir is what no one ever forgets to
condemn for its mistakes, and
never remembers to praise lot the
good it accomplishes.
It is subsidized organ when it
fails to tell about the millionaire’s
wile running awnv with the coach¬
man, and a libeous yellow rag
when it reports ycur police court
trial for kniiug your neighbor’s
rooster.
It is what is difficult to print S‘>
as to isnit anybody, and which
would be nothing but eight pages
of blank white paper with a head
line if it were published fo as to
suit everybody.—Binghamton (N.
Y.) Republican.
Correct Speaking.
One of the most pleasing things
in young people is the habit of
correct speaking. Let us advise
ill our young readers to acquire it
n early life. The longer you live
be difficult the acquirement of
•orrect language is; and if the
golden age of youth, the proper
season for the acquisiton of languag
is pissed in abuse, the unfortunate
victim, if neglected, is very prop¬
erly doomed to talk along all his
life.
Money is not necessaiy to secure
this education. Every one has it
in his power. Ho has merely to
T Hfc ENTERPRISE. CCVING'JON GA
use the language which he reads,
instead <*1 the slang whi'h le
hears, to form his tastes iron the
poets and authors of the
country, t > treasure up false phra¬
ses in his memory, and habituate
hiimelf t > their use, avoiding at
the same time that precision and
bom hast which show the weakness
of vain ambn ion rather than tlie
polish of an educated mind.—Ex.
j
! Heart O’ Mine.
j Shall I tell that I love
you you
Heart o’ mine?
Shall I say the stars above you
Not more steadily can shine.
Whether clear as crystal gleaming
• Or soft-veiled in clouds of grev
Constantly their light is beaming,
Constantly alway, alway.
g^ a p j H{IV that j u U1 y dreaming,
. Heart o’ mine.
Does your picture, always seemiug
Wreathed in beauty more di¬
vine,
Shine in radiance supernal,
Smiling through the sileut
night
Luring bepeand faith eternal
Sacred vision of delight
Shall I sav that when I’m waking,
Heart o' mine,
Any worthy effort making
In the struggle: This thesign,
This the secret, certain, sealing,
This the blessing and the bliss,
For the wounds the sweetest heal¬
ing—
Just the promise of your kiss?
—Selected.
-*• « • »
The Cry For Laughter.
To make one laugh—this is the
insistent demand to-day. The
element of amusement must enter
into every form of art. Leave out
sense, sentiment, imagination, but
venture not to leave out fun. The
lecture that draws the big audience
is the one that brings in the most
jokes; the play that fills the house
is i.ot the tragedy which ‘‘purges
wiih pity and terror” (that passed
long ago) nor the drama of
human action and passion lighted
here and thcie with wit or humor;
it is tHe exaggerated burlesque,
the hop and skip vaudeville, the
farce so ridiculous that we laugh
in spite of ourselves and feel self
contemptuous afterwards.
To laugh is all right. Laughter
is an excellent thing—in its place.
It i9 a corrective of sour moods; it
is a breeze that clears the mental
atmosphere of vapors; it is a dredge
that sweeps away the barriers of
formalism and sets in motion warm
currents of good will. But laugh¬
ter, to be wholesome, should be
occasional, not continuous. Hu¬
mor is the spice of art not the
pabulum. There is danger of los¬
ing sight of ibis—danger that the
craze for amusement invade the
domain of serious art arid dethrone
noble ideas.—Mary R. Bryan in
Uncle Remus’s Magazine for Octo¬
ber.
A good house and lot on Monti
cello street for sale. Apply to
Wood Aiken.—tf.
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HON. WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN
Who will likely be the Democratic nominee for President next year. He will deliver an address a|
Georgia State Fair tomorrow to one of the largest crowds ever assembled in Atlanta, j
A large number of Covingtonites will hear the famous Nebraska orator.
Woman’s Photo Wins
Fortune For Her.
Mrs. Lydia Pea-hke, of Milwau¬
kee, Wis , has been left a fortune
of four hundred thousand dollars
by Senor Juan J<>se Manda, of
Mexico. The senor saw a photo¬
graph of Mrs. Paeschke, fell i
love with it and wrote a letter to
the young woman ardently ex¬
pressing respond. his Soon love, afterwards but she did he died not J
i
and when the w.ll was opened it
was found that ,ie had left his en¬
tire fortune to the woman of the
picture whom he had never 9een.
There are no heirs at law and the i
willis legally drawn aid Mrs.
Paeschke will get the money as
soon as the estate 19 administered.
•« «► - •
Subscribe for the Enterprise
Unique Card of Thanks.
A lady living in u county up ins
Tennessee sent her editor the fol¬
lowing card of thanks: Mr. Edi¬
tor: I desire to thank tin friend*
and neighbors most heartily in
this manner for their corporation
during the illness and death of in v i
late husband who escaped from me
by the hand of death on lust who| En
day. To tny friends and all I
contributed so willingly toward !
making the last moment and the I
funeral a success, I desire , . to <*e- j
lines member will most find kiudly, hoping these j
them enjoying
same blessing. I have also a good j
milch cow and horse, eight years;
old, which I will sell cheap. God
moves in mysterious ways his won
ders to, perform. He plants his
footsteps upon the sea and rides
upon the storm. Also a black and i
white shoat cheap. >
BRICK STORE.
The oyster supper givwi bi
voting people of Mt. PieassiB
last Friday evening was and
ble affair, Q .ite a neat *ui
the church "as realized.
field, Social Circle, l J i fle
and other points were well
sented.
Rev James Armstrong, of
tur W!,s 1 llH ■ f Mr.
. this we
Paine at B'iek r-t -re
Miss Eppie Sh-ckleyof 0
ton. spoilt Lst wte k here wiU
Opbelm Terrell.
V j r au ,j y| r .< j T Taylor ^
ll 9 t, Friday with Mrs fib
in Covingt m:. attend!
Mr Paul T Dyer
Gentry,d<;g aiffi ponv s’*°*
ington I< riday • • ■
Misses Leila and Cora
of Si'Cial Circle, spent -
end with M is J 1 la\ ' ra
Both