Newspaper Page Text
MIXON.
Mis. J. H. Pope a::d daughter,
Mbs Sallie Mae, were the guests
of Mr. Son Pennington’s family
last Sunday at Gaithers.
Miss Lania Polk spent Sunday
with Mrs. Andrew King.
Mr. aud Mrs. Johnie Kitchens
and children spent Sunday with
Mr. Jack Bohanan and family.
Mr. Johnie Kitchens has pur¬
chased a new organ.
Messrs. Sevice Vaughn and Hu.
b:e Ivy spent Saturday night and
Sunday with relatives and friends
at Endora.
Mias Pearl Polk spent last Sun¬
day with the Misses Ivy.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvy Polk, from
Snapping Shoals, visited relatives
b«ie Saturday and Sunday,
Mr, Will Savage, of Starrsvillo,
wnc m this community Saturday
right.
Mrs*** Maude Key, Eula Hardy,
and Ida Mell Thompson, from Mt.
Zion, Jasper county, spent a few
VI H ft of last week with thq Misses
j
Polk,*
Miss n.,, n. . the , guest .
Aiken was
CL Miss Dossil Rue Ivy last Sun
«V ttfternoon.
By request the,. -iU be a sing
iug at Newton Factory next Son
<l,.y afternoon. Everybody in
vited to attend.
Miss Nora Kitchens entertained
of her friends , . . Sunday ^ ^ ,
n few
with a singing. All reported
pleasant time.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
spent Saturday night and
with parents, Mr. and Mrs>. I.
Vaughn.
The school opened here Nov.
with very favorable
r.rui is under the control of
Lee Herring and Miss Flora Cox.
Both these teachers are highly re¬
commended and it is certain that
1 he school will florish. So let ev
ervhody give a long pull, a
puil for the best school anywhere.
ROWLEY.
The farmers in this section are
GOOD THINGS ALL DEPARTMENTS t
LADIES DRESS £
GOODS. t
\ Glothing
n a ■ \, We have had beautiful success Shoes tv.
:>*■ v with our up to date Goods this sea
UK i. son, and we are now getting more
UK 1 new goods in this department to Shoes M
UK 5 ^i You must not fail to keep the stock pretty be to
ms so sure
UM Q look line be¬ give look.
nn our over us a
UK L We do not hesitate
nn o fore you buy that New
m yin llii / BLANKETS, QUILTS to that our Hey
UK r Fall Suit. say
Cr : Gold weather will be here is
i i soon and you wood Shoe for men
UM We can fit you in will need a good pair of blankets or some quilts the best Shoe for the
n We have beautiful li
anything. a me. rice will find
mn most Q, you we
T4K 1 them in all Styles.
We want trade. If ave
mg We sell GOOD your you want We are also very
Si II to buy anything to
UK !: wear or to eat Every Day
MK -A. Clothes. to strong on
UK liliisfl come see us. Our stock is com- Shoes for Men, Boys,
!
I i ! *11
mn 1 « V ** anr *» e \Afn T * --at *%.-*%* vou v m nc*h i » LSi - % ! women and Childr
ns r J
3* ■
*i‘0- ■ TT-Bi- T|mi[-_| I
§F r ‘ m mm
, / v-tj vY
y SM
r» j? /ff fit Cat fl # jgg • m
sowing now more cats and
wheat than was ever known be¬
fore. The sowing season has been
good aud the farmers have taken
advantage of it and will live more
at home next year than they have
been doing.
Our community regrets very
much to loose as residents Mr. J.
A. Stone and his estimable family,
who have gone Griffin to reside.
His friends commend him and his
family to the people of his new
home.
The Victory school opened this
week in charge of Miss Ruth At¬
kinson, of Senoia. Thirty-four
pupils attended the opening day
and this number wiil increase.
Miss Atkinson is highly recom¬
mended aud has made a splendid
impression already, At the first
of the year the number of teachers
will be increased.
♦ ►
Marriage Suprise.
the : ii -damage t Aline
o -
Wright rirrtif to in Mr. Mr Saffillel- Green of nf
Edgewood on Saturday evening at '
the home of her Aunt, Mrs. C. ■*-'
Erankline, lJUU came as quite a r .utrprie
“yXht'is ,. A
a •’
Co ^ v ton and
v« ». T daughterof Mr. and . Mrs. ,..
! ‘A Wtight aud a grand daughter
, 1 *<*>, 0. W. Powell.
Mr. Green ism the real estate
business in Atlanta.
Best wishes of all the friends of
young couple attend them.
D. A. R Luncheon at Mrs:Pace’s
Among the many brilliant af¬
fairs given the past week in honor
of the visiting delegates to the
state conference, none was more
beautiful than the buffet luncheon
given by Sergeant-Newton chapter
D. A. R. at the lovely home of
Mrs. James M. Pace.
The house with its decorations
of numbers of fecus, palms and
magnificent chrysan themnms,
I made a beautiful setting for
numbers of handsomely gowue l
THE ENTERPRISE, COVINGTON, OA
women. The hallway was nr.ost
attractive with yellow chrysanthe¬
mums, potted plants and beautiful
flags, artistically draped. Tie
drawing room was in pink; the
dining room in white aud the cozy
little coffee room in yellow and
blue.
A hot course, consisting of chick¬
en boudine, green peas, sliced ton¬
gue, beaten biscuit and olives, was
served with coffeo followed by a
beantiful salad course, in which
the color scheme of yellow and
blue was carried out.
The young ladies serving were
Misses Bonner Simms, Flora Carr,
Annie Carr, Kate Butler, Susit
I^ewis, Anna Keith, Ezell Fox aud
AUiue Wright.
Mrs. Pace was assisted in re¬
ceiving by her daughters, Mrs.
Annie Pace Wooten and Mrs. Lula
Pace Owsley, of Atlanta.
it THE SENSELESS FEATHER DUSTiL?
By BDWARE BOH. Editor of the Ladle** Home Journal
“It may be a quick way of dusting, but what does it really accomplish, except to set particles of d
that it be easily breathed in by those who happen to be in the room. As US f'” tnot ‘ on
can more an unsanitary articl so
its duster equal and is at scarcely the end known.....Let of that time there a maid is just or a exactly housekeeper as much devote dust in one the hour to there the dusting of a roo* m ° • USC ’ a ^ * er eat * la her P s
room as ever was.
It is simply not in the same spots."
You can avoid all this menace to health and useless work by wiping off the sur
faces of your furniture and interior woodwork with a piece of cheese cloth slightly
moistened with
UOVAfl H
' d *t Jriff conation an ““Possibility a^ossaad for disease germsto live ordustto remain where Liquid Veneer is used/l m
and sanitary amhvith polish like new. One 25c bottle winprove.” 1 * cleaa
• *. k x . .'TTiX -* -**v. ■
i . E EVE BUTS Furniture Store
Is tor labor and carl age j the labor
Is fixing lh& surface, shifting
ladders scaffolds pulleys and ropes,
and brushing-ou paint.
Take another job exactly like
tbal . try another paint; it takes 12
gallons. The bill is $10 more.
Take another exactly the same;
another paint; it takes 20 gallons,
The bill is $100.
There is only oue Devoe; there’s
a dozen 12-gallon paints, and
that take 20 gallons to cover a 10
gallon job.
The only d'fficulty is in finding
out Devoe. After that you save
work; there’s less work in 10 than
in 12 or 20gallons; less paint
buy and less to brush-on and less
wages to pay.
If Devoe were only a little
than others, there’d be some
culty in finding-out the difference.
It goes twice as far as ha;f the
paints; that ought to be easy.
It wears, longer too. You’ll
wait a good while, if you wait to
find-out how long it wears; there
are thousands of people who know
that the least-gallons paint wears
longest.
Yours truly
F .W. DEVOE & CO
P.S. Fincher-Norris
Co, sell our paint.
TO PUBLIC
• «i£
1 5m kgaitiIn my old bfflee in
S*- 0 rda Bldgu aud have two
^ S) one for fenite, one colored.
in fine b.nalth and iully pre
pared to do as good or better work
than ever before. Your patronago
earnestly solicited.
DR. W. J. HIGGINS
LAND FOR SALE—1 House
and lot in Oxford, N. East; 1 house
and lot in Ozford, S-west; 1 house
and lot iu “Frogtown” ; 1 farm
east of Alcova river. Apply to
Miss E. P. Dearing.—tf.
--—
Star Lodge No. 164 I. O. O- F.
Meets every Thursday evening
at 7.30. Visiting brethren cor¬
dially invited to meet with us.
A. H. Milner, N. G.
J. W. Peek, Rec. Secty.
-to --—
Letter to Lunsford & Milner.
Covington Ga.
Dear Sir; The easiest way we
know of to make a little money is
if you’re going to paiut—to paint
with the paint that takes least
gallons.
Take a small job; say it takes 10
gallons Devoe, two coats; that’s
an average house. When the job
is done and the bill cotnes-in, it is
$50; the paint, etc$17.50; the lest
CLEARING RESERVOIR
Sedale bids are asked for clearing the whole or any part of th !
that will be covered by back water from dam now being erected at th
foot of counties, Capp’s and Georgia. Lloyd’s Shoals in the Ocmulgee river, in Butts 1 l
Jasper
The land to be thoroughly cleared of standing or fallen timb*
brush, stumps, &c., in accordance with specifications information «i
or
furnished by J. G. White & Co., of Jackson, Ga.
j Bids are asked in the following maimer:
First: At so much per acre for the land actually cleared- the com,
pauy reserving all merchantable timber aud cord wood,
Second: 4t so muoh pe acre for the lands actually cleared, v,i;i 10D
jany claim on the timber or cord wood.
Bids are to be addressed to Georgia Construction Company Care o
J. G. White & Co., Jackson, Ga., and plainly marked
“BIDS FOR CLEARING RESERVOIR”
Bids to be received not later than December 1st 1908, and the coat
pauy reserves the right to except the land purchased from any indivi
dual owner or reject any and all bids receiued.
For particulars as to the manner of doing the work, the time o
completion, Ac., apply to the Superintendaut of Construction, for J
G. White & Co., at Jackson, Oa., or at the Dam Site.
GEORGIA CONSTRUCTION COMPANY.
W. J. Massce, President.
—,
R. W« Milner A. H. Foster
Residence Phone 33 Residence Phone 111
MILNER & FOSTER
ATTORNEYS, COVINGTON, GA.
Office in Court H ouse.. General Practice in State and Federal
Gourts. Phone 254.
G2 pamx