Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / April 7, 1911, edition 1 / Page 2
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Saving Trouble. The husband of a fashionable wom an, wboee gowns are at once the ad miration and despair of her feminine acquaintances, was discussing the cost of living with a friend at the „ Union. Leaguo the Other nlfht "By the way," ventured the friend, "—or—don't you hare a good deal of trouble keeping your wife dressed In the height of style?" The woman's husband smiled and then shook his head, emphatically. "Oh, no," he said, "nothing to speak ot Nothing—nothing to the trouble I'd have If I didn't" Important to Mothara Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Signature In Use Fo£,Over 80 Years. Generous Advice. "If the Japanese want to eald the nervous man, "why d&n't they begin?" "Perhaps," replied the calm and collected person, "they are waiting for more tips from our military ex perts on how to proceed." What we aro doing speaks with greater force than what we are say ing.— Royston. CHANGE ~ IN WOMAN'S LIFE Made Safe by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Graniteville* Vt —"I waa passing through the Chanffoof Life and Buffered from nervousness V - and other annoying symptoms, und I Ir'fr can truly say that I-ydia E. Pinkham's • A:'!!* Bj| Vcßotoble Com • j|ME Jij pound has proved Prci: A jM# worth mountains of ffolc * to mfl > as " • restored my health and strongth. I fffP nover forget to tell my friends what P '' i—lLydia E. l'lnkham'a Vegetable Compound has done for mo during this trying period. Complete restoration to healtn means so much to mc that for the miko of other suffer- Jng women 1 am willing to make my trouble public so you may publlsn this letter."— M us. Ciias. llauclay, 11. F. 1)., Oranltevillo, Vt. No other medicine for woman's ills has received such wide-spread and un qualified endorsement. No other med leino wo know of lias such a record of cures as has .Lydia E. l'inkham's Vegetable Compound. For more than 30 years it has been Turing woman's ills such as inflamma tion, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irreg ularities, periodic pains and nervous prostration, and it is unequalled for • carrying women safely through tho jpcriod of change of life. sfrs. Pinkliam, at Lynn, Mass., Invites all nick women to writo her for advice. Her advice is l'ree, lUid always helpful. SWAMP. rot recommended for OVV rv.iv it everything; but it you 1) OOT have kidney, liver or ,wu bladder trouble tt Will be found JustV.lo remedy you need. At drug;- IflslH In fifty cent nnd dollar HIZCS. You tuny liavo a sample bottlo of this wonder ful now discovery by friall frco, txlap j pamphlet tolling all about It. Afidrps*, Dr. lUlmer * Co., r;i:i({bamton, N. Y. I Charlotte Directory; f$U KODAKS ru u»vWF,W LL rftajiAj ' " Mull orilur• glvon ■ Mlillfv P r " nl l>t Ht ontlon. ( ompleto ntoi'k ot | 1 i>UuU> Niip|>li«i». Kcnd for ratnloguo, w. 1. van nksh & to. S3 N. Tryoii Nlrcct, thurlottv, N. C. | "Wuntet 1 . Men tc» l,«»iirn tho lli»rb«*rTm!*. Wo Imvo pmlUona wttiiiug. In iitlilltton noo«l Hulary, i CDiumliialon nnd'lpn itinouiit U> uiori* thun iuo«t m«*n ! 4*am. I>>w wt»ckl ('"timldc*. Too 111 irtv«n; Wiire* **" tthlla learning. Wrlm for ealatoiniiv MOLF.K ! IIARIIFKt W KNT MITC HELL &TItEET, ATLANTA, (ICOIUiIA. TYPEW RITERS | •200 miscellaneous new, rebuilt, shop worn and second-hand typewriters ! of all- makes from $ 10.00 up. Easy terms if desired. J. E. Craylon & Co., Charlotte, N. C. ; STIEFF! PIANOS X. arc sold direct from factory to the home. . It's the piano to buy because IT'S THE BEST and COSTS LESS. 6 West Trade Street Charlotte, N. 0. h C. H. WILMOTH. MANAGER EASTER OFFERING ~ 1..■ - • ■ H I siirw Bavw ■ H F id HA Season = of Joy = HERE Is an Instinctive BgSßw—Vl sense of dlsappolnt pMW| | ment whon it ruins on L tfljM Afl Easter. We feel that the sun should shine HprajßKMiL and all nature be at her best and brightest on this day that Is typical °' spiritual and «■! physical reawakening. As far as we can we voice this joyousness In the flowers that are seen everywhere. There Is a coldness In the church service that la not brightened by at leaat a lily or two today; It seems to poorly express the spirit of the Eaßtertlde. It Is good for us to have one day In the year that IB all Joy. it Is no time for yielding to gloom or do presslon. Lite has so much of shad ow that the road would be darkened did we never come out luto the full aunshlno. We want life -and light and color around us; therefore we put the blosßotns of spring In our win dows and wear them as we go to and fro Other festal dayß have their tem poral distractions. Easter makes Its strongest appeal to the soul side of us. Coming as It does on the first day of the week, when the busy world Is resting, thero Is time to think of the higher side of life, to ponder on the deeper moaning of things that be. What means this Joyousness of the season that Is felt by all, If unexpress ed? Is It not reviving hope; u hope to brighten the dreariest, most dispir ited man or woman? Did not man believe In H*4»ftrca"tor, a future when wrongs will be right ed und sorrows turn to Joy, the world would have stopped trying long ego. The Easter Egg I am the tinted Easter egg, - at whose bespangled shell you peg with careful stroke of knife or spoon, regarding me as quite a boon. And as I (eel your lusty stroke I chuckle gaylyattbe joke, for you I know are in the mesh of placards worded "Strictly Fresh." You trust the crafty grocer man who sells his eggs just as he can and never is the lesst afraid to claim that they are "Newly Laid." The grocer man, he puts his trust In men who are not wholly fust, for they sell eggs the whole year round and often in deceit are found, because they keep the eggs on ice until there Is a raise in price. However, I would advise that you should turn your hsppy eyes upon the tintings of my shell—the hues aro laid on so well; the dreamy pinks and reds and blues with which the dye my form embues; or possibly 1 may present designs that (or true art are meant—a landscape or an ocean scene wherein there ar? faint hints of green, or maybe, limned with dainty grace there 1s a most bewitching (ace that smiles into your Joyous eyes which shows the sparkle of surprise. Do as you plesse, but it is best to act. perhaps, as I suggest. Put down your kni(e with which you aim to crush my most sristic frame, and simply (east your Inner man upon the pictures that you scan. For all you see and all you know; (or all my cunning pictures show I may be o( the overflow of Eastenime a year ago- Old masters may have painted me ia some (orgot en century and left me ia some chcriahed hoard—some ware house where fresh eggs are stored—and it might (ill you with regret if you should heed me not and let your appetite for worka o( art gain headway o'er your mir.d and heart. O, listen, listen, let me beg—l am a simple Eaater egg, bedaubed with paint and drowned in dyes, but let me beg of you: Be wise I Ho t w often do we weep to see things not what they're cracked up to be 1 Remember, 1 have made no claima —I leave the dealers all such games; I may bo but a cheat and sham, but i am only what I am. Think over what I aav—think twice; all men may pro(it by advice. If you shou'd crack me to your woe, remember that I told you so. Now all my little speech is done. Strike! Strike, but first prepare to run I Even with all our faith that deaden ing question. "What's the use?" lurks In wait for us at every obstacle in the road. Did we not believe in what lies on the other side, though unseen, we would turn back like Pliable from our miry Slough of Despond. Take away temporal hope from a man, from a nation —what follows? For the man discouragement, inertia, despair, then uselessness; for the na tion disintegration. How much farth er reaching In Its effects for ill is a hopelessness that this rough earthly path loads to eternal life. Are we discouraged today? Have the worries of the money-troubled winter hit us hard? Have we trials that none but ourselves may know, the more bitter that they must be hidden? Are we bowed under a weight of Illness, of morbid dread of the future, that will not lift? Let the Joyous message of the Eas tertide bring healing. Hope Is h»)lng voiced on every side today, In the swelling notes, of the organ, In the soaring voices of choir and chorister, In the Inspiring message that is pro claimed from every Christian pulpit In the land, it but remains for ua to reach not for that hope and make tt our own, .to loosen the sordid, de priving earth corda that have us tightly bound. The joyousness of Easter. Alas, far the woman who cannot feel It; wh*> 1# not lifted out of herself today,- - What though the old gloom returnaf Is it not something to have stood on the heights and sung aloud with the Joy ot living; to have seen tho sun piercing the clouds, to have caught a glimpse of the radiance beyond? Nev er again will the blackness be ao dense, for U there not the hope of that Joyous day when tho sunlit heights will be ours, to inspire ua to keep on climbing. Let us not bo content to keep the season's Joy In our hearts. Real Joy ousness must And an outlet, in cheery Krfcotlng, In forgetfulnesa of old grud ges, in taking brightness into the llvoa of those who may be Bhut out from It. Wear your Raster flower, typical of hope, be heartened by the Knster message, but share both flower and message with those whose need of cheer may be greater far than youre. BIG SUITS 60 OVER SUPREME COURT HAS NOT YET ANNOUNCED DEC.IBIONB ON TRUST CASES. OIL AND TOBACCO SUITS Keen Disappointment Prevails When Tribunal Finishes Weekly Ta»k of Handing Down Decision* Without Touching on Dissolution Bults. Washington—Keen disappointment prevailed In the vicinity of the Su preme Court of the United States when that tribunal finished Its weekly task of handing down decisions with out touching on the dissolution suits against the Standard Oil and -Ihe to bacco corporations. The biggest crowd that has atr tempted In years to get into the court room blocked the corridors in the capltol. Women and men stood In the line for hours, even while the court was taking a recess for lunch eon, In the hope that they would gain admittance. The sixty-odd who were fortunato enough to procure seats within the court room early In the morning seemed to make an all-day visit of It, and consquently the pa tient and impatient ones on the out side remained outside. Governor Harmon of Ohio, Senator Root of New York and a long list of distinguished personages waited throughout the three hours the court was announcing opinions believing that the "trusts" cases might be decided. The failure of the court to decide the cases precludes the announce ment of the decisions until the next time for handing down decisions at least. t Some of the members of the bar thought that the court was flirting with one question involved In the Standard Oil and tobacco cases, when it decided that proprietary medicine companies are not entitled to monop olies In the salo of their medicines and that the public is entitled to the benefit of competition among retailers thereof. Justice Holmes In dissenting alone from the court's holding uttered some cfustlc words about the "popular but mistaken" notion ' that competition was always beneficial, to the public. In both cases the government took the position that the natural effect of competition is to increase competition and to extlrtgnlsh or prevent the free play of competition Is to hinder It The corporation lawyer® questioned the doctrine that the reduction of competition necessarily meant a re. stralnt of Interstate commerce, as re ferred to by the Sherman anti-trust kiw. CAN CUT PRICE ON PHYSIC Supreme Court Says Manufacturer Cannot Control Rates. Washington.—The right to "cnt rates" In proprietary medicines In this country received the approval of the Bupremn foourt of the United States. That tribunaf, fn an opinion by Justice Hughes declared that to do otherwise, ft would afford the manu facturers of medicine an unlawful monopoly. The question of the right of a man ufacturer to control the price of hlf article to the consumer arose in r suit begun by a medical company o' Elkhnrtr Inrf., against a wholesale dealer In medicines in Cincinnati. Justice Lnrton, then a Judge In the crcult court, said that while the man. nfacturer of medicines under a secre* formula had a right to a monopoly of manufacture, yot the courts could not Insuro him the "unnecessary mono poly" of controlling the price to the consumer. Justice Hughes quoted approvingly, from Judge Lurtons opinion and stat ed that the medical company had made the mistake of considering ?s monopoly of manufacture to be a monopoly of salo. • Justice Hughes further said the manufacturer, having sold the medi ciues at prices sati|factory to itself, that under the common law and the Oherman anti-trust law the public had a right tQ the benefit of compe tition therein. Infant Head of Chinese Army. Poking.—An imperial edict issued in the name of the Infant Emperor as sumes for him supreme command of the army and appoints the Prince Regent generalissimo until tho Em peror attains his majority, Tbe proclamation is the most Im portant of a series of edicts, by which the throne has gradually raised the military standard until the army, which was once the most despised profession, Is now considered of the highest type. It reviews the valorous history of ancestors. Case Against Newspaper Remanded. Montgomery, Ala.—With a divided tribunal, the Alabama supreme court reversed and remanded the case of former Qovernor B. B. Comer against The Montgomery Advertiser, In which the governor was awarded ono cent damages in the city court of Birmlng. ham while he was Alabama's execu tive lor the publication of on article to which ha objected. The reversal was ordered mainly upon the governor's plea that certain Important evidence was excluded at the trial. To Get Its Beneficial Effects N. ' Always Buy the Genuint SYRirfIGS U and Euxrte Mmu&cforeA byfhe Sold by all leading Druggists p Pottle ig Well" have used ment on a lame leg that h*s gfrven me much trouble for six months. It was so bad that I couldn't walk sometimes for a.' week. 1 tried doctors' medicine and had a rubber bandage for my leg, and bought evenrthing that I heard of, but they ail did me no good, until at last I was persuaded to try Sloan's Liniment. The first application helped it, and in two weeks my leg was well."—A. L. HUNTER, of Hunter, Ala. Good for Athletes. Mr. K. OILMAN, instructor of athletics, 417 Warren St, Rox bury, —"1 have used SLOANS LINIMENT with great success Is cases of ex treme fatigue after physical exer tion, when an ordinary rub-down would not make any impression." Sloan's Liniment |My has no equal as a MU remedy for Rheuc matism, Neural gia or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints* Pr1005,250.,600.&t1.& I M Sloan's book on I H horaM, oattla, »h«»p ■ I •ml poultry nut H rtHLWHI 11 1 r*a. Addntl I jfl Sr. Earl S. Sloan,. E Boston, Xus., XT. I. A LimßlSnt For POULTRY AILMENTS. If your chicks an worth 28 cents buy t bottle of Mustang Liniment and bo ready. A few drope will o«rer» cam Pip, Of—, Roup, Conker, ok. Mn l»to IX—. IflewM. Fh., writ—i •1 em using jour Mexican Mustang Lb hunt on mj chicken*. 1 had one ehiefc— villiceakortelhe threati 1 did »ot notice her at nrst. when I commenced to doctor her I bad eo idea that she would ererKre: it took m* nearly three bet 1 eared he*. I have another now with sore heed and em using the Mustang oe her." 25c. aOe-jl a bottU et Dreg & CeeT S>—. jmntVQper BSf Is GUARANTEED to stop and perma nently cure that ter iZiKM rible itching. It is MKW compounded for that puipoec tod your money WW Mm will be promptly refunded AftM without question if Hunt'a Core fails to core Itch, Kcsema, Tetter, Ring eKBHin Worm or any other Skin Disease. 30c at your druggist's, or by mail direct if he hasn\ it. Manufactured only by k IRICHABOS ■EOtCJMECO.. SUnaM.Tmi ■{■■■nßanß w « u IraillHltSLlllllU «nn> liLUBIiiMUiiUi ni r—m DEFIARCE STARCH J. 21. Spelter -mm or— Wood, Shingles, Poultry, Eggs and Furs. W« carry a big line of Warfl P«p*r. WllHamston, W. G. ! IT. E. Warren/ J. 8. Bhodw l i Drs. Warren & Rhodes FHTBIOIANS AMD SUXOSOMS • Office in BIOO'S DBSJQ BTOBB Vkw Ne. 88. Jos.H.Saunders, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Day Phone 53. Night Phone CT WHllamston,N. C. Hugh B. York. M. D. Microscopy ) Electro tb era py > Specialties. X-Ray Diagnosis ) Office Over Merchants wh.d Farmer* National Bank. •moa Hom:—B to IS A. M.i Tto IP M. r-* n«M No. ML Mfeht PkoM New M ▲. B. Dunning, J. 0. Bmitfc Dunning & Smith Attornays-at-Law. wrnmmmm \— m • WILLI AMBTON, - - N. Q ROBEBSONVILLE, N. O. DR. J. A. WHITE, 188 l / DENTIST mJIHIJ (MBee Main 8k Phone 98 • ijoua A.Critcher. Wheeler Msnto. MARTIN & CRITCHER, Attorneys at Law, WILLIAMSTON, - - K. O Phone 23 " 1 1 —-s ■ fniiSiw, Nnr to übuu i»Wi> in>» aok%l ■ 11 W'lletoi. «*"•. IN ALL COUMTmM. ■ HilfUmm Jlrrrt ■mltk Washington MUt Mm B ■ money **4 cflm tkt tatrnt. ■ Pitjat *l)4 lirfrlnprneiit Practice Erslwlsstyt B ■ui mm* IM, TTatwl IMm hM 00~.l KILL THI COUCH t«o CURB twr LUNCB Dr. King's New Discovery I FOR CBKSI 18 | MP ALL THHOaT AMD LUfW mOHBtES. IGUARANTEED SATIttKAOTOItY | OB MONBT BEFUNDBP. _ " "7 PB#T I CARJ" 1 DO YOU know of anyone who is old enough to read, who has not aeen that sign at a railroad crossing? If tnqm* baa aeen h at earn* time or other, thee why doean't the railroad let the sift) rot ' away? Whydoee the railroad 1 1 company con tin a a to keep theae eigne at every croeeing t Maybe yon think, Mr. Merchant, "Moat everybody knowa my | atore, I don't have to adverdae.'* ' Your atore and your goods need I more ahrertlßiii| than the rail* roada need do to warn people 1 to "Look Out for the Can." H Nothing ia ever completed in the advertiamg world. II The Department Storea an a M [ very good example—they are . 1 ■ continually adverdaing—and , ■ they ate continually doing a ! good buaineea. I If hpaye to ran a irw ade 'round ,; about Chriatmaa time, it cet* tainly wfll pay you to run ad iwha n»eatt about all the tbna. | JUL If »|Htli ill i ii. that'sall.to Ua. ADVERTISE in rJV-vTHIS PAPER
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 7, 1911, edition 1
2
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