Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / July 19, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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And the Lord alio helps those who help others. If your dl(rt*l4on I* * little off color a OourM of GanleUl Tn will do you jjood. When you are offered anything free look for th« string. Mrs. Wlnalow's Soothing Syrup tor Chlldrra teething, softena the guma, rnlacu Inflainma lion, illtji pain, cures wind colic, Ko a bottle. A truthful fisherman always knows where to draw the line. . DOES YOCB IIKAD ACIIE T Try Hii-sr CAPUDINK. It's liquid—pleas ant to take—effects Immediate—good to prerent Sick Headaches and Nerroua Headache* also Your money back If not satisfied. 10c., X6o. aod We. at ntetllclue stores. Another Matter. Hewitt—We aim to please. Jewett —But wtiat do you hit? CHILL TONIC. Ton know what you are tAklnii The forru ils I* plainly printed on every bottle. lhowln« It la •Imply Quinine and Iron In a taaleleat form, and the biott effectual form, for growr people and children. Usenia. In the Suburbs. "Is Mrs. Gillet a well-informed worn an ?" "Well, she's on a paiSy wire."—Life. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it ttCMSBSZ In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria The Moon's Offspring. Looking out of the window one eve nlng, little Marie saw the bright, full moon in the eastern sky, and, appar ently, only a few Inches from it, the beautiful Jupiter, shining almost as brightly as the moon Itself. Marie gazed Intently at the spectacle for a moment, and then turning to her mother exclaimed: "Oh, mother, look! The moon has ; laid an egg!" A Question of Names. In some of the country districts of Ireland It Is not an uncommon thing | to see carts with the owners' names I chalked on to save the expense of ! painting. Practical Jokers delight in | rubbing out these signs to annoy the i owners. A constabulary sergeant one day ac costed a countryman whose name had ' been thus wiped out unknown to him. Is this your cart, my good man? "Of course It Is!" was the reply. "Do you see anything the matter wld It?" "I observe," said the pompoua police man, "tlvat yoi.r name la o-hlith«ratml.' L "Then ye're wrong," quoth the coun tryman, who had never come across the long word before, "for me name's O'Flaherty, and I don't cnre who knows k."—Youth's Companion. EFFECTIVE. First Walter—Did that Ariz ,ia 1 ranchman give you a tip? Second Waiter—l should say he did! j He told iue If 1 didn't step lively bed blow off the top of my head! • j SALLOW FACES Often Caused by Tea and Coffee Drinking. How many persons realize that tea and coffee so disturb digestion that j they produce a muddy, yellow com- ! plexion? A ten days' trial of Postum has j proven a means, in thousands of caßes, of clearing up a bad complexion. | A Waslin. young lady tells her ex- , perience: "All of us—father, mother, sister and j brother —had used tea and coffee for ! many years until flually we all hadj stomach troubles, more or less. "We all were sallow and troubled ! with pimples, bad breath, disagreeable taste in the mouth, and all of us simply so many bundles of nerves. "We didn't realize that tea and cof-! fee caused the trouble until one day we -an out of .offee and went to bor row some from a neighbor. She gave us some Postum and told us to try that. "Although we started to make it, we all felt sure that we would be sick If we missed our strong coffee, but we tried Postum and were surprised to find It delicious. "We read the statements on the pkg., got more and In a month and a half you wouldn't have known us. We all were able to digest ofur food wltkout any trouble, each one's skin became clear, tongues cleared off, and nervet In fine condition. We never use any thing now but Postum. There Is notb lng Ilka It." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. "There's a reason," and It Is ex plained In the little book, "The Road to WellvlUe," In pkgs. Krer rea4 tkt ak«T« tettorf A am MM appear* Iroa tltM to tla*. Tkay M* saaaiaa, KM, U4 fall it knua A Rich field for thfsg Antiquarian -mt JJZTXP awmwyjixz ished with Miletus, may send Dr. Wis with hU Immense experience and hi. large resources; perhaps the Amer icans who have been foiled at Cyrene earnest eye; but we know, too. that which enclose It can be followed from by the Trlpolltan war, and are look- 80 me ancient critics (among them Lu- sea to sea. The fine Greek masonry lng for a fresh field, may anticipate clan) held the original the most beau- Is especially well preserved where the him. The British Athenian school, as it tlful of all Greek statues In the world fortification runs down to the water on happens, is going to begin excava- which still knew a hundred master- the east, and a terminal tower was tlons.within a day's ride of the place pieces now lost. Probably that per- built out Into the waves; but the old —at Datcha, the ancient Akanthos. f e ct type of feminine nudity was rapt er parts, constructed in the polygonal One could wish It had taken Its cour- long ago from Cnidus—though why fashion, which made for strength, are age in both hands and gone for the more probably than that of Hermes on the Acropolis of the Trlopian Is* greater city. The great sites demand, should have been rapt from Olympla? land. Here were evidently at once of course, more time and money and —but, even so, Is it not still well the stronghold and tbe holy places of men; but It is in them that In ninety- worth any art lover's while to dig Cnidus. The mass of the city needed, nine cases out of a hundred, the great the site of the town which put up at howevei 4 , the larger spaces of the worki of art and the great historical Delphi the "Treasury of the Cnldans" mainland, and climbed terrace above records are found. whose beauties the French school at terrace to the suinmit of a high rocky And Cnidus is a great site on all Athens have revealed to our tlm«? hill. Its main plan and the situation accounts. Its area Is very large as All through the classical Greek age of many of Its public buildings were Greek sites go; the scale of the visible Cnidus was a capital city, the chief of madp out of the Dttettantl expedition remains Is big, the Indications of yet five famous neighbors on the mainland and by Newton, and even after years bigger things below ground are fre- and in Rhodes; and the Dorian games, of neglect -they can still be traced, quent. The place was always lu the which were the bond of the six clt- The marble facings have been much forefront of Asiatic Greek history; ies, were held always on the Trlopian damaged, partly by the builders of and treasures of art which it Is headland beneath her walls. To dig Rhodes, partly by native lime-burners; known to have possessed were of Cnidus, therefore, would be to follow but even in such an obvious quarry as the very first quality. Even what has the best rule of excavators, which Is the Theater offers, a good deal of ths already been found there by hasty to dig capitals. It was also a moth- finer material remains In place. There diggers Is out of the common. The er city, able to send out colonies of Is a rich harvest to be reaped by any great marble lion, which Is supposed its citizens to the Adriatic and even one who can Induce the Ottoman gov to have commemorated Conon's vie- the western Mediterranean. Its situ- ernmeiit to expropriate the peasant tory at Cnidus in 394 B. C., Is not atlon secured It wealth from the Bea, cultivators, and thereafter will break more remarkable as a historical monu- for It lay Just at the southern augle down their terraced plots and search tnent than a work of art. The Cnldlan of Asia Minor In the track of every them systematically from the harbor's Demeter Is the finest extant status ship which beat up from the Phoe- edge to the hill-top. Cnidus Is ths which can reasonably be ascribed to nlclan and Egyptian seas Into the most promising and favorable Greek the hand of an Aslatlo Greek master. Greek. The Trlopian Island, which site which remains for a well-financed But splendid as Is that figure of the Is now Cape Krlo, lay so near the and well-equipped expedition to under mourning Mother —or, at least, as her mainland that It could be Joined by a take. There Is no modern village, no head Is, for her body Is by an Inferior causeway, and the strait thus bridged modern graveyard, to hamper diggers; hand—lt would rank far below anoth- gave the city two bays, one looking communications with well-supplied er Cnldlan statues, were that still pre- westward, one eastward, and both well centers —Rhodes, Cos, and Budrum — served for some one's lucky spade. We screened. In the latter, whose old are easy, and labor could be procured know the Aphrodite of Praxiteles only mole still breaks the southeast swell, tn abundance from both the Trlpollan from coin tyjtes and copies, of which a modern steamer of much larger ton- peninsula itself and from the isles, the best is that Vatican figure whose nage than the average coaster can Finally, there Is no lovelier spot than charms a prudish pope caused to be ride at ease. The site is a good Eng- Cnidus on one of the loveliest coasts veiled by metal drapery from the too lish mile In length, and the walls of the Mediterranean. How Professor Got Radium Eaaterner Telia How He Obtained Enough of Precloua Btuff for Experimenta. Au eastern college professor was lecturing on radium. "Itadlum Is no valuable," he de clared, "that most small laboratories have to get along as well ,as ran without the actual experiment. In fact, there are many colleges In this country which do not possess any radi um at all, and nil that can be learned of the element la from bookß on the subject I will tell you how I se cured the radium with which I have been performing experiments for a number of years. "It was not long after the Curies made their discovery when a noted French scientist came over to this coun try with a Bmall quantity of the newly discovered substance. He performed a number of the stock experimenta be fore several hundred studentß In this lecture hall. When he concluded his discussion he took the small piece of paper on which the radium was lying and poured the precious grains back Into their especially prepared recep tlcal. After doing that, he, with the utmost care, brushed the tiny dust from the paper, thereby causing his large class to burst Into laughter at his seemingly exaggerated frugality. " 'You may laugh,' said the lecturer, 'but know that there are hundreds of Institutions In this country that would give a great deal for that little coat ing of duet I have just saved. Many experiments could be performed with that alone for several year*. I know what I am doing all right.' Century Plant in Bloom The beautiful specimen of the "cen tury plant," Agave atrovlrens, which baa been a conspicuous object In the Succulent house at Kew gardens, Lon don, England, for many years has been invested with a halo of romance, be cause, unlike Peter Pan, who never would mature, It has grown and grown, outstripping Its neighbors and mishliig Its way tar op Into the glass "The class broke Into applause after thiß rebuke had been administered and the gathering broke up. The French scientist went on his way lee* turing and experimenting. A week later before one of my own classes I performed all the experiments we had had during the visit of the foreign physicist. Where did I get my radi- Problems in Scientific Experiments to Be Made to Demonstrate the Possibility of Improvement. The Cambridge School of Agricul ture Is trying to make hens lay red eggs. There is always the best mar ket for eggs which are of the richest red brown In color, and the problem Is to develop the right kind of hen. The Cambridge experimenters hope to produce a red egg-laying hen of pro lific habit, Just as they have produced a strong rust-resisting wheat of high yield by working on the curious law of Mendel. Hens have so far proved ad mirable examples of the working of this law. In respect of single and dou ble combs and in respect of color they are perfectly obedient to the proper scientific principle. They "h«- have" as they ought, to use the tech nical verb. Why should not the eggs behave as well as the feathers and comb? There Is also the subsidiary question of food. It may be possible to alter the egg color by food aa well as by hereditary influences. It has been done In the case of canaries. roof. Early In March of the preaent year the plant—which, by the way, waa called the "century" becauai for merly it was supposed to flower only once In a hundred years—showed signs of flowering, the upper leaves that were formed being smaller and leas spinous than ordinary leaves. The In florescence or "pole" soon made Ita ap pearance, and growing rapidly, reached um? 1 01d"'t steal it as you may suspect. You will recollect that I men tioned the fact that the radium had been brushed from a small slip of pa per. The Frenchman got his radium and threw the paper away. I picked up the paper and with the particles of radium still adhering to it I can now perform all of his experiments. I have been doing so for several years and will continue for several more, when I expect to buy a larger quantity after the price goeo down." Egg Culture If Cambridge achieves the poultry man's Ideal of a hen that lays yearly 260 two-ounce red eggs, no one will then say that the universities are not "practical or even commercial—New York Sun. Sugar Cane Introduced by Jesuits. Sugar was first made in Louisiana In 1751 by the Jesuit fathers from San Domingo. The cane grew well, but all at tempts to manufacture sugar from It were abortive, and It waa not until 1791 that Bon Antonio Mendex suc ceeded in extracting sugar from cane. Three years later Etlenne de Bore made such a large crop of sugar that many were induced to go into the in dustry, and It Is to htm that the real credit of being the father of the In dustry belong*. In common with all Industries In tbe experimental stage, the sugar cane In dustry of Louisiana was at Its Incep tion a very crude and unimportant one, but by 1820 the crop approxi mated some 20,000,000 pounds ot su gar. the roof in the courae of three weeks. It then became neceasary to move the plant Into the open air, and this ea» tailed the removal of the greater part of the end of the building. The flower spike has continued to elongate and IS now some 18 feet high. Tbe plant haa exactly 60 leaves, the longest of which Is 7 feet 3 Inches broad In tha middle and 14H Inches at the baaa. Some of tbe lower leaves are 11 Inches thick In the middle and IS Inches at tha base, but only 4 feat to 8 feet ta length. TESTIMONY OF FIVE WOMEN Proves That Lydia E. Pint ham's Vegetable Com* pound is Reliable. Reedville, Ore.—"l can truly recom mend Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound to all women who are passing through the Change of Life, aa it made BMMMMHjn me a well woman aftet ffJCMnPI suffering three years." T Uil MN - BOGAKT, Reedville, Oregon. _Mm New Orleana, U. "When passing through IflfZiPMI the Change of Life I was J troubled with hot flashes. backache. I was notfitfoi W2£Pl anything until I took Ly m. ".mm dia E. Pinkham'a Vege m Compound which ;proved worth ita weight in gold to me."-Mrs. GAS TON BLONDEAU, 1541 Po -9W3 lymnia St, New Orleana. Wfjok Mishawaka, Ind. Wo ''MTL* yM men paasine through the Change of Life can take nothing better than Lydia Wwf tb E. Pink ham's Vegetable Mr>CT>» iwj| Compound. lam recom mendingittoall my friends because of what it has done for me. "-MrsXHAB. •SRU mm BAUER, 523 E. Marion St, I Mishawaka, Ind. Alton Station,Ky.-"For months I suffered from mzmSmSmgß troubles in consequence of W aRe an( * Mm -w~ m:Ww could not live. Lyaia E. WM. HU P'nkham's Vegetable K-Ml t Compound made me and I want other suffering women to know about it J Mrs. EMMA BAILEY, Alton Deisem.No. Dak.— "I waa passing through Change of Life and felt very bad. I could not sleep and was very nervous. Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound restored me to perfect heslth and I would not be without it" —Mrs. F. M. THORN, Deisea, No. Dak. could not step on "Nortake anything In my hand*, /MI to tort from rktumatttm." There you see the hard case of Mr. Phillip J. Cormisky of East Mauch Chunk, Pa., as he explains in a letter to The Blood Balm Co. Your cast cannot bt woftm than his. "I suffered 3 years" hi says. "I wia run down to bad. the doctors told m« I had no hope to be cured. I could find no place on account of my aickneaa. I waan't fit for anything before 1 started to use 8.8. ■ 'Todsy I am well end happy: and able toearna hundred dollarsa month on a loco motive. Your medicine ia so helpful I gained 25 pounds in two weeks. And I am ■till saining. I will recommend 8.8.8. to •11 ray frlcnda." If the druggist can't supply you with 8.8.8. write to The Blood Balm Co., Philadelphia or St. Louis. • Don't keep on suffering when real help is at hand. Make the Liver Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver !l right the stomach and bowels are right CARTER'S LITTLE JW LIVER PILLS gently butfirmly pel a lazy liver In Ullll ll' do its duty. Cures Con- W!T.L L I atipation, lIIVER digeation, and Diatraaa After, Faring. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK, Genuine must bear Signature A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. In this 10 of rMMrot and nperimmt, all nature Is ransacked by the aclentlllofodh* comfort and bap plneesof man. Selene* haa Indeed made giant atrtdea In the peat century, and among the— by no means taut Important—discoveries In ns*dteln* la that of Tberaplon. which baa bean used with great success Is French Hoe pi tall and that It la worthy tbe attention ot tboaa who suffer from kidney, bladder, nervosa iliaeesea, chronic weekneeses, uloerasktn eruptions, plies, fee., there la no doubt. in faot It scams evident from tbe blf stir created amongst specialists, that THKKAPTON la deatlned to oast Into obUvlon ell tboae questionable rauadlea til at were formerly the iole reliance ot medio*) asen. It la of coarse Impos sible to tell sufferers all ws shun Id like to toll them In this short article, bat tboae who would Ilk* to know mora about this remedy that has effected so many—w* might almost say, mlraculoua cures, should send addressed envelope for KRBB hook to STL* Clara Med. Co.. Havers toek Hoed. Hampetead fcTwTre of No. I Is what they and have been soaking in vain daring a llfepf misery, suffering. 111 health DAISY FLY KILLER SET SHSZ S alee. Meat, clean or -IMEW nemeatal, eoavaelsot, ■ (has*, teats all saaaaa. Made *f Me tel. caat spill or tip overi will eot *oll sr lejara eajthlag. Osieranteed effective Sold by dealers * t aeet prepaid far »L BASOLB somas, ue BeKalh Ave.. Sraeklya. ■. X. Reetoree Qray Hair to Natural Oolor aaaorss aaraacfr ajib acvsr Invigorates an J prevents the b&lr from fellingofl Py Sola fcy XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia Mas *1 Vs* BsMsi Ssa«la Betas »•*. hathtdntat Hf KODAKS lIUIK. Attention. Price* reaarmshls proaspt. Send for Price Uat. vWumnuiaaa, auausssa. a, a The Sum and Substance of being a subscriber to this paper is that ycvuand your fnnr»i 1 y SBttSCbcd it. The paper becomes a member of the family and Its coming each week will be as welcome as the ar. rival of anyone that's tfsar. It will keep jrou informed oa tbt dotngaof lb* coaimaAitjraad lb* bargain* W lb* flMßbum npUfly adwitM wfll w>tl« yoa TO MTCA aay tee tha COM oftbt aobaoripbom. | We're Opposed jj Mail Order Concerns Because— Tliay ban aever contributed • cent to furthering the intend* of out lowa — Emj mot ncMrcd by tKem from tbi* community it a dinct lorn to our merchant*— la >lmoM erety caae tkeir price* can be met right ban, ■ without delay in receiving good* B and the pouibiUy oi miatakai I in tiling order*. But— Tba natural human trait U to buy where good* an ch**p**t. Local pride M urually mcood ary in the game ai life ea played today. Therefore Mr. Merchant and Bedam Man, meft your competitor I with their own weepaa* — ■ ad*ertiaing. Advertise! The local field ie your*. AH you oaed do it to avail TOUT. •eli oi tbo opportunity* ofeted. Aa advetrieeatent in tbi* paper will carry your meaeafi into hundred* oi home* ia tba com. mumty. Ili* tba MM* medium oi killing your gmmi com pedtor. A apace tbi* axe won't oo*t much. CUM IS I and tea a* abort It fr— bow to «kuOa (MM tnule mark*, ■ •WlaMfc**. ll» ALL COUNTRIES. Bmtbutl Srtft milk Watkimgton taint Hmt, ■ wair mud often tktp»Unt. Pitwt ui IxfrlitftmMt Pnrtlot Erotudvaly. I WrfU or K«n« to aj al Ml KbUI Km*. •**. MM Ikta hM 0*«. l WA«HIWQTOI>, P. 0. J KlLLthi COUCH and CURB TH« LUNCB *"™ Dr. King's New Discovery FOR 08^ I M|P ALL THROAT AND HmQTWOUBUEt. IGUARANTEED SATISFAOTOJtIf | OB MOVXT KETUMDgD. | * " T\o TOO know of anjroM Is Who b aid cooofh to rem, who m m 0m tiut sign at a raQrood croariag? If IIW7IBI taw MM It U MM ilm or other, tbaa why 4mml «w nfimd Im the alga IM awayf Whydoeotba nibcU company eontinae to k*n ttaoM eigne at •y*Tj crowing » Maybe you think, Mr. Merchant "Mom everybody know* my etere, I doet here to advertbeb* Tow Mora and yowr good* need more adTertMng than the n£- ro§di d«l do to win people to "Lack Oat far the Car*" Nothing la e*er completed fa» the MTcriwin| worio, they an coallmaUy adTertWag—.and defag ■ If It paya »o iw a few ade ■revad about CMetmea «h»e, h eer- Mtady «0t pay ywa ran ad> i Hlta«MiaM atuai aHtheHaea. JL r»jtlilll .+ef«*M L& ADVERTISE in Pgr#* THIS PAPER
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 19, 1912, edition 1
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