Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / April 19, 1918, edition 1 / Page 7
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FARMERS LUTED ON WHEAT SUPPLY MILLING DIVISION OF FOOD AO MINISTRATION ISSUES MORE RIGID ORDERS. DISPATCHES FROM RALEIGH Doings and Happenings That Mark the Progress of North Carolina Peo pie, Gathered Around the State Capital. Raleigh , ■* Aa-a consequence of the necessity for absolutely rigid control of the dis tribution and consumption of wheat flour until the next harvest, the mill ing division of the Food Administra tion has promulgated an order govern ing the amount of flour that 'wheat and rye millers can sell to farmers or give in exchange for wheat The order limits all miller* to the sale of not to exceed 4H pounds of wheat flour to a person living in a ru ral district In addition, no miller may sell quantities to exceed a cug tomer's 30 days' requirements The miller must require the custom er to accept wheat substitutes of equal weight to the flour purchased, unless the customer submits lit writing n certificate showing that no has on hand a sufficient supply of such sub stitutes These are defined as hom iny, corn grits, corn meal, corn flour, edible corn starch, barley flour rolled oats, oatmeal rice, rice flour, buck wheat flour, potato flour, sweet pota to flour, soy bean flcuor. milo, Kaffir, feterita flour at.d meals Each miller must forward to the oderal Food Administrator of his State on the first of the (uonth the cert if! eates thus received. When a farmer brings wheat grown by himself to the mill to exchange for wheat flour, the amount of the flour that may he exchanged shall not ex ceed In amount that, with flour al ready in the hands of the farmer, will reasonably meet the requirements of his household or establishment during the next Hd davs~ In determining the quantity of flour to be consumed mill ers are required to conform to Food Administration's statement of March 24, asking all persons to cut their conaumptlon of wheat flour by 50 per cent and limiting the amoount of the sale for exchange to a monthly basis of fi pounds for each person Food Administrator Henry A. Tage has made one exception to the new orders as they apply to North Caro lina This exception allows mills tq supply farmers who live more than three miles from their mills and are not accessible to another mill their requirements up to a f.O days supply. Trucker* Not Discouraged April frosts have not discouraged gardeners and truckers in the Kinston vicinity, and the next warm spell will bring out of the ground the largest crops of edibles this section has ever known, it is predicted In places peas are bearing; First ripe strawberries were shown here recently. Frosts on two mornings recently were heavy, but apparently did no great damage The Kinston official gardening com mission. representing the municipal and school boards, the chamber of commerce, and the home and farm demonstration services of the agricul tural department. Is encouraging the growing of vegetables new to or not well known in this section. Some of these are carrots, salsify, spinach, rhu barb. eggplant, parsnips, parsley, hrus sels sprouts, and hohl rahi In order that enough of the vegetables may he saved to supply the community next winter.' the chamber of commence Is selling a carload of cans to housewives and canning clubs at cost Oardeners In the outlying tcrri'ory are being In vited to participate in contests started by the gardening commission. Anti-Typhoid Work Pays. According to figures just complied by the State Board of Health. It ap pears that those counties that have had special anti-tvphoid campaigns during 1915 and 1010 have reduced their typhoid death rate nearly twice as much as those counties that had no such campaign. Another interesting fart noted is that in at least one instance in Samp son county where good consistent health work has been carried on for a number of years the typhoid death rat# for the last four years is only 20 9 per hundred thousand population, while the rate In every county that borders on Sampson is higher. the av erage for Sampson's seven neighbor ing counties being 33.2 or about 59 per cent higher. Wheat on Hand Called For. No general order requisitioning wheat has been sent out"by the food administration. The various state food administrators have been instruct ed —in order to enable the continuous shipment of wheat to the allies—to ap peal to farmers in the middle and southern states that they should market fheir residue of wheat after seed by M' 7 1. and in the extreme northern Bi.uen by May 15th. BONDS THAT BLESS. (By GOV. T. W Sickett.) . . Litje.rty. Romls. like iiK'rcy, are twice blest. They bless the folks who stay at home and the men who are going to the front. They test and declare the physi cal and spiritual dynamics of this Republic. They appeal to the commonest kind of sense, and to the rarest sort of sentiment In them will be found more of strength than In the lordly head of the herd, and more of warmth than in the fleece of the leader of the flocks. They will carry one farther than a "Ford" and faster than the fleet est descendant of "Nancy Hanks " They will yield more solid com fort. for the inner man than "pos sum and potatoes, and more Juicy sweetness than the apples for which our first ancestors threw I'aradise away. They are absolutely free from the uncertainty that racks the nerves of men. and from the taxes that make the grass-hopper a bur den and mourners go about the st reets. They will add to the glory of youth and to the grandeur of age In them one may hear ten thou sand cannon roar to save a little child, and see ten million men leap forward to die that others may truly live. They are preferred stock In The Gem of the Ocean They are Star dust from Old Glory. They are the soul of the Red. White and Rlue They are messengers of hope to our friends, and missiles of terror to our foes They are harbingers of peace to all lands safety to - m seas, and freedom to all of the children of men They are badges of chivalry cer tiorates of nobility, memorials of love Buy one' Htiv today, and live forever In your own esteem and in the gratitude of a world you help to save. Base Hospital No. 65 Under Way Major J W Long of Greensboro, who is organizing Base Hospital No j 65. a strictly North Carolina unit for j service In France, advises that this unit will consider applications for set- | vice from persons both within and [ without the draft age. There is at j. present special need for orderlies, 1 nurses, stenographers, clerks, p*iarma- j cists, Uarbers atid men of various hpe- | cial training Those entering th-i | service will go in as an enlisted nan with opportunity for promotion to the j ranV of non-commissioned offi'-err. The Surgeon General has appointed ! Major F M Hafie* of Winston Sale.n, a recruiting officer for the hospital , personnel, and all those deslrin? to en ter this service should apply to him at once either in person or by letter. j Premium List Bring Printed. The North Carolina Extension Serv ice makes the off It ial announcement that the composite premium list is In the hands of the printer and will be ready for distribution this month Secretaries of fails are urged to wait until this list; which has been assem bled to aid the fairs of the state, j reaches them, before going to press j with their own catalogues. This bulletin contains the rules and j regulations governing State aid. pro- i vision of judges and other Itejns of Interest to the secretaries of fairs ! Application blanks, asking for State aid and the furnishing of Judges, will be mailed out with the bulletin. A j new plan places the county farm dem- | onstratlon agents in closer touch with I the officials of the fairs. A North Carolina Distinction. John R. Kneebone of Flint, Mich., has been appointed city manager of Beaufort, N. C., under the city com mission headed by Mapor C. F. Dan j ner. Mr. Kneebone has the unique j distinction of being the first person | to taka»up an outlined course of study in the city managers' profession at the L'nlversity of Michigan, the first j university in the country to offer such j work He completed the five-year j course In 1916 with the degree of tration of arts in municipal admlnis- ; tratio nand for the past two years has been In the city eßßineerlng depart ment at Flint. Mich., as chief account ant and assistant to the city engineer. Convention is Postponed. The convention of North Carolina ! fair secretaries that was Scheduled to | be held In Raleigh on April 10-11 hag been postponed until some date In the summer. This announcement has Just been made by S. B Rublnow, chair man of the fair committee of the agri cultural extension service. Flour Offered Government. "We have 30 barrels of flour. If Uncle Sam wants It at cost wire quick where to ship." (Signed) O. L. Clark The above telegram is typical of r number of communications State Foos Administrator Henry "A. Pag has during the past severa' days since it was announced In the newspapers that the bread ration p' the French soldiers has been reduced and the statement was made that tlu flour situation was such as to lead sev hundred hotels to pledge then* 3«!lves to baniah wheat products THE ENTERPRISE, WILLIAMSTON, NORTH CAROLINA FIVE THOUSAND MOVE 10 CAMP ORDERS FOR ENTRAINING DUR ING FIVE-DAY PERIOD BE GINNING APRIL 26. NUMBER OF WHITES CALLED Allotments of Each Local Board Has Been Mailed Out to Them—First Two Calls Negroes. Raleigh.—Local hoards throughout the State are being mailed orders from the oice of the adjutant general for quotas of men to be entrained during the five day period beginning April 26. North Carolina is called upon to fur nish 5,055 men under the three calls from the war department effective on the date mentioned, and the office here has completed the work of ap portioning the quotas for each local board This total of over five thousand men to be sent to training camps Is di vided Into three calls The tii st Is for 2.001 colored men. to be sent to Camp Grant, Roockford, 111 , this being the number due from, thi* State under pre vious cnlls. The second call is for 1.997 colored men to be sent to Camp Jackson for training, applying on the new call The third is for 1.057 white men to he sent to Camp J*H'kson, ap plying on the new call. The board asre asked to bear in mind previous instructions with re gard to deferred, being placed „ tije end of the quotas wherein is the llrst class. Those boards which have nrt men hut such as are so engaged have reached the end of their quota and must furnish the number called tor, even though thut number Include those who are actively, completely and assiduously engaged in the culti- Vat ion of a crop. The war department has ordered that the exact allotment under oach of the calls be furnished. The call for 1,05-7 white men to be sent to Camp Jackson is ailoted us fol litws Alamance 13, Alexander 4, Al leghany 3, Alison 11. Ashe 8, Avery 4, Beaufort 14. Bertie 9. Bladen 8, Bruns wick 6, Buncombe No. 1 13, Buncombe No. 2 14, Burke 9, Cabarrus 16, Cald w«Jl 8, Camden 2, Carteret f>, Caswell 5, Catawba 18. Chatham 10. Cherokee 6. Chowan 5, Clay 2, Cleveland 13, Co lumbus 13. Craven 13, Cumberland 14, Currituck 4, Dare 2. Davidson 14, Da vie 5,- Duplin 13, Durham 20, Edge comhe It!, Winston-Salem 27, Forsyth 11, Franklin 10, Gaston 20, dates 4. Graham 2, Granville 10, Greene 7, Guilford No. 1 8. Guilford No. 2 18, Guilford No. 3 9, Hertford 19, Harnett 11, llaywood 11, Henderson 8, Hert ford 6, Hoke 5. Hyde 4. Iredell 14, Jackson 11, Johnston No. 1 9, John ston No. 2 11, Jones 3. Dee -5, LenolV 13, Lincoln 7, McDowell 7, Macon 5. Madison 9, Martin 8. Charlotte 24. Mecklenburg 11. Mitchell 4, Montgoni ery li. Moore 8, Nash 20, Wilmington 14. New Hanover 2, Noorthampton 10, Onslow (1. Ora'jge 8, l'amlico 5, Pas quotank 2, Pender f., i'erqulmans 5, Person 7, Pitt 19 Poolk 4, Randolph 11. Richmond 12, Robeson No. 1 H. Robeson No 2 10. Rockingham 16. Rowan 18, Rutherford 11, Sampson 14. Scotland 8. Stanly 15. Stokes 8. Surry 12. Swalif 5, Transylvania 6, Tyrrell 2, Union 14, Vance 9, Wake No. 1 19 Wake No 2 14. Warren 9, Washington 5. Watauga 5, Wayne 19. Wilkes 12, Wilson 17. Yadkin 5, Yan cey B. Woodmen Buy Liberty Bonds. Klnston. —The national camp of the Woodmen of the World Invested $25, 000 in Liberty Bonds through Ellsha B. Lewis, State manager for the order The Woodmen are putting $1,000,000 Into the bonds, purchasing at many laces In the country. The subscrip tion here was the only one in North Carolina. Klnston's allotment gets the credit. The order holds $2,000,- 000 worth of first and second loan bonds. Model for All Others. Special from Washington. The shipping board Is making plans for es tablishing a shipyard to build con crete ships at Wilmington, N. C„ without waiting for congressional ac tion on the appropriation of $60,000,- 000, which has been asked for ex perimental work with the new type of construction. Five yards are to be established, but the site at Wilmington Is the only One definitely selected. The Wilming ton yard is to be the model for all the other yards. Jailed for Enticing Labor. New Bern. —Harrell Nalepasse was placed in the county jail in default of a Justified bond in the sum of four hundred dollars, aft"" probable cause was found on a charge * ftt eatlcing laborers to leave New Bern for anoth er State. Nalepasse says he is in the employment of the Richmond Cedar Wo'V-p, of Richmond, Va„ and at the hearing in police court he admitted that his mission here was to get la borers for his company. It was state 1 'hat the defendant has visited othjr towns In the at ate BOND ISSUE TO BE MARKETEDj State Treasurer C. R. Lacy Takes it sue with the Council of State. Raleigh. - \*E'ith State Treasurer I! j R. Lacy emphatically voting in (ho negative, the Council of State deter mined to proceed with the issuatieo and sale of $500,000 bonds for the j state's educational and charitable in- ! stitutions as provided by the last leg- i ialature in its six year building pro gram The actios of the Council of State followed the conferapce with the heads of the institutions and the build ing commission. The sentiments ot thjß institution heuds were embodied in a resolution which was submitted to the Council of State and adopted j The resolution itself was signed by j Dr. Robert II Wright, of the Kust | Carolina Teacher Training School; l>r | I. B. McHraver, superintendent of the State Sanatorium; Dr J I. Foust, pres- | i(loiit of the State Normal at (Jrrens-j boro; Ur K K. Grnhatn, president of; the University of North Carolina; Dr. j W. C Kiddick, president of the State | College of Agriculture and Kngineer ing; Dr Albert Anderson, president of the ( entral Hospital for the Insane; Dr. John McCampbell. superintendent | of the Western Hospital for the In-! sane at Morgnntoh; I'rof. J. T Alder man, art Ing superintendent of the State s Imol for the Blind ami Deaf; ] Or. \V \v Eiilson, superintendent of 1 the (loldsboro Hospital, and C K : Boger The institution heads and the Coun cil of State by endorsement of the resolution, "believe that the State of North Carolina Is abundantly aide and willing to take care of Its institutions in the moderate degree provided by this ait and at the same lime bear her full share of her war responsibll itles " Highest Birth Rate, Raleigh North Carolina Tops the lint of registration states with thn highest birth rate recorded. According to I>r J It Cordon, state registrar, our birth rate for 1911! was .'ll !» per thousand population while the-latest published federal report for l!Hfi shows Connecticut and Michigan tie ing for. second honors with a rate of only 211 7, Another very surprising thing to many people according to Dr Gordon, will be to learn from North Carolina's vital statistics that our white birth rale is 32.2 per tliousaml whites as against only 31 per thous and for the colored population. The fact that our white birth rate Is higher than our colored rate Is found to con form to the findings in every other registration state in the Union A still more striking finding Is that while North Carolina has a high birth rate we also have a low death rate, only 13.0 per thousand population for 1916. In analyzing the death rate Dr. Cordon finds that the white death rate is much lower than the colored rate Requisitions Full Output. Durham. —In order that American soldiers in France anil In training camps for this counlry may lie sup piled with their favorite brand of smoking tobacco, the government has issued orders taking over tiie entire ■ nit put of the American Tobacco Com puny's Hull Durham brand of tobacco. I lie tobacco Is all nianufaci ureil at the local plant, and the order Is now opera i Ivo. The order taking over the output of Bull Durham doea, not mean that the otnpany'H business has been com mandeereil by the government ft dnes mpan, however, that fr-• • i now until the 11 me when all government reeds have been supplied no Hull Dur ham will be sold for domestic eon -iirnption. NORTH CAROLINA BRIEFS. The Barium Orphanage has rpcelved n bequest of s4o,mm from the bite John C. Burroughs. a wealthy litizen of Charlotte. filass has been found in caedv bought by a citizen of Charlotte and the matter h:• y been referred to offl ' ials at Washington. A deep snow fell at Pilot Mountain in the recent, cold weather prevailing over the State. North Carolina has realized the one million dollar mark In her Liberty I,oan campaign, ..with Cumberland county leading The decomposed remains of a body wished ashore on Shell Island, about two miles off Wrightsville Reach and opposite Moore Inlet, was buried by the health department without the formality of an Inquest Coroner Hol den not deeming this formality nec essary.. The town of Mooresville has won the right to fly the honor flag offered by Secretary McAdoo to town first raising their quotas The SIO,OOO structure of the Mt Zton church at Concord has been de atroyed by Are, with only 12,000 In surance. Thomas Frazier, alleged to hare robbed a bank In San Francisco re cently, getting away with over SIO,OOO, was arrested while walking along one of the principal streets of Charlotte by Oetectlve Bradley, of the city police department, who recognized the man from photographs sent out from the California city. Six North Carolina flour mills havp disciplined by the food adminis tration and two have been ordered to close down. Dr. sTTvftrVrm- Ruck, the, noted tu berculosis specialist of Asheville, is deod. IMPROVED UMfORM i INTERNATIONAL SUNMSCHOOL LESSON (By REV. p. It. KITZVVATKR. D. D.. Teacher of English Biblo In the Moody lllble Institute of Chicago.) (Copyright, 1 5* IR. W«i(cr»i Newapapor tTnlon > j *=-■ =« : LESSON FOR APRIL 2T JESUS TRANSFIGURED, OR A FOREGLEAM OF THE KINGDOM OF GOD. LESSON TEXT-Murk OtII.HKN TEXT—This Is iny beloved j Son: hear r« Him. —Mark 3:7. ADDITIONAL MATERIAL FOR | TEACHERS-Matthew 17:1-20; Luke 9:25! ! 43; It Peter 1:1-21. PRIMARY TOPIC—With Jesus on the | ; mountain I INTERMEDIATE TOPIC- Meeting rtlf ! Acuities with prayfr ADDITIONAL MATERlAL—urtii.es 8:15- ! IS | SENIOR AND ADULT TOPlC—Vision | nnt! service. The hopes of the disciples were | crushed when Christ announced his death on trie cross. They were unable j to see how victory could Issue from I dentb. .lesus took with htm Peter. , .Timtes ami John, and went Into the mountain apart by themselves. Ac cording to Luke, they went there to j ! pray (l.ukc While, doubtless, [ lie loured for fellowship ami sympathy as the shadows of the cross were fall- i j Ing upon him, bis chief desire was to j I get the disciples apart and Into a state j of receptivity, so that be might show ' them the methods of the kingdom. He i fore going into the mountain, be do j dared that there "«re some standing I in Ills presence Who would not taste of j death till they h:ul seen the kingdom uf tJod come with power (v. 1). That I their drooping spirits might be revived ~ | and their confidence restored, lie way tnunsflgurcd before them. The [ pies sorely needed such a vision. If | the faith of the disciples was to he j kept through the dark liour of the j cross which was loomlhg large before j tlietn the light of the eternal must i I beam forth. The disciple now, as j j then, needs a glimpse of the glory he- j yoiul the cross In order to face the Is sues of the hour. '. ' 1 I. Jesus Christ Glorified on the Mountain (vv. 2, ,'l). He took his dls j I clples "bv themselves" and was "trans figured before them." This shows the j purpose terminated upon the disciples •j and not upon himself. Christ's rebuke j ' of I'etcr for Ids unwillingness to hear j concerning his death apparently for a ! tljuc estranged the disciples from him. | ! To heal this breech, an unusual trans j action was required. Ills "shining nil- j I merit" was typical of that glory which j j shall be manifest when he comes back j I to t be en rt h. M. Peter, James and John sent Israel in the Flesh In Connecttc With the Kingdom (v. 2). Christ Is peculiarly the King of Israel. Accord Ing to Kzekiel ;t7 :'JI 27, they are to lie the central people In the kingdom , This people shall be gathered from among the nations, united as one In that kingdom in their own country; 111. Moses and Elias Appeared In Glory With Jesus (vv. 4-13). These mi ll In the glorlllled slate nrc typical of the slate nf flu- saints In glory. Muses, Palestine, appears now In glory, repre senting the redeemed of the Lord v\ ho •hall puss through death Into the king doiu. The thousands of the I.onl who base fallen tisl. i p, at Christ's coining •-ball be awakened and pass Into the kingdom through translation. Manv •-bull be living upon the earth when the herd shall come, aml they, with xmt -dying, slmllTie xd+ungcil and pnvw into the kingdom (1 Cor. 15:50-. r ».'l; I Thess. 1:11 IS). 1. Peter's foolish proposal (vv. !">. 0). Moses and Kilns, who had been a long time In glory, would be 111 at hyinc in a tabernacle on I lie mountain •■lde. It would have been to Peter's credit to have Ijecn silent, ,sllic; he I,new not what to say. 2. The Divine voice out of the cloud vv. 7. X). lie is declared to he the beloved Son In whom Cod Is well pleased. When one desires to know what pleases Cod, look at his perfect Son, .Testis Christ. ??. Jesus' charge (vv. Of;?). lie instructed them that they should tell no man concerning the things which they had seen until he had risen from the dead. IV. The Mighty Power of the Divine Servant (vv. 14-29). When they de scended from the mountain, they saw a great multitude In a state of per plexity. The immediate cause of their perplexity was the grievous state of a voting man who was possessed with a demon (v. Ift). The father of the the. young man had nppenled to the disciples to cast the demon out, hut they were unable. When they brought him to Jesus, the foul spirit was re buked (v. 1T(), and enme forth. This young man's state Is representative of the nations who nre oppressed by the devil. The people were grievously op pressed. There are times when the devil Is especially active in the op pression of men. During Christ's so journ on earth lie seems to have been very active, and we have reason to be lieve from the Scriptures that Just pre ceding his second coming he will he even more active; tor he knows' that his time is short. One Of the ominous signs of the imminent coming of the Lord is the almost universal activity if the devil among the nations in this hour. When he comes he will cast out lii> demons, and the nations shall be brought into the Igngdi'in which be •*lll establish Usii- 11:10-12). NERVES GAVE OCT Serious Kidney Trouble Had Made Life Miserable, But Doan's Removed All the Trouble. Hasn't Suffered Since. "I had such severe pains In mr hark," says Mrs. Albert Akroya, 304 w. Indiana Avenue, Philadel phia, I'a., "that they almost doubled me up. Many a day I could not do my housework and at every move It seemed as If my hack would break In two. My feet and ankles swelled until HL I had to wear large sized slippers and n Y J sometimes I couldn't \ 7 "I had dizzy ppelli and dreadful head* \m! aches and fiery flashes passed he- Mr». AUrord fore my eyes. Had a heavy weight been resting on my head, the pain could not have been more distress ing. The least noise startled me, I was so nervous. 1 couldn't control the kidney secretions and the pain In passage was awful. "It began to look as though my case was beyond the reach of medi cine until 1 used Doan's Kidney l'iUs. The first box benefited me and four boxes cured all the trou bles. I have had no further cause for complaint." Sworn In before me. Thou. H. Walters, Sotary Public. Cat DOH'I at Any Slora, 60c a Bos DOAN'S "VfJIV FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. tSave the Calves! Slump ABORTION Out ol Yom Mrrd and Keep It Ouf I Apply treatment vouraelf. Small expense. Write for free booklet on Abortion, "gucHtloiiH and Ann* em". State number of «*nttle In herd. Ir David Robtrti V«t. Co OO Grand Avsnut, Wauketha, Wit Bilious? Take NR Tonight Nature's Ramady la Battar and Bafar Than Calomal. Claana Out Syatam Without Griping. Stop* Sick Haadacha. Ouarantaad Blllnus attacks, constipation, alck headache*, etc., nro In tho great ma jority of cane* duo to digestive trouble Mid no n-oxonablo person can expect to obtain real or lasting benefit until the cause Is corrected. Nature's Remedy (NTt Tablets) Is ft vegetable compound that acts on tha stomach, liver, bowels and the purpose being to bring about healthy and harmonious action of ali the organs of digestion and elimina tion. It acts promptly and thoroughly, yet so mildly and gently that thera Is never tha slightest griping or dis comfort. But that Is not all. Natura'a Remedy (NR Tablets) have a benefi cial effect upon the entire body. By Improving tho process of dljestlon nnd nsslmllatlon, tho nourlshm int Is derived from food, tho blood qua Ity Is enriched, vitality Is Increased an I tho ■whole system strengthened. Qnca -you*, get your' body In this splendid condition, you need not, take medicine every day—Just take an Nil Tablet occasionally when Indigestion, biliousness and constipation threatens, nnd you can always feel your best. Remember keeping well Is easier and fcheaper than getting well. Get a 25c box of Nature's Remedy (Nit Tablets) and try It. It Is sold, Buaranteed and rccouimeuded by your drug-gist. For' itass Horses / -H~»rsemon agrco— ' '•WW-ftSAIvN it , • \r „ . " ' „ i ,vH| s i tL. - --J Liniment L the rtatiTrr?| best and most eco ""J nomical liniraont for general stable use. For strained ligaments, spavin, harness nails, sweeny, wounds or old sores, cuts and any enlargements, it gives quick relief. A 35c bottle contains more than the usual 50c«bottle of liniment. 35c PER BOTTLE AT ALL DLALERS YAGER'S LINIMENT I OILIIKItT lIROH. & CO. Ualtlmore, Md. Have you RHEUMATISM Lumbago or Gout? Take RHEUM AC J DF. to remora .hecansa anil drive the poison from lire system. "BllklßAt ll>K OS TIIR ISBIPK PITH UIIII ■▲TISA on TUI orrsiM" At All Drugiclili ' Jas. Bail? & Son, WkolesaU Distributors . Baltimore, Md, . \annr- I® a KODAKS & SUPPLIES rlFlliV We also do hlfebeat class of finishing. 1 lilMjl_ lvu '" ""d Catalogue upon request. '-73 S Gtleiki Qptical Co., Kichaoad, Vw
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
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April 19, 1918, edition 1
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