Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / March 18, 1921, edition 1 / Page 2
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8' Buy Your Job Printing Like You Buy Clothing r When you go into a store tojbuy a suit of clothes, you don't buy a pair of overalls to go to church YflP p AJ . in, simply because they cost less, do you? Then why go into a printing office and pick out the IT Ii JT j cheapest stock for your stationery? tJ'JAJman can be judged by hisjpersonalfappearance - . J |? v firm by its stationery. Does >ours [make a favorablejjimpresskm jon the [people you write? - J\ 11 , — — = _______ Mail Owi^rs ■ Think it over andfif B not|satisfied,|jGlVE*US A TRIAL, we know how —THE (ENTERPRISE Attend^ THE NATIONAL FARM LOAN ASSOCIATION is now ready to make loans to farmers. ' If you are in need of a reasonable loan, call on the Williamston Nation al Farm Loan Association. See JNO. D. BIGGS ' | OR W. C. MANNING LET ME 1)0 YOUR JOB WORK IF YOU NEED ANY— LETTERHEADS - NOTEHEADS ENVELOPES - HILL HEADS • STATEMENTS CARDS INVITATIONS or any kind of printed matter, write or .phono me, and your order will receive prompt attention. I'rices "reasonable. - c |f|L|| If 1 LV Tfte Height of Musical | •- • * YOU get the height of musical joy when you hear a great living artist. But you get equal joy when you hear the same artist on the New Edison. The proof of this is convinc ing, conclusive and concrete. 7% NEW EDISON '/ft# Phorn'tfraph **>ith O 5 Ctrl ** Convincing for JMr. Edison him self said in a recent interview:" "The emotional effects and con sequent benefits of music are well known. Through the agency of ~ rt»y new phonogiupli, I can pro- ( j . j dupe «the same effects as would result ft om the original music." , ; 3 . .C • | Conclusive—tor you can score, on a Mood Change Chart, the effects of the New Edison's realism on you. Come in and listen to this , test of realism. Concrete-for we will show a big book of proof, that there is no di£ ference between RK-CHEATED music and the original music. This proof would be good in any court of law. t:: ' — * - - -a. s. COUKTKEV, fW«U«r» £ - V® ' ■ / | DRINK HOT TEA TOR A BAD GOLD -■■■l i Oct a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Take a tableapoonful of the tea, put a cup of i boiling water upon it, pour through a : sieve and drink a teacup full at any ' time during the day er before retiring. | It is the most effective way to break a | cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens tile bowels, thus driving a cold from the system. Try it the next time you suffer from , & cold or Ui» grip- It Is inexpensive I and entirely vegetable, therefore sat* | and harmless. RUB BACKACHE AND LUMBAGO RIGHT OUI ! Hub fain and Stiffness away with • tmall bottle of old honest 81 Jacobs Oil When your hack is sore and lama or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffer! Qet a HO cent bottle of old, honest "St. Jacob* Oil" at any drug store, pour a little j in your hand and rub ft right into I the pain or a/'.h«, and by the time you ! j count fifty, tho mottocs* and lameiies* j in gone. Don't crippled! This soothing, j 1 penetrating oil needs to be used only onee. It takes the ache and pain right | out of your back and ends the misery. j j It is magical, yet absolutely bitrnJcKs | and doesn't burn the ukin. Nothing elm> utops lumbago, sciatica | M.»wt lame iMU-k misery so promptly 1 FOY, ITCHY ECZEMA IS HEALED RIGHT UP j WITH THIS SUffKUR / ■ ■, Any br walring oat of the.aldjfr eaee^^JsEn irritation, soothes and j ecxrms right up aud clear and smooth. It never (ails to relieve the and disfigurement. Sufferers skin trouble should get a of Mem ho Sulphar from any druggist and use it like a cold cresnS [ PUT .CREAM IN NOSE AND STOP CATARRH k Tells How To Open Clogged Noe | triU and End Head-Cold*. ' - ■ " i j, - You feel fine i| a few moments. Your colli in head or catarrh will b« guns. Your clogged nostrils will opeu. The air passages of your ;L«od will clear and I you can breathe freely. Mo mors dull- I Less, headache;' 'no hawking, snuffling, | mucous discbarges or dryness; no strug gling for breath at night. Tell your'druggist you > want'a* small I bottle .or Ely's Cream Apply a little .ol |this fragrant, aifttvPHe eraam in your nostrils, let it penetrate ( through every "air passage of the head; sooths and heal the swollen,'inflamed mucous membrane, and jettef comes instjuitlv. It is just what every sold and dlarrh sufferer ,needs " l>«n t stay etutfedup and 'miserable/' Ja.st received two carloads wire fencing. Be prepared^ for the stock law when it goes into effect on the 16th. Cheap for cash. C. D Carstar phen & Co . * o•. ■ S Colds & Headache "For years we have used Black-Draught in our family, and I have never found any medicine thai could take its place," writes Mr. H. A. Stacy, of Bradyville.Tenn. Mr. Sta cy, who Is a Rutherford County farmer, recommends Black- m Draught as a medicine that should' be kept in eveiy house- gj hold tor use in the prompt treatment of many tittte ills to pre- ■ vent them from developing into serious troubles. THEDFORD'S.. j BLACK-DRAUGHT j "It touches the liver and does the work," Mr. Stacy declared. 'lt is one of the best medicines I ever saw for a 5 cold and headache. 1 don't know what we would do in our j family If it wasnt for Black-Draught It has «aved OS many ■ dollars ... I dotft see how any family can hardly go with- I out tt I know it is a reliable and splendid medicine to keep in the house. I recommend Black-Draught highly and am ■ never without it" [ v At all druggists. Accept No Imitations | THE ENTERPRISE I Start Tomorrow and Keep It Up I Every Morning Oct In the habit of drinking a glass of hot water before breakfast. i ; t We're not here long, so let's make our atay agreeable. Let us live well, eat well, digest well, work well, sleep well, and look well, what a glorious condition to attalu, and yet, how very easy It is if one will only adopt tho morning inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, split ting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, Instead, feel aa fresh as a daisy by opening the sluices of the system eaoh morning and flushing out the whole of the Internal poisonous stag nant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoouful of limestone phosphate In It to wash from the atomach, liver and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour btlo and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food Into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfeiljr in vigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases. waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. While you are [ enjoying your breakfast the water | and phosphate is quietly extracting a large volume of water from the blood .and getting ready for a thorough flushing of all the inside | organs. The millions of people who are 1 bothered with constipation, bllloua I spells, atomach trouble; others who I have sallow skins, blood disorders and ! sickly complexions are urged to get a I quarter pound of limestone phosphate Sipj the drug store. This will cost ry Utile, but Is sufficient to make yone a pronounced crank on tho 1 subject before break- of Baits if yonr Back hots Bladder bothers you—Drink IF more water. If you-most have your meat every day, sat it, but. flush your kidneys with salts j orcjisionally, aajs it noted authority whe I tells us that meat forms urio acid which 1 almost paralyzes the kidneys in their ef forts to exptl it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, thsa you suffer with a dull misery in ths kid nay region, sharp pains in the back or sick j headache, dimness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bud you havo rheumatic twinges. The urino geti cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, ! obliging you to seek relief two or three "j time during the night. To neutralise these irritating aoids, to j cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body's urinous waste get four ounces of Jed Salts from any pharmacy herei take a tablespoonful in a glass of j water before breakfast for a few daye and your kidneys will then aot fine. This famous sslts is mads from tke acid of grapes and lemon juioe. oombined with lithia, aad has been ussd for generations j to flush and stimulate slugi p«> Udasy% ■ also to neutralise the acids ia uriae, | so it no longer irritates, thus end lag ; bladder weakiMM. I Jad Baits la isai iisualvs; eaanot la- I lure, aad makaa a delightful if n Sua! lithia water drink. SltE 1H uuras HMA TDJtr aUH Don't Stay Gray I Hare's aa Old-time Recipe that Any body can Apply.. The nee of Bags and Sulphur for re* storing faded, gray hair to its natural color dates back to grandmother's time. She used It to keep her hair beautifully dark, gloasr aad attrac tive. Whenever bar hair took on that duU. faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture waa applied with wonderful •ffsot But brswlag at home la mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wyeth's ■age and Sulphur Compound." you will get this famoua old preparation. Improved by the addition of other In gredient#, which oan be depended up oa to restore natural ooler sad beauty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggiat says It darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that nobody eaa tell it has bean applied. Tou simply dampen a sponge or soft brush wub It and draw thta through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By mornlag the gray hair disappears, aad after an other application or two. It becomes beautifully dark and glosay. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound la a delightful toilet requisite for thoee who desire a more youthful appearance. It la not Intended for the sure, mitigation or prevention of diaeesa SOY BEANS AND CORN FOR SALE also fat pigs, weighing from 60 to 90 pounds. Will sell dressed o on the hoof. Joshua L. Coltrain, R. P. D. 4. M 8 4t The stock law ia effective March 16th, e pbrepared. We have just re ceived two car loads of wire fencing, also 1 carload of No. 1 Timothy hay, and 600 bushels of Burt's 90-day seed oats. To be sold cheap, for cash. C. D. Carstarphen A Co. Now is the time to buy your fer tiliser for 1921. See Leslie Fowden first. _ See Leslie Fowden before buying your fertiliser. LISTEN!! % -- - .. . ... _ . ... , -'l^ It Has Come—A Tremendous £Vo/v y b/ 25 per cent ill Fertiliz6lf 6 making it within reach of all farmers. 1 You know- you can't raise a crop with- / out it. I have what the majority of * farmers and the Agricultural Depart- CI 4 ment consider to be the best fertilizer ! made. Some one to wait on you every minute at No. 5, Storage Warehouse. • 1 also carry the old time cotton seed meal—the kind you can sow in a gu ano sower. Not a feed mixture for cows . & I HAVE THE RIGHT PRICE ON EV>~ AND CONSIDER QUAITY / PRICE EVERY™ c Lei me .do business with y it WILUAMSTON . •' r t The Finest Thing Ever Said of This Bank —"— It »« not in praise of our great strength— It was not in praise of our syatem, which ii most modern— * Nort wan it in praise of our growth, of which we are very proud- No; it was in praise of our "human nans" if we may use the teim. « "( •njoy the same intimate rela tionship with the Farmers & Mer ' chants Bank," said our friend, "that 1 enjoy with niy closest friend, or my business associate. Invariably I have found sympathy and kindly counsel *. first, later if needed, truncated into terms of material help when the rules of good banking have warranted it." We Believe Nothing Finer Than This . Can be Said of any Institution 9 ' ■ - •- ■ --- """ Trw *5 • '"•Wit* i*«lj "The bank where you feel at home." FARMERS & MERCHANTS BANK Williamston , North Carolina
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 18, 1921, edition 1
2
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