Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / April 3, 1903, edition 1 / Page 1
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THE ENTERPRISE IBKIB OF SUBSCRIPTION: $t JOO Ber Tear. Strictly ia Advance VOL IV. - NO. 27. Excess OfStllni Affected My Heart fie I Bed Te Sit Up Te Breathe. Dr. Mlm' Heart Com Cured Me. Mad a* Ini mm «»if »c SSMSMII ■*SSr*wM"h waatToSplll JUL JZytWW. ■nriJhjMA Xi*f («• « mU i k|«arkMk mI k iw DM Mat « ■«*f ■*■»■> >■* M i *" Fl ' : *" fcßjJfwefla Valbibxlnt Mi ! Vtt mt foicbtkm finat iw ttwilialanre. Vctkosld nokn I* bah at it fa thit waj—at leaat. to «l ut oaaon il H4 nmrt address ft* Sir PWhrnk Trerea, an English MfriciML To ibt Bodtn fiptil, 1( aaja, hwM b nrvlj the oot (w of —tiril piwww, vkoit mm at htfai b a kindly or Imml (w Iu tymptom* 11c Mn|j Ibmlo(ini natural tf iwt toward con." They or* "not —two te latent, bat bic for their •aad tho rfcldiag of tho body of tho an tnaUa which they ate «vp faoadta lyai a>.* After oil, how mna, Ihb.ini ■ b aot ao rery uw. ■aa hi tho aWk agra wbo ata MM of tho fore* of na *ba* ood la thb pfiraae ho* tho tratk oa which Sir Frederick boo ftaaai hb tertara. Mi it b fro qaaatiy forgotten that nature mean* nB I j aa, and it b a pod thing to ha «M in aarhib reminded of il A diaarAcrrd acavl aaj caaseao cad ef troelir. Wira the itoeark bib ha putaa a>faactioai thrbowrlabe caase dtnajed. the Km aad kidarra coapiied, caaaiag inntiom dif iifi the M fatal of akirt ot {am!» ad tturfon Ik BOR tokdmiM. The fcaprtMt tfc'l, is to mitn the i til» h Mi Ira tor a fccahy mftiw. and for Um TiHiti Fee aale by X. S. Fed HTgh MCM la IMS. the Mat jrear n Ime Men •MOO pud be a tiaj Tudor gilt tail, mmlj more than four Ma fa height, tad £3,000 (or a UlallM aaltcrliar, 1577, about MO4 S Wlf inchee high, the hrw yriei working oat at £l9O M MM Ml tha latter £330 par MM A JMM L Hirer gih cup, afaataM fafa hick, farther real fa| tha caMfortaMe Jortalt of MM and a Henry VIL apoon, partly gilt, nat fW E6ML The poa- Mrioa mt thaaa If e art tries moat l»»Mwa af pet. teaponaihility— double* manj of oa mold chaarfaOj endure afUitj if m conld get them given to m—John Bnll'a Year Book. Nat Sec* am Unawal FnL Dr. da Sank * ft* weeks ago lec twiil m Washington am "Ueeoh IMM" After kts address be pic a dMaiwetislinn of his power vbea, hf wnntrrtiin to mind on it, he amashcd into stcithereen* n bottle . .' fWi el water. The incident caused wnil and m ditensaed bjr ier aral seaetnrs gathered ia the daak mm of the TfpgttHl iMginr breaking a battle by thinking of it,' sail one of the ?Itart nothing," said Senator fbs.au blandly. TW known men U think at a bottle and braak a doj- M* —{Mnit Free Press. ■ fan as* "s*ita( tmm bmmm, te, Hancock"* Ufrillrilteh a «tc«c Sold by C. D. Cantaipfeea iTo. A LfTTLE NONSENSE. Q mnS' Teacher—What ia a synonym, Freddie? Freddie —A synonym *» a word to be aaed ia place of another weed yon can't ipetL Teacher —Ia there sny connection between mind and nutter? Small Boy—Sure. If a bojr dorsal ■ml then li soon be soaMthiag the matter. Sunday School Teacher—Ham, da voa know who wrote the ftOIT of the' loaves and fishes we have jat finished reading? Han; —No, ma'am, but it aoaad# a good deal like one of pa'a fish ato (iaa. ex-widower) —Come here. It man, and aee the aew mamma I promised TOO Boaaae (aped four)— Why, papa, aha doesn't look very newt Mam— Yoa hare drawa the horae very nicely. Chart*, bat joa hare forgotten one thing. Where ia his tail? Charlie—Oh, that bone doan't need any tail. There ain't no ties an him.—Chicago New*. Yea. It Was Geod Wtaa. Old Faaaer—So there's the wine at last la it pny good, waiter? Waiter—Well, ?ir, I haven't cd it yet, bat—(gurgle, gurgle.) "Tea, air, it'a a very fair wine, air." And then Faster goea down HS KM* Better. "1 want to get some bird seed," aaid the cuatomer in the seed atom. "So, ye don't, amarty," replied the new clerk, recently acquired from the country. "Ye can't joke at Birds grows from egga, sot aeeda."—Philadelphia Presa. His Oplalsa. 1 am a believer in the motto Tar as you go,'" aaid the prudent nikn, *So am 1," answered Senator Sorghum, "and I am also coaTineed that the more you are willing to pay the farther you are likely to go. Washington Star. On Iks ten*. "Yea, sah, when Ah was at Yale Ah was on the scrub teaih, sah." "What! Did yoa play footballK "So, sah; Ah was connected with the eommona laundry, sah."—Yale Record. - - No Other Plan. "Little boy, what hare yea tied that tin can around that doe's neck forr - "Aw, gwan. Can't yoa ass he's hohtailcd ?"—Kansas CSty JoarnaL The Tiitd Table. Of eeoraa (W taMe look* lin —I. It ku to stand mil day Mat osee mmj H at Son te raa* Or ran abcut aad stay. I watch K wtth m aadJiatd anißr. MHhtataa M not el y bep Jaat to dona aflUk MSi * Aad acuta Ma nor h*a. Aad when a larva aad lavWk task Upaa a la lnUfcfd Dprn twLaatk MS lead.' II ear* not arrmtrb the pottaAed Beats; It waata to ran aad hap; tCm Inaaiae to (■ oat at daaaa Aad try to apte Ma ton 0 taMe mm d»sui« and good, i My heart la aad far yeal 1 wUk r*a sight rhooaa what yea awl Aad aha I yea weadta da. | OF DISEASE. 0k dMtvpx ise. WILLIAMSTON, N. C., FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1903. PiKGPONG IN CHINA. are not devoid of hn mar, m is asnally supposed," said a jmmg Yale MIL "1 most admit that one got the better of me and left me namtuo as to whether h« «as poking fun at me or not. One aifti! one of our pingpong balls was kaorkcj out of the clubroom win dow and laj all night b; the curb, where 1 foctd it the next morning and put it in my pocket. " John, did voa ever tee a little egg like this T f asked him. * "So egg,' he answered, with an indifferent glance. ■"What m it, then?* I inquired, wandering what he would raj. m 'Pmgpaag,' ha replied quack 11 a wink. ' "'How do you known asked. "Heed ail about pingpong ia hook,' he said; *in old Chinee book Chinee alay pingpong vcrr long— thootaaa thousand years. Pingpong in China first, before Columbus, be fore Greek man. Chinee (top pini; Mag, write aboat pingpong, then forget pingpong.'"—New York Her ald. The Parast a* Vallomkraaa. According to the dispatches, the forest of \ allomhrosa, best known through MUton's famous lines in "Paradise Lost**— TIM mm autumnal I mmrmm that at row tba Worlu .J la V ftllojr-feroea. wbera (b« Etrurian wnfuasvlfc*! lubtv ti was recently partlv destroved by Urn. The forest is fifteen miles east of Florence and consists of splendid fir, beech and chestnut trees. In the forest is what was formerly a Benoliciine abbey, founded about 103* by John Gaulbert. The pres ent magnificent conventual build ings were erected in 167.1. The ab bey was suppressed in 1869, and the buildings are now used for a school at forestry, supported by the Italian government. \ allombro«a was vis ited by Dante and is mentioned in Ariosto's "Orlando Furioso." In modern times it has been a favorite resort of artkts and tourists.—Ar gonaut. He Oat Hl* Bumps. The rejection the other day of Dr. Simonton, a candidate for ap pointment as assistant naval sur geon, because he was so big he couldn't get through the hatchwaprs recalled to the navv department his torian the case of Lieutd ant Thom as Xorton, one of the best known officers in the service. When Nor ton applied for admission to the Naval academy, he was half an inch fcdms.the required height. A course of stretcfilflw a gymnasium added a auarter of an iiffh. the before he was to take the physical examination Norton was in despair nntil two of his friends suggested a way out of the difficulty. They pounded him on the top of his head with bed slats until great bump* appeared. The next morning Nor ton parsed the teet with a fraction of an inch to spare. Chicago Chronicle. ' AastraNa'a Miniature Volcanoes. A carious feature of the breakup of the protracted and devastating drought in Australia was the num ber id miniature volcanic explosions ia various parts of the common wealth. The ground had become so parched And dry that it cracked, and the fimares thus formed became the receptacles of heated air. When the long prayed for downpour of rain came at but, the water met the hot air ia theae fissures, and little gey sen and volcanoes were manufac tured in a moment. Many farmers, hearing the explosions snd seeing columns of steamy stuff arising from the earth, wondered what new plague had come to afflict them and whether they were out of the frying paa into the fire. Lcathxd the Crown. President Roosevelt was telling a friend about his mail, which aver ages 500 or GOO letters a day. "One of the most remarkable letters 1 ever received," he eaid, "arrived on the morning the first full accounts of the Martinique disaster were printed in the newspaper*. The writer aaid he saw that the Ameri can consul at Martinique had been burned to death. He applied for the place and wound up with this sentence: 'I make this early appli cation so as to get in ahead of those loathsome creatures the officeseek tn.'"—Baltimore News. Honeyrroon and JalL The jail keeper at Fort Scott was astonished the other night when a ri looking young couple asked permission to stay in one of the cells ti!! morning. It was explained that tbev had just been married over in l&souri and were going into soathern Kansas, where the man had work. They ran out of money and had no place to sleep. The Mon itor says the bride was good looking and cheerful and seemed to look upon the matter aa something of a joke. Bat think of a honeymoon begun in jail!— Kansas City Joux- A CRAZY CRITIC. 1m occe asked to play before the inmates of an insane asylum by an alieaist," mid Jan Kubclik, "the doctor believing that music was a fine medicine for aabah.'icrd minds. I accordingly accompanied him to the institution, where lie introduced me and said I would favor any hear er* with something car and hapny. "I hadn't intended to do Utis; bat, following his suggestion, I play ed a bn'lunt Slav composition, which I hoped weuid be joyous enough. The crasy folk were all seated about the platform in chairs and aecmed to be Intensely inter ested. As I finished s very pretty yoang woman rose and beckoned to me. I thought, artistlike, that she wanted an encore and so aaid to the doctor: - " 'Ask her what she desires.' "He rose to his feet and wss shoot to question her when she ex claimed: " To think of- the likes of me be ing in here and he being at large in the wnrrld T "That wss the last time I ever ?ayed in an insane asylum."—New oik Times. Variety Stars Win Tttlaa. The number of variety dancers and ringers in Germany who get notable husbands—notable, that ia to say, aa regards titles and riches— ia rapidly increasing. An inquiring statistician baa ascertained that 00 per cent of (ierinan variety actresses who marry win husband- in far bet ter social pi-sition than their birth -and training would have led theiu to expect, and 20 per cent w«-d men of title. At the present time thirty eight counts have wires alio were comedy actFefcea or dancers. A l*ru*»iata prince (Adalhcrt) is mor ganatically married to Tkeresc KLs stair and Prince Phillip of Hamtn to Albertinc Stsber. Among other bearers of proud nanus who have recentlv married stage women are Duke l!rn«t of Wnrt tern berg, Prince Sulkowsky, Prince Paul of Thurn and Taxis and Count Kchafranch. Every year the number of Ifuch mar riages increase*. Cald Weather In Canada. Maxwell 1L >rahaiu, Esq., son of the late General Sir Gerald Graham of the British army, relates a re markable instance of the extreme -cold of the Georgian lay district of Canada, where in winter the ther mometer frequent!;.- falls to 30 or 40 degrees below Mr. Max well Graham, who owns the l,yn dock stock fanr:-, a row early ono morning last January to investigate a noise he had heard in the kitchen. To his surprise, he saw the family cat standing stock still in the very attitude of springing upon a mou.-c, which Ifatted-the cat with a horrified expression. Both animals were fro zen as hsnl as stone. The eat'* ta.il was extended ami the mouse's nuiiith slightly opened, as though it had ut tered a cry of terror. — Lippincott's. Successful Rouscltatlon. There arc still undeveloped possi bilities in eleetrieitv. A man in an apparently moribund eoudilion was recently taken into the Melbourne hospital, and in order to revive him an electric shock was administered. The results were startling and unex pected. A demoniac energy was in stantaneously infustd. He sent the doctor sprawling on the floor and flung a couple of assistants out of the window. Then he proceeded to wreck the ward, while nurses ran away shrieking and bsrricaded them selves. He nad done a hundred pounds' worth of damage before ths police, who were telephoned for, ar rived. Electricity as a medical agent seems to be as Tet imperfectly un derstood.— London Chronicle. Senator Quay's Way. A Pennaylvanian who was in Chi cago a few days ago threw a side light on one of tne methods by wnich Senittor Quay holds control of the Keystfyie State. "One time 1 wrote him," thi* man, "asking a favor, which he granted at once, apparently glad to do go. About two years later I by mail rnv own letter, acro j the Lack of which was written, 'Hear Jim, will you do so and so for me?" It was signed by Mr. Quay, and you bet I loe>t no time in doing as he asked. He's a Winder, is Matthew Stanley Quay."—Chicago Post. It Waa Ne Picnic. Representative Blurale's large fam ily bQI (this may be read two ways) recalls the story of the mother who boarded a street car with brood of ten. "Are theae your children," mapped the.rude conductor, "or ia thu a picnic?" "They are my chil dren, and it's no picnic," she an rwered.—Philadelphia North Amer ican. Insult to Injury. -This, sir," thundered the victim of tlje "get rich quick" concern, "ia what I call a downright outrage!" "Well," retorted the swindler, "did yon ever hear of an upright outrage?"— Kansas City Journal. CONDENSED STORIES. Mr. McKtnley Qlad the Judge Wis Lined Up With the Party. A new story ia being told illustra tive of the late President McKinley's ready wit and sharpness of repartee. Mr. McKinley had been suffering with influenza. Shortly after he vis taken ill Frank L, Campbell, assistant secretary «>f\hc interior, had a similar attack. \.ater, after both had recovered end were ■t their duties, Assistant Secretary Campbell was at the White I loose. "I congratulate you, Mr. Presi dent," he said, "on your speedy re covery. lam glad to see you well again. But I have a grievance to score against you." "What's that?" asked the presi dent. "Simply that I think I ought to hold you responsible for my doc tor's bill. You must hare given mo the grip, for I was taken ill a day or two after you were taken down with it" "Well, judge," retorted the presi dent, j'l am sorry that you've had the grin, but I'm nwfully glad to know that you are keeping in lino with the administration. A Queer Female Crank. "The quecrcrt of the female cranks to visit the While House made her appearance shortly after Mrs. lloosevolt's installation as first lady of the lanil," said an attache. "She was a faded little old woman. Her shoulders were shrouded in an ALL nniia MAM: LEOI-ATCA A BCVKS sxca. old shawl, and in the of thu shawl she had swaddled up a little very old, toothless and half blind i§Jsve terrier. - serf#,* raid the little old tinfr,4ipj|uiiig pleasantly at the doorkeepers anif assure. 'l'm yoa know.' "All made Cleopatra a erc-noe, and she undid the loose ends of the shawl swaddling the aped Skve terrier and showed the dog to them. " 'I thought I'd leave poor little C'hannian with Mr». Itooeevelt, you know,' said the little old woman rather pathcticallr. I'm going to visit the tombs of ihv ancestors in the pyramids shortly, and the pyra mids arc so damp lately that I fear Charm inn will take cold if I take her along with me. - So I thought I would leave her with Mrs. Roose velt while I am gone.' And' she gazed affectionately at the little old terrier and stroked its head. "They tojd her that Mrs. Roose velt was out of the city, and t=he went away with the decrepit terrier, saying that she would return later, but she didn't come back." —Wash- ington Poat. They Wouldn't Hire Hlrz. In the room of the house commit tee on judiciary one day a number of the legal lights on that commit tee Were discussing the ili'Tieulties a inan encounters in getting back into legal practice after a term in con gress. "Mv practice has entirely melted away, said Judge Winter of Illi nois. "Until now I liave not a single case jiending. Should'l retire from congress at the end of the two years for which I have been re-elected I would find myself without a single client and I probably would find pretty hard work building up a prac tice. "It reminds me of a remark made by General Buckner, who had been governor of Illinois and had a dis tinguished career in the senate. After his retirement from public life he returned to Chicago and' opened up a law office. ."'Governor,' a friend asked him' one day, 'don't you find it hard set tling down again to the practice of law?" "'Yes, I 4p,' General Buckner answer*!. '1 find it blamed hard.' Phey won't hire me.*"—Washington . MH'B'I TH ENTERPRISE' RATES OF ADVERTISING: One Square, one insertion 75 Carta. " two inKitiou f I.aj. " " one month fajoa. " " three month* $4-oo " " (is " SJJHK " " twelve " f 12x10. For larger advertisements Libera] Coo tract! win be wim FOR THE LITTLE ONES. Obedience of a Boy Who Became a Great Man. Sir Henry Haveloek attributed much of his success in after life to the training which he received from his father and mother. On one oc casion his father told his eon to nwrt him on London bridge at noon, but he forgot all about the appoint ment, and w hen lie got home in the CTening was surprised to find the lad not there. "Where is Ilcnry?" he asked of his wife. She replied that the boy had gonj to meet his father early in the day and had not been back yet; "ffhj," said tL\j father, 'lie must he waiting for 111 c on Ixmdon bridge. I promised to meet him thero at 12 o'clock. I told him to wait for me if I was not there at that hour, but 1 forgot all about it." It was now late in .he evening. The father at once put his overcoat on to go in search of the lad. He liTcd a long way from lomhm, and It was nast midnight when he readi ed the bridge. .Sure enough,there stood the brnvo boy, shivering with the cold. He would not move away, although cold and tired,- because his father's Inst words on parting had, been, "Wait there for me, my coy, till I come." Is there any wonder thnt a boy could obey go well became a great and honored man in the his tory of his Ration ? Presence of Mind. Dr. Alexander McKenzio In ono of his sermons tells of « pretty nnec-> dote of the early life of Louis Agas si/., the great scientist. As a child Agassi* lived in Switzerland on the bortlcr of a lake, lie had a younger brother, and one day the two lads started to cross the lnkc. It was frozen, and the ice looked safe enough, but their mother watched them. The boys got on very well till they came to a crack in Die ice perhaps a foot wide. The mother could not call to them, although her heart failed her c« she thought, "Louia will pet over well enough, but hi* little brother will try to step ovor and will full in." •As hhe watched she Paw Louis get down on thctcc, his feet on one siile of the crack, his hands on the other tide, making n bridge of his body, and the little brother crept over him to the other aide. Then Louis got up and they went on their way. A Problem For Bcience. Little Hoy—l wish I was'a great jihiloFffpher, like you. tJreat Scientist And why, my son ? 44 'Cause you know everything, an* there's some things I ean't under stand, but if I was like you I could." "Tell me one of them." « "Well, for one thing, I'd like to know why photographers can take picture* of comets an' nieteora an' flying cannon bulla an' lightning flashes an' yet they can't photograph "lli''-Wv without moa' squashing his hcadW%(ajtur of pinchers."— Oood Xewa. Upside Doyiw;-- vj. It is a mystery that we right side up when the picture tnafc is formed in the eve, by which wo see them, is upside down. A very interesting ejneriment can be tried with a vi>iti«g«j(l and a common pin. Take and puncture it with a pin. Hold tho card about three inches away from Ra Tftl PiM , 1 BOW TOU LOOK AND WHAT YOU BEE. rour eye and with the other hand firing the pin between cart! and cyo. The picture of the pin before the card will disappear and will uppear upside down through the opening made in the cart), a« shown in the eorncrof our illustrat ion. Of course, we have to hold tile card against the light of the window or against the light of a (litoiip. Quecttcmi For Mamma. A little girl wa3 just learning to read. One day while conning her book she suddenly looked up with this peculiar auestion: "Mamma, what docs "hen backed up to 'w' «pell and what does 'ho* hitched on to 'w' spell?" It required some thinking to discover she meant "when" and "who,"— New York Tribune. _ WHOLE NO. 183 Professional Cards. OR. JOHN D, BIGQS, DEXTIST OFFICE: MAIN STREET. GKO V> KEWKLL, A TTORNRY-A T-IJV IV, Office up stairs in Xt« r«k Euik&» tug, trfi hand cadr. top of step*. TILLIAIIBTON. N C. whertm irnkt> are desired. Special attention given to examining and mak ug title for purchasers of timber and limber lands. l Williamston Telephone Co. Office over Rank of Martin Coonty, WILLIAMSTON, If. C. Those Charges For Non-Sabscribers To Washington >5 Cent*. " Greenville 25 " " Plynidhth - 25 " " Tarboro " 25 •• " Rocky Mount 35 «• " Scotland Neck 25 " " Jatnesville 15 " " Kailer Li'Sey'a 15 " " J. O. Statun 15 •• " J. 1,. Woolard 15 •• " O. K. Cowing 4 Co. 15 " " I'artticle 15 " «> " RolK-rs:>m illc 15 " " Kvcrctls %• 15 '• " Gold Point 15 " " Geo. I*. MrXaugbton 15 " Hamilton - 20 " I'or other points in Extern Carolina see "Central " where a'phone will be found for use of non-sutneribera. TO COKSUIKPTZVCS. Tl,eurdersi;:ne.!haT?ri:l M ■ • akfe by simple mean,after*-£cik.£:. iei>nly trf With a disease CoammptltMß, w aas» as ic tuke kao* \ to his fellow sutlercrs ths *es rs c-f cure. To those who rfetire it. he w;!l ct.*er # ' R) send (free of charge) a mpy » f tbe presc: . .1 - they will find a sore cw *• x C>r tropii.n, A»thmm. Cstirrh, iH « I J.roit and hng Maladk .-,. lie iKipesaH tuJ'rera wil try Ms remedy. as it is fnsfanMl. 1 % *e-t!c««rtajf (he prescription, shkh m'.l c t v f* • tbiag, and air prove a blcmsf, will j-k k»c a Wren, iter. LD WUiD A.WIL3© J. Bcwaijm New Ymrn. ' I ; "PwTi yr TJJTJSiiEiU JT* •• OM IS YELLOW KlisCli I In yeor S!no! ? Physicians caJl .. It 1 .eisiW Qcra. Itcsnbesecn | .til 1)1-V:J ufitter J nlcici;apg. it works day and rnlgSt. nnt. It Giroi yotrow _ J piexion yellow. Chilly, aching 3 uens.-.tiotu creep down your fl backbone. You o feel vesk and worthless. ; ROBERTS' CHILL TONIC ■ will stop the trouble new. It ' enters the Mood at ooc? and ' drives out th? yellow prison. ' If nepleeted aid w.isn Chills, 1 Fevers, Night -Sweats -iiu a gen * ernl break-down come later on, 5 Kobsrls' Tonic *»i»l cure you 1 lifn liut *hy wail? Prevent j future ikkntij. Tire rrr.nufzc -1 turers kr.aw sbeut this yel . low poison and have perfected j Riihsrti' Tonic to (irivc It out, ] nourlah your system, restore appetite, purify the blood, pre vent and cure Chilis. K'vri and O alarb. U Iras aired thMU* B aiida—lt lit cu. a yon. or j-oor A moßsy back, Ihutisfair. try 2 jjt. l*iice, 25 cents. For sale by A mlcnsO!*, IfasM: II & Co.,and Eli Gurtanus. WHY The reason One Mlnula Cough Cur a relieves a aagfc In one minute. Is because It sets first on the maoism membrane right whsrn the couch troublaa— la tlte throat or d«n> s«*tsd on the larga. deatioy»i*f tW mtcrobos or coufh terms sod ckartsA the phiscm. I Ono Minute Co*i«h Cure aot orif dsatroys the dto* MM firms, and cigars out their polarm. but tt |ti si Strang! h and clastictty to tha doMrsie membraas# which protect the thrnat ard hjrgs. Opens the sAp Essaces and promotes uses the to recsiva Its natural supper cf oay«sn. thus exhilarating the pulmonary crnns wtt rich strength and etgee that the hmgs and bronchial tubas become bulwarhs sgtlnst the Inception of sase. Asthma. Bronchitis. La Grtppe. Coid Om tka Lungs and ail Pulmonary Compistrts that are cuiablft ITS Quickly cured by the use cl ONE MINUTE COUGH CURE Pneared by E. O. D.WITT * 00.. 1 & K BIt.CS J miaKF ''H' l CotnrmoMrs ac. qnloklf aacartAif w opi.lu« trm »!■>■ am lnT*ntk>n U proUMy ■ ilwlilli Cammmlm tioMnmirwmaawiifal n.n«it»Mn Mot Im OMM aceMT 'oHtmiMH). Fatente taken throonh Mum ACb. IStthf tprcloi notice, nlthowt rhargs. la Ike Sckßtidc Jfserkn.* A Vandaomefjr WhmHrnied wnklr. lanmt dr eulation of
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 3, 1903, edition 1
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