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VOU VI. - NO 25 -
K- " " ..
DIRECTORY
—■■•i'l.- ..I*
Tm.oam
Mayor—Jaahii* U Ml. ■ *|§S
CMMUOMM-#.}. a. a. ugkt,
N. S. Pad, Dr. J. DL MRI, 1 IlMUfl.
P. K. Hodffe*.
M. S. Peel.
Clerk—A. HUKII.
CWW .
LrtCa
!>wirtliiri(l, No. ja, i.F wdA.
M. aada«d*»
the World, feepl* tttli every Md
la* Friday afchta. , t
►
Ckufh §t the Mvcat
Service* mHW ascoad nl Mkjpw.
(Ujra of the IMI-hhlm nd maiaj,
aad oa the Sataidaya befbre,
■ad Oa Moadav* (fa. a.) *ft*a wH Saa
daya ollbe aoatk. All are eordially.ia
riled. B. S. UWTn. Rector
Re*. B. B. Rnaa, the Methodiat Pa*-
lor, hai the foUovißf tppoiflUMitf:
Every Sunday nocviag at 11 o'clock aad
Bight at 7 o'clock wpactiwly, ticayt
emy Suadar —iln aft 9:30 o'clock.
Pntfcr*wMlhf every w edneaday eves*
iait at J o'clock. Holly Bfwtagi 3rd
Sunday r nail at 3 o'clock: Varaoa I at
Suaday eveatag at 1 o'clock; Hamiltoa
>ad Suaday, aaoraiagaad aight; Haaaella
aad Saaday at 5 o'clock. A cordial ia
ritatio* to all to attead theae aervicea*
SMttMCfeWCk
Preaching oa the lat, lad aad 4th Saa
day* at 11 a. at, aad 7:30 p. a. Prayer-
Bftiag rretv Thuraday Bight at 730
Saaday School tiai Saaday atoraiag at
9:10. J. D. Bigga, Superiateadcat.
The paator ptaachai at Haariltoa oa the
3rd ttoiadav la each taoath. at 11 a. a>.
aad 7:yo p. m.. aad at Riddick'a Grove
•a Saturday before every iat Saaday at 11
a. m.. aad oa the iat Saaday at 3 p. m.
Slide School Hoaae oa the aad Sunday
at 3 p. at., aad the Bigga' School Hoaae
•a the 4th Saaday at 3 p. at. Everybody
cordially invited.
R- D. CAUOU. Paator.
SKEWARKEE JL
Lo^
OiaaeroßV FOB 1903.
8. a Browa, W. M.; W.C.Manaiag.S.
W.i Be. G. Taylor. I. W.; T. W. Than
m, 8. D.; A. P. Taylor, |.D; a R. Bigga,
Secretary; C. D. Caratarphea, Tiaaaaiai;
A. K.Whitnore aad T.C.Cook, Steward*;
B. W. Clary, Tiler.
STANDING COMMITTEES:
CHARITY—S. a Browa, W. C. Maa
aiag, Mc. O.Taylor.
PtMAMCM—Io*. D. Bigga. W. H. Har
•ll, R. J. Peel.
Rtrnucx—W. H. Edward*, W. M.
Greea P. K. Hodge*.
ASYLUM —H. W. Stabb*, W. H. Rob
crtaoa, H. D. Cook.
Professional Cards.
D*Joi«rDriiGGs
DENTIST
Oancs—MAlM Srutr
PMOMR «
W. K. IMRU WM. K. WAKKKM I
DRS. HARRELL ft WARREN
PHYSICIANS
AND SURGEONS
OPPICR IN
Bnos' DRUG STORK
'Pbooe No. 99
■M——l#»«a*aaaa—aaaa—a—
DR- J- PEBBLE PROCTOR
PIYSICIAN
AND SURGEON
(Mka ia Mobiey Boildiag
oar*: 9xo to KKJO a. aa.; 3 to 3 p. m.
" 'PIWWW n
BURROUS A. CRITCHER,
ArroMinrr AT LAW
Office: Wheeler Martin's office.
'Phone, 23.
WILLIAMBTOK. N. C.
WINSTON ft EVERETT
AnDßmm AT LAW
• r ■ .
Bank BuiJdin*, WilHamston, N. C.
8. ATWOOD NEWELL
LAWYER
m- SSURSTa&S
* V ILUAMSTOIt N (JL
I!*; Mtta tar pant MIII" ** SnbaT**** Hail 11
liah
*ak*aat ,M jaa vfaha bar * aeU M I
f APPEAL TO FARMERS
T« SUad If lie SMrtkern
(MM kmcnttm.
Governor' Terrell of Georgia
makea a atrong appeal In die Carm
en of the Sooth to stand by the
recommend-toots of the Southern
Cattan ftaaociatioa He nrgea
them In be tone la each other in
whnt he calls this evicts in their
aftin. Nov is offere' them the
opportunity to shake off the thral
dom of the Wall street and cotton
Mtefcaage speculators and to take
into their own handa the manage
ment of the cotton market He
endo'ses the work of that Asaocia
tion aad believes it will bear good
fruit Its iMCcew depends upon
the farmers themselves If they
will stick together they will win;
hot If each one tries to fool and to
get ahead ef his neighbors then
will all the work have been done
and a I the expense incurred in
vain. Governor Terrell, though,
believes the fanners will stand by
each Below we give ex
tracts letter which all
formers should rend.
Governor Terrell waa raised on a
form and is still a former. He has
several plantations, on every one
of which he will reduce the cotton
acreage twecty five per cent and
he also is holdi»g his cotton of the
present crop In his letter the
governor says:
"I have watched with great in
teraat the work of the Southern
Cotton Aaaociatkm. Its officers
and the officers of the various State
divisions have dooe a good work
in ao thoroughly organizing the
Southern Staiea. Truly the words
which appear on the official em
blem of the Aaaociation. 'ln unity
there shall be strength ' are very
appropriate. The time has come
for the people of the South to stand
together. They can now work out
their own aalration. Failure to
become nnited means failure. This
carries with it the absolute serfdom 1
of the Southern planter to Wall
street The South has never lost
anything by standing together. It
has never succeeded by drifting
apart Had it not been for the
dark days of the reconsrtuction the
manhood of the South would have
pasaed away with its property in
terests. The Southern planter needs
this same determined and united
strength in the present fight the
cotton growers are making against
the evil that is threatened in an
effort to control the product of
human labor by apecula'ion in
Wall street There eht.uld be no
laggards. Now ia the time to act
in order that the beat results may
be guaranteed. This is the plant
ing time, and it is incumbent upon
every former who loves his section,
and who feels the proper comxjh
Cor the weal of coming generations
to give the fullest play to unselfish
patriotism and cut down his indi
vidual crop in respect to the im
plied contract that the great class
of planters have made with each
other
"He should not only do this
himself, but he should urge his
croppers and his neighbors to fol
low his own example, honestly and
practically set, by reducing the cot
ton acreage twenty-five per cent
and fertilizers in the same ratio. ~ j
"Diversifications of crops to take
up the land not planted in cotton
and a greater effort than ever bo
fore to raise food supplies at home
will put the Southern States in bet
ter shape than eVer.
"I believe the people of the South
are thoroughly aroused on this
great qneatioo and that they ere
going to reduce their acreage, hold
what cotton they can for better
prices, and when next fall arrives,
1 believe the crop of cotton will be
much shorter than in years, and
that the price .will be much higher
than it ia to-day. "—Wilmington
Ml MIUfCI
Fed tired, no appetite, cannot
sleep, work or cat? That's spring
tiredness and will disappear at
oace if you take Hollister's Rocky
Mountain Tea this month. 35
cents, Tea or Tablets. J. M.
Wbeekas ft Co., Robeteonville, N.
C., and T. J. Latham, WHliains
tm, N. C.
(Djt (Enterprise.
WILLIAMSTON, N. C„ FRIDAY, APRIL 7,1905.
Man's Mission.
Every man has a mission in lilt.
Creation would be purposeless if
its highest and crowning consum-
mation—man —was left to wander
aimless and object ion less.
What matters it. if he is endow
ed with God-like qualities of intel
lect, a superb brain, a creative, ac
tive mind, an intelligence that can
grapple and overcome the potential
and hidden forces of nature, if all
these magnificent inheritances ate
only wasted and unutilised.
If the grave is the goal to which
all humanity tends, if life » to be
swallowed up in that all-embracing
vortex, then it matters little wheth
er our brief existence terminates
without the sensation of a strife or
passion or amidst the splendor? of
accomplishments and a name
synonymous with great deeds and
mighty achievements.
But the grave is not the goal of
the human race. Existence is not
the effervescent dream that flits
athwart the mind in the silent
watches of the night. It ia a most
wretched delusion that leads a man
to believe that after a misspent
life, where no promise met with
fair fulfilment, and every flower of
beauty and fragrance, ere it blos
somed in the sunlight, was choked
with the noxious weeds of passion-
and of vice, he could lay the gar
ments of his soul *into an earthlv
casket and say: "Here at last is
oblivion. In this grave are rest
and peace." Impotent delusion !
Vain hope! Boundless space,
boundless time, never ceasing and
eternal energy are some of nature's
conditions, and through its ever
changing forms it is still and for
aye never changing.—Frank. H.
Merick, Colorado.
What Our Schools Cost Us.
It is ptobably not generally
known that the United States
spends ann ially on elementary ed
ucation about $227,000,000 —the
exact figures for 1900 —1901 were,
according to the report of the
United States Commissioner of Ed
ucation , $216,043,236. Europe
spent during the same period ap
proximately $246,000,000. The
enrollment in the elemental
schools of Europe Is, however, in
the neighborhood of 45.000.000,
while in the United Slates it is not
much more than 16,000,000, al
though it ia estimated that there
were in 1901 almost 22,000,000
children of school-going age in
this country. Our yearly expendi
ture per pupil averages twenty
two dollars.
Some profit may be gained from
a comparison of the amounts spent
yearly by representative American
cities for the maintenance and op-
of their public schools.
New York spent in a single year
$'9>73i>639; Chicago follows with
in outlay of $8,204,493; Philadel
phia's expenditure was $3,319,604;
Boston's, $3,043,640; Baltimore's,
*M»7.39*; Cleveland's. $1,257.-
345; and Washington's $1,182,916.
New Orleans is at the end of the
list, with an expense of only $478,-
025. St. Louis, by the way, pays
more for its police department than
for its schools—sl,6o2,lß2 for the
former as against $1,526,140 for
the latter —a ratio of one dollar for
the police to ninety-five cents for
the schools.—Harper's Weekly.
Forgot AlMt Yiir Slmkl
If xour digestion Is bad the vital
organs of your body are not fed
and nourished as they should be.
Tbey grow weak and invite disease.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what
you eat. cures indigestion and all
stomach troubles. You forget you
have a stomach from the very day
you begin taking it. This is be
cause it gets a rest —recuperates
and gradually grows so strong and
healthy that it troubles you no
more. E. L Babcock, Amherst,
Minn., says: "I have taken a
great many remedies for indiges
tion but have found nothing equal
to Kodol Dyspepsia Curie." Kodol
digests what you eat, cures indi
gestion, dyspepsia, spnr stomach,
belching, heartburn and all stom
ach troubles. Its preparation is
the result of many years of re
search. Sold by Anderson, Craw
ford & Co. "I
HER ARMY WEAKENING.
Russia's Soldiers Refuse to to
to War—Prefer Death.
The latest and a very alarming
evidence of the fire that is smoul
dering beneath the surface in Rus
sia is the refusal of soldiers to go
to the war when drafted for that
service. At one point in the south
ern provinces forty refused to go.
The two ringleaders were shot and
the others have been sentenced to
eighteen years of penal servitude.
This is something new with the
Russian soldiers. Heretofore they
have alwavs obeyed such orders—
doggedly and unwillingly, it is true,
but they did not dare to refuse.
This shows that the Russian peas
ants, including the anMicrs, are
getting more desperate, and wAb
their desperation arc losing their
abject fear of the government and
its officials. The soldiers have a
dread of going to the seat of war,
though up to the present they have
not had the courage to resist their
officers or to refuse to obey the
orders to march, but now they do
both, knowing that it means death
br penal servitude. Their horror
of going to the war must be great
indeed to make them prefer the
other alternative. What can Rus
sia expect to gain by opposing
such soldiers to the enthusiastic
and patriotic Japanese, whose
greatest ambition is to die fighting
for their country ?
Russian officials believe the
safety of their empire lies in the
army. So far the anny has not
shown its ability to protect its
honor. The glamour of its might
is fast fading away before the on
slaughts of the despised little Taps.
Her soldiers prove no match for
them and her generals are ourwitt
ed at every turn.
Russia is beginning to learn that
she cannot depend on ner armies
to maintain her prestige abroad.The
next lesson she ia likely to learn
regarding them will, most probably
be that it is the soldiers who will
destroy that mighty fabric called
the empire of all the Russia* —
mighty in name and outward ap
pearauce only—under the founda
tions of which is a mine of the des
pots own making, which may be
exploded at any moment.
Became the peasantry and liber
ated serfs have been trodden down
and trampled into the dust without
resistance or show ot resentment for
so many years, their oppressors
have come to lielieve that there is
no ill treatment they will not sub
mit to. Some of them have sub
mitted to. such degredation for
such a length of time that they are
really but a few degrees alx>ve the
brutes and the wild animals of
their forests and steppes. They
do not resist. They show no re
sentment in the presence of officials
or of their superiors, but the re
sentment and the hatred is there,
and the power, too, to exercise
them, though it lies dormant, not
even recognized by those who pos
sesses it. But some day they wtll
awaken to its realization and a ter
rible awakening it will be. Once
let them realize their power and
throw off the abject fear of the
government which now holds them
down and there will lie a terrible
reckoning with their oppressors.
The leaders of the anarchists will
engineer this movement and the
instruments they will use to put it
in mqtion will lie the soldiers re
turned from the war in the east,
whether victorious or vanquished.
They will be ready and willing
tools in the hands of the plotters
who are scheming to tear down the
empire and to establish anarchy
and a reign of terror in its place.—
Wilmington Messenger.
Tit digit lUI IS BflWltt
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve
cools, soothetfand heals cuts, burns,
boils, bruises, piles and all skin
diseases. K. K. Zickefoose, Adolph
W. Va,, savs: "Mv little daugh
ter bad white swelling so bad that
piece after piece of bone worked
out of her leg. DeWitt's Witch
Hazel Salve cured her." It ia the
most wonderful healing salve in
the world. Beware of counterfeits.
1 Sold by Anderson, Crawford St Co.
Selected Smiles.
» •
Affairs in Greece—Fried oysters.
Always "hard pressed"—Bricks.
Mill does—Wages of factory gi h
Nature's tailoring—A potato
patch.
Educated on a sound basis—The
drummer.
Modeaty—A beautiful flower that
flourishes in secret places.
A druggist ia not inappropriately
termed the chief pillar of society.
Editor—A poor wretch who
empties his brain to fill his stom
ach.
A nan recently knocked down
an elephant. He was an auction
eer.
» Doctor—A man who kills you
to-day to save you from dying to
morrow.
"How is your honor, Pat ?"
"Unimpeachable, sir," was the
reply.
. A sarcastic lady says the only
thing which keeps Lent is her beat
silk umbrella.
Lawyer—A learned man who
rescues your estate from your ene
my and keeps it himself.
Betting is immoral, but how can
the man who bets be worse than
the man who is no better ?
My dear—An expresaion used
by man and wife at the commence
ment of a quarrel.
"What would a pig do who
wished to build himself a habita
tion?"
"Tie a knot in his tail and call
it pig's tie."
"fimsley thinks his wife is an
•ugel."
"That so? Why, I didn't know
Jimsley was married,"
"He is a widower."
Willie—Pi. why do they call a
woman a mau's helpmeet ?
Pa —I suppose it is because when
a man thinks of marrying, the
woman meets him half way.
A lady entered a grocery store
00c day and told the clerk that she
wanted to buy an "empty barrel of
flour, as she wished to make a ben
coop for her dog."
"Is it true that you said Jobson
here had stolen your purse ?"
"I did not go so far aa to say
that, your honor All I said was
that if Jobson had not assisted me
in looking for the purse I might
have found it."
Lylea—Did you ever come across
a more conceited fellow than Bul
ger? They say he is an atheist,
and I believe he is.
Bonter —I wouldn't like to go ao
far as that; but I do knew that he
doesn't recognize the existence of
a superior being.
Willie —Papa, if I was twins
would you buy the other boy a
banana too?
Papa—Certainly, my son.
Willie—Papa, you surely ain't
going to cheat me out of another
banana just because I'm all in one
piece?
A strength tonic that brings rich,
red blood. Makes you strong,
healthy and active. Thaf s what
Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea
will do. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets.
J. M. Wheeless & Co., Roberson
ville, N. C., and T. J. Latham,
Willianiston, N. C.
"You are as full of airs as a
hand-organ," said a young man to
a girl who refused to let him see
her home.
"That may be," was the replv
"but 1 don't go with a crank."
It is difficult to cure a cough 01*
free yourself from the discomforts
of a cold unless you move the
bowels. Bee's Laxative Honey
and Tar acts on the bowels and
drives all cold out of the system.
Then comes its soothing effect and
strengthening influence upon the
throat and lungs. For Croup.
Whooping cough, Colds, and all
Lung and Bronchial affections, no
remedy is equal to the original
Laxative Hooey and Tar.
Sold by, S. H. Ellison, & Co. ,
LEARN TO SAVE.
The Man Who Saves Is The
Successful One.
>
The first lesson a man is given
1 lo team when he enrolls in the
school which qualifies for success
> is to put by part of his salaty every
week The truest friend in times
, of adversity is the bank account
and the surest foundation upon
which to build a fortune is the ac
r-"ii*ted savings of months and
> awa, a reflex in its ac..» eifcifc
money itself is a valuable accesso
ry, and the quality of mind and
t character developed through this
habit makes for ultimate success.
The man who can civknly pass by
the tinsel and glitter of civilized
1 life, whose money is not drawn
from his pockets by every tinkling
sound, is a man who will have
small cause for complaint at the
> world's treatment He will de
velop beyond the influence of
, trifles.
A man put forty remarked. "If
I only had a little money I could
make a fortune out of this device."
"He was sadly mistaken,'' was the
comment of A. P. Monroe in a re
cent article. "The fact that he had
reached forty on a salaried posi
tion, without having saved money,
was proof positive that he had not
enough power of resistance suc
cessfully to handle any kind of an
enterprise. Sharper, shrewder peo
ple would get his money away
from him, just as they hai> been
getting it away from him for twen
ty years." When a man's ambi
tion is not a stronger force with
htm than theatres, cigars, fancy
ties, expensive boarding houses,
slot machines, and such agencies,
his life will be devoted to support
ing parasites.
A man who cannot withstand
trivial temptations to spend money
has not in him a stiff enough back
bone to make a success of any
venture. He could be turned aside
from' his undertaking by the first
bauble that caught his eye, like
some infant, enthralled with a toy
balloon. The cutes, soda foun
tains, the places of amusement, all
furnish temptation to a young man
to part with hi» money. If hi?
ideal, the purpose within him, is
not stronger than those outside in
ducements his salary will be fritted
away on unnecessary expenditures,
and his life will be a failure. It is
the order of mind such a course of
action indicates that spells failure,
not the mere fact of being without
money, though the possession of a
small sum of money has often
made ultimate success possible.—
Merchants Journal.
A wonderful spring touic. Drives
out all winter impurities, gives you
strength, health and happiness.
That's what Hollister's Rocky
Mountain Tea will do. 35 cents,
Tea or Tablets. J. M. Wheeless &
Co., Robersonville, N. C., and T.
J. I«atham, Williamston, N. C.
A Wife and a Cow.
The illustrious General K. K.
Lee, in his advice to his children,
said to his bavs: "If you want to
be missed to society, be useful;
patch up the old house and keep
out of debt; marry a sweet woman.
Let her bring a cow and a churn;
they will be all you want in start
ing a happy, useful life. Read,
improve the mind; read history,
works of truth, but never read
novels. Follow simplicity of dress;
it is not becoming in a Virginia
girl to be fashionable. A farmer's
life is one of labor, but it is also
one of pleasure." The young man,
who predicates his acts and life on
the grand principles above marked
out by the illustrious General Lee
will be a success in this world. —
Selected.
' Wo i lui if Faai
DeWitt's kittle Karly Risers, the
famous little pills, have been made
famous by their certain yet harm
leas and Ren tie action upon the
bowels and liver. They have no
equal for biliousness, constipation,
etc. They do not weaken the
stomach, gripe, or make you feel
sick. Once used always preferred.
They strengthen. Sold by Auder=
son, Crawford & Co.
ADVERTISING
Your money hack.—Jujtcionf advertis
ing is the kind that pay* back to you
• the money you invest. Space in thia
paper Maura* you prompt returns .
WHOLE NO. 385
A MATTER OF HEALTH
POWDER
AbtoliiMyhir*
MAS MO SUBSTITUTE
Wllliamston deplume Co
Office over Bank of Martin County,
WILLIAMSTON, N. C.
Phone CUarres
Menage* limited to" 3 minutes; extra charge
wilt positively be made for longer time.
To Washington 35 Cents.
" Greenville 25 • "
" Plymouth 25 "
" Tarboro 25 "
" Rocky Mount 33
>'* Scotland Neck 25
* v V Jamesville 15
Kader Lilley's 15
" J. G. Staton 15 -
1 J. li. Woolsrd 15 "
' O. K. Cowing &.Co, 15 "
1 Pannele 15 "
" RobersonviUe 15 "
Kveretts 15 "
Gold Point 15 '•
, Geo. P. McNaughton i{ "
Hamilton 20 "
For other points in Eastern Carolina
see "Central " where a 'phone will be
ound for use of non-subscribers.
In Gase of fire
you want to be protected.
In case of death you want
to leave your family some
thing to live on. In case of
accident you want some
thing to live k on_ besides
borrowing.
Let Us Come to Your Rescu*
We can insure you against
loss from
Fire, Death and Accident.
We can insure your Boiler,
Plate Glass, Burg
lary. We also can bond
you for any office requir
ing bond
NOll Bit But CoiNiiii Rtprisntii
K. B. GRAWfORD
INSURANCE AGENT,
Godard Building
EXPERIENCE
11 ■ k I 1
TRADC MARKI
DESIGNS
- COPYRIGHTS 4C.
Anyone undine a sketch and description DM
quickly aeoertam our opinion free whether MI
invention la probably patentable. Communlra
tlnnaetrtetlyoonDdeiitlal. 11 ami book ou Patent*
■MM free. Olileat BMMIH Y 'or aecurlng pater.i*.
I'Ntenta taken through JHuim A Co. recele
iprcUU nolle*, without charge, In the
Scientific Jfmericatt.
A handaomelf I'.tuxt rated weekly. ctr
rotation of any »nefilUe Journal. Term*. $3 a
reur: four months, |l Bo'd by alt new adea lorn.
MUNN & Co.» a,B ~—»»New York
Branch Office. w **f— W anion* fori. I). (1
AGENTS AGENTS
TUB OBIATMT BOOK OP TBS DAY
"CHRIST IN THE CAMP"
BT Da. J. WILLIAM JOMCS
Aorm KSPOSISI
N. a-"*Work«don.dir. r«c.lv«d 10 oidm."
Akk-'Haeahrf Pro. 1 o'clock, sold Tbr nichL"
V*.—"Sold Irln 12 hour* ' L. P. Bandar*,
fuaa— 'Workadooaday, aotllofdan."
amy AT ONCI TO
Tin Mtm a HOTT CO.. AtUat*. 6*.
to writ# for our confidential loiter baforo Ap
plying ror potent: it may bo worth monoy.
w» promptly obtain O. ud IMn
PATENTS
the boot local aarvioa and advfco, and oar
ehargaa aro node rate. Try UA.
SWIFT A CO.,
Op p. U.S. PatMt oaM.WuhliftM, B.C.