Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Feb. 12, 1909, edition 1 / Page 7
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Do You Get Up Witli a Lame Back? KUMJ Trouble Bakes Tea MbenNe. Almost everyone knows of Dr. Kilmer's £>wamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and a „ bladder remedy, be ' Jriffy L cause of its remark f II *kle health restoring tfl J jrfß'u . Root fulfills almost " J Lit |s/ every wish in ovcr aHl M coming rheumatism, ■V«L fl l pain in the beck, kid jPf*jF r# _ neya, liver, bladder •ilrll and every part of the B ' UL— - urinary passage. It m ' ■■■* —" * corrects inability to bold water and scalding pain in paaaingit, or bad effecta following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often through the day, and to get up many tisM during the night. Swamp-Root is not recommended for ■ereifthing but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble, it will be found just the remedy you need. It has been thor oughly tested in private practice, and has proved so successful that a special ar rangement haa been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not al ready tried it, may have a sample bottle aent free by mail, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root, and how to findoutifyonhavekid neyor bladder trouble. When writing mention fr*f* reading this generous Ifcil' "MF—'■ '' '1 offer in this paper and »SS| •end your adarese to Dr. Kilmer & Co., H»TTIBSS[» s". Bingham ton, N. Y. The regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles are sold by all druggists. Don't make any mistake but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad dress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. Rheumatism to th. CttT td " br. Show's* ~ Rheumatic Remedy "ALL DEALERS" YOU CAN EASILY OP ERATE THIS TYPE WRITER YOUR SELF. 'A Dan't worry yoar Don't write him rti nifi'Kr aarthlnr by hand that takes his tUne to make out—that may SM leave him In doubt can't easily And don't tU oat Ifial paper* or card oenio»—or make out account*or hotel menus 4a your own handwrlUne. It looks bad. ra 4UcCaoo rour staadlnc. aiske* people UUijV jroa ean't afford a staaocrapher. and la aome- OIDM ambiguous. You can writa oat roar lettara— make oat aa attract—ail In aa Insurance year card memo*-make oat roar aoeoan*, -or hotel menu—or do any Mnd of wrltlnr roe JOMML. on A V else or thickness of paper. Sad •eraus any -ay you want on TjTJe OLIVER Tj^pcWrifei THE STANDARD VISIBLE i WRITER. You can write any of these thinga yourself if von do not happen to have m, stenographer. For you can easily learn, with a Hittle practice, to write just as rap idly, and a« perfectly, as an expert •operator on the OLIVER. Becauae itbe Oliver is the simplified typewrit er. And you can see every word .joti write. About 80 per cent, more •durable than any other typewrites, {because it has about 90 per cent. Lss 'wearing points than most other type writers. 80 per eent. easier to write with ♦ban these otter complicated, intri cate machines that require "humor ing" technical knowledge - long frtaetiee and special skill to operate. Then machinee which cannot be ad justed to any special spaea—with which it is impossible ,to write ab stracts, insurance policies, odd side •documents except you bay expensive rspecial attachments requiring experts to operate. ' . , You can edjust the OLIVER to any reasonable space-—you ean write •an any reasonable size or thickness •of paper, right out to the very edge, without the. aid of any expensive at* tacbment or special skill, and your work will he neat appearing, legible ■and clear. -- For the OUTER is the Typewriter ior the doctor, lawyer, the insurance -agent, .the merchant, the hotel pf jwietor—or aay «maa who d«a baa aim writing. i - Write us sow for our booklet oa. the simplified features of the OLIV ER. THE OLIVE* TYPEWRITER. CO. t The Oliver Tjpcwillei BiiMing . ' CHICAOO. liL. NORTH STATE HAPPENINGS Occurrences / Interest Gleamed From All Scctioua cf the Duty Tir Heel Stall STONEWALL TRAINING SOZOOL. City Schocl Superintendents ard PrindpsJi' Association Hear Val- U*bl• Addresses. Raleigh, Special.—Declared to be the best meeting sinee its organisa tion in 1889, the -North Carolina As sociation of City Superintendents and Principals Monday closed its session of three days which has been held iir the aaditorinm of the Raleigh Hirh School. In 1839 the associa tion began with a membership «>f seven and h has increased till now its membership numbers sixty-two. The meetings in Raleigh have been pleassnt snd profitable, the discus sions in themselves showing that ed ncstional interests are advancing in North Carolina, and that there is no abatement of the spirit of pi-ogress which seeks to make the schools of this State the very best in the eoun try. The session of Monday an especially interesting one, for in ad dition to the discussion* there were helpful and inspiring addresses by State Superintendent of Public In struction J. Y. Joyner. Dr. W. I* Potest, president of Wake Forest College, Mr. J. P. Cook, chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Stone wall Jackson Training School. At. the session there also occurred tbc election of officers for the ensuing year. President—Supt. L. C. Brogden, of Kinston. Vice-President—Supt. Harry How ell. of High Point. Secretary—Supt. C. •W. Wilson, of Scotland Neck. Prof. Cook was heard and the fol lowing was adopted: "Whereas, the State of North Carolina now has a Reform School, under the charter name »f the Stone wall Jackson Manual Training and Industrial 8ehool„ where incorrigible boys and youthful offenders under the age of sixteen years msy he placed and t-.uigbt correct habits and receive instruction in the several brsnches prescribed in the Publio School Law, and taught one of sev eral useful trades; and, "Whereas, the Board of Trustees of said school hsve succeeded :, i se curing property and building* "th more than thirty thousand « >m. of whieh the State contributed only ten thousand dollars; snd "Whereas, this is a lonif needed work in our educational system, re lieving many schools of disturbing problems and yet offering a well founded hope for saving to the State useful citizens that otherwise would become expensive criminals; r.nd "Whereas, it reflects the progres sive and the moral spirit of the peo >!e of our State; now. therefore, the Association of City Superintendents of North Carolina, in convention as sembled. do "Resolve 1. That it views with pride and satisfaction the great work accomplished by the Board of Trustees of the Stonewall Jackson Mannal Training and Industrial School of Concord, for the wayward boys of the State; and that we here by pledge the said board and man atr»ir*nt our henrtiest sympathy and iroral support in this humane and irrpnrtpnt educational wort. "2. That we unite in ejpresslnar 'lie hope nnd belief that the present General Assembly will deal kindly and (reneroncly in its provis'ons for the maintenance and development of this srrraf work so long delayed in our good State. , , Explosion Damages Repaired. Spencer, Special.—The mammoth ahop buildings of the Southern Rail way Company in Speneer are being repainted in connection with the re pails made following the powder magazine explosion here October Ist. Tbe repair work baa been com pleted and when the painting baa been finished the bnildings will pre sent a new appearance. Hog Gained Pin Pounds Daily. Winston-Sslem, Special.—A hog that gained in weight five ponads a day is the exhibit offesed by Mr. Jphn Vawters, of Centerville, a suburb of this eity. Mr. Vswters ssvs that he bought a hog last November, when it weighed 212 ponnds. He kept it 50 days, and it weighed just 483 pounds. VVUnesses substsntiate Mr. Vawters, should any doubting Thomases come forward. An average of two pounds a is considered fair for a hog to gain in training. TaadertCt's School to Close. Aaheiille, Special—-Baltimore Par iah school, established and maintain ed bj George W. Vanderbilt for 12 years,j will be discontinued at the end of the present term and the building Will be leased to an Ashcville teach er, who will conduct a boys' school there, becauae competition of a near by publie school has rednced the at tendance* from one hundred last term to twenty this term. FROZEN TO DEATH ET BOAT. Edward If. Wrl?ht. Accic'eutalW Hurt, BkttU Eeiax Fractured, ar«d ties of Injuries and Exposure ta Weather. Washington, Spews I. Sterling news wss received in this city Tues day morning to the efftect that Mr. Edward N. Wright had been frozen to death while in a gas boat on Pamlico river Monday night en routa for this city. The gas boat Lena was located near ths Black hour about one ir.ile from this city and was towing a raft of logs to this citw Upon boarding the boat the search ing party found young Wright lying ■i. the bottom of the boat, with blood sytttered all over the interior and his body frozen, his skull being crushed in. Tliert were no evidences of foul play, it is believed that his head was .-aught in the machinery and hie wound and the extreme cold cauc*d death. KILLED WHILE HUNTING. Newbem Lad tle Victim bf a Dis tressing Accident--Trigger of His Gun Caught on Briars and His Death Results. Newbem, Special.—Howard, ths 15-year-old son of Rev. J. N". H. Summerell, pastor of the Presby terian church here, met with a dis tressing death. He went hunting and when he had not returned at the time appointed his parents became alarmed. A party of citizens went in search of the boy, and the dead body was found in the marsh near the county home, five miles from Newbern. The gun had its load, which lodged under the hoy's jaw and his brain was perforat ed with shot. The trigger had evi dently caught on a briar in the und«r> growth and caused the discharge. Fought Wth Shotguns. Asheville, Special.—ln a fight with shotguns between John Llewellyn and four of the Hurst boys on Bif Ivy, near the Madi.ion and Buncombe line early Wednesday morning, ac cording to a telephone message from Mars Hill Wednesday afternoon. John IJewellyn received whsrt are considered mortal injuries. The light between the Hurst boys, sons of Wil liam Hurst, of north Buncombe, and Llewellyn ocurred at a print about three miles from Democrat and an equal distance from Mar* Hill. „ If is understood that the Hurst boys were not hurt, or at any rate serious ly. Llewellyn, it is said, was shot twice—in the abdomen and the head. When the news reached Mars Hill Llewellyn was still alive, but it is said that he would die. The trouble between the men, it is alleged, grew out of a dispute over some land. Warrants, it was slated, had been issued for the Hurst hoya. Kept Officers in Cold. Newborn, Special.—A negro nemed Shade Morning held the chief of police and three officers at bay all Sunday night and until 8 o'clock Monday morning. The negro had a row with his wife. Hester Morning, Sd when the officer* appeared be •t himself npatair* and threaten ed to hill the first man wha attempted to enter tne hruae. All Sunday night the officers stood on puord— the celd eat night of the winter. Monday morning. Officer Griffin went to their rescue and oncceedod in arresting the man, although he shot at them dur ing tho attempt. He was tried and sent np on two chanres. and ra court i* in aeasion he will likely be sent to tho roads this week. Burned to Death. Fayetterille, Special.—Mini Claude Youngblood, the 19-year-old daughter of N. E. Youngblood, a railroad engi neer of this city, waa burned to death Sunday afternoon aa a result -of bar alothing catching fire from an open stove. Resnlta of th« Billiard. High Point, Special.—Monday af ternoon a three-inch water pipe on the third floor of the Redding build ing burated, flooding the building and causing aeveral hundred dollars dam age to furniture and the building. Another accident dne to frosen pipes was st Baaeom Hoskin'a place. A flre was being bnilt in the Mtehen >o prepare breakfast when water back, whieh was frosen, exploded, tearing the range to atones and the flying pieces tearing out tbe door and two windows. Members of the fam ily jn*t left the room, thereby escaping an awfnl death. Small Prescription Business. Winston-Salem, Special.—Whisksy prescriptions filled at the four white drag stores ift Winston in January numbered onl 117. It may be re marked that "in . Greensboro last month there were 500 prescriptions filled. The druggists here say they have had comparatively little bother with peoplo wanting liquor without prescriptions. Every proscription, they say, was for medical purposes. Breakfast in House of Lords. l%e customary breakfast siren at the opening of the legal term by the Lord Chancellor In the House ol Lords to about three hundred guests ia an institution which goes back ic Vhe days of the versatile Brougham Fcr the last forty years it has been hold In the House of Lords, but at an earlier date It was given In tne Lord Chancellors rsaiJence. It is a relic cf the times when break fast was a great social function. Many othor great men had what may be termed the breakfaat habit. Thus Mr. Gladstone was a resular giver of breakfasts ar2 a constant at' tendant at them when glren by oth ers. Of recent years, however, the breakfast ha# fallen into desuetude as a social function, except at the universities, wnere young men are still tcund who are capable of con suming three or four courses and the while maintaining a genial flow of olegant conversation. Recently an attempt has been made to revive the tbrea'rfast. Thus the king in 1907 at Newmarket, Issued several invitations to breakfast par ties. To our ancestors the meal was a solid cne, of many dlahee of meat, qualified by sack possets or small beer, the ancient equivalent o soda water. Tea was not known, and oof tee was . only to be found in the me diaeval analogue of thn modern mu seum.—Tit-Bits. J . 2>. Speller -DKALER IN- Wood, Shingles, Poultry, Esgs and Fur*. We carry a hi# liue of Wall > Paper. Willlanrvston, N. C. ; Jos.H.Saunders, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Day Phone 53. Ni>thi I hone G7 Wlltlamston,N. C. Dr. J. T. Underwood DENTIST Robsrsonville, - N. C. DR. J. A. WHITE, Sft DENT ' ST Office Main St. Phone 08 WTE. Warr*n J. 8. Rhodoa Brs. Warren & Rhodes PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Office in BIGO'S DRUG STORE 'Phone No. 29. Hugh B. York, M. D. tfifSOaOPX. - 1 -= v :■- " electrotherapy, \ "ptcialtiea X-Ray Diatiiioeif ) > OSm Cl-.aM*a pi o« Iter* mm Hot M • to 10 A. W.i I lo tf. K. Or* fkMt S«». It. K)«b> I'hr.Bf K«. M ' «*". B rroai A.Crlteher. Wheeler Martin. MARTIN & CRITCHER, AttornHVß at Law, WILLIAMS! ON, - - N. O Phone 23 F. D. Win*ton 8. J. Everett Winston ® Everett ~ Attorneys at Law WILLIAMSTON, N. C. ▼home 81. Money to Loan S. Atwood Newell LAWYER Ottee formerly occupied by J. D. Biffs. Phone No. T7. WILLIAMSTQIt >. & A. R. DUNNING Attorn* at Law. ROBERSONVILLE, N. C. J. C. SMITH, ATTOkIkY at li*W, U«n'ritl r»«llr» OPKK'.K. Dr. » »r*roV«'« Krlek Bldg vi'l*. N, C LAXATIVE COUfiH SYRUP CONFORMS TO NATIONAL PURi WO 3D AND DRUOS LAW. An Improvement over many Coufh. Lung and Bronchial Remedlee. because It ride the system of a cold by acting as a cathartic on the bowel*. No opiate. . Guaranteed to ghr» satisfaction or money refunded. Prrp*»vil bv MNErt * ''•■''EOICINE C( CHICAGO. U. S. A* BAUG AT CHASE'S D2U3 ftfOBH ' 'i-L-VI.TV? ' " .V-V . •>>•••' . v- ■ , V >;. ,jk3M I 'Weak Women 1 H frequently suffer great pain and misery during tHel N change of life. It is at this time that tho beneficial I 3 effect of taking Cardui is most appreciated, by thoqeH (1 who find that it relieves their distress. HcMom I It Will Help Ton "11 Mrs. Lucinda C. Hill, of Freelaiid, 0., 'writes:! I "Before I began to take Cardui, I suffered so badly I II WBM afraid to lie down at night After I began to I I take it I felt better in a week. Now my pains have I I gone. I can sleep like a girl of 16 and the change I ■of life has nearly left me." Try Cardui 1 AT AIL DRUG} STORES John D. Pings, President; Asa T. Crawford, Sec. A Treat. T. W. Tilgharn, Gen. Mgr.; T. O. Tilgbam, Gen. Bupt. The Dennis Simmons Lumber Co., Manufacturers of Kiln Dried N. C. Pine Lumber Dsnnls Simmons Brand Cypress Shingles Orders Solicited. WILLIAMSTON, N. C. yWOCUHtPANDPtrtWOKP..*^" IO^^ drawing or photo. for esp«trt oearoh mid free report. ■ frM •drkA how to obtain paunto, inule mjurfca, ■ Ihuinttt 4rr/«Wy»SvM «'.« rtac.fl mcney am J ofltn tki fmttni. Pi tint ind InfHnfwntnt PnctiM Eroluilrsly. I Wn# or oorm to ua Kb ■« Matt Hmt, »vf. ValUi Mat« Mm* City Barber Shop J. H. Hyman, Manager MAIN BTREET ' ' I ■■« First - Class Shop Four Chairs. Everything clean and in order. Give uj your work. Next to postoffice. KILL™ COUGH tm> CURB TW« LUWQ6 w Dr. Ring's New Discovery MCS&IP jfiSSft. MM> ALL nWtOAT MP UHWIWOMBfcP. OUABASTISD SATISFACTORY mmm£Zm£S2lm2S^ama mmm f&t r if>s>*> A icw don** of tli •.- i medy will in irariiilily cm-* au n:y attnok of diarrlitßU. I It citn always be 1 landed npon, I i «Ten in the move *«■> to attacks of crainp 00110 and chole -k morbns. It is eqnally nurc-su'ul for summer diarrhoea ana chol»-r>» Infantum la children, and is tlx* t> onus of earing the HTM of many chi: Irea each year. When ndnwl w.tli water and sweetened it is plcux.'.ni to take. Everyman of it tin lily shonld keep thik remedy in bis ho j»e. Bny it now. Prics, 850. J.arobSize, 60c. Kodol For Indigestioa Our Guaranteo Coupon If, (fur u»lnt a |KI bottla of Kodol, ton can tionadljr aay il fcai no! benefited you, wa will raltind your mat i. Tr 1 Kodol today oo (hit gatrialaa. Fill olil and »i|D iba Ibllow- Ibi. prMoat it ta iba'daal-r at tha lima o purchau. II il fail! »• > aatiaty yon ramrn lha battle la iha daalar Iro i whom jroa boocbt l«, ud wa will reload rat t mooey. % y " r ~— ' Stata , *' Slfa w *** , ' ■ I' tWB.Ia Oat ' i Digests WhatYouEat And Mik«a (ha Stomach Sweat R.C. D#W*TT * CO.. Chtra—. I&! fbrHilVia im\ II ilsa, mK Mm Ma t Ca, Issafca. OPIUM'S; HaMta cued at my Baaatoriam la a fair waaka. Yoa aan ratan to year boa* la K data wall, baa aadVm*. tahaafiplnuatwHnij^S to* Si- Fajor aw a at, Allaata, Oal
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 12, 1909, edition 1
7
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