Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / May 24, 1912, edition 1 / Page 4
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" ■ ■ gr * 1 = > THE ENTERPRISE. •* „ T ■ " PI'BLISMKD BVJIRY FRIDAY WUUamaton, K. C. WILLIAM C. MANNING. EnrfO* _ SUBSCRIPTION KATES '4lm Year . . - - SI.OO SSontbs ...- .50 Three Months • • • - .85 Strictly Cash In Advance Advertising Rate* Application flnterei «t the I'oat Office at WilUamatou, . K. C. as Second Claim Mail Matter. Friday, May 24. iQt2 Clean up and prevent flies and tUedise?9;» they ,spread in hot .weather. "©ne bv oue the candidates come •out. This is tbe year when more fatnriy history will be written than at any previous time The presi dential candidates —some of them — j*re surely making history and it wili not stand as wholesome read- AOg "The death of Hoc. Richard Battle at the age of svetty-seven - years fills the State with sorrow. A Christian and gentlemen has been removed from us, but his splendid services to his State will be remem bered and will work out for the good of the people. He gave of hi i intellect and money for the up lift of humanity and died at Rex Hospital an institution which he had helped largelj. To such men as Richard 11 Battle the S.ate owes her greatness. Some people will rave again be c-use the North Carolina Society v of Colonial Dimes has uuvei'ted a tablet to the memory of the signers -of the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence. There are these who desire to rob the State of z -what is hers, beginning with the days of trial when we were trying to throw off the British yoke down to the period when North Carolina fought the bravesu battles in the ■ Civil War. But we are holding to our pages in history and will con tinue to do so. No Sign of Popularity It now seeini that Mr. Roosevelt lias whipped Presideut Taft in almost every fish' l ou d that Taft will enter the Chicago Convention a defeated man. This does uot show, however, that Roosevelt is so popular with his party as mere than one million Republicans in the States (if New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts Illinois and 0...u d:d uot think enough of the bt&Wi and tlit* Braw lers to even a» tc the primaries and express t.ui" preference. Aid while Roo-evdi i c.it Taft. n is not j becau-e t *. ; .tu:ci is loved tm-re; but becnu-i the ' UU: is loved I.* -. j The Baitiiiio.re Convention will j name the next I'l'.-ioent. A Correction \Vt r.ie ghvu 10 correct an erroi j in the last oi th'.s paytr. The. error its question wa • the statement | the 1 . F. L -Gind-toae- % ave -a b*i« '• beeue at Hamilton o.n the icth, to j •which a number of V. tiium-ton , jjeople wire mv.t.-d. Isuch a stole-' irsent seem-; to have bteu an error as \\e have received a letter from a prominent d Hamilton stating that "the barbecue and all necessary trimmings were given by the boys of Haonltou and oik City.' We ate glad to make this correction a« it takes nothing .from the well-known* generosity of /our friend, F. L. Gladstone, for h £ had a goodly share in it aud we can gjive credit to the others of that section who, alike, are noted for hospitality and the ability to serve * dinner fit for a king and his re rtlnue. But we were informed that Mr. Gladstone gave the dinuir and T that he hadfoHowedtUe custom for • several years choosing the ioth as ao auspicious occasion. There is ». one thing that we especially deplore - about the matter —we were not there to enjoy the good things provided by onr friends. Col. W. G. Lamb for Delegate The desire of Col. W. G. Larub to be chosen as delegate to the Democratic Convention at Balti more from the First District, is meeting the approval of friends throughout the district. \\ ben Cleveland was nominated for the fir:-t end second terms, Col. Lamb wts a delegate to both conventions and no'.v that the prospects for Democratic victory are bright, h-i wishes to be allowed the privilege of helping name the winfler. Col. Lamb's fidelity to Democra tic principles no man cun dispute without merttirg the condemna tion f those who know his life and character. For vears he has been giving of his best to help tbe cause of Democracy, asking nothing ex cept the post of duty- where the fight waged fiercest. He is chair man of the Board of Elections of North Carolina and ncae are more alert than he when the principles of bis party are menaced. Col. Lamb deserves the honor for which he is asking and no man in !he district could better fill the position of delegate to the conven tion, which is to be one of the most important iti the history of the party. We need men to represent us that will stand for the best an i Co!. Lorn*) meets the requirements as set forth in the letter of Ex-Gov. T. J. Jan-is which we published last week. We be lieve that he would hold the success of the party high above tile success of any iuJiridual. We think Co'. Lanb merits the position he desires and we hope that tile Democrats of the First District will appreciate his fitness and cbouse him as dele pate to the Baltimore Convention. DON'T SHOCK YOUR LIVER WITH CALOMEL Dodson's Liver-Tone Persuades It tc Worlc Naturally and Sate, ly —No Rastriction of Habits or Diet It you have a sick horse, you cannot make him work by beating him, and if you try it you are liable to ruin him forever. It's the same way with your liver. When it be comes toipid and slugK'sb, you can take calomel and whip it into ac tion, but the calomel will leave your body weaker and sicker than ever. Calomel is a very powerful chemical made from mercury. * A pel feet substitute for calomel, , that has all of its medicinal proper ties with none of its dangerous aud uncertain follow-ups. is Dodson's . Liver Tone. . , Saunders & Fowden drug store sells Dodson's Liver-Tone w:tb the guarantee that il you dou't find it | "aperient substitute for calomel, j this st»u*i will give vo:i you; money i back. Dodson's -Liver* Tone is n . true tir.-.ic for the l.ver, purely! vegetable, and willi such u plensaut I ta-te that it is no trouble to get-i chiltlicn to take it. It isatsolutel*' | impossible for it to do anyone anv hann, because it simply persuades, tilt liver to "do what it ought to do— : i no ino! e.ruid no ltss. Dr. J. T. 14. Ntnl, Ptop. River- , i side Drug Co., GreeuvilU, S C.; v rites ucfen'.ly. "1 have been a| j practicing physician iiiid druggist! i for ovei vS years and have sold and ! i administered man) kidney me.ri-; I t cir.es but tioce to equel Foley Kid ! : tvey Pills. They are superior to | | any I ever used and give the quick* ■en perar.tteut relief." Sauuders i ii- Fowden. Senator Lorimer is permitted to I hold his seat in the Senate. Of ! course, the "interests'' aud those i Senators who are in touch with the ; jsatne, stood by him. . H.A. Waggoner, Alvoti, W. Va., | ■says that Foley's Honey and Tar| i Compound is the best medicine for coughs and colds he has ever know A?' He says: "Every man and ?oman tells me it is the best ttley aave ever used and whoever , has ÜBed it once, always comes : back for it again." There are no t opiates in Foley's Honey and Tar i Compound and it Is safest for I children. Saunders & Fowden. IN MEMORIAM Down, ~dov.x\. down, on the floor of the sea, two miles under the out law bergs, lies the Titanic, a splen did mausoleum, of steel and brass, in whose shattered bold rests as fair a company of good knights and brave ladies as ever amilled in the face of death.- Soldier and sailor and merchant prince—play actor and journalist—idler and drudge—peasant and nobleman — Saxon and Norman —Latin and Celt—Slav and Jew— strangers in motherhood wrought into brother hood—equal at last in the glory of their end. There was Steed, whom kings loved, but who himself loved the helpless more. There was Millet, whose paint throbbed with the songs of souls. And Harris, who climbed back and gave his place to a woman. There was Butt, the fighting man; and Straus of the open purse, witli his wife, (aud no queen was ever greater, tor out of courage sprang all real nobility). And there were a thousand more and none were less thete. Swart peasants of a hundred tribes —children of moil and need—slaves of the stockhole —potwasbers — room stewards —barmen and bar bers; when and where before was there woven so mighty a memory with such strange aud varied strands of caste! They told us that the world was drunk—mad with the wine that weakens —that the ancient stock of Sparta and the Macedonian bills was gone—that the reu blood which coursed in Wiukelreid aud Rienzi and the Old Guard and Lawrence and Hale, was no more; but tlicy wcic wtuug —the breed of heroes will never perish. So long as yesterday shall illum inate her tablets with the splendor of martyrdom—so long as history shall remember valorous tmprine— so long as the purple tide of nobil ity shall scorn the grave aud leap the generations— so long as sacrifice shall quicken pulse aud redden heart, the hour will never call in vain Icr the mau. Straight trom the dimmest ages, through evolution and revolution, dovui from the hills and up from the plains and out on the seas, the answer has always rung. There is no cause for grief. Save your sorrow for infamy; weep at failure: moan over treason; but shed no tears for the lost of the Titanic. They ate already of the immortal few whom eternity has kissed. They wear tLe accolade of fame; their names are deathless. The human hour is but one beat of Time's fleet wings. Millions on millions, we pour from out the mother*womb, and millions on mil lions we sink back to the dust of out making, without one lasting footprint tn our trnclt, or one en- 1 during thought to mark out pass in. through. The longest life is as a mote j when measured with the unborn dawn-. What is a. dajJ—what is a : | decade to the kcaty stars? Exist jence vr.sf. paltry price to pay to, fall with the hundred at Thermo pvto fight in "the thin, red 'line" at Balaklava, or to perish i ntulst the handful at the Alamo. Those who are gone have bathed j |their souls in the Golden River;! I theit children ever after shall be j j crowned with urine. To rear gwid temples, to cut ! j lithe marbles, to heat drab' words, ; j to found strong creeds, t... heal sore I wounds, to build majestic cities, to j conquer deserts, to hew down mountains —these are splendid things; but to endow posterity with higher standards of manhood is to | take kinship with the gods. So long as there are men to cry | "women and children first"—so 1 long as fear is cruuched under the heel of duty -so long the laurel bursts into blossom on the fields of peril— so long as humble bandsmen stand upon a sinking deck and, with the billows swirling against 1 their breasts, go home to the Mas -1 ter, with never a quavering note, ' the Almighty is with us—there is • hope for all and for all time. — Herbert Kaufman. • ll I j, ~ ji $ \li m>o Modefs j|j[ * "SI ' ■ —>y Jx 1 ' gj If You Were an Expert, g 1 What Car Would You Buy? j§ The time has passed when automobiles can be sold to you on l/VS i||Bj their appearances or claims. This is a day when you and every SK3 purchaser must be shown what the car for which you pay your money will actually perform; what it will do. Beware of an J&s automobile salesman who attempts to beguile you with a vv sft pleasing story. Tell him to show the goods and prove to you /3J that his cars are worth the money. Find out whether his car ® is a real car or only an assembled automobile built to sell. fc&j You have a right to your money's worth, but it is up to you [jjsH to see that you get it. Deeper than all appearances, there I^l are a few expert tests which ought to be applied to every car. Hi Who makes the car? Is it an assembled car or made from top \ J to bottom by one manufacturer? What kind of a guarantee - vj is on it? Does the manufacturer respect his own product with a real guarantee, or does he want you to take the chance? J What do parts cost you and how conveniently can you get >»lj them ? How many cars of this make are in service and how «l J| many are giving satisfaction? Questions like these go deep into the heart of the case, and if you put them rigorously upon any car you will find out with a certainty whether or not that (j I J car is worth its price. ] We afe selling Studebaker E-M-F "30" and Flanders "20" cars because we know that, dollar for dollar, their equal is not xSj jStf sold in the market today. The records of many thousands of O Ygj cars in all kinds of service have convinced us absolutely. Studebaker E-M-F "30" and Flanders "20" cars are built to £*q Xrun, and because they run they sell. If we cannot prove to ' jgl you under the most searching test that Studebaker cars are jSS absolutely the best automobile values in the market, we do not want your business; but we can prove it, and your AH neighbors who drive these cars will tell you the same thing. Be an expert when it comes to buying a car. You can, by getting from us some farther ideas on real tests of an automobile. Clip the attached coupon and send it to , us now because we have something new to tell you * which you ought to know, whatever car you have £kv \ The Studebaker Corporation 1 "\ \ \f\ Detroit, Michigan SI \ J. Paul Simpson, Local A*ent |J| \V\ %\S 1 '1 5 Notice of Sale Undef aatl by virtue of a judgement cf tbe Superior Court of Martin County in the Special Proceedings therein pending entitled, "A. R. Dunning, Administrator of Jerry Bryant, decease''., against E. D. Bryaut, Cornelius Bryant, etals, heirs at law," it being a proceeding to sell land for assets, tbe undersigned, will on Mon day the 3d day of June, 191 i, at 2 o'clock p. tu., at tbe Court House door of Martin County nt Willinmston, N. C., offer for public sale, to the highest bidder for cash the following described resl estate,to-wit: Situate in Goose Nest Tow nship, ad joining the lands of T. 11, Piitehard, W. T . SiUs. H. H. Moore ted other?, and beginning 111 the public read at Ibe Iron Mine Spring Branch, thetice up said blanch with T. H. Pritchatd t. and Moore's lines to a gum iu ttao long pc»co- I tin, & corner, thence n straight line back to the public read to a tenm where 1 line along road to tho ill i contain 100 acres in the trai-t, and being tbe same premises conveyed to Jerry 'Bryant, bv H. 11. M»»6re and wife, by j deed of record in book 000 at page 80 1 | Martin County Public Registry. This 2)tb dov of April to:;. A. R. DUNNING, Com. ff :i CO W ERS! ; When you want the best. r«mem ! her vve are at your service ; Choice roses, carnations, .vnllies, ! violets and wedding outfits in the; I latest styles ; Floral offerings artistically arrang-1 j ed at short notice | When in need of pot plants, rose ! bushes, evergreens, shrubbery, j 1 hedge plants and shade trees, mail j ; telegraph or telegraph your order to J. L. O'Quinn & Co. Phone 140. Raleigh, N. C. , > Wilt Tuias Alain 1 is hearty, vigorous *life, according to Hugh Tallman. of San Anton to t "We find," he writes, "that Et . King's New Life Pills surely put new life and energy into a person. 1 Wife and I believe they are the 1 best made." Excellent for stomach - liver or kidney troubles. 25 cts at Saunders & Fowden. Increased Yields Increased Profits For Top Dressing Oats. Corn. Cotton, Truck and General Crops USE ONLY GENUINE 44 Cere a 1 i t e "Fop Dressing" BEARING OUR TRADE MARK • (Don't ? e misled by imitations). "CEREaLITE" at less cost per ton than "Soda," us ing the same number of pounds per acre, gives equally as good, if not better results than "Soila" "CEREALITE" Is packed in 200 pound bags. in goods, mechanical condition, does not etlffln the land, and no E>a porate, The crop got*, it ail. **■ -» —■ • | For "CEREALITE'* and full information tcgarding it, Apply to 'Harrison Bros. & Co. wiiiiamston.is.c. O K Home Fertilizer and Chemical Company Sole Owner and Manufacturers N Feel That Thump-ety-Thump? A SAFE headache cure. Quick. Pleasant Contains no coal tat product or any. heart heart depressant. Fine for neuralgia. B ROMA LQIN E • 5c at soda fountains . - - ioc, 35c and 50c bottles For sale by SAUNDERS & FOWDEN
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 24, 1912, edition 1
4
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