Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Aug. 23, 1912, edition 1 / Page 2
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C ANDWICHES! What*. I tastier than iflam It's exceptional in flavor and doesn't cost a bit more than ordinary kinds. A woman can't feed a man so much taffy that It will spoil his appetite for It. For RI'MMKK II KADACHES Hick*' CAPUDINK le the b. 4, remedy—n» matter what causae them—whether from tb« bfat, ■lttlnv In draughts, feverish condition, •to. 10e., 15c. and Wo. per bottle at medicine Moras. >* In a woman's eye the most attrao tlve thing about a man is her ability to attract him. A great majority of rammer lilt arc due to Malaria In tuppreutxl form. Las- situde and bnadaohes are but two tyrop toms. OXIDINK eradicates the Malaria germ and tone* up the entire lyitein. Appropriate Name. "Why doe» that doctor's wlfa call her husband, Duckie?" "Why not? Isn't he a quack?" Coat of Living Reduced. The King Fruit Preserving Powder will keep perfectly fresh all klnda of fruit, apples, peaches, pears, berries, plums, tomatoes, corn, okra, elder, wine, etc. No air-tight Jars needed. Used more than 25 years from New York to Florida. A small package puts up 60 pounds of fruit and taste la Just a" when gathered. Saves money, time and labor. Births In the Air. The International Congress on A» rial Legislation, sitting at Geneva, Switzerland, is evolving a very de tailed code of laws. One of its sug gested paragraphs reads: "In the event of a birth occurring In an air craft the pilot" U to enter the erent In his log book and must notify the fact to the authorities at the first place at which he descends." BUT HE WAS WRONG. >' M | & "TMd you fool anybody?" "Yep. I fooled myself into thlnkln* I could fool pa!" "That's Good". 1$ often said of Post Toasties when eaten with cream or rich milk and a sprinkle of sugar if de&ired. That's the cue for house keepers who want to please the whole family. Post Toasties are ready to serve direct from the package— Convenient Economical Delicious ••The Memory Lingers" SoM Vf Crocan. SULLY, ONCE COTTOJ§I®3 KIHC/'NOW RUMS IOHHSB SUMMER HOTEL • SMMT/ 0 you remember "Dan" Hj | j| years ago was perched on running a boarding house. n lonely majesty, lending his name \ ind prestige to the undertaking, dar- Br ygk m ding boarders with tales of paat gran most In bis - gate to others. business on account Mr. Sully pointed to the sea, whose more business jHjKfl waves were roaring over the steep troubles," Mr. Sully water front of Watch Hill. explained, when he "Over there to the left," he said, "Is and the reporter JQATKL&S dftfIUCJT Block Island. To the right Is Montauk again settled them j Point. Straight ahead the nearest selves to enjoy the sea air on the ver- denly appeared In Wall street and : land is the coast of Spain. That breeie anda. "Last fall I went to England to began operating in cotton In accord comes direct from there." see about some business matters there, ance with a "system" that seemed to "When I was busy In the cotton I Intended to spend the winter either be Infallible. This Is the man whose I market In New York," he went on, there or out west or in the southern methods completely mystified the "I found ther* was no place like this states. wisest old stagers in the country,, for resting. It rests the brain as no "But the plans that I had made did whose profits ran up as high as $«00,- other place does, and when you're not turn out well and I decided to 000 In one coup—the man whose fall working in Wall street It's the brain spend the winter right here In Watch ure, when announced from the roa that ought to get rest. I used to run Hill. It was the first time that I or trum of the cotton exchange on ;up here every Friday and stay till my family had ever stayed here In March 18, 1904, caused the wildest J Monday morning. It made an lm- the cold weather. But, when I built panic ever known In the history of ' mense difference to me." the house, I put steam heat Into It, that Institution. j On the subject of Wall street, that so we were very comfortable. And The "Dan" Sully who now takes ! made and broke him, Mr. Sully Is right there the Idea struck me, not people through his house and quotes disinclined to talk. At best he Is a only to run this place as a boarding prices on rooms to them was once | man of few words, but on cotton and house, but as an all-the-year-round worth $3,000,000. He lost nearly $2,- speculatlon In general he Is Sphinx- boarding house." 000,000 of It In two minutes. Accord* like. 1 In that idea something of the orlg ing to him. he announced his volun "Do you want to get back to Wall inallty of the "I)an" Scully who tary suspension to the superintendent I street?" he was asked. evolved a "system" and played the of the cotton exchange at 1:45 on the "Of course, I'd like to," he an- cotton market to a standstill crops afternoon of that fatal March 18. It ! swered. "When a man's been In out again. Up to the present time no- was not read on the floor of the ex really active work he wants to get body has ever thought of that wind- change until two minutes past 2. \ back into It and stay in It until he's swept promontory, Watch Hill, as a "That delay of two minutes coat put underneath the' sod. But" —and place In which to spend the winter me $1,176,000," Sully said once, in tell here his Jaws set firmly—"l'm not Yet, having done It once, "Dan" Sully ing the story. "If it had been read at 'going back I have no plans to do was amazed at the mildness of the or before 2 o'clock I might have come ! that. At times I hear echoes of the air and promptly resolved to make out all right." \ old days when I was there, but I other people besides himself enjoy It. Aa it was. when the smoke cleared j don't Intend to try to have more of In fact, he already talks about Watch from the field where he had met dis ! them." Hill as a sort of future Atlantic City aster, his ' liabilities totaled up to j The house, by the way, Is a fine of New England something like $3,000,000. At the time I summer residence, built by Mr. Sully "Out there"—again he waved hit "Dan" Sully said to a reporter: j himself a year or two before his hand toward the Atlantic ocean "Three weeks ago I was worth $3.- ' downfall on the Cotton Exchange, "only a short way off the coast, Is 000,000. Now I'm not worth S3O. and named Kenneth Kldge, after a the gulf stream. It's quite near Such was he who now runs the Sea son who died. It stands on an eml- enough to keep the weathpr from get- side bonrdlng house and expatlatej» nence, tho highest Is Watch Hill. Be- ting too cold here In winter. Yet upon the glories of Watch Hill and ,fore the owner's l financial downfall everybody who has a house here or Its many advantages as a boarding the house witnessed festivities which, hires one for the warm weather never place. Into all his laudations of the |lf houses can foedlate, must lead It stays later than November, and the place he puts real enthusiasm; they Ito startling contrast. hotels close early In September. I'm would be creditable to the most con ' Six years ago, for instance. Mr. going to show people that this Is an summate Boniface of them all. 'Sully gave a dinner and ball at Ken- all-the-year-round place." "Would you like to get back to New 1 neth Ridge to Admiral Bobley D. "Are you doing anything besides York?" Evans and a party of his'offlcers. running your boarding house?" asked Like a shot came the answer, with "They danced in this room," he told the reporter. a gleam of the eye and a snap of the > the reporter, leading him Into a spa- "Nothing whatever," answered the Jaw: __ | clous apartment. "Now, the boarders ex-cotton king. "'Would I like to get back? Why ! I have use It for a sun parlor. Yet this Is the man who, an . ob- New York Is the only place in the "I wen* Into the boarding house | scure Providence cotton broker, sud- world!" France Leade: ImmtnN Revenue Accrue* to That Country Because of Ite Acknowl edged Supremacy. Jules Heuret, a French writer, as serts that In fnshlon France 1? still unrivaled. He has carefully Investi gated the state of affairs In Germany, Englan*, Swltserland, Austria and northern Italy, and has come to the conclusion that France stands first In matters of taste. Her Jewelry designs awl her models of furniture are the finest In the world, although England and Germany are selling well In both these directions, he declarer From fashion M. Heuret estimates the revenue of the French at 150,000,- 000 francs. In Paris there are over 12,000 business houses employing from one to 100 working girls. For the whole of France the total of such establishments reaches 96,000, to which may be added 15,000 lingerie firms, 4,000 houses where embroider esses and menderv are employed. Thus there are 115,000 shops where sewing is the industry carried on. More than a million persona earn their living In this way, 940,000 women and 75,000 men. To the aggregate of a million wage-earners by their needle must be counted 140,000 employers, large and small, of whom 26,000 are men and 114,000 women. Thia vast energy does not provids the means of iir 1 |, years of our life make us; all that is W Oman and added later 1B veneer; and yet some say, tf a woman can cook a dinner or The lawyer may see no deeper than the strength that springs from knowl- dress herself well she has enough cut his law books, and the chemist see no edge and the magnanimity which lure. Olive Bchrelner. further than the windows of his lab- springs from strength. We bear the ' oratory, and they may do their work world and we make It. The souls of Proceeding, well. But the woman who does worn- little children are marvelously delicate "Some men are lucky. I know t an's work needs a many-sided, multl- and tender things, and keep forever man who cleaned out a bank and yet form culture; the heights and depths the shadow that falls Brst on them. they never did a thing to him." of human life must not be beyond the and that is the mother's, or at boat a "I suppose he had considerable in reach of her vision; she must have woman's. There was never a great fluence." knowledge of men and thlnga In many man who had not a great mother; It Is "He badnt any. He waa the Jan states, a wide catholicity of sympathy, hardly an exaggeration. The first six itor." ■■ - I •" : , ii.'l of Fashions wage earning only for those occupied In the business; It resolves Itself Into a revenue of over 114,000,000 franca In the export trade of the country. When all the handiwork done for the use of the people living In Prance is added to the export trade, and Have Control of Millions Wealth That Aggregatea $365,000,000 la Intruated to the Management of Four Women. New York state courta have desig nated Miss Christina Arbuckle, who Is aged seventy-two, as administrator of the 135,000,000 estate left by her brother, Mr. John Arbuckle, the "sugar kind," who died Intestate last March. This makes four American women who have the exclusive control ovar enormous fortunes, the other being Mrs. E. H. Harriman, to whom the late railway magnate bequeathed 1150,000,000; Mrs. Russell Sage, whose husband left her 180,000,000; and Mrs. Hetty Green, whose own estate ta valued at 1100,000,000. These four women thus have the exclusive man agement of property of a total value of 1365,000,000, The newest recruit to the ranka of feminine multl-milllonalrea has the when H note Is made of the strangers who reside In the country, and of theses who make purchases of clothing or ornaments as they pass through, some Idea may be gained of what Is earned by French needlecraft. Hun dreds of millions of pieces of silk, lace, embroideries, woolen stuffs, feathers, flowers and ribbons are sent Into other countries every year because Paris Is supreme In fashion. same personal characterlatica which distinguish the three othera. She Uvea simply, enjoying the company of old friends, never flaunta her wealth, and gives her spare time to charitable work, which abe accomplishes aa se cretly as poaaibl«. Miss Arbuckle shares with her sister and nephew the Income of the estate which she now will manage, they being the late "su gar king's" only surviving near rela tives. She assisted Mr. Arbuckle In the management of hla fortune for a number of yeara before bis death, and la thoroughly familiar with the details of Ita administration. She Intends particularly to continue her brother's philanthropic work In connection with the Brooklyn church of which the late Henry Ward Beecher was paator. Raw recruits are often done for. Moving Pictures Popular. In & recent number of the Dally Consular Report* are collected memo randa from cities and towns in vari out distant parta of the world showing the universal quality of the popular Interest which the moving pictures excite. England. Japan, Turkey, Mex ico, India, Australia and the islands of the sea all have the same story to tell; wherever the cinematograph goes it finds an Instant and sustained welcome. BAD CASE OF HEMORRHOIDS Okalona, Ark.—"l had a bad case of itching and burning pllea, and tried many remedies without relief. I could not sleep nor rest at night. The atTect ed parts were irritated, also Inflamed, and my family physician said I would have to undergo an operation. 1 bathed good with Cuticura Soap In pure water about fifteen minutes, then I applied the Cuticura Ointment I did this four times a day for two weeks, then three times a day tor an other week, and in the space of three weeks I was cured sound and well. One box of Cuticura Ointment with Cuticura Soap cured my case of piles of six years' standing. When I com menced to use the Cuticura Soap and the Cuticura Ointment, I only weighed one hundred and twenty-eight pounds. Now I weigh one hundred and eighty eight pounds." (Signed) Floyd Welch, Dec. 11. 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Addreas postcard "Cuticura. "Dept. L. Boston." Ac to KlMlng. Jack —Do you believe there'a mi crobes in kisses? Owen —You can search me. A great majority of summer flls art due to Malaria in suppressed form. Las dtude and headaches ere but two symp toms. OXIDINE eradleatos the Malans fsrm aad tosss ap the satire system. It'a usually the fool who rocka the boat that llvea to tell the tale. MOTHER OF ÜBCE FAMILY Tell* How She Keeps Hei Health Happiness For Those Who Take Her Advice. Seottville, Mich.—" I want to tell yon bow much good Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg a j.ji.ujujiiji.iii.iii m «table Compound and mmgmmm Sanative Wash hav« ■jlilMSgmlm done me. I live on a farm and have worked |||f alfl very hard. I am w ,VF $$ #ort y- ftve y 64 " ow. jiliUm . - fsi% »nd am the mother ' V J 1 ..J of thirteen children. Many people think \\ 1101 broken down with hard work and ill the care of my fam ily, bat I tell them of my good friend, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, and that there will be no back ache and bearing down pains for them il they will take it aa I have, scarcely ever without it in the houae. "I will aay also that I think there la DO better medicine to be found for young girla. My eldeat daughter haa taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound for painful periods and irregular ity, and it haa helped her. "I am always ready and willing to apeak a good word for Lydia E. Pink* hara'a Vegetable Compound. I tell every one I meet that I owe my health and happiness to your wonderful medicine." -Mrs. J.G. JOHNSON, Seottville, Mich.. R.F.D. 8. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs, and today holda the record of being the moat successful remedy for woman's ilk known. SMITHDEAL. COLLEGE * rofty-hw y*n training A _J ■■ rouni man ami worn— tot Bonbbaawins. Eafilak CMVMk SIwRHOO No vacation.-Day and night Send for catalog. L. ROSE I CO. &US6I (THE OLD RELIABLK) Wa at* la the market at all time. for SCRAP BUBBCRi RAGS, MKT A 1.8, BONES, IKON AND MCCOND-HAND MACHINERY. Wa pay hlgbeet price*. Oar laryo Hat ot shipper*— out Mt advattlaement. Write for prloa lut. 414-494 THE AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE FOR THE COLORED RACE Opan all the year. For males only. Board, Lodging and Tuition 17.00 per month. Write today lor catalogue or Free Tuition. JAS. B. DUDLEY. Praaidaat. A. & M. COLLEGE GREENSBORO NORTH CAROLINA Till Oldest Southern Cillefa Catleae at WtlHaai aaS Btn. FasaMlattM Healthful altnallon ud historic aaaoclatlona. On C. A O. Railway, half way between Fori Monroe end Richmond; 8 all- from Jamaatowa; I* ml. trom Torktown. Dagreee of a, M. A., apeclal Tonehars' Ooursaa. Excellent athletic Mid. Total coat per eeaelon of nlaa months (board end fees) MS. Write for annual catalogue. L L MBSCS, ItfMa. ■Manatas, fkfWl CAM CANCER SECURED? IT CAN! At leeoid of the Eel lam Boapltal la without parallel la hletory. hayavrad *0 *lay cared permanently, without {lie hm of tbe knife or X-B*y over SO fir MM. of the many h«ndrad»of ■fmnlroa canoer 'SSkRSgvfesSnSES. Aj ST HOSPITAL The Sum and - Substance of being a subscriber to this paper is that ycu.and your family become attached to it The psper becomes a member of the family and its coming each week will be as welcome as the ar rival of anyone that's dear. It wit Imp roe lahwwd «■ tha dotoga ot the community ud tha bargains at tha merchant* regularly adrartiaad will enable Tto to aaramaay rtmaa tha coat af'tba aabaartpdoA. | We're Opposed | Mail Order Concerns Because— TWy iun nnrcr contributed a ccai lo furthering iK« nawaata at out lowa Every cent mailed by them (torn tha community it a ditact lot* to our menhaotr— v la almoat trmy eaee their price* cia be act right Ute, I without delay in receiving food* U •nd the poMibikjr oi inaiake* ■ ia iliing ociioit. But— The aetarel human toe* I. to buy where good* are cheepeat. Local pride u usually aaeoad ary ia the paa ai lib a play* today. Therefore Mr. Mafcbaat and Baaine** Ma* »*ft yoar toapanon I with ihaa owa wa*paai — ■ admtaio|i Advertise! Tha local (eld W yourv All yea aaad do it to avail your ■aU oi the opponuoitvn oteted. Aa advartoemeal ia thi* paper will cany youi mem ay into bundled* oi home* in tha com munity. It u the Maerf medium af killing tour graatoM com pedtor. A apace thi* aiae I won't coat mack. COM H ■ aad tea at aboaat h. fro* md'r toe, *vm te gkuu patent* mark*. ■ eoayrtatoa,ale, IN a tt COUNTRIES. ■ Muthtut Srtt l wUk H'atklngtun «nw Ma>,| mtntf an J e/lrn li 4 totrnt. Palart and IflfffoftmMt Prtotlc* E/slttlwty. B Writ* or come to u M ■ Ml Ball Mnat, *»». MM IWa Ftlnl Mh| KILL™* COUCH urn QURK rue LUNCB Dr. King's New Discovery FOR CB"S" 8 JSk. I A«jD ALL THRO«T AND LUfn TRCUBUB. I aUABANTXXD a ATISJACTOKI I OA MONXY KF7CKQCD. I 1 r roRM CARVH DO TOU know of anjooa wbo b old axmffa to read, who has not mo that sign at a railroad croaataf? If avaryaM HAS MM it u MM tta« or otter, than why iiiii'l tha railroad lot tha d(a rot aw ayf Why doea tha railroad company continaa to keep thoaa a*M at ttaiy rroaaing t Mayba you think, Mr. Marcfcao\ "Moat (vary body know* my atora.ldoa'thaTa toadvaitfaa.* Yoor atora and yoor (ooda Mad mora advertttag than tha rafi roada Mad 4m to warn paopta to "Look Oat lor tha 6m* Nothiag ia arer complaaad la tha advenfctog wocid. Tha Dapan— mt Btoraa a«a a *wy *oad asanpla—they ara aootinaaUy aiiirdriiM—aad thay doing a If It payatanma WadaVovad about Chriarmaa thna, h aar ••hsty «U| pay yon to ran ad *aiHaaai«maabuut aHthatla>ab A » SXL ADVERTISE In gkTHIS PAPER
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 23, 1912, edition 1
2
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