Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / March 7, 1913, edition 1 / Page 7
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0 FOLEY | | JPICTHUS Backache Rheumatism Kidneys and Bladder rmilu N»Hafc* Tiflu Drwe* | Stewart .£&« CBpplnf MmUml I out (ra Mild etwl ber. wlwS. pTQtaoi rwion I •d ud raa la oil Bu ats lot Mm» S"9SOI atyl* SexiH* abaft and tMnMMir *7 W I wasrferfc*?" Writ* for fr*o n*wc*talo« of WNt modara On* ot I fcora*cU»*iin«aad*h—>s)M*rln>—chin**. 1 Salesmen Wanted Wo hare a CASH weekiy proposition for* ««pon aible uv to handle our lino of HIGH UKADI NUIMSKT tux*. (X»MIM,BTS NSW OUTFIT rttss. Write at once for our liberal offer and secure excluaiTO Agency. W. T. HOOD & COMPANY OLD DOMINION NURSERIES. Richmond. Va. , Mention this paper when writing. # TYPEWRITERS All make*.aold,rented and skilfully i repaired. Rented l& for 3 months, rent applies on purchaae. Tf riwimt* SX , let,. • oar. MM Ka.l Bals MM, IKkM*. Vs. j | Taking a Lesser Chsnce. A government inspector was con ducting an oral examination for ma- \ riue engineers. Said he to one: "If you had tested your gauge cocks, had looked at your water glass and j had found no water in the boiler, what would you do?" Came the answer, swift and true: *"I would jump overboard." Aftsr 10 Year* of Suffering, Show Man j Finds Relief in Tettsrlns. "I have been troubled with a never* I case of Tetter for ten yearn. In Colum- | bla last week a druggiftt recommended j Tetterlne. I bought a box: K gave me I relief, so I bought another and am en- j tlrely well." I-> w Wren. Chicago, j Tetterlne cures Eczema, Tetter, Itching Piles, Ring Worm and every form of J Scalp and Skin I)l»ea»e. Tetterlr.c 50c; Tetterlne Boap 23c. Your druggist or by mall from the manufacturer. The Shup- j trine Co., Savannah. Ga. With every mail order for Tetterlne we | Jive a box of Shuptrlne'a 10c Liver Pilla re*. Adv. Rubber Atrocities. "I can sympathize with those rlc- I times of atrocity in the rubbor re- 1 gions." > "What do you know about them?" "It's ray business to carry our rub ber trees in and outof the house, so cording to the weather." ' Burduco Liver Powder. Nature's remedy for biliousness, constipation, lndigestfon and all stom ach diseases. A vegetable prepara- I tlon, better than calomel and will not I salivate. In screw top cans at 25c j each. Bur weft & Dunn Co., Mfrs., j Charlotte, N. C. Adv. What's the Use? "It did Jack no good to marry his j stenographer, for she continued the j habit of the office in their home." "How so?" • "When he starts to dictate she takes i him down." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle ol CASTORIA. a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it | In Use For Over 30 Tears. Children Cry for Fletcher's Caatoria j A lie Is a lie, no matter whether i It is white or black. ITCH Reliaee* in 30 Mimrtea. Wool fori!'* Sanitary Lotion for all kirn* of \ voutagiou* lu-h. At DriigglaLs. Adv. Anyway, the wage worker alwayi { has s boss to blame it on. Wlß* ri'REO IS « TO 14 DATS Tutirllruagiat will refund money If f'AXO OINT. Mk.NT falla to cure any case of Itehln*, Blind, ' BWodiOC or Protruding I'ilea m« to 14days. 60c And some men are too lazy to la dulge In guesswork. Mrs. Wioalow'n Soothing Syrup for Children teething, woflea>the guma, reduce* Inflamma tion .allay* Xiin.oure* wind colic*c a bottl*4* Sometimes s man uses gold bricka In constructing his air castles. CONSTIPATION SMuoyon's Paw-Paw Pills are unlike all oth er laxatives or cathar tics They coax the liver into activity by gentle methods, they do net scour; they do not gripe; they do not weaken; but they do start all the secretions of the liver and stom ach in a way thst>aooo pats these organs in a healthy condition and oorrscts constipation. Munyon's Paw-Paw Pills ars s tonic to die stomach, liver snd oferves. They invigorate instead of. weaken; they enrich the blood instead of impover isfaiuf it; they suable the stomach to get all the nourishment from food that is put iats it Pries IS cents. All Druggists M m th—■ MHyCmnnn. pi . .77 • INAUGURAL DAYS OF FORMER YEARS * ' How George Washington Became President at Federal Hall in New York City. I FUSE STORY OF JEFFERSON "Simplicity" ef His Insuguration a Myth Trsced to English Writer— Jackson Fairly Mobbed by Motlsy Throng. By EDWARD WEBSTER. From the very beginning of the na tion, insuguration dsy has generally been a dsy of display and festivity for the people of the United States, though at times national conditions have made it an occasion more solemn thsn joyous. But slwsys the Induction of a new president hss been a note worthy snd interesting event. When George Washington was In augurated the first president in 1789, New York was the temporary capital of the young nation, and it was there that the ceremony took place after General Washington had ridden from his home at Mount Vernon in what was much like a triumphal progress. Welcomed to New York. Arriving at Elizabethtown Point, N. J., on April 23. he entered a barge rowed by 12 pilots clad In white, and passed through the Kill von Kull into New York Harbor, which was full of all manner of craft gaily decorated, and loaded with cheering crowds. The Spanish man of war Galveston broke out the colors of all nations, and fired a salute of 13 guns, to which the American frigate North Carolina re sponded. . Finally, on April 30, all was ready ; for the inauguration. Washington ! was escorted to Federal hall, then the capitol, which stood on the site of I the present sub-treasury at Wall and liroad streets. The streets had been filled since sunrise with waiting 1 crowds, and the enthusiasm was in | tense. In the senate chamber Wash | ington was joined by Adams, Knox, 1 Hamilton, von Steuben and a few oth ers, and all of them appeared on the balcony. Robert R. Livingston, chan j cellor of New York, administered the qath and cried "Long live George I Washington, president of the ITnited j States," whereupon thete broke out a mighty tumult of cheering, bell-rlng ! ing and the noise of cannon. Re | turning to the senate chamber, Pres | ident Washington read his Inaugural | address and the history of the United Ststes under the constitu tion began. Jefferson Btory False. If you are a good Democrat, no ! doubryou believe that Thomas Jeffer son rode unattended to the capitol on horseback, tied his horse to the fence, and was Inaugurated with less | ceremony than would attend the tak- J lng of office by a keeper of a dog I pound. Such Is the old Btory, but It ! Is pure myth and Is first found In I a book of travels In the United i Ststes written by John Davis, an Eng j lishman. Davis asserted that he was an eye-witness of the simple ceremony ! which he described, but It has been I ■ft' V /-ilflll I JH9W m' I ' MISIPTTW k^b'ls^Mß wj: W jm lyflß V» * Chief Justice White. proved thst he was not In Wash ington at the time. The inauguration of Jefferson, which marked the defeat of the Federalist party of Hamilton, Washington, Adams and Jay, was the first to take place in Washington. The newly es tablished national capital, then but a few months old, contained only 3,000 Inhabitants, many of them negroes; the houses were mostly huts and the streets muddy roads. The big event was thus described In the Philadelphia Aurora of March 11; 1801; "At an early hour on Wednesday, March 4, the city of Washington pre sented a spectacle of uncommon ani mation occasioned by the addition to lta usual population of a large body of citizens from the adjacent districts. A discharge from the company of -Washington artillery ushered in the day, and about one o'clock the Alex- aodria company of riflemen witb the company of artillery paraded in (toot of the Presidents lodging*. At 12 o'clock Thomas Jefferson, attended by a number of his fellow cltlsens, among whom were many members of con gress, repaired to tbe capitol. His dress was, as usual, that of a plain citizen, without any distinctive badge of office. He entered tbe capitol un der a discbarge from the artillery. As soon as he withdrew a discharge from the artillery was made. Tbe remain der of the day was devoted to pur poses of festivity, and at night there was a pretty general Illumination." "Man of the People." When Andrew Jackson was elected in the fall of 1828 the people of tbe west and tbe radical elements of tbe south scored a triumph and he was bailed as a "man of the people." This character was emphasized on tbe day of his Inauguration the following March, for never before had such a hiige motley throng gathered in Wash ington. Jackson's wife had died not long before, and he asked that tbe ceremonies be made very simple, but \yfW Hl I hE II I II 1 Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. the masses were too hilarious to heed | the request. The weather was pleas- j ant and the east front of the rapttol was used for the flrst time for the in auguration. In front of it surged 10,000 persons who were restrained only by a great iron chain. Jackson rode to the capitol on a white horse and went through the ceremonies with dignity, and started back to the White House. Then began his troubles, for the people broke loose with a ven geance. "The president was literally pumied by a motley concourse of people, rid ing, runnihg, helter-skelter, striving who should first gain admittance into tbe executive mansion, where it was understood that refreshments would be distributed," wrote a contempo rary, Mrs. Samuel Harrison Smith. In : their mad rush the crowds smashed furniture and dishes and seized the food as if they were starving. "The confusion became more and more aP palling. At one moment the presi dent, who had retreated until be was | pressed against the wall of the apart- I ment, could only be secured against i serious danger by a number of gen- j tlemen linking arms and forming themselves into a barrier. It was then that the windows' were thrown open, and the living throng found an outlet. It waß the people's day, the people's president, and the people would rule." Too Much for Harrison. For 12 years the Democrats con trolled the destinies of the country, and then the Whigs elected .William 'Henry Harrison, who was inaugurated March 4, 1841. Hy this time trans portation was made easier by the building of railways and tbe crowd that flocked to Washington was im mense. It was much better behaved than that which "honored" Jackson, but it was hungry for offices. Cold, wintry blasts swept tbe streets of Washington that March day, and Harrison, already old and rather feeble, rode his white horse without cloak or overcoat, and witb bis hat off in salute to the cheering crowds. The line of march was unprecedent edly long, and so was the inaugural address, and then the president led the procession back to tbe White House. The exposure was too much for blm and within one month he was dead. When Lincoln Took Hold. Immensely dramatic was the first inauguration of Abraham Lincoln in 1861. From the day, of his election threats against bis life were numpr oui, and detectives discovered and foiled an organized plot to assassinate him on his way to Washington. The ! big bodies of troops that had been employed at former inaugurations merely to add pomp to the occasion now were used for the protection of the president. The day had opened cloudy, chilly and dismal, but as tbe president step ped forward to take the oath from the aged Chief Justice Taney the sun burst, through the clouds and shone full on the bowed head of the man who was to give up his life for tbe country be loved. Lincoln himself noticed tbla "sunburst'* and draw from it a bappy augury. '' . ' Straighten That Lame Back! Backache is one of Nature's warnings of kidney weakness. Kidney disease kills thousands every year. Safety is only certain if the early warnings are heeded while help is possible. Doan's Kidney Pills have helped many thousands to get rid of backache, strengthen weak kidneys and regulate bladder and urinary disorders. Don't neglect a bad back. If your back is From Serious Dropsy To Perfect Health lame in the morning, if it hurts to Stoop or lift, D. J. Donovan, Larchmont. N. Y., says: "At on* if the dull aching keeps up all day, making work ,ilT ' e m y ri B hl le K was so baJ 'y swollen with dropsy that _ . _ , _ _ . •«-«_ LiJ it was twenty-four Inches around. Last winter thera a burden and rest impossible-suspect the kid- wprc thrc# d y octor(l |n ottendunce fllmost consUntly . neys. If the urine is Off color and snows a sedl- My felt as if it were being |>rodded constantly ment; if passages are irregular, too frequent, by a hot iron. My skin was cold and clammy and too scanty,or scalding, this is further proof. 1 h » d down 210 pounds to about iso. t was Then, may be dixry spell., headaches, nervousness, dropsy swellings, rheumatic an ,j ] began using them. I improved- rapidly and attacks, and a general tired-out, run-down was soon up, but so thin that I could not wear Condition. my clothes at first. I kept on taking Doan's Kidney Pills and when I had used eight boxes, had Use Doan's Kidney Pills, the remedy that is regained 40 pounds, publicly recommended by 100,000 persons in fVhen your back hurts, when your kidneys trouble you. tchen ™ny different lands. Doan's ac. quickly con- fa tain no harmful nor habit-forming drugs and are tame that cured Mr. Donovan, and make jure the qpme wholly harmless, though remarkably effective. DOAN'S is on the box. "When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name" DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS^ At all Dealer* or by M&iL Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Take Your Choice of Twenty Million Acres, Free! II New Homestead Law Gives Full Title to 320 or 160 Acres in the Great Northwest in Three Years The attention of the whole world is centered on the great North west. Crop. last year surpassed all records. Millions of acres of the finest lan v in America ar still undeveloped and idle. You may take your choic under the New Homestead Law which makes it easy to 1 acquire full title to a rich 320 acre or 160 acre farm in only three years. r "j Come and see for yourself RIGHT AWAY. 1 Low One-Way Colonist Fares— via (iSf" Northern Railway ■ (*T $33 from Chicago tcf* MoTVtana points. 3B to points in Idaho, Washington, Oregon, and British Columbia. Proportionately low fares V\ to all points Northwest. I\ I ' Low Round Trip Homes •« Iter's Fare* in Eli eel Ist uJ 3rd TaeWayt •( Each Moolh IIP* \W D Write for Special Booklets \VAs Wc have prepared a number of handsome. Illustrated H booklets, folders, maps, etc.—the most complete Information H llpW rt fU ;l Jl % compiled on the opportunities in the great Northwest. ■ !|H awß V» (oIH #W« will gladly send these free if you will write at onoe. Use ■ a|Qp|P yt ■ Wl M the coupon or a postal or a letter. ■ M fl.ilWA' H ■ 1 1 . 4 m Af. M. HUBBERT. District Patttnger Agent I HA' 1 B Aft 6J6 Chestnut Stmt. Philadelphia, Pa. BB if— SB 1 Panama-I'm. fx International Fxpaiihon, Sen Francisco, 1015 BZEa^QM^SSQESSuSIi fllfl imiiisssiiissiMußumper Crop Coupon«""«»"»«i"»«"» JEHVV ■ E. C. LEEDY, General Immigration Agent, O Dept 85 Great Northern Ry., St. Paul, Minn. I Please send Ijooklets and full information regarding the New Home- ■ J stead Law and opportunities in the Great Northwest, free. B 1 sjd IntcmUd In . _ | Could Easily Believe It. . He —I live on my wits. Sho —You don't look any too well fod. —Boston Evening Transcript. It's the easiest thing in the world to Instruct another how to do things. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES _ STOMES VsarSv M ■ ■ (So Oil) Unr, HUa.rti a.d m ■■■ App**4lritJa TnwMe. CDCC i««M fWr M PH* lIICC CsMsw*iw*Ce.. D«wL S.DwWe St,CMesee LEARN TELEGRAPHY Ttooossndt of opersturs needed. Salary lit—WO per month. Write UpartanburK School of i Telegraphy, Hpsrttalwrt, 8. C.. I>ept. ▲. ; 1 ■ mHtmmmsmmm tonic i BtjlllWilifirilliJ FOB EYES ; I.ISTKN —Send for pictura of farms in South j Mlnaourl fre*. No darklea or moaqu'tooa, 4» a. 1 jxoo Otliera B. 584. Mountain Vl»«, Ma. Ilnrar Co. Spwlal Scad Corn. Ilrfd twenty I years for purity A ylald, bushel ahntlad. IS I- cob. C. W, Tompklna A Hon. Galßo*. Ta
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 7, 1913, edition 1
7
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