Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Oct. 28, 1927, edition 1 / Page 2
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PAGE TWO *A" - ' THE ENTERPRISE Published Every Tuesday and Friday by the ENTERPRISE PUBLISHIISk; COMPANY WILLIAMSTON, NORTH CAROLINA W. C. Manning -1 —Editor Subscription Rates 1 year . sl.l>o 6 mo:i>hs 1 , ; , , • j. , .75 Ol"IYHl>E MARTIN COUNTY 1 year ,_i ! 6 months ■ l.OO (Strictly Cash in Advance) No Subscription Will Be Received for Six Months' Advertising: Rate Card Will lie Furnished I'pon Application Entered at the post office at WilKamston, N. C., us-second-flass matter under the act of Congress of March 3, 187' J. Address all communications to The Enterprise and not to vidua! members of the company. ' . " Friday, October 28. 1927 After All, We Are Doing Fairly Well Prosperity is now being cartooned as a big Hallowe en pumpkin "hang ing up, surrounded by a large number of |>eople marked Labor, Agricul ture." "Business"-and "Manufactur er." The brand of prosperity is not stated, but perhaps it is the K.ool idge brand. " . There may be more (ruth in the . - /One Way of Finding Your Kin •• X] . * 1— — t James B Duke's kinfolks were parentiv tried tn* claim kin. found by one clause in his will. The It is said that a good many Bibles clause is the one which gives two were changed ,and a few public rec million dollars to, his first, second, ords defaced and changed fir the and third cousins.. ]Kir;xise of getting a swipe ;rt the When this clause of the Duke will i>2.()00,000. was made public, everybody that litis is another proof of what men could spell the name '"Duke," ap will do for money. Law Enforcement "Law Enforcement," was the sub ject of an address L>> Judge N' A. Towsend to the local Kiwanis Club! Wednesday. The 'speech was.wore of a talk full of solid meat than an address. It was plaint that the judge views the situation with some degree of alarm, and he dwelt the condition than he did on the reme dy. The true diagnosis of the con dition indicated want of .enforcement rather than enforcement. The fact that the judges today take their seats in the courthouse with a fear that they will almost surely have to. pass on serious charge of law violations made against the chil dren of the "liest people',' of a com munity for some offense committed, which is almost sure to occur' at every session of the courts, makes judges almost tremble and falter, - Children ap|>ear to disregard the Jiome laws when they find their fathers drinking which Was manufactured and soW in violation of Af £##»••»•«/ Trmntfrlttimm iJM^^wPjjrfpSaßr J#®® o - Qwo Trucks that lead the world in popularity *" The nuo,i> ' r °f T °° ■•»•! H \ Ton truck* in u*e today i*far capacitiee—lor these arc the jV unit* used by thouaanJ* up .. on thou*and* of retail mer _ __ chant* to caret the re]uir«. /2IOTI mrnl * °* modem delivery Ckmuu Out? P" And became Chevrolet of f J J • f«" the great**t value avmll- I.«. fc. FUau, Mldk - ifcliln M*k af these hroaixti —and hecaute it offer* the X. world'* lowest ton-mile coat — both the Chevrolet Too and Vk-Ton truck* arc lead the world In popularity. Com* in—and ace for four* •*" what Chevrolet offer* 1m you In comparison with m XOBL" other haulage unit*. Then Chmmu Only TOull know why Chevrolet % Jk f \ W U the world'* largest builder J r> of tsar-shlft truck*—with un t,XmmTrack Chassis with C*k um disputed leadership in both HARRIS MOTOR PEEL MOTOR COMPANY COMPANY Robersoimlle, N. C. Williamston, N. C. ■: . M% . . - • • 11 cartoon than we-are willing to admit. IWe think our labor should produce | i what we want, when we were cre jated just strong enough to produce! I what we need,. ' i -- We are when we are able to li.ive such thin:s as we need. • After ;dl, we are doinjp fairly well. the law. . If a boy runs his fa'her s car a ij round a curve and Turns it over and :skills himself, it 1. generally b.uius>' 11 he has heard his fatlu-r bragging a ) bout how fast he could drive; viq i latinir the traffic lawS. fj , The attempt to govern by theory > and mercy is making- it hard to en force laws. (Jur lawmakers have found so much mercy in their hearts that they have exempted (.hildren | under 16' years old from liability for i crime. • Now, a moonshiner can load his product in the pc.cLus of boys who ' tan go about and sell it without vjo lating any law, because one lias to •lie above 16 before he can com ,! Mit crime. This is possibly one of the reasons why so many young (x-o --> pie are tilling the jails of the coun try. They see the older people break > ing and laughing at the laws of the r minor ty|x\ and grow into burglars. s!.murderers and highwaymen. f! Most of the crime we have to deal with today Js by the lack of law enforcement at home and in the community Judge Tfwnsend is certainly right Canned Polit The Raleigh Times sees men dis appearing as leaders of nations and cold-blooded concrete policies reeled out as the political music that will lead the nations of the future. Then the man that bosses the loud-speaker will direct things. The new order of things may be no better and pos sibly not as good as those of the past ' .S J •' ' * Thr TintrY, under the heading of Political Rhetoric to be Packed in Air-'l'ight Cans," editorially says: *" At I'inehurst Tuesday 400 mem bers of the American Institute of " Steel Construction heard Secre tary of Commerce Hoover deliver an , address ' according to invitk tinw, the'while lie was at his office in Washington. Nor was this mere ' radio transmission by., broadcast and hook-up. which, however suc cessful, is always subject "to static disturbance and other adverse con ditions. It was, on the other hand, a specially prepared address ' de livered to a special audience and more intimately received that), if the speaker "had fieen in tlie ball in perwiii. The means used were the announcing Thomas A. Edison's latest achievement • "Clote-up" music with a new dimension (\f / I ' ° ' the astounding ¥ ; V\ V EDI SONIC \\ « • . I | Hear the New Edisonic ,j 7 • % St % Yoii will call its stereoscopic tones u a«tonnding H , "iapetV. / . • You will marvel at the "close-up" illusion—at the way the O fK O • q UU li|y of each orchestral instrument seems to come right \ ° u in c,ear re,ief .. «t the full mellowness of the Here in u vlkoullmilou of \ ba«H uot«>H and the sparkling purity of the treble. ++■ ++■ miuir a> |>Uyri by ail or- "0 S\ _ , , _ - dinar? |>bou»Krapii. it i. « But... the Edisonic can never be adequately described ... luLvoaUiiirefiUnwLud* v m *iy nor can pictures do justice to the chaste, decorative beauty —lae-n-aj'; >. J V of the Edisonic cabinets. ~ Let us play the Edisonic 0* m p for you. Then imagine it in your own home ... flooding | ' » \ it with Ix-auty .. . giving you, at any time, just the music u the 50th Anniversary of. % » you like without even the annoyance of changing a needle! Thomas A. Edison's invention of the > * # - Phonograph, comes this uiiifjouiiecment » fr~~ of his latest contribution to music . . . the Edisonic ■ Now, a golden year in the life of Thomas jfM ; p \. A ison and t € history o inunit ... A /l Now, the hAlisonic . . . still another mile- /&'#;. ;* | I stone in a great career .. . Now, music )■ '• % JgS* 1 Wl it iij V ml- HHH wbj. - M of a revolutionary quality . . . of an // inspiring resonance, a beauty/an all- /m .XJr pervading illusion of startling nearness, / '"**■>**? * 'i|9 RqHLjH «l which prdinary phonographs have never before . . . Now, Mr. Edison \ has bestowed upon music a new dimen turn. lulisonic music comes to you with JL iwft flowing, surging, leaping contours. It is V "*T| ViMPfv'gaK {* i \F -. i aH music with volume ... 4t elose-up" music \kst i%' 1, . . . music which surrounds you like wflj ], V ¥ i sunlight. It i« music with p« rspective... \l # J y m^wl It it "stereoscopic" music, as \n J.' fjy ing the music of the ordinary phono- g|||pr^2H graph as a beautiful picture viewed through stereoscopic lenses, surpasses the | |h 1 PUB W yial monotony of a lithographed post- • K i 1 card. It is Edisonic music, Mr. Edison's K "H H * latest gift to you. +-\+ . Jl t p J " . As if to signalize the Golden Anni- ,': U versary of his invention of the phono- f - Edisonic HlotC up Mlltic " grap , r» E ison _•• new • Here is a vi«u*li?«tioii of the ant muaie Edisonic from his laboratoriea a hnkhed, • 1 u Recreated by the new Edisonic. The music, « perfect, tblug. Miuicune, critic ud I" 1 ! *-*—»" I^™ . * .j. , . , i. full .letail .../orm to every w«nd. There all who nave heard It, acclaim it as a SaUhMt in im-omm ICagluk i« depth, pc»-Bj»ective, beauty ... the living artist marked advance in the history of music. to _ «oe*i«a preeenl in the room. B. S. COURTNEY THE ENTERPRISE when he says the only thing that will arrest the law-breaking wae of to day is a general awakening of the public to the danger we are facing in tly disrespect of the law. v cal Oratory iinprqved jihonograph connected with amplifiers. The Secretary had made his speech for the pur poses of a record, which had then been sent on to the association. When it was ready for the speech, the sAftcfa was turned, and Sec retary Hooyer spoke. We are destined to hear more of" this modem development, prob ably in the' next presidential cam paign. Its probabilities of politi cal publicity are practically limit- h's-s. « All major aiifl rnany minor candidate, may now spealrat their ease, every word, phrase, and. sen- Ic-ncs «revLsM, every tone prac ticed, every nuance of, delivery tested: J Hey mav " count jninfi deiitly on an audience i,i millions f"r ever;,- political declaration, with the advantage of a personal ren dering. * . • Nothing, of COUP . will ever take the place of the to the immediate audience, hut much ot personality can in this manner he passed o'n to the audience"of the electorate a- a wholes.,- The immediate audience is.. iii the na ture relatively small. It i an be multiplied indefinite im mensity. For a blind niau the new style of speaking will mean every thing that he could have were the speaker personally before him.. Only facial expression, gestures, and attitudes of the speaker will be lacking to modify the illusion. It is not beyond conception that in a few years we will be done with the personal appearance of candi dates, so wearing on them and sometimes so fatal in their contre tempts. Suppose, that there had been no personal appearance of the &ev. Mr. Burchard, when his • phrase, "Rum Romanism, and Re bellion" applied to the Democratic Party lost New York State to Blaine. Had the geltnemaih pre pared a record to that ctfect, it never would Jiave been put on the machine, the phrase never would ' have been uttered, political his tory would have been changed. Oratory for a U'ng time been canned for safety: it soon will l>e mide air-tight. Ought To Go To Jail I'all and Sinclair are up again for stealing the government's oil' out of the Teapot Dome Naval Oil Reserve. They ought to go to jail, just like poor folks have to do. ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE Having this day qualified as admin istratrix of the estate of Henry"" P Gibson, deceased, of Martin County, this, is to notify all persons haying claims against the said estate to. present llu tn to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of Septem ber, 1928, or this notice will be plead ed in bar of their recovery. All per sons indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 28th day of September, WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT. BUICK WILL BUILD THM There's no time ouflox Buick Any Buick owner will tell you that there is no "ttmt tut" for Buick —Buick is always "in the game"— never "on the side-lines" . . . That's why you see so many Buicks at the big football games every year. Sedans *1195 to *1995 » Coupes *1195 to 'lßso Sport Models *1195 to *1525 AU Pnittt/. #. k. Fhmt, MUb., gotirmmtnl tax /• b* 71# G. M. A. C fmmuctug pUm, tb* m»si dturabli, it atailsbh. BUICK>I92B N. A. RIDDICK MOTOR CAR CO. "The House That Service Built" Scotland Neck, N. C. Friday, October 28, 1927 1927. KATIE L. GIBSON, Administratrix of Henry P. Gifctoti, "leceased. Elbert S. Peel, attorney at law, Wfl liamston, N. C. *3O 6tw
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
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Oct. 28, 1927, edition 1
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