The Enterprise ? hy ??? ENTERPRISE PUBLISHING CO. WILLIAMSTON, NORTH CAROLINA W. C. Manning Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Strictly Caah in Advance) IN MARTIN COUNTY Om year S1JC Six montlii .TS OUTSIDE MARTIN COUNTY Om 9M0 Six month! 1.00 No Subscription Received for Lam Than ? Month Advertising Rate Card Furnished Upon Request Entered st the poet office in Williamiton, N. C., as second-cUes matter under the act of Congress of March 3. 1879. Address all communications to The Enterpriae and not individual members of the firm. Friday, February 14, 1936 Consideration for Others Senator Bob Reynolds told the truth when he said that if people would visit each other more, wars would diminish, and that knowing people changes our feel ings toward them. If a thousand American citizens should tour the world, they would not find anybody that they would kill nor would they be willing to see any of them killed by others. It is easy to make nations hate each other if they are taught to hate, which is the first step in the war game. The nature of man?and most beasts?is to tolerate and love rather than to hate. Man has tamed most of the ferocious beasts. They had to have a lengthy association to accomplish setting up a com panionship, yet it has proven the truth of the predic tion that the lion and the lamb shall lie down togeth er. No race of people will fail to respond to love and mercy and atts of kindness, and when all people deal fairly with them they will soon respond with kindness, yet you can knock down, rob and kill the men of the weaker nations until you kindle the bitterest savagery. We need to remember that when we begin to im pose on strangers that it operates to make them our enemies and brings on war. We cannot claim for our selves the best of every trade and thep expect others to be wilting to trade with us. When we see other people, we will be more willing to tolerate and deal honestlv with them The Burning Question Even the untrained political mind has no trouble in understanding that that versatile newspaper writer, Tom Host, has fully made up his mind who ought to be Governor of North Carolina; and he shoots at all the opponents of Mr. Graham whenever he sees a bush shake in the neighborhood of Winston-Salem or Shelby . He is gunning for McDonald and Clyde Hoey, and he would seem to be expecting to flush them out any minute.. He goes far enough to intimate that the Cleveland County man is trust bound, and almost intimates that McDonald is a very dangerous" man. He does not point out the danger, however. It may be that the newspaper man has heard the tax-dodgers' language, and it is not only possible but likely that they see the danger. Of course, both Hoey and MacDonald may be just as Mr. Bost says; but, digging a little deeper into the matter, there is a burning question in the minds of many people and that is: Who are Mr. Graham's political bedfellows? A Sad Situation What is a factory worker going to do if he works ail of his days at a wage which is so low that he can not accumulate enough for a home or any estate and then, when he gets old and unable to give 100 per cent service, he is led to the back door and given a kick? The question present a sad picttlhe, indeed. Such a worker has only two things left to him: One is starvation; the other is the charity of honest hearts. He can expect no consideration from the mill that refused him any opportunity to have a voice in saying what he might sell his labor for and forced him to take whatever the mill said. Then when he tried to protect himself he was branded "socialist." A Hot Time in Politics Likely If the whistling of the political wind is a true indi cation of the political weather, there is going to be a hot time in the United State from around June 1 until up in November, this year of our Lord, 1936; and if the general public can only hold out, this is one year when the tax-dodging, money-gouging gang is going to get a good flogging. The only thing that indicates danger ahead is the vast amount of money being spent to influence the thousands who know not. Business Follows the Advertiser GrtenvilU RejUctor. A survey of 59 principal cities throughout the U nited States for the past month shows that the big fart business increases have come in the cities where merchants have increased their newspaper advertis ing. Such figures are evidence to the (act that con stant newspaper advertising is the best method of creating increased Settling Capital-Labor Differences The Labor-Capital problem would be much to solve if they all lived together, where each side would have an opportunity to see and contact each other, teaching them that each has rights and needs alike, and then they would be better able to adjust their differences. As it now is, each knows but one side of the controversy. Most of our troubles have originated in those fac tories built and operated in the South which later fell into the hands of New Englanders The factory de mands of a New England owner do not fit well with the' Southern worker. New customs and demands, though they may be equally as just as those under which they have worked for years, may not be well understood by the Southern laborer. The owners and workers need to live where they can see each other every day and Sunday, too. Another source of trouble is a young scion who in herits a fortune and tries to tave over the 1,000 men men employed by his father, who enjoyed the work ers' esteem and friendship. The young man, who has probably never earned a dollar and who has always floated along in the higher stratas of society, knowing curs the enmity and hatred of the man who does creases the enmity and hatred of the man who does the work and trouble begins at once. It is not a new thing in life. Men who think they are imposed upon have never in any period of history been satisfied. We need a more harmonious feeling of actual frindship. Every poor man should have that feeling of confidence in his employer to think that he would not stand by and see his children starve, and the owner should have won enough of the feeling of loyalty in his employees to think that they would gladly pull him out of a ditch if he should fall in. Nothing short of a feeling of good honest fellow ship will solve the differences between labor and acp ital. The World Is Crying for Peace The world is crying for peace every day, and we are all of one accord in the utterance of peace prayers. That is, excepting the few who do not want peace hut war. They are the ones who make money out of war, and when they are making money they do not care anything about the fellow on the battlefield, who is left bleeding, limp, limbless or lifeless. The war profiteers are the fellows who break up peace confer ences and prvent our own lawmakers from passing neutrality laws guaranteeing the peace of our own nation. They are, in truth, the devil's arch-angels and the greatest enemy of peace and happiness. Judge Meekins for President We have nothing whatever to do with the selection of the Republican nominee for the presidency; but, in the exercise of that guaranteed right of free spech, we take the liberty of saying that of all the candidates proposed we think our own Judge I. M. Meekins is the best yet mentioned. He has the fine quality of friendliness, and he has charity and sympathy for the weak and lowly man. He is, upon the whole, at heart, too good to be a Republican. Nothing To It Greenville Reflector. '?* Governor Alf Landon of Kansas, aspirant for the republican nomination as presidential candidate, claims that the New Deal is a "stumbling block" to recovery. A review of the record of the great strides the business of the country has made toward recov ery under the New Deal as compared to the down ward trend during the last republican administra tion should be sufficient to convince most anyone that there is nothing to Governor Landon's charge. They Smite the Hand That Feeds Them Rocky Mount Herald. The human memory is sometimes fleeting and in deed short. Who is there among us that does not remember the effects of the great depression that was upon this country from 1929 to 1933? Two-thirds of the high school children in Rocky Mount were underfed, un dernourished and the percentage in the grammar grades was higher and the condition that existed in Rocky Mount was practically the 9ame throughout the country. The sad condition is indescribable. Hungry children crying to destitute fathers for bread. The fathers unable to listen to the cries of their hungry children sought flight through suicide, infact, we had an epidemic of suicides throughout the country. The American people ceased to be laughing and smiling people. They carried heavy faces and sad countenances. When Mr. Rooaevelt took the oath of office the above was a true condition. Mr. Roosevelt was the first President of the United States that gave his first concern to help the farmers and try to improve liv ing conditions of labor. He realixed that there could be no permanent recovery, unless the agricultural conditions were improved. Agriculture has been im proved. The living standards of labor have been bet treed and what has come to the farmer and labor has benefited industry and business. The dividends of the great corporations, many of them the greatest in the history of the nation. No longer ago than yesterday it was published through out the nation by the General Motors Corporation that they had earned the greatest dividend in the history of the corporation. Yet many of the major stockholders are crying out Mr. Roosevelt and the Democratic laartatihlp fas Cam gress are ruining the country. The naked have been clothed, the hungry have been filled and the great stockholders of the great corporations hav received their dividends so that they can have their accustomed luxuries which they did not receive during the depression. Yet they cry out against the hand that has made all of this possible. t l-l ACU FA jm wrm ? BOOM bouae for sale One-half mile from depot, Parmele. Term* eai ly. W. C. Manning, agent dl7 tl NOTICE North Carolina, Martin County Under and by virtue of the power at aale contained in a certain deed of trust executed by A L. Mizell and wife. Lydia MjpM. on the ltth day of February, 1929, and of record in the public registry of Martin County , in book Y-2, at page 565, said deed of trust having been given for the purpose of securing a certain note of even date and tenor therewith, default having been made in the pay mijnt of said note, and the stipula tions contained in said deed of trust not having been complied with, and Elbert S. Peel having been appoint d substituted trustee, as allowed by aw, the undersigned substituted trustee will, on Saturday, the 15th day of February, 1936, at twelve o' clock noon in front of the court house door of Martin County, in the town of Williamston, North Carolina ofler for sale to the highest bidder, foi cash, the following described real estate, to wit: Beginning at G. C. James' corner, at right of way of the A. C. L. rail road, running along said right of way 83 east 264 feet to J. E. Mon arch's corner; thence back along Monarch's line 75 yards to a corner; thence a straight line to George C James' back corner; thence south rly along George C. James' line to the beginning, containing 11-8 acres more or less, excepting 48 leet front the entire depth that was sold to G. C. James and 50 feet front the en tire depth sold to F. S. Powell. Deeds c said parcels being recorded in reg ister of deeds' office of Martin Coun ty. reference to which is hereby made, this being the house and lot that John A. Crisp purchased of J. L. Williams and wife, situated in the town of Parmele, N. C. This the 13th day of January, 1936. ELBERT S. PEEL. jl7 4tw Substituted Trustee. NOTICE North Carolina, Martin County. In the Superior Court. J. G. Barnhill, A. P. Barnhlll, and H. L. Barnhill vs. F. D. Burroughs, Admr. of C. F. Burroughs, Trus tee, and Mrs. Mary Alice Dun ning, Executrix of A. R. Dunning, Trustee, and George D. Burroughs The defendant, George D. Bur roughs, will take notice that an ac tio!) entitled as above has been commenced in the Superior Court Lady's Painful Trouble Helped By Cardui Why do so many women take Car dui for the relief of functional pains at monthly times? The answer la that they want results such as Mrs. Herbert W. Hunt, of Hallsvllle, Texas, describes. She writes: "My health wasn't good. I suffered from cramp lng My pain would be so Intense It wou!4 nauseate me I would Just drag around, so sluggish and do-leas.' Mr mother de elded to rtv* me Cardui. I began to mend. That tired, sluggish feeling was gone and the pains disappeared. 1 can't praise Car dui too highly because I know It helped me." ... If Cardui does not help YOU. ooasult a physician. of Martin County, North Carolina, to which action laid George D. Bur lougha ha* barn made a party de fendant by order of court, the pur poae of mid action being to remove a cloud upon the title to land* owned by the plaintiffs and to re move a recorded deed of truat in which laid George D. Bur rough* 11 giantee; and the laid George D. Burroughs will further take notice that he is required to appear before the clerk of the superior court of Martin County within thirty (Ml daya and answer or demur to the complaint in said action, or the plain tifl will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint This the 6th day of February, 1996 L. B WYNNE. Clerk Superior Court, 17 4tw Martin County. NOTICE Having this day qualified as ex ecutrix of the estate of Kathleen Wallace Lilley, late of Jamesville, N. C., notice is hereby given to all persons holding claims against said estate to present the 'isame to me on or before the 28th day^of January, 1837, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of recovery of same. All per iscns indebted to said estate are re quested to make immediate settle ment of same. This 28th day of January, 1936. ANNIE WALLACE FLEMING. f7 6tw NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of the au thority contained in a certain deed of trust executed to the undersigned irustee on tne 20th day of March, 1922, said deed of trust being of rec rid in the Register of Deeds' Office in book H-2, page 113, same being given to secuie certain note of even date tl ere with, and the stipulations lot having been complied ivt.n, and at the , cyuest of the l oldc-r of raid bond, the undersigned trustee will, on the 22nd day of February, 1936. at 12 o'clock noon, in front of the o'lrthouse dooi, Mattin County, oi ler loi sale tc tin: highest biudtr, fur cash, the following described land: 9 All that cer'ain piece, parcel or lot of land situated, lying and being in the Town of Oak City, County of Maidin^tat^o^lortl^Carolina^e^ all of lot Number Nine in Block rn by plan of the Town N. C, I " " ' tea all a "K." aa i of Oak City. N. ?, recorded in book No. ?, pane 420, of the public road of Martin County Thii 22nd day of January. 1226 H. a EVERETT. jS4 4tw Trustee. NOTICE North Carolina. Martin County. Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in a certain deed of trust executed to the undersigned trustee by L. K. Raw Is and wife, Hattie Rawls, on the 22nd day of April, 1920, and of record in the public registry of Martin County in book U-L at page 405. said deed of trust having been given for the purpose of securing a certain note of even date and tenor therewith, the stipulations contained in said deed of trust not having been com plied with, default having been made in the payment of the said note, and at the request of the own er of the said note, the undersigned trustee will, on Saturday, the 29th day of February. 1930. at 12 o'clock noon, in front of the courthouse door in the town of Williamston, of fer for sale, to the highest bidder, foi cash, the following described real estate, to wit: Beginning at a light wood stob, running a west course to a green pine, thence down Thin Branch a south course to the run of Bear Grass swamp, thence an east course up said swamp to a pine, a corner, thence a north course along Mar tha Gurganus' line to a post, thence an east course along the said Mar tha Gurganus' line to black gum, 3 corner, thence a north course to the beginning, containing thirty-flve (35) acres, more or less. This the 6th day of February, 1936 JOHN RAWLS, f7 4tw Trustee. Elbert S. Peel, Attorney. NOTICE North Carolina, Martin County. Under and by virtue of an order of resale made by L. B. Wynne, clerk of the superior court of Mar tin County, the undersigned trustee 25th day of will, on Tuesday, the a?^Jlh^I5llwia? February, ISM. at twelve o'c noon, in troa&t the eourthoui at lfartin County, in the town or Williameion. North Caxuiiaa. offer for *ale, to the highaat bidder, tor cash, the followinf described seal estate, to wit: Adjoining the lands of Ibi 3. B. Waters and others, and bounded on the north by the lands at Charlie Hinson and Charlie Davis, on the seat by the new road leading front Jamesville to Dardens. on the south by the lands of Mrs. J. B. Waters, and on the west by the lands of Warren W. Waters, containing M acres, more or less, and being the same land that was deeded to T. V. Davis by L. F. Waters and wife. Fannie V. Waters, on the 27 th day of September, lttO. which deed is of record in the public registry of Martin County, in book D-2, at page 555. This the 5th day of February, 1136. ELBERT S. PEEL, n 2tw Trustee. A Three Days' Cough Is Your Danger Signal A cough, chest cold or bronchial Irri tation today may lead to serious trouble tomorrow. You can relieve them now with Creomulsion. an emulsified Creo sote that Is pleasant to take. Creomul slo'i Is a medical discovery that aids nature to soothe and heal the in fected membranes and to relieve the irritation andtnflammatlonnsthegerm laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Medical authorities have for many years recognised the wonderful effects of Be- chwood Creosote for treating coughs, chest colds and bronchial irri tations. A chemist worked out a special process of blending Creosote with other Ingredients so that now in Creo mulslon you get n real dose of Beech wood Creosote v hioh Is palatable and can even be taken frequently and continuously by adults and children. Thousands of doctors now use Creo mulston In their own families and practice, and druggists rank Creomul sion top because in this genuine, original product you can get a real dose of Creosote so emulsified that it goes to the very scat cf the trouble to nelp loosen and expel germ-laden phlegm Creotnulsion Is guaranteed satis factory In the treatment of coughs, chest colds and bronchial troubles, especially those that start with a com mon cold and hang on and on. Get a bottle of Creomulslon right now from your druggist, use It all up as directed and If you fall to get satisfactory re lief. he Is authorized to refund every cent of your money. Get Creomulslon right now. < Adv.) Change to Mint Springs and Lowest priced of all Glenmore's great straight whiskies. It's made on that famous 34-year old Glenmore for mula. Try its win ning flavor. GLBNMOKB DISTILLBOIES COl. be. LouUvilU ? OwfMboru Mtry im Kentucky BOYS-GIRLS SMITH-DOUGLASS *1500PRIZES IN A NEW AND ENTERTAINING CONTEST NOTHING TO BUY NOTHING TO SELL HOW MANY OBJECTS WHOSE NAMES BEGIN WITH S or D CAN YOU FIND IN THIS PICTURE HUNDREDS of boys and girl? who entered the greet S-D word contest lest year have asked us to give them another. >ere it is. Interesting?entertaining?instructive?and with a $150 first prize to shoot for. There's nothing herd sbout|this contest. It's (ust a test of your knowl edge of words end the sharpness of your eye. Start today. Don't try to work from the picture in the ad. Your local S-D agent has a folder for you with a large picture, sod complete rules. See hies today aad begin, because the contest doses on March 15th. I luck to youl There's nothing to buy or sell to this contest. All farm boys sod girls up to It years of age are eligible. But be sure you follow the i K thaas Cross your SD agent. ig9Pp ;\ % *MITH-DWfiUSS CO ?NO. NORFOLK, VA?