VOL. IV. RALEIGH, N. 0., THURSDAY, DF OEM HER 5, 1907. NO. 32 LETTER FROM BILKINS. Mr. Bryan is Still in Training Speaker Cannon Early t Snow at Bilkinsvillo The. Local Sportsmen Hold a Session and Spin a Few Yarns, Some of Them Being Fish Stories. Correspondence of the' Enterprise. December 4th, 1907. I see Mr. William Jennings Bryan is still raining fer the next preser denshal fite, an' iz dietin' himself so he will hev lots ov wind an' won't git tired. Billy hez bin runnin' purty near ever sinse I kin reckerleckt any thing erbout hit. He hez won a gude many premiums an' blue rib bons fer fast goin' an' high jumpin' an' the like. But if he hez ever bin preserdent the papers don't menshun hit. I'd give the price ov a gude shoate ter see Billy preserdent fer erbout half a day. But I reckon the day of mirackles iz erbout , over. When he gits ter be preserdent hit will be after the offls goes a-beggin'. This iz one ov the most peaceble countries on earth, even if hit hez had a Cannon fer Speeker ov the House at Washington. He wuz- an ole gun, too, but he iz the sort that causes a gude deal ov destruckshun when he iz fired off, 1 We air havin' a big snow at Bil kinsville ter-day, an' the' rabbits air gittin' ready ter immygrate. This town iz full ov rabbit hunters and fishermen. Ter hear sum ov them talk you would think that they had killed at least a millyun rabbits in the past. I always wink the other eye when sum ov them begin ter spin rabbit yarns and fishin' stories. But they kin tell sum stories that would make a stranger open his eyes. Bill Simpkins wuz here one day last summer an' wuz sittin' on a goods box in front ov the store talkin' fishin'. He sed that he went sayneing one day down on Middle Crick, just after .the war and drag ged out forty bushels ov fish rangin in size frum half a pound ter twenty four pounds apiece awl caught in erbout thirty minits by saynein up and down the crick a distance ov a hundred yards. They wuz several sittin' erround an' they tried ter change the subjeckt, but Bill went rite on talkin', an' sed that after haulin the fish home he tuk off hiz wet clothin' ter put on dry duds, an' when he shook hiz clothes erbout six bushels more fish an' several eels an turtles cum out ov the clothin. Sum ov them sittin' erround tried ter change the subjeckt ergin, but Bill wouldn't stop. He sed he caught a whale in Swift Crick with a hook an line that wuz sixty-four feet long, an he flggered that hit must hev weighed not less than fifty-five thousand pounds an' eight ounces, or thereabouts. If this thing keeps up the" Governor will hev ter call a special session ov the legislater ter suppress the fishermen livin' erround Bilkinsvllle. They air a site. The big snow to-day wuz a cool surprise. We, ain't use ter snow in these digglns so early. I hev bin seein that the weather man wuz predicktin' a warm wave an I wuz gittin up firewood az fast az I could, ter I knew a cold wave wuz on the way. The manager ov, the weather burow at Bilkinsvllle must be a grandson of Annynias, fer he kin git up more yarns erbout whut the weather iz goin' ter be than two ov them lightening stenogryfers could take down in four months. When he predickts a warm wave I always car ry iny overcoat an' a hot brick . in my overcoat pocket. When he puts out a rumor they iz goin' ter be a cold wave, I put on my linen duster an' carry a palm leef fan. That iz the only way ter keep even with these weather predickters. They air a plum site. Az ever, ZEKE BILKINS. The Marital Unrest In the time of our great-grandmothers and grandmothers nobody thought of dissolving the marriage tie. A woman's career was marriage, and having once embarked upon it she never considered going back. But In these days debate Is ram pant, and so many persons have con sidered going back" that one won ders what slight reciprocal affection induced them ever to advance at all. Probably it was not affection, but attraction, which depends upon outward and visible signs rather than Inward and spiritual graces, and can cause the most unlikely and unblendable character to find each other k irresistibly" charming. And while they are finding each ' other charming, marriage is so easy! Since the beginning of the world, admoni tion and advice have done very lit tle toward the curbing of passion, and the obstacles have only served to excite it. And it is not too much to say that most young people, if left to form their own characters, with little in the way of respectability forced upon them and a great deal in the. way of responsibility forced upon them and a great deal in the way of comfort and pleasure at their right hand, will form rather self indulgent characters which, rushing rapturously into matrimony, as it were into the seventh heaven, are exceedinly chagrined to find how much self-denial is degianded of them when they get there. Nobody has explained to them what mar riage, and the companionship of it really means, nor what a fund of tact and tenderness,, forbearance, good-will and gentle judgment one must have to tide over the hard places that come, at times, to even the most loving couples.- Carlina Duer, in the Delineator. Peter W. Halrston, of Davie Coun ty, and one or two others were rid ing horseback near Walnut Cove a few days ago, when Mr. Hairston's horse shied, throwing the rider in a gully on the roadside. Mr. Hairston received a severe gash over his right eye, his nose was broken, his wrist sprained and he was hurt otherwise. Last week Charles Waters, about twenty-two years old, got a load of sow-paw at Marion and returning to his boarding-house at Cliff 3ide, Rutherford County, proceeded to raise a rough house. An officer was called and in trying to escape from the officer Waiters jumped into the river and was drowned. OPINIONS IN A NUTSHELL. Looks as if Old Prosperity was getting his second . wind. -New York Mail. . Nothing sobers t a business man quicker than to find money tight. Washington Post. ': .. The Russian Douma, it is said, may fall. However, it will not have far to fall. Philadelphia Ledger. .'.. ' College presidents continue to de plore hasty talk and then loose a lot of it. Philadelphia Ledger. If the banks would let up now the other interests of "the country are about ready to do it. Philadelphia Press. '. New York's Horse-Show was a fin ancial failure, but as a millinery dis play it was flawless. Philadelphia Ledger. We are making financial history, but the prophets are not agreed as to the final chapter. Philadelphia Inquirer. Has any census been made of the men who think they know what the President's message will say? New York World. Better do your holiday shopping with the money you are hoarding be fore the burglars get it. Philadel phia Press. . The army test rides cost $ 1 5,0007 But what is that compared to the amusement they gave the President? New York Sun. ; The fact that turkeys are plentiful doesn't seem to have occurred to the people that are fixing' the prices. Baltimore Sun. i " Since New York bankers admit that the crisis is past, perhaps they will soon loosen up on depositors' money. Philadelphia Inquirer. '; ;". . Eleven murders have taken place in one Kentucky "speak-easy" with in a year. Kentucky takes its pro hibition sadly. New York World. It seems that the President was in no danger while on the Mississippi, but he thought he was. which was equally (distressing. Philadelphia J,edger. The usefulness of the Panama Canal in floating a loan is only a sug gestion of the great purpose it is to serve in floating ships. Washing ton Star. . . In spite of the assurance that the President is toning down his mes sage, his critics do not appear t be toning down their remarks. Wash ington Post. ' ' Admiral Evans is a man always ready to do his duty to sail a ship ,or fire a blazing sentence when it shall please his country to need ja hot phrase, Baltimore Sun. i . ' ! "There will be a, further drop in the prices of provisions and meats;" says an Armour manager. "Furth er?" Has anyone noticed the previ ous drop? New York World. ... . Money stringency is said to have sent formerly well-to-do New York ers to the pawn-shops. The experi ence may teach them how the other . half lives. Philadelphia Ledger. Twenty thousand automobiles are licensed in this State, and sometimes you get the idea that they are all in operation at tbe street corner where you want to cross. Philadelphia Press. . A company has been formed in Pa ris to operate sight-seeing airships. With "rubber-neck balloons" it will not be long until we shall have to tunnel, if we seek any privacy. New York Sun. An Ohio convict made $20,000 while serving a five-year term. He got board and clothing free, too. A scramble may be expected for posi tions under that warden. Philadel phia Ledger. ::' . ''"'. We are not at all choice. We take $10 gold pieces, with or without the words, "In God We Trust"; also greenbacks, silver, nickels, coppers and scrip. It all looks good to us. Durham Sun. The discovery of the Kuskwaga mutes in Central Alaska by a Phila delphia professor may be pleasant for the Kuskwagamutes, but we fear it will revive that simplified spelling controversy. New York Tribune. . . . The shooting season is yet young, but the opening promises well. So far the number of persons killed or maimed by the accidental discharge of guns, or by being mistaken for game, is large. State3vllle Land mark. Now that it has been discovered that persons can converse over the telephone with the trasmitters placed upon their chests we expect it will become usual for young people to hold the instrument over the cardiac region and thus indulge in real heart-to-heart talks. New York Tribune. Christmas Work. December means Christmas to the children, so we want the whole months to be used for working up the Christmas Offering. The tiny stockings proved such a success last year that all Leaders who used them then will want to use them again. Other Leaders also will join in this plan and we hope to have the offer ing go beyond our fondest expecta tions. Please explain fully to the children that their money this Christmas will go toward the building of the Sun beam School at Ylng Talc, China. Since this is their very own work, they will feel a deeper Interest in collecting all the pennies possible iu the bright little stockings. If you have no Sunbeam Society In your church, will you not have . the children join In this Christmas Offering? Letters have been sent to the Sunbeam Leaders and on plans fully explained. If you wish a pattern for the stockings and full explanation of our plans., they will be sent you upon application.