* r 1 THE ENTERPRISE. C BIHHIWI. ... Bono*. ■Man* at ISi IMB (Mat at WiMwaMa. IkniT MARCH 30,19U6. —— SNAPSHOTS. It metmm that when a Pittsburg Baa strikes it rich, nowadays, the first thing he wants to do is to get rid of his wile. When Judge Parker talks of a Southern man for president, the Honorable Joe Bailey of Texas aits up and takes notice. If Cornelius Bliss got $75,000 at the time, out of the insurance com panies, he was certainly the cham pion political bleeder. Speaker Cannon must have en joyed reading Andy Hamilton's re marks. They came so near his own opinion of tbe Senate. With more than joo interrup tions in a single speech. Senator Rayner must feel that he has been through "right smart" of a debate. It is one ot the jokes of history that the conservative Democrats are now turning to Bryan, because he is conservative as against Hearst. Secretary Taft will doubtless, de cide that a Supreme bench appoint ment in the band is worth a bunch of chances in a national convcn- It may be all right for Mr. Car negie to attempt to reform our spelling, but the country is more concerned in the effort to reform oar politics. Certain ill-formed persons are asking who this General Corbin is that he should be made a lieuten ant General. General Corbin is as great a man as Admiral Crun shell. , "How shall we take care of Gen eral Grosvenor," asks an exchange. Put him in the Weather Bureau or at the head of the staff of statisti cians. If he can figure he will be happy. _____________________ * The Houve Committee on Post Office and post roads, recommend legislation calculated to "stop the abuse of fru nkiiig privilege " Deai Dear! Can it be possible that the franking privilege has been abus ed? The President of the Massuchu setts State Senate declares thai there never was a time »hen tin legislators of the old Hay State were more honest than they are now. They were probably nevet watched as closely. Delayed reports from Omaha indicate that the mob which wa trying to lynch a few negroes wa? dispersed when a loud-voiced citi zen secured attention long enougl to shout. "Remember, gentlemen this is not Soring field. Ohio. It is asserted that the price of shoes will be advanced again unless Congress removes the duty on hidcc. Still the standpatters ma\ figure that the people will not b able to kick so hard if it is mad impossible for them to buy shoes. The original docket is to he cal led In the Supreme Court for th. first time in thirty years. Th railroads would probably not o; pose an amendment to the Hp burn bill providing that rate li:igi tlon cases should be placed on the "original docket." The tar that is contained in . Bee's Laxative Hooey and Tar i> harmless. It is not cool tar, but b obtained from the pine trees of mmr own native fore*t*. Bee's Laxative Honey and Tar is the beat remedy for coVls because it acta on the bowels—thus expel- Hag all colds from the system. Bee's is the original Laxative Hon ey and Tar. and is best for coughs, colds, croup, whooping cough, long Russell Sage, the financier of New York, has decided to retire from active life. He will be nine ty years old this spring. Uncle Russell, as be is familiarly called, regrets 00 doubt that be can not live a thousand years to obtain millions yet. It has been s fascinating game to pile up dol lars jnst to see bow high his pile would reach. But his health will not permit him to go furlher with his undertaking. His name is a synonym of the dollar mark. He will do well to emulate An drew, the philanthropist, and make his name immortal. STANDARD OIL VS. UNCLE SAfl One of the members of the Stand ard Oil Company made the follow ing threat to Uncle Sam: "We are bigger than the gov ernment. Standard Oil is stronger than the United States We own the Senate and the House. If you pursue your investigations beyond the point necessary to fool the public we will have you removed. We can secure the instant deposi tions of the secretary of commerce and labor, Mr. Metcalf, and the commissioner ol corporations, Mr. Garfield. If you persecute us in the slightest degree you will be out of your job, and if you keep at tbe business you will find what we say is absolutely true. Rockefel ler is a bigger man than Roose velt." | This is a peculiar situation for one of the government officials to be placed in. Mess. Metcalf and Garfield no doubt consider this threat as no more than child's play. Why docs Rockefeller hide from the officials of the State of Missouri if he is a bigger man than the President or if his company is big ger than the government ? It is folly for people with good sense to speculate as to the power and force of Rockefeller in comparison with the government and people of Ameiica! If the great bulk of the Amciican people—and we presume that they are honest and true — should recognize that these words were anything else but a "sound ing brass and a tinkling symbol," the life of Standard Oil would lie crushed out like an elephant would destroy an ant-hill, for the masses still cling to the principle that ours is a of the people, by the people and for the people," ind moreover that this principle is part and parcel of their very life. There are trucklers in our coun try just like there were in the an ient governments, and we can safely say there always will lie, nit we feel confident that tlie "fuedalism of wealth" will have to fall if it crosses swords with the i»ower and might of the houest American citizen. Years ago we fought for our political liberty, aud if necessary •o-day we can show that the Stand ird Oil, like the toolish knight of tld, is attacking a wind-mill that is able to annihilate in one rotation •he last vestage of a Rockefeller interest. A corporation derives all if its jiowers from the government that created it, and if it transgress es the law of its being, it shall surely die. "The way of the transgressor is hard." "But the -0111 that sins, it shall surely die." This applies to the artificial as well is the natural sinner—to the Stand ard Oil. A Ckiciii Mtrau Ovis Hit Elictloi ti CkMbcrtaii'i Click Riail) "1 can heartily and conscien tiously recommend Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for a flections of the throat and lung"*," savs Hon. John Shenick, 220 So. Peoria St., Chicago. "Two years ago during a political campaign I caught cold after being overheated, which irri tated my throat and I was finally couipellcd to stop, as I could not speak aloud. In my extremity a friend advised me to use Chamber lain's Cough Remedy. I took two doses that afternoon and could not believe my senses when I found the next morning the inflamma tion had largely subsided I took several doses that day, kept right on talking through the campaign, and I thank this medicine that I won my seat in the Council." This remedy is for sale by S. R. Biggs. The President's Income. A correspondent asks: "Is the President able to save anything out of the $50,000 a year salary be receives ?" Many people believe that the salary the President receiv es is the sum total of bis official in come. It is a misuke. This is how he is paid: Thirty-six thous and and sixty-four dollars is given him in addition to his salary of SSO 000, to pay the salaries of his sub ordinates and clerks. His private secretary is paid $3,250, his assis tant secretary $2,250, his stenog rapher fi.Moo. five messengerseach $1,200, two doorkeepers each $1 ,- 200, four other clerks at good sal aries, ranging from $1,500 to $2,- 500; one telegraph operator; two ushers, $1,200 and $1,400, a night usher $1,300, a watchman, S9OO, and a inan who takes care of the fires who receives $864 a year. In addition to this there is given him SB,OOO for incidental expenses such as stationary, carpets and the care of th«- Presiden'.s stables. And un der another heading there is given him nearly $40,000 more. Of this $12,500 is for repairs and refurn ishing the White House; $2,500 is for fuel; $4,000 is for the green house: $15,000 is for gas. matches and the stables. The White House all told, costs the country, in con nection with the President, con siderably over $125,000 a year. The Presi lent is well to do in his own right, having; inherited a competence front his father. Add to this the royalties he has receiv ed from his hooks, his income from magazine work, and it will be seen that the expense incident to the marriage of Miss Alice will hy no means pinch the purse of the house of Roosevelt. —San Francisco Ar gonaut. To the Beat Paid Man. It's sound sense that we tell you Your work costs less dollars and is best every time you use 1,. & M You do more painting with one gallon of 1,, it M than with two gallons of other paints and the L. & M. Zinc hardens the L. & M. White Lead and makes the L. & M. paint wear like iron. 4 gallons 1,. & M. mixed with 3 gallons Linseed- Oil will paint a moderate sized house. L. Si M. costs only $1.20 a gal- A. T. Terrell River head, N. Y Writes: "16 years ago painted with L. &M. Only now requires repainting." Sold by S. R. Biggs. lowa has eight different kinds of Rep iblicans, but thev are all after the same kinds of jobs, Plague Spots in the Blood. A Remedy l ounl to daaaae the r.ntlre System. Half of the diseases from which mankind sutlers are ca-ised by im pure Wood That hendach'-, those pains in the joints and muscles, that tired feeling are all caused by poisons in the blood. The reason Rheumatism. Sciatica and Gout cannot be cured by rubbing with liniments and oils is U>at the dis ease originates in the blood, and an internal disease cannot be cured by an external remedy RIIKUMACIUE is the most pow erful blood purifier in the world. RHEUMACIUE 'goes right to the seat of the disease." sweeping all the poisons out of the Mood, toning up the stomach, regulating the liver and kidneys, und restoring each organ of the body to its nor mal functions. That is the reason it cures to stay cured. RIIKUMACIUE cures Rheuma tism and kindred di>;oi»»fS,ifter all other means fail, because it "gets at the joints from the inside.'' • I gladly testify that RHEUMA CIDE completely cured me of a severe case ol Rheumatism." writes James Kenealy. of 1100 Frederick avenue, Baltimore. "About four months ago 1 was taken with the disease in my lower limits, which spread throughout the body. My back troubled me greatly. I suf fered acutely, could go up and down stairs only with the greatest difti. ulty. I received treatment at the Johns llopkins Hospital this city, for nearly three months but was not benentted Your medi cine was recommended to me, and after taking two bottles the disease left me. and I have been perfectly well ever since I also found that RHEUMACIUE was a great benefit to my d gestion. 1 trust that oth ers will try it and be cured also.'' General Wood has the honor to report the thorough aud |>erma nent pacification of 600 hostile Mo- Three little rules we all should keep To make life happy and bright, Smile iu the tuoining, smile at night Take Rocky Mountain Tea at night. —J. M. Whiten & Co., Roberson ville, N. C. Arkansas Ruortadu. "An induatiy that is bringing in a good income to many farmers in Southm Missouri and Arkansas of late years is none other than ahipph g the old razorback hog to the Northern States, where they are fattened for market," aaid B A. Scott, of Clinton Mo. "Years ago tbe razorback bog was not considered worthy of any thing more than killing for mak ing meat used by the poor farmer families in the backwoods. Ma«y people considered that variety of the pig family a native of the South, but it is not. In the old pioneei days the farmers let their' hogs run wild and they deteriorat ed into tb« breed that has since been noted as razorlttick*. They developed lean fides, long noses aud long legs through the nece-«i tv of hdving to shift - among the pines for their food. "To-day the shipping of razor backs has come to be quite an in dustry and hundreds of them are b- ought to Illinois and lowa for fattening. They grow to a good size tn the woods of the South and having voracious ..appetites and large frames, they soon put on flesh after being penned up where they do not run their flesh off. The farmers ».f the South are now taking in hundreds of tlious aups of dollars a year from n scource that was formerly unproductive, and their Northern brothers find that fattening razorbacks turns their corn into shekels at a rapid rate."—Milwaukee Sentinel. One would think the Laxative idea in cough syrup should have been advanced long before it was. It seems that the only rational rem edy for Coughs and Colds would lie to move the bowels and clean the mucous membrane* of the throat and lungs at the same time Kennedy's Lafcative Honey and Tar does this. It ia the Original Laxative Cough Syrup, the liest known remedy for Coughs. Colds, Croup, Whooping Cough, etc. Tastes good and harmless. Soltl by S. R. Biggs. For bloating, lielching, indiget tion, etc, eat a King's Dyspepsia Tablet after meals. Sold by S. K. Biggs. Andrew Carnegie seems to have made a favorable impression on Richmond, Va. They may lie wondering if he has another SIOO,- ,000 in his clothes. If it is a bilious attack take Chamberlain's Stomach ami Liver Tablets and a quick cure is certain. For sale by S. R. Biggs. "Billionaires are lieconiing great founders of colleges." "Y'.s. Or it might !>e expressed, colleges are becoming great finders of billion aires." —Washington Star. TO,CURB A OOLO IN ONI DAY Take I,AX ATIVK HROMO Quinine Tab let*. Druggists refund money if it (nits to cure. K. W. OROVK'S signature on the box. 350. They are still having a ' hard" time in averting that "soft" coal strike. For Coughs and Colds There ii a remedy over sixty yeara old—Ayer'a Cherry Pectoral. Of course you have heard of it,probably have used It. Once in the ramtly.lt stays; the one household remedy for couchs and hard colda on the chest. Ask your doctoraboutit. " I h»T» had lima Ulan. Ay*r'« Call 11 Neiont hu ferrnigM mmlMt thro auk MM Um>. I tan JMI rwuiwM At . .-A U Iliters Ayor's PMIs lncr*«M> tt»* acttvtty of th» li¥f, And thus Aid rteonwy. Notice. By virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Martin coOntv in the pro*etl ing, '.V. M. Perry, guardian ex parte. I will sell for auh at the court house in Williamston on Monday, April 2, 1906, the land mentioned anil described in the petition in aaid cause, viz: Adjoining the Madley land on the north, the Jamas K. reel land on the east, I.etris HolM day on the aouth, ant' Simon Wanl on the west, containing one hundrel and sixteen acrea, more or leas. This March I, 1906. Whkklkr Martin, 16-41 JgjK' Comntiasioner. Dissolution Notice. Thia U to notify nil creditors of the A. L Owens fc Co. furniture store ot my withdraW from aaid company, and I will not be responsible for any debts contracted from and after this date. March 19, 1906. 3 Jj-41 A. L. OWENS. For Twenty-one Years Bonanza, Orinoco Bone have been thejtandard Cotton and "• Tobacco guanos in the South— REGISTERED because great care is used in the —selection of materials. Ask your dealer for RoyitCff*! F. S. ROYSTER goods and don't take substitutes GUANO CO., Said to be just as good. See that Norfolk, V«L A * TRAD '- MARK U °- ♦ NEW YORK ONE PRICE CLOTHING AID DRY GOODS STORE! Wo hare just received a new and up-to-date line of Clothing. Ladies' I)res« Goods of all kinds, and also a complete line of Hats and Shoes. m SST iJfiVii. Macht Brothers & Rutenberg We arc more able to please custo mors this season than we were last /M \ as we have a larger stock and the jK fB Wight Prices. One price to all. Tdßx Lookout for our Circulars aßm Of the Opening Next Week Notice. - - WOOLARD'S - - lUvinK qualified as mlininisUator up- • . « n - _ - . SSSSLZS.VJS.VSI s; Combined Harrow and Cultivator all iwritnnß boliling claims i.ainsi «aiil entitle to prevent then) for jwynient on Ad** or before March loth '907, or thia no- /A A OftVing 1 Of 1)116 tice will he plead in Iw of their recov- | ~ erv. Persona imlehletl to said estate M U a „.| will plow make immediate paymeut. # J-J.VJI. OtJ (Hill 1 W U Thin March 10, iy>6. A -j-r s w caspkr. m Horses. 3-»3-6t Administrator. K\ The Triadic /M , Worit *1" at one lime. Breaks the &havill4 Parlor rK»d- and culiirmte* with as lIHTnUU much ease an any ordinary OVER J. W. WATTS & CO. plow. Sharp Razors, clean Towels What Every Parmer Needs and Good Work Guaranteed. For cotton, c>rn and rice, and the very thing truck girdener* Cleanliness Our MOTTO , K » e ,| Stlls on it* merits when seen at work. Thanking one and all for your jAU Kinds and Sizes Tobacco Flues' Made ta Order. past patronage and hoping for a . , .. , „ .. , , . . ror information and prices ca'l on or address continuance of the same, I remain, * Yours to sent, J. L. WOOLARD, J. H. HYMAN, Prop. 3-9-tt m One Kf THE IEW IDEA KB TB£ ORiGIIAL LAXATIVE BB COUBI STROP M EHHEDYSIAXATI VEH ON E Y^IAR b MmstUßmls JLI MUrCNMm JL A 4"SSf*