THE ENTERPRISE. c. nnitr— T ... bmiou. FUIUT IUBCH », 1006. SNAPSHOTS. A Uat of Senators who are rail way or stockholders would make 111 irstinf reading at this time. The future queen of Spain is jmt about as beautiful as King Alfonso is manly and handsome. Japanese need not worry about nan stature. They look big eaough to people who get into difficulties with them. What would become of the Brit ish aristocracy if it were not rein forced with American money and beauty from the stage ? Running down the populace in •a automobile appears to be a much ■NR serious offense in Italy than in you might mention. It develops that it was not alto gether through the goodness of Us heart that Germany abandoned the proposed tariff war against the United States. G rover Cleveland has provident ly sold his Princeton farm. It wouldn't be safe to appear in an insurance office with a single hay seed in one's hair. For a toastmaster now-a-days to introduce Secretary Taft without incidentally nominating him for the presidency, would be a gross breach of courtesy. "Asia for the Asiatics" may be come as reasonable as some more familiar occidental slogans, after the "Boxes for the Boxers" shall have popularized. Last Saturday the House passed 416 pension bills in sixty-four minutes. Probably the reason it did not pass more was that there were no more to pass. The introduction of a new rate bill by the junior Senator from Pennsylvania never fazed the Pres ident, for he has become hardened to all kinds of Knox. 1 What with Cuba's $25,000 gift and those big Kansas turnips, pumpkins, apples and that car load of coal, the Longwortlis are prettv well fixed for the rest of the winter. American autoniobilists contein plating a trip to Italy should se cure a complete outfit of armor plate touring suits with rapid-fire batteries, as they will be needed if • dago should be killed. A San Francisco man has lost the power of speech as a result of taking his whisky straight and kerosene as a "chaser." The San Francisco brand will usually turn the trick without the aid of kero sene oil. Senator Parker says that Con greaaman Mann roars like a lion •gainst the trusts when in Chica go, but in Washington becomes a socking dove. Will the Congress man please go home and roar for the babies in his district? They are getting noisy. General Shafter has broken out with a bad case of yellow perilitis and fears that all the Americans in will be massacred. Let the government take prompt action and mail to all centers of disturb ance a photograph of General Shafter licking Spain with one hand. There would be the great est Chinese hair raising on record when the bad yellow meu look on that dread picture. Thrae little rales we all should keep T» make life happy and bright. Smile in the morning, smile at night Take Rocky Mountain Tea at nicht. —J. IC. Whiten ft Co., Roberson 10c, N. C. CLOSED DOORS. « We think it very essential that all the private deliberations of pub lic officers be kept secret. If they are not kept secret then the public officer is going to have enemies, for necessarily the laws are going to refer to persons, some officers are going to refer to persons in order to illustrate and carry their points. Anyone can see the dangei of exposing these personal references. It makes an office of this nature undesirable, and any man who has pride and ambition of the right kind, is not going to like continual abuse and perhaps a thrashing iu some instances. About matters of a public policy let the officer be criticized if he passes a rash act. Criticism has the most potent influence for good in a free government. A high minded public official will not be a criticism of his pub lic acts, but he will submit to the pressure of public opinion and be pricked and benefited thereby. The conscientious officer and the officer that yields to public opinion is our ideal of a public servant. But the secret deliberations of a body of officers, of a jury, should not tie told to the outside world, for good government is dependent on such deliberations, it's the method of administering it and therefore we must have this priva cy. Good men do not want public offices if these necessary secrets of government are going to be ex jiosed. With The Cotton Men. On Wednesday of last week Mr. Chas. C. Moore, of Charlotte, president of the Notth Carolina, division of the Southern Cotton Association, and Mr. Armstrong, «>f Savannah, Ga., second vice president of the Southern Cotton .Vssociation, addressed the farmers in the court house. Owing to the lack ot advertise ment, the heavy rain the day be fore and bitter cold and frozen roads, there was a smaller crowd present than should have greeted and heard these distinguished gen tlemen. Mr. Moore addressed himself to the methods of organ izing and its object. Mr. Arni vtrong discussed the demand for the cotton crop, the condition of the market and the best methods oHnaTlcetfilg: "* Mr Moore told of the poverty of the cotton l»elt when cotton was selling at four and one half cents per pound. He gave his own ex perience when in the fall of iHyH, itter he with his family had work el from sunrise to sunset from Mondav morning to Saturday night, to tnake and house a crop of c itton, he was poorer at the end of tie year than the lieginning. He lold of how, when he had put four lules ot cotton on his wagon Sat urday afternoon to take it to mar ket, his little eight-year-old gitl 0 line out to him nnd said, "Papa, 1 w»nt a printer. My teacher said 1 had learned all in the other book and must have a primer." He promised to get it, but when the lour bales of cotton were sold he received only $98.16, and he had le» than enough to pay his debts a id 110 money to buy the primer. Me had eaten Baltimore fat back for years, that he was burned out and for two years slept on hay in the barn. These were the conditions when he was growing as much cotton as he could each year but becoming more and more poverty stricken, lie had seen a better day since. Nature had limited the supply of cotton, and the demand and the price had grown. Farmers were prosperous aud happy. Now the object of the Association was to keep the farmers prosperous. We have learned the evils of over-acreage; we had better times with better prices. The object of the Associa tion was to reduce the acreage and to encourage the production of supplies. Thus fertilize soil by rotation and keep your money for supplies at home and stop growing cotton to pay for pork, hay and breadst tiffs. The Association had done much to help the business conditions of the South and pre pared to do more by organizing every school-district, township, county and State in the entire Sooth, and that was its mission Mr. Armstrong next spoke of the condition of the market, the pledges of Mr. Jordan and the best methods of marketing the crop. He himself was a farmer and bad* seen the consequences of large acreage and when the demand was large. He said that by the farm ers fixing the price early in the season the market has not fluctu ated this season with ft w losses and great gains. The spinners wanted the price to be fixed at as permanent place as possible and thus prevent the ad justments of the finished product and unsettled conditions. The spinuers are not selling their finish ed product at the basis of sixteen cents for cotton, that the difference between the ten and one half you now get and the sixteeu was the speculator's profit; that they made more by never seeing a bale than he who digged it out of mother earth. The market held up to its present standard of prices although cotton has not a friend on the mar ket. There are a of con tracts for orders to be fillel within the next twenty to forty days which would create a deinaud for cotton and would cause a sharp advance in the price which he pre dicted would come in the next few days if farmers would only keep the staple off the market. The chief mistake of the farmer Was putting a whole year's crop on the market in three months. The spinners don't have the stor age space, don't have the money to invest in a whole year's crop, in surance is high, the interest on the money demand created by loans to purchase cotton; all these things are taken into consideration when they are buying a supply twelve months ahead of time, consequent ly the price must be low. These things could be taken care of by the farmers if they would extend the sale of a year s crop through twelve months instead of three. These were strong nrul highly beneficial speeches and it is to be regretted that they were not heard by every farmer and business man in the county. They effected an organization of the county with I)r. John D. Biggs organizer; then the organization named the following executive committee: Justus Everett, Goose Nest township, chairman; Simon K. Hardison, Jamesville; J. A. Whitley, Kveretts; W. A. Everett, Robersonville. The organization will be extend ed to each township. Ash Wednesday Once more the thought of the "Chrisrt&n world ttrrirs to thc figure of the Christ in the solitude of the desert," meeting those - temptations which were to test his strength, clear to his own consciousness the mission on which he came, and, through struggle, suffering ailcl victory, to clothe liiin with power as with an invisible garment The lessons of the Lenten season strike with n new and impressive force on the conscience of a country which has suddenly awakened to its own lack of rectitude, aifrFTTfsa people to whom there has come, on a great scale, a conviction of situ In the midst'of an almost unexam pled prosperity, fields yielding/ as perhaps they have never yielded before, mines contributing on a scale to the wealth of the country, the channels of business choked by its volume, a great increase of com fort and an immense advance of luxury, a piling up of wealth which would have been incredible even thirty years ago—in the very heart of this material prosperity there has sounded the voice \of one crying in the wilderness, and while the feast is at its height again the invisible hand that has so often recorded the doom of nations and of men has written oti the wall. Others day have seemed mote for tunate because less disturbed; but in the truest sense of the word there can come no greater prosper ity to a people than the awakening of its conscience. Americans are no worse than the men of other nations on the contrary, the statu a:ds of purity, of family integrity, and of individual honesty are perhaps higher, taking the whole people than auywhere else in the whole world It must not be forgotten that no nation has ever been so tempted by the things which min ister to the senses, that to no other nation have ever come such oppor tunities of rapid accumulation of I wealth, into the hands of no other people have ever been committed such colossal for noes. That hu man nature has tuccumbed to the pressure of thtie appeals is not surprising; and thev who sit in judgement mm beware lest in passing sentence they reveal, not a penetrating in* ;ht but a funda mental lack of i real knowledge of conditions. Nevertheless, after all explana tions have been made and every defence put in, ft is sad but most healthful experience through which Americans are passing. There have been few (isclosures of calcu lated villiany, ftw colossal default?; few infractions >f the primary laws of life; but there have come to light widespread stupefying of the conscience, a }on fusion of moral ideAS, and an acquiescence in evil conditions so general that while great success his coiiie to individ uals, something very like lailure threatens the Ration, Anieiicans have insensibly drifted into the position in whtfh thev seem to re gard their government as a colos al opportunity for making money; and the iiusincts and the govern ment to its ureal uses and conserve the ideals of the Nation except radical severance of these two in terests. The nen who are trying to drive business out of public life and to estublhb before the law the equal lights oi all men, find them selves confronted, not simply by political bosse* and corrupt politic ians, but by lieu of the highest commercial standing. The most tragic asjiect cf recent events has tjeen the fact that the prime offen ders have been men whom com munities have looked upon as in carnations of integrity as well as possessors of business genius. A nation in sackcloth and ashes would disturb the conventional judgments ot the world, but would attain its highest dignity. No concealment nor evasion, hut searching revelation and heartfelt confession, are needed, and are fortunately common among Ameri cans. We are only at the begin ning of a revival of religion which is to express itself in a revival of pet sonal righteousness In every tli. rection the movement gathers head way.; out of the confusion higher stnnd7ircls~are defining themselves: out of discouragement and abase ment new possibilities of pultlii service are Tevealing themselves. The pitiful tragedy of wealth gained without honor has opened the eyes of young men especially to the emptiness of mere material success; never in the history of the Nation has there been such a series of conspicuous failures brought to light/as during the past twelve months. It is time for self-search ing, for confession, for humility, Jot-ailcuix, and. r=XLc Outlook, Uoad Building Business No one denies that to build a good house requires the services of a good architect. The same is true of road building. To build ngood road requires the services ot.a man skilled in the work, and skill is never acquired by merely reading a theory. It must l>e obtained by actual exjierieuce. A college train ing in road building may not be necessary to make a good road builderV but such an education equips him with a knowledge that sootier or later will more than pay for the extra time spent in its ac quirement. Highway engineering is distinctly a branch by itself, and_ it is rapidly becoming recognized as such. To-day there is a great er demand tor the highway engin eer than the supply, and this d - maud is bound to iucrerse as the work of building roads progresses. There is 110 lietter Opening for a young man than the profession of a highway engineer. I Ar-Qoctoi' 1 Medicine Ayer's Cherry Pectoral is not a simple couch syrup. It is a strong medicine, a doctor's medicine. It cures hard case*, severe and desperate esses, chronic cases of asthma, pleu risy, bro.tchitls, consumption. Ask your doc&r about this. " I hare 11 so 4 * ffffcftt deal of Ay*»r*» Cherry Pastoral far cowM am! hard cold* on tr»»- chest. It has always don* nu> *reat *ood. It !• certainly a rao*t wonderful (*>ukh mell ctaj." - MU-IIAU. J. nTwiEALD, Madford. yf /4 _ > MBATMUi flyers JS*.sViSsßsr^bazs: For Twenty-one Years Bonanza, Orinoco YRABt: MARK pj one . t 'f*" r ~l*l ' * ,ave >eui standard Cotton and \ • *■ Tobacco guanos in the South— REGISTERED because great care is used in the selection of materials. Ask your dealer for Royster*S F. S. ROYSTRR goods and don't take substitutes GUANO CO., Said to be just as good. See that Norfolk Vi trav ' e ~ mar k' s on ever y bag. Notice. Having qualified as executor to-tlie Will of Klisha Kverett, deeeant l, no tice is hereby given to all persons holding claims again# said estate to pre sent them either to ml or my attorneys for payment or this notice will be plead ed in liar of their recovery. All jierwitis indebted to said estate sre requested to make immediate payment. This January 31, 1906. JAM KS A ICVKKKI'Xyv • rixec'utor. Winston & Kverett, \ii> s. 2-9-6t Notice. By virtue of an order uf the Superior Onm of M.irliu cmiit> in n special pro ceding entitled John Dunei Biggnguar diutl, ''l tls exparU', i witl sell for cash at the court house in .V* 11 llauistoli, N. C., 011 Monday, March 19, 1916, at public au.ti.im. the following land, to-wit: A tract ol land adjoining Mviiian Bnwen mi the not tli, David iiai risou ou the east, Reuben Rogers-ill on tliu south ami Noah Robersoii 011 the west. containing twen tv-tive acres more or less, ami known us lot No. in the division ot the llenj i -111111 II >well la 1 among bis heirs at law. This February 13. lyo Wiikhi.kk Martin, i-lfi-41 Commissioner. Notice. By oriler of the Superior Court of Mai tm county entered lu the special pto : ceeding there pending, entitled Richard U. Norlleet 1 nil others, ex parte to. the court, 1 w ill sell for cash to ttic highest bidder at the court house door in Wil lininstou, N. C., a. 12 M.,tn Moihlhv, March 19th, 1906, the following tra. t ol land In Mirrtin ■. |J _' v - n'l' 1,11 of th- Joseph J. Williams "Uome l't iu; ' which wasjtUutted to J| urv .r I'lUtU lit -me laiul iTivisioti~Bad among the heirs at-law of Mrs. Charity" Pagil, which is l,ot No. 7 of said land division which see for better description and which land contains 91' a acres more or h;ss. This February I tail, itf.nd, Francis d. Winston, Coutlniss loner. Winston Kverett, Attys. Notice. Having qualified as adiuinisttutor upoit the estate of James K, Moore, deceased, notice is hereby given to all (lentous hold ing claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned for payment on or before th first das of February, 1907, or this notice will be pleaded iu bur .a recovery. All jaSrsons Hide tit ed t» said estate are requested to m ike immediate payment. This Feb. 13, 190*1. WliMil.KK M variN, j-16-ot Administrator. : Notice. Having qualified as administrator of the estate of the late Pill*, de ceased, tilts is to give ttotice to nil partus holding accounts to present them at once •r this notice will l»e plead iu l>**r of their recovery. All person* holding claims against the estate will settle litem at once This Feb. i, 1906 Joshua pitts, Adm'r. Winston 9l Everett, Attn. a 9-to Notice. Having qualified as administrator U]ion the estate of l.uke Council, deceased, this is to notify all persons holding claims against said estate to present them for pajinent on or be l ore the first lav of K 'bru'iry, 1917, or this not ee will ,1a- plead in bar ol Uieir reeoverv All ] ;iersoiis indebted to said estate will please make immediate payments. This February 1, 190 ft. iIORKY i-96t Administrator. To Cure a Cold in One Day !■ Two to Laxative Bromo Quinine *n Million boies sold In past I 2 months. 8p THE NEW \::k ry v:i cn:c:?:*L UV.T ':. 12 EJ CASES SYBSP nq EHHSDYSIAXATIY ENIOM E Y^IAR k Huns tsß Bmls iLJ Best far CtiifrM Mi & BIG REDUCTION In Clothing Wright's Underwear ' $1.72 1-2 a Suit r Don't forget our com plete and up-to-date JSgff ft jj line of Millinery and /j IT~ i Ladie's Fancy Dress 1 1 jPjf h We guarantee to plenrtc ill,' no ~ ' J | Very Respectfully, G. D. Garstarphen dc Go. THE MEN Sf ' l-'sti-Mt'ti Ms!"-, 't y w it ms men of all physiques, can" .liTnTe HUUfiliH'iory ,-i '• ctio . • I their SuiSug and Summer needs, 1ro»n the well known ;is-urtincut of M ele-io-Measure Material ' shown by I HOi Si; & UUOS.. iVh»keiH of (he Celebrated _ Hi£h-Art Clothing. Their exjv rt, fuller wi I lie at our ntore MX/SDAY ami TUBS DA V, March 12th ami lo> 1 1 ami will be glad to receive your 1 orduri Kuultie-s 'fit, Superior Workmanship and Up-to-Date St> le.v i J. L. ' VVil ininsUm, North Carolina. a-a-6w D. S. Pres. C. 11, Carstarphen, V.-Pres. P. F. Pagan, Cashier. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF : The Farmers and Merchants Bank AT * 11,1.1 AMSTON, N. C. K 1 At close of business* Feb. 6th, 1906. RESOURCE-}. LIABILITIES. Loaus and discounts $72,103.64 Capital stock $35,000.00 Furniture and fixtures ~6,2 56 7 ' Dividends unpaid 18.00 n Due trom banks 25,.>69.23 ifcposits 72,986.62 ' Cash 011 hand 5,245,09 Notes & bills re-discount'd 5,280.18 K • ' il $104,250.52 ' $104,250.52 ■t Xlio banners ami Merchant Bank l>e({«n business on June 1, 1905, with a paid I in uap.tal of f 15.0u0.0u. On January 1, 1906, a dividend of six per cent, of the || capital stock w is declared au4 paid to the stockholders. On February 1 the capi « tal »U« k .f the Dante vas tacreiwf to #15,000.00. W'c are now in better position than ever to accommodate our customers, and we rcv,«eU'ully solicit account-- We give special attention to collections and remit for same promptly on ltuwleVate terms. Three per cent, interest paid on time de jiOJ.lt*