Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / July 6, 1906, edition 1 / Page 3
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A lUlle love, a little wealth; A little home for you and me. It's all 1 ask except good heal h. Which comes with Rocky Ifount » • - .*'? Tn. _ - . S. R. Wings WiJlianistoo. awl Nrl so . A Ha^mm.^obersonville. The lawyers will undertake to see that young Mr. Thaw still has abundant opoortuuUy for getting tid of his mom y. Best Time to Get WelL AH MMM CM Be Urlvea Oat d the System New. Right now is the season of the year to get rid ol the bhtod, liver and kidney affections that have been troubling you. You need building up nuw in order to stand the strain of the hot weath er ol summer. Let Rheumatism, Sciatica. Gout. Catarrh, Indigestion or Constips tion run through these months ami tliey became chrouic and hang on 3". for f ars. A regular course of RHEUM A CiUfc Uken at the preset! time wit. thoiougtiiy cleanse the blood lone up tlie atoutac set the .iver and kidneys to doing .heir normal work again, and will Ituild up the entire systau... Wlnle it u) the most wonderful blood purifier in the wond. yet KIIEU VIACIUK IS a purely V«i;ei alde preparation . tfi.it operates through t ninety uatui.tl methods. It has been lotv.il ou the delicate stomach of a baliy without the slightest harm. iK-tter get a bottle today and start to get well KtihUM.vCll>£ has cuied hundreds of stubborn cases after all other remedies, not ed physicians and even the great Johns tlopkins Hospital have fail ed. KIIfcUMACIDE has cured thousands of cao& and we believe it will cure you. Your druggist sells it. KHEUMACIUK "gets at the joints from the inside" and ' makes you well all over." bold by S. R. U'Kg®. Notice of Dissolution. To all whom these presenta may cume —Greeting: Whereas, It appears to m> satisfaction, by duly authenticated rec ord of the proceeding* for the voluntary dissolution thereof by the unanimous consent of all the Stockholders, deposit ed in my office, that the Yurk-liayes Company, a corporation of this Suite, whose principal office is situsted on Maiu street, in the town of Williauistoa, coun ty ot Martin, Slate of North Carolina. (J. G. Hayes being the ageut therein and IS charge thereof, upon whom process may be served), has complied with the requirements of Chapter 21, Keviaal of 1905, entitled "Corporations", prelimi nary to the issuing ot' this Certificate of Dissolution. Now, Therefore, I. J. Bryan Grimes, Secretary of tbe State ol North Carolina, do hereby certify that the said corpora tion did, oa the 18th day of May, 19U6, file in my office a duly executed and at tested consent in writing to the dissolu tion of bald corporation, executed by all the stockholders thereof, which said con sent and the record oi the proceedings aforesaid arc now on file in my said office as provided by law. In Testimony Whereof, 1 have hereto set uiy bain) uul affixed my official seal, at Ksleigh, this 2HUI day of May, A. 1>„ 1906. J. lIKYAN CxiMKS, 4-Mt Secretary of State. Backy Mountain Tea Nuggets A Buy Mia fee lay Mi. OokUa HwlU and lnwj Tlfv. A ladlftlsa. Uw • lid "? ■ g n ?r6 MsJwtfwf H firm, a reals • bn* (MaiMla by ll nuira Dam Commit, Mntim. Wis. GOLDEN NUMETt FOR SALLOW PEOPLE TO OURg A COLD IN ONI OAV Take LAX ATI VB BROMO Qainiae Tab lets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. B. W. OROVH'S signature on the box. 15c. The Triadfc Shaving Parlor OVER J. W. WATTS & CO. Sharp Razors, clean Towels and Good Work Gnarnnteed. Cleanliness Our MOTTO Thanking one and ail for your past patronage and hoping for • continuance of the .same, I remain, . -.Yours to serve, J. H. HYMAN, Prop. /LW\ /HARPER\ ( KEHTUCKY \ (WHISKEY) lOMnii Government's Endeavor to Make Them Good Citizens, LAND DEAUNG LAWS. Lasses Expire at tad of rivt Years— Plepenaatlsw of Proceeds of Sale*, ■mmlm Avwrae to Mortoage* and Note* Considers Carefully Before iaMag Into Contracts. Probably the moat efficient system ta the world of protecting tlie Indiau to Ms righto la Maintained by the Uaioa ladlaa agency at which administers the laws of Cou- giass and the regulations of the Sec retary of the latsrior for the purpose of keeping the fullbiood In possession of his worMly goods, says the Kansas City JowaaL Every toot of land the fullbiood setls mast be alienated with the consent of the Interior Depart meaL either through the removal ot tie restrictions or the posting of his la ad to bs sold to tho highest bidder through the Creek land aalea division ul the agency. The fullbiood cannot nil nor Incumber his homestead lor a period of twenty-five years, and can only alienate the other portion of his allotment with the consent and under the aupervialon of the Oovern ase.. He la not allowed to lease nls land for agricultural purposes for a peiiod of over Ave years, and he cannot lease It for mineral purposes sxitpt with the spprovsl ot the Inte rlur department and upon proof tielng aubuilttad that he 1a receiving ade quate compenaatlon for the lease. At present the only fullbioode who tau mil their land at *ll are citlmni of* the Creek Nation. In the Chero kee. Choctaw and Chickasaw nations the delivery of deeds to allotters has nut l«ea completed. and therefore Indian landa there are not yet alien able. At prefpnt from &.000 to 8,000 acres of land a,month are sold through the Creek land sales department of the Union agency at prices ranging from to fro an acre for raw upland ■arms. By this system the fullblood Indian gats the greatest poaalble protection Ha must first Ale a petition with the Indian agent (or the sale of his land. He mast stipulate how much land he deal res to aall, and what he Intends to do with the money. He Is also aaked about his ace, physical and fi nancial condition and ail of those things are taken Into consideration by the Government before action Is taken upon his petition. It the Government believes it la to the beat Interest of the Indian to sell a portion of bis surplus holdings, his laud is posted tor sals and sealed bids are received upon k. At the expiration of sixty days theae bids are opened and the land la sold to the highest bidder. If, how ever. the Secretary of the Interior bo -1 levee that the compensation Is not large enough, the bids are rejected and the land readvertlsed. It would naturally be supposed the protection to the fullblood would stop here, but It hsa only begun. The Gov ernment seat ascertains through the Indian agency bow much of the money the Indian owes, If any, and how much ot the money he receives from the sale of hla land It Is necessary fur him to have Immediately. This Is paid over to him in caah, usually a small auni, and the rest of k Is held In trust tor htm at the local United States depoaltory In Muskogee. According to the rules of the Secretary, he Is al lowed to draw upon this sum at the rale of |H a month. The fullblood, before he is allows to sell hla land, is usually compelled to promise that he will use most ot the money In building Improvements upon his homestead. Aa soon as he re ceives hla grst payment he Is Instruct ed to go ahead and have the Improve ments aade. He secures carpenters and has buildings erected, and some times has a few acres of his homestead broken for cultlvaUon. When It la all done a Government Inspector goes to the place and Inspects tbs Improve ments and ascertains If they were properly made. The fullblood Is then required to send the bills submitted by the contractors and others who have done the work, as well as the bills for material, to the Union agency, where they are reviewed, and If the Indian haa been overcharged they are cut down. They are then approved and paid out of the funds realised from th» sale of the Indian's land which are being held In trust for him. If any ono has a bill or note against the Indian representing a debt contracted before tbe land is aold, these are sent to tbs Union agency, where they are review ed before the money Is checked out to the Indlsn so hs can settle the obli gation. In going ahead and engaging bis own labor, buying the material and super intending the work of having bis Im provements made, ha la given all the advantage of managing his own af fairs without being subjected to dan ger of being grafted In the proceeding. Indian agency official* say that a nil I blood seldom breaks his promlne to use and make Improvement* as agreed when be Is allowed to alienate bis la ad. Another admirable trait in the fullblood |a that he seldom sends to the agency for a monthly Install ment of the money doe him In advance of the stipulated time, and If he is not actually In need of the money he al lows the payments to run over for sev eral months without drawing, thereby receiving Interest. He Is also becom ing averse to mortgages and notes, and It Is a much more difficult matter to persaade him to contract a debt than M was a few years ago. A bird In the hand Is worth a don aa egg* In the Incultstor. Children like Kennedy's Laxa tive Honey and Tar, The pleas •ntest and best cough syrup 10 take because it contains no opiates Sold by S K Biggs. We do not know whether it is a feign ct terror In Russia, or mrt, bat H is certainly too strong to be called an occassional shower. MUSICAL ELECTRICAL MACHINE. Generates Currents That Make a Tel ephone a Full Band. Another electrical wonder has been i ITCH to the world. Dr. Tbaddcua Lai. ill. in a dingy shop at Holyoke. Mass., after twelve years of unre mitting toll, succeeded In finally per fecting what Is considered by elec trical engineers to be one of the moat remarkable devices la the history ot electricity. In this Uttle shop there now stands a 2tw-ton electrical machine called by lta inventor the telhannonlum, which combines In Itself the mualcal power of all known Instruments, and besides this can send Its music over telephone wires for hundreds of miles In all directions Any telephone subscriber within Its radius can be supplied with music In great or small amounts, aa his feelings dictate. "Future Paderewakls." says tne Kloetrlcal World, ''sitting In New York may be heard In 10.000 places miles apart, aad In each place the criminal effect is heard." The real wonder and novelty or Or. CahiU'a Invention Ilea in the fact thai the telhannonlum does not, like the phonograph, reproduce music, but actually makes it, and In an entirely, t.ow way. What the operator plays on sre a number of little specially ar inrigcd dynamos. These are so con nected to the keyboard, which Is ar ranged like that of an organ, that the (Vfire-'sion of a certain note, A i»r instance causes a current In tho truns luittlng wires which produce a vibra tion In the telephone receiver nt tho other end of the line Just like that following the playing of A on a piano. The person with the receiver In tus e.'ir hence hears the A as If It were played upon a piano. In other words, the note le not actually made until ths current roaches the receiver at the end of the wire. 80 that thin lit tle two-Inch contrivance la the actual mtiHto producer ot tho telharmonlum. It Is wonderful enough that any sort of a tune can bo played on such a simple device, but whoa Dr. Catuil state* that any note of any quality and timbre— violin, fluto, piano, organ, clarinet, etc.—can be accurately re produced by the telharmonlum. and, further, that the combined harmonies ot theae various Instruments, as they occur In bands and orchestras, can almi be accurately produced by a sin gle performer at the keyboard, one's wonder becomes perilously near to skepticism. Those claims, however, seem to be *ell authenticated, and It la snnouun «■! that In about throe months one of the new machines Is to be set up In this city. If this In tho rase, tne public will soon be able to tost Dr Cahlll's claims. The felharmonlum must, obviously, be a very complete and hence expensive machine. The I 'one at present In Or. Cahlll's Holyoke laboratory Is said to have cost about $200,000. Tills exocesslvo cost Is seen to be of no groat Importance when it Is romen bered that one machine will proba bly be able to supply from 7, 000 to 10,000 subscribers. 11l receiving tine electrical tnuslo mie ordinary telephone receiver Id «cmwpd into the end of a born, like that used on the phonograph. Tho music in wild to be loud and clnar. one reoeivor tUi ln« a good slaed room, and ontlrn'jr free from the disagreeable ra*plng and scraping accompaniments so ooui unn In the phonograph reproductions. Lord Kelvin during a visit to thin country la said to have examined and hrnn greatly Impressed by ur. Cahlll'a Instrument. A local eloctrlc.il engineer wbo baa been up to lloivone and heard Ibe telharmonlum descrllies IU tonce a* beautifully clear and pleas ant to the ear. Aa to the genuineness and revolutionary character of the dis covery, therefore, there aeemt) no t'oubt. The current lasue of the Kieo trlcal World speaks of It us "the birth of a new art," one of "tho no table achievements of our moloi n day," the "creation of anutbet grout electrical Industry." The Growth of Children. Until the age of eleven or twelvo boys are taller and heavier than girls. Then tho girls for tho next few years surpass the boys both In weight and belght; hut the boys soon overtake and pass them. The sons of non-labor ing parents are taller and beavlor than those of laboring parent* The heads of girls are a little rounder than thone of boys, and always a little smaller. It has been found that children grow but little from the end of November to the end of March; grow tall but In crease little In weight from March till August, and Increase mainly In wolgni anu little In belght from August to November. —RBcbsnge. Balloon Cure For Consumptives. A patent has boon taken out in Australia for an Improved niothod ot preventing and curing consumption and other kindred diseases. The pa tient*, are placed In rooms connected by aluminum tubes leading to captive balloons at altitudes of 6.000 feet to 8,000 feet. The balloons are construct ed of sheet aluminum, And are strung on cables of aluminum bronze ropes, to which the tubes are attached by Lands at Intervals The cable and at tached tube pa** through axial tubea In the lower balloon*, tho air opening being at the highest point. A circula tion of pure air Is maintained by ex hausting the air from the rooms. Ton are never crowded off of the ntrtigbt and narrow path. Kennedy's Laxative Honey and Tar is the original laxative cough syrup and combines the (ju.-ililics necessary to relieve the cough and purge the system of cold. Con tains-no opiate's, . Sold by S. R. Biggs. Dan Lamont left a fortune of nearly four anl a half mil Hons be ing private secretary to a presi dent is a good start for a young man. ".v"-': 1 ■ * ■ L. . CURES AFTER THE DOCTOR^^AVE FAILED Wfe^aEyMSg of vL nS ald 4 nwr H St »h OS «j l4^' !? \?* world, had failed. Rheumacide cured Ausfin Percollo. JS? s 3? ad * the J Norfolk Va.. contractor, aftor they had spent large sums on othi remedies and the doctor had given up hope. Rheumacide cured Mrs. Mary Welborn, of High Point N'(? Almost. Miracte h. ™. Babbitt Ch i I r EMI lon. S. C, AMK is. • 5"f t **». of Atl(lns. Vs.. after the most famous New York specialist failed i« i tnak rkru- in ?. r, « S SI/ , k!i 6uf *f Is the latest discovery of medi- Sf tK bJSJd s f eep »f" Jf* TX T % and poi«»ns out lo ™ it rnntinurd io ernw ®J *"• Dl ©©d, It operates by purely natural methods, does not Injure tha EES, Afr ,"o r X«'P a c„ h uia ; VS fcfe mo * t *•»«•*• «t©m»oh, and builds up the entire system. J /O/ PHD r O rsS.^j hT te«»i__ _ *-X, li II n r X MifoYJfri/l/ w w "*■ ® 1,0 mp cood. untii Dr j. Mm /Msm jmJm MMM MM JmM M KwiQf, of Dillpn. ramp to tec mo He told m f M«lotry»our KIIKUMACIDI" HCEOTWVOLR M" M I'WV •h r>i r il 'V'i n( I"' 1 ' "•«*!• 10 take It. I Selatlaa. nna before toe hrst |>otflc wns ukml up I bee an I Lumbago. SWEEPS ALL POISONS OUT OF THE BLOOD titer 1 began to *£« A purely vegetable remedy that gees right to the Mat of the disease end "** r Tr *«w*. -- lEU'CKtafST"' Tout* truly, JAMKS WILKU, BOBBin CHEMICAL COMPANY. Proprietor,. Bsltfo,ore. d£L~ Sold by 5. R. Biggs THE ENTERPRISE DKAGrurlNur ..JOB DEPARTMENT.. '•* "V * denmpoira area symptom rt the m«t aertoißi trouble which can All Kinds o"Jo/> Printing Done attack a woman, vU: falling of the womb. With this, generally, • come Irregular, painful, scanty or profuse periods, wasteful, weaken- Ing drains, dreadful backache, headache, nervousness, dizziness. Irri tability, tired feeling. Inability to walk, loss of appetite, color and - r ■ „ t iko . , . beauty. Tho cure I* Ine lUtas UflllC A A 111 " le cst or ' tmen WINt |® -ft] 11 111 file Equipped Plant OF wvalllv I ,n Eastern North arolina Woman's Relief Enables us to Turn Out the liest Work for the ... LEAST MONEY * . . that marvelous, curative extract, or natural essence, of herbs, which exerts such a wonderful strengthening Influence on all female organs. '* ww **www Cardul relieves pain, regulates the m«\sc3, stops drains and sttm- Tt 7~ \M\r ■*>. /% C U C ulates the muscles to pull the womb up Into place. fV C IYI \ L d J DCCI lIV 0l J It Is a safe and permanent cure for all female complaints. * WHITS OS A LETTER "I SUFFERED AWFUL PAIN (>OIIIIIIOIXI 1 PFilltill^ In strictest confidence, telling us all Iri my womb nnd ovaries,'' writes Mrs. your troubles. We wfll send freo ad- Naomi Bake, of Webster Groves, Mo., No Order too Small No Order too l^arire vice (In plain sealed envelope). Ad- "and my menses were very painful dress: Ladles' Advisory Dept., The mtd lrre K ulnr. Since taklriK Cardul I No Job too Small Nil loh ton I qrve Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chalta- (eel like a new woman, and do not OUUtll 1>() ,l(»0 l(»0 I nooga, Tenn. —i suffer as I dkl." ~ ~ Letter Meads, Packet Heads, Dennis S. Pres. & Trena T W. fieii. M«r. Asa T. Crnwfonl, Se v .«(/ J liill Heads, Statements, t THE Envelopes, Circulars, Cata- iojfue and Book Work. DENNIS SIMMONS LUMBER CO * „ We are now preparing for lohacco Warehouse . . Manufacturers of . work, send for prices and samples. Kiln Dried North Carolina Pine Lumber, J* «* .* «•* . . . - J ...... Tl >c Enterprise Priming Company, Inc.. PUBLISERS - PRINTERS - BINDERS - ORDERS AND CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED _ Williamston, - North Carolina WILLIAMSTON, N. C. IFOUTS KDNEY CURE I I Will positively cure any ease of Kidney I I or Bladder disease not beyond the reach I I of medicine. No medicine can do more. I FDLEY't KIIINFY fillßF PaM9d ItOM ud Br>vt4 wm > Kitmiaik« nii ■ Wfcfcl W Itlifllbl uunie A. H. Thurnes, Mgr. Wills Cresk Cosl Co., Buffalo, O .wrltsei M l have been afflicted with kldnev and Maddsr trouble for yssrs, pose* strengthens the urinary organs, 55f31-Srj; SS5 I "iCi SffiSfSSTS builds up the kidneys and invig- aJSfc*l orates the whole system. FOLEY'S KIDNET CURE haa done me »I,poo worth of good." IT I a cmnsMTCcn fc WMr R#mfd y oin Com P irt H ■ ■ ICS VUHnnn I btll Ttios. W. Carter, of Aahboro, N.C., had Kidney Trouble «sd aMaiH fiIVBQ _ _a #o© bottle of FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURB offeoted t pdrftotoun, tid B ■WW If OI&RLQ OlfO ana p 1 oUU te My% thoro It no remedy that will compare with It. SOLD 110 KOOMEIDED BY i R. Will jams ton, IN. G,
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 6, 1906, edition 1
3
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