Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Sept. 4, 1908, edition 1 / Page 7
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| M——ittfi i i r——— Free from Alcohol , Since May, 1906, Ayer's Sar- |saparilla has been entirely free ■ from alcohcl. If you are in Ipoor health, weak, pale, nerv jlous, ask your doctor about tak ing this non-alcoholic tonic and alterative. If he has a better medicine, take his. Get the best always. This is our advice. ~ We publish our formulas y a W« banish alcohol Ad 1 r from our medioin— tiijers A sluggish liver means a coated tongue, • bad breath, and constipated bowels. The question is, "What is the best thing to do under such circumstances ? " Ask your doctor if this is not a good answer: "Take laxative doses of Ayer's Pills." —by tha J. C. Armr 00.. lowoll, KIU. Cough Caution y«Tgr. puum»elT«r>er potion iuuilups*. Ifroq •oufb—eyeo from » iln.plo cold oalr—>oo should always soothe, and CM* the Irritated broo. chlal tuba*. Don't blindly suppress it with m stupefying potion. It'i sarnnae how *om» thins* finally oome about. For twenty yean Dr. Sham dm constantly warned people not to take cough mixture* or preemptions contolulng Opium. Chloroform, or similar poisons. Apd now —a llttVs lata though— (>hi*toss says "Put It on the label, It poisons are In your Cough Mixture." Good I Very good 11 Hereafter forthlsrery rmsonmotheri. and others, should Insist on haying Dr. Blioop I Cough Cure. Mo poison ioarks on Dr. Hhoop'e labels—and none in the medicine, else It must by law be on the label. And It'* not only safe, but It Is mid to be by thoee that knowtt best, a truly r» markable cough remedy. Take no chance then, particularly with your children. Insist on haying Dr. Bhoop't Cough Cure. Compare carefully the Dr. Shoop package with other* and note the difference. No poison mark* there! You caa always be oa the safe side by demanding Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure "MX DEALEWff' DR. J. A. WHITE, DENTIST Office Main St. Phone 93 W. E. Warren' J. S. Rhodes Drs. Warren & Rhodes PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Office in BIGG'S DRUG STORE 'Phone No. 29. Burrous A. Critcher Attorney at Law Office: Wheeler ■ Martin's Offise. Phono 23. WILLIAMBTON, N. C. P. D. T inston S. J. EvoreM Winston ®. Everett t Attorneys at Law WILLI AM STON, N. C. •Phone M..- - w - Mon ay to Loan S. Atwood Newell LAWYER Office formerly occupied by J. D. Biggs. Phone No. 77. WILLIAMSTOtj N. C. A. R. DUNNING Attorney at Law. ROBERSONVILLE, N. C. HUGH B.YORK, M. D. Microscopy, ) Electrotherapy, > Specialties. X-Ray Diagnosis ) Office: Chase's Drug Store. •vricK Hot an. 8 to 10 * 7 to 9 r. v. » Pboue Wo. C 3. Night Xtione No. fit. "■ i ■ ■ KILL Tin COUCH I iss CURE TH« LUMPS w,th Dr. King's New Discovery for c&gr JSS «. AMP ALL TMHOAT MP LBW6 TSOOBLEi. OUABAMTMtD iiTWyiflWM am MOWMY BJONNRPAIX I NtMt*adM%«M*tßatioshiatiJ/. I ■ WHSejgeasaeCaas* _ g I m—mi ■arrow l d. c. | t ' * I NORTH STATE HAPPENINGS Occurrences Interest Glenjisd From All Secticua of the Busy Ta.r Heel State - i - "* . . 4 ■ t'V Labor Day Proclamation. Raleigh, Special.—Governor Glenn a proclamation urging the people of North Carolina to observe Monday, September the 7th, as "a day of rest, recreation and thanks giving throughout the entire State.' 1 In this executive paper the -Governor refers to the drastic effects of tue panic in other sections of the coun try and the providence that has > saved North Carolina from its worst i effects. The proclamation is as follows: I State of North Carolina I Executive Department, , Raleigh. Labor Day Proclamation: \ Whereas, the General Assembly of j North Carolina has set apart the first 1 Monday in September of each year , as Labor Day, and made it a legal tio;iia> : Ni.w therefore, to the end that said day shall be properly observed, I I, R. B. Glenn, Governo* of the State . »f North Carolina, in accordance, I jwith- law, and with the earnest de sire that all peoole shall recognize this day, do recommend and urge that Monday, September 7th, 1903, be observed as a day of rest, recrea tion and thanksgiving throughout the eqtiro State. I further direct that all the State offices be closed on that day, and nil work on the part of State employees cease, and request, as tar as possible, that all business in the State be sus pended, to the end that is niacin deed be a day of rejoicing and wst to all. —both those who toil with their hands and those who toil with their brains. While during the year 1907, and I continuing even unto today, a severe ' panic has tome upon our country, and deprived many who toil from ob taining wbrk and making a living, still when we see how little this panic has affected our own State, or causedour employes to lose work, in j comparison with the suffering and r want of work both in the Western and Eastern States .and while we regret that even one person is de prived of an honest livelihood, still 1 we rejoice that God has blessed our State and comparatively spared us 1 many ills thai come from poverty, and want of employment. This La- 1 ■bor Day should be one of good cheer both to Capital and Labor, and should he so enjoyed y as to bring these two great forces, closer to-j gether, each helping the other, thus fulfilling the Master's commandment of "loving one another." There is no cla?s *of people in the S>ate that more deserve the respect and love of all, than those who labor with their hands, and the great les son should be taught to all on La bor Day, that it is not the kind of work you do that degrades you, hut the way you do the work and that a person who does .the most menial service and does it well, is as de serving of praise as those who per form great deeds. Let us therefore be thankful to God on this Laboj- Day, for our health, and many other undeserved mercies b Cf| towed upon lis, and let us in return ,to. Hjjn wlyj .does so much for us, on this day resolve to encourage all who toil and do what we can to add to their comfort and success. Let us do "itliing on this day in violation of lr ", either human or di vine, but let the day be so spent as'' to strengthen and encourage us in our daily work, and make us re spect and recognize the rights of all mankind. In testimony whereof T have hereunto set my hand and caused | the great seal of the State to be affixed, this, the 2Gth day of August, 100S, in the year of our Boy Fatally Burned at Germanton. Winston-Salem, Special—Neva was received here that the 3-year-old son of Robert Bades, of GermantOn, this county, was fatally burned there Fri day afterrioon. The lad had been left at his home in charge oj. a broth er, who left him for a few minutes, On his return the boy was writhing in flames and physicians say he can not live. _ > DRMILESANTIPAIN PILLS 1 F - -£A FIDCFFI > / '^L R .. \ | J> NEURALGIA. ' \|- . . ,>, /F SCIATICA. •". B\BEHBTO||B|W \| They Relieve Pain '.RHEUMATISM. ' I|,^^LML»UP Y /&Y QUICKLY, LEAVING NC. I BACKACHE. / L. \3 N .V/ ' J| BAD AFTER-EFFECTS PAIN INCHCST . DISTRESS IN ,/ jBL *S7r Take ONE .| 25 Doses f j S?EE°P!SS / #/ of 'he Little Tablets | 25 Cents ' [SLEEPLESSNESS ' ' Tl/ ANOTHE PjVIN IS GONE. $ Never Sold in Bui! . 1 * - * *?J//7/,7/;77//7J/7/;;/////W- //>* Lord one thousand nine hundred and eight, ami in the ©ae hun dred and thirty-third year of our American indeoendence. R. ii. GLENN. • By the Governor: A. H. Airing! on, Private Secretary. Pish and Oyster Oonvontion OYer. Morohead City, Special.—A very enthusiastic meeting of the Fish and Oyster Convention closed at More head under the chairmanship of State Geologist Joseph Hyde Pratt, with Mr. W. J. Tate, of Currituck, as secretary. A great deal of work was accomplished. Three sessions | were held daily and practically every i feature of these important intorest* : was thoroughly discussed. The work jof the convention was principally | along the lines of deciding whet to i recommend to the next session of the | Legislature for embodiment in a i general fish law and some very valu ; able recommendations are the out come. The convention recommended favorable legislation on the question of the cultivation of the oyster, ap proved the establishment and the work of the fish commission, with recognition of its value. Theh ques ' tion of general legislation was dis cussed and favorably received and a close search for certain commercial fishes was recommended. The mini mum size of mesh that can bo legally used in certain kinds of nets was ]»a;-3od on, and it was decided that a more- open passage way for the fish going Up the sound and rivers would ; ter.d to conserve the industry, there by increase production. This applies more particularly to Croatan and Al bemarle sounds, and the streams empyting therein. About fiftv mem bers were present and while differ ences of opinion developed the meet ing was-enthusiastic, harmonious and optimistic spirit prevailed throuijh ' out the convention, afforded for the first time an opportunity for repre ' sontatives of all the sections of the , Stato in which commercial fishing .is practised together, know each others' needs, and thrash out the , whole complicated subject in a man ner that cannot. fail to he produc j five cf much good to the State at ; large, Prof. T. Gilbert Pearson, sec retary of the Audubon Society, made a most interesting talk on the con servation of the natural resources of ! the State, Which vied with the ehair : man's address as a valuable eontribu , tion. Better Conditions at Raleigh. Raleigh, N. C., Special.—Flood con ditions in this section are much more hopeful and with a big falling of? in the rain there is a rapid receding of waters from the over flowed lowlands. liailroad bridges are found in much better condition than railroad men flared hope would be while the raging floods were surging around and over t'hem. The Seaboard Air Line found the bridges between here and Hamlet all right, save some repairs that could be done in a few hours. Consequently the main line track from Raleigh to Hamlet was put back into service. Fabius H. Bnsbee Dead. Seattle. Wash., Special.—After an illness of six days, Fabius Haywood Busbee, a prominent lawyer of Ral eigh, N. C., who was in Seattle to at tend the ron vent ion of the American t'nr Association of which he was a member of the general council, died of Blight's disease at the Minor Hos pital. Mr. Busbee was f»0 years old. [ He was admitted to the bar of North Carolina in 1S(!9. During the Civil war he was a lieutenant in the Seven ty-first North Carolina Infantry. For Slander. Wilson, Special.—Wednesday af ternoon before Magistrate W. R! Wood. Mr. Andrew Whitley was ar raigned on the charge of slandering the good name of Mrs. Celia Nichols. Both parties ar« residents of Spring Hill township. After hearing the evidence the 'Squire bound Mr. Whit ley over to court, where a jufy will decide what is to he done with him. THE GREAT FLOOD LOSS. Fuming Lands Damaged More Than A Million boilers. The recent heavy rains have not only done an enormous amount of damage to crops, bridges, roads and railroads, but according to a esti mate made by W. W. Ashe, State Forester of North Carolina, the up land farming lands have been wash ed to an extent of more than a mil lion dollars, the damage being heav iest in those scetions where the couii try is most hilly and where the rain fall was most concentrated . These estimates, based on the amount of soil in the water of the rivers, as shown from previous rec ords of freshets of the same height indicate that more than 1,500,000 tons of soil were washed from the pied mont region of North Carolina dur ing the past week; more than 500,- 000 tons from the farms of northern Georgia, 100,004 tons from upper South Carolina, and 400,000 tons from the hills of Virginia. Analyses have shown that more than one-third af the earth which muses the mud iincss ol the rivers during Ihe high freshets is humus which is undoubt edly wa.-h?d chiefly from the favms. At one iiollar a ton for this humus, I which is le-s than it can be replaced for, The loss to these States in im poverishment of the soil exceeds sl,- 200,000. This is a loss which is huge ly overlooked and under-estimated by the firmer, because it i a loss which takes plaiv so constantly, hi the ag gregate, it is so enormous that it is ane of the chief, if not the chief rea son for the poverty of so many southern soils, keeping them depleted af their h.mus, or the mandrel por tion of the soil. This is a loss to' which iioi'.hern soils are not so sub ject, on at count of the lighter rain falls ami the more gentle character. The ran fall at ltatcigli and at many other prints in middle North Car olina exceeded 12 inches in four days. In pails iff upper South Carolina it was 1.") inches in three days, while more than 4 inches fell at many places during one day. Such preci pitation is tropical in character but it is not uncommon in the south. It is necessary for the farmers of the south il they/wish to preserve their hillside lands to employ not only the same means which are used at 'the north but to take extra means of protection besides, so as to lessen ex cessive erosion, deep plowing, plenty of h unins and where the slopes are 1 at all steep and cultivated crops are raised, level terracing besides. But hillside ditches should not be usr;d. The policy of the farmers should l»' to have small cleared areas, cultivate more intensculy, so that then? shall never he any land idle without a cover crop on it to hold the soil, and protect land which is not in cultivate more intensely, so that There ire more than 2,000,000 acres of jdio farming land from Virginia to Georgia which should be planted in timber, if for no other reason than lo prevent its washing away, though the timber on it will make it eventu ally a good investment besides. CCT: pany of Infantry and Regimen tal Band for Grociufooro Fair. 'ireensboro, S,pecinl-.—lt .appears that Greensboro's centennial eelebra l lion is to fare better than was ex-1 peeled at the hands of the War I)e-j pariinent. Several months" ago Sen ator Overman - and a committee from the centetyiial board of managers se cured from the department a promise* that a troop of cavalry and the ma rine Hind would be sent to Green horn, and since that lime the chief of '•taff hns agreed to send a com pany of infantry and u regimental band, and it is not improbable that art.llery will be sent ulso. Senator Ov'iman, who has shown a deep in tercut in the centennial, and who has been of material assistance to the board of managers, is in receipt of a letter from Maj. Gen. .J. F. Bell, chief of laff giving this pleasing informa tion. Many Lives Nearly Lost. Try on, Special, l'a-sengers OS tram No. 13, westbound, on the Southern Railway had a narrow es cape from death hero Saturday. On car is derailed and overhangs a steej embankment. ' Outside of a seven shake-up no one was iii'ured. I Every Month 1 ■ writes Mrs. E. Fournier of Lake Charles, La., "I V ■ used to suffer from headache, backache, side ache, I ■pressing-down paing, and could hardly walk. AtH ■ last I took Cardui, and now I feel good all the H CAROUI I It Will Help Yon "I Cardui is a medicine that has been found to act I ■ upon the cause of most women's pains, strengthen-1 ■ ing tho weakened womanly organs, that suffer be-1 ■ cause their work is too hard for them. It is not a pain 4 'killer," but a true female! ■ remedy, composed of purely vegetable ingredients, I ■ perfectly harmless and recommended for all sick wo-1 ■men, old or young. Try Cardui. Women's Relief. ■ AT ALL DRUG STORES Kodol For Indigestion Our Guarantee Coupon If, after using a |i.«o bottle of Kodol, you Can honestly say it hat not benefited yon, we will refund your monry. Try Kodol today on tliii guarantee, hill oiut and lign the follow ing. present it to the dealer at the time of purchase. If It fails to satisfy you return the bottle to the dealer from whom you bought it, and we will refund your money. Town ' State Sign her" -CfctTfclaOui ' DigestsWhatYouEat And Makes the Stomach Sweet R. C. Do WITT «■ CO«« CbICMO, LU. For Mf»V* by & R. Higg*, TOBbvu sU»n, Blade, Joint & Co., lintnilthn. D. D. Stawla R. H. Lanitsr Stawls&Lanier Builders of Carts, Buggies, Wagons and Tobacco Trucks, and repairers of All Kinds of Farm Implement! En gines and Boilers. HORSE SHOEING A SPECIALTY Ouf Work Guaranteed We Also Run « Snw and Griat Mil) and Cotton Gin. Stawls & Lanier Everetts, N. C. , Very. Serious It is a very aerioua matter to ask for one medicine and have the wrong one given you. For this reason we urge you in buying to be careful to get the genuine— BLACK-DRAUGHT I Liver Medicine g The reputation of this old, relia- K Me medicine, for constipation, in- ■ digestion and liver trouble, ia firm- / ly established. It does not imitate Other medicines. It is better than jC otheaa, or it would not be the fa- I write liver powder, with a larger | •ale than all others combined. aotp IM TOWN Fa I i YOU CAN EASILY OP ERATE THIS TYPE WRITER YOUR SELF. * Don't worry your anything by hand JbUfljllW that takes his time to L \ n, ake out—that may wlia «fcN. leave him In doubt— -4 thnt he can't easily And don't fill out legal papers or card nwmos—or make out accounts or hotel menus In your own handwriting. It lo.>ks bad, re flects on your standing, makes peopio think you can't alTord a stenographer, and Is some times ambiguous. You can write out your letters-make out ! an abstract 1111 In an Insurance policy—enter , your card memos make out your accounts, or hotel menu-or do any kind of writing you need, on A ir si/.u or thickness ot paper, and Rt'AC'B any way you want on Tf?e. A OLIVER JVpe\Arrrfo&i THE STANDARD VISIBLE WRITER. You can write any of these things yourself if you do not happen to have a stenographer. For you ran easily learn, with & little practice, to write just as rap idly, and as perfectly, as an expert operator on the OLIVER. Hwause the Oliver is the simplified typewrit er. And you can sec every word you write. About SO per cent, more durable than any other typewriter, because it has about SI) per cent. 1 ss wearing points than most other type writers. 80 per cent, easier to write witK than these other complicated, intri cate machines thnt require *4iinmar ing" • technical knowledge long practice and special skill to onerate. Then machines which cannot be ad justed, to any special space-r-with which it is impossible to write, ab stract*, insurance policies, odd sizo documents except you buy expensive special attachments requiring experts to operate. You can adjust the OLIVER to any reasonable space—-you can write on any reasonable size or thickn&M of paper, right out to the very edge, without the aid of any expensive at tachment or special skill, and your work will be neat appearing, legible and clear. For the OLIVER is the Typewriter for (he doctor, lawyer, the insurance agent, the merchant, the hotel pro prietor—or any i:iun who does his own writing. Write us now for our booklet on the simplified features of the OLIV ER. THE OLIVER TYPEWRITER CO. The Oliver Typewriter Building CHICAGO, ILL.
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 4, 1908, edition 1
7
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