Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / July 15, 1910, edition 1 / Page 6
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tftee Tie Kidneys Are Weekeied by Dyer-Wort Unhealthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. Weak' and unhealthy kidneys are re sponsible for much sickness and suffering, fthercforCj if kidney trouble is permitted to continue, serious re sults are most likely to follow. Your other organs may need at tention, but your kid neys most, because they do most and should have attention first. Therefore, when your kidneys are weak or out of order, you can understand how quickly your en tirebody is affected and how every orga». seems to fail to do its duty. If you are sick or " feel badly," begin taking the great kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. A trial will con vince you of its great merit. The mild and immediate effect of Swamp-Root, the great kidney and bladder remedy, is soon realized. It stands the highest because its remarkable health restoring properties have been proven in thousands 01 the most distress ing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. « Sold by druggists in fifty-cent and one-dol- fSMCSH SSStSS-j lar sizes. You may f |gSjjjjjji[{ have a sample bottle SfltkftSipi] by mail free, also a pamphlet telling you HUUM ot hwump-Koot. how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention this paper when writing to I)r. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Don't make any mis take, but remember the name, Swamp- Root, and don't let a dealer sell you something in place of Swamp-Root—if you do you will be disappointed. J. B. Speller -DEALER IN- Wood, Shingles, Poultry, Eggs and Furs. We carry a bitf lino of Wall Paper. WlllSamston, N. C. W. E. Warren J. S. Rhodes Drs, Warren & Rhodes PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS Of life in BIGQ'S DRUG STORE Vhon« No. 2D. B. York, M. D. Microscopy ) Electrotherapy > Specialties. X-Ray Diagnosis Oft ice: Opposite llalk OFrici IIoobh:—H »•> 10 A. M.; 7to # P it l'bua* No. Mi Nl+rht I'liona No. M jos.li.Saunders, M.D. Physician and Surgeon Day I'lione G3. I hone 67 Williamston.N. C. A. R. Dunning, J, U. Smith Dunning & Smith Attorneys-at-Law. WILLIAM9TON, - - N. 0. ROBKRSONVILLE, N. 0. DR. J. A. WHITE, DENTIST Office Main St. Phone 98 J FTJIT A.Clttcher. Wheeler MarUn. MARTIN & CRITGHER, Attorney* at Law, WILLIAMSTON, - - N. 0 Phouo 23 pPOCOnCDANODCrCNDCD. I^™^! diH»urf "rpuii(o.lur«xp4nt»f«rdatDu fr*er*i»ort. ■ Frt« JTHW, V M>W to oUukin ivttmiU, inuie injtrkx, M cupyriKbt* | N AH COUNTRIES. ■ Jtusixfst dlr+t 1 with H a: Ming lon saves timsjß moHry and often taUnt. PittM tud Mringtmwt Practlc* E"o'u*lv»ly. I Write or cotnfl to u» M •U Blath ftrat, w>. UntUd 3UUI ritmt Oaca.Bj KILLtm COUCH >»» CURE TKK tunes wrrH Dr. King's New Discovery FOR CZiBV* mo ALL TMRCUT AHP LOWB TROUBLES. OUARAJTTXXD OB EOIR BIWHSM I CONFESSING THE SON OF GOD, Matthaw 16:13-28.—July 17. "Thou art the Christ, the Hon of the living God." OCR Muster, wisely and with becoming modesty, hesitated to declare hia own greatness. He allowed hlh actions to speak and to tell to his disciples that be proceeded and came forth from God, and that in the performing of miracles, and particularly in his teachings he w« the finger of God and his mouth-piece. John the Baptist was sent to be hia special fore-runner. It was he that declared that Jesus was "the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world." It was bo that declareth that the Master was so much greater than hluißelf that he was not worthy to stoop dowu and loose the Master's sandals. But after John had borne him witness, testifying, "This to he," nnd had declared that he saw the holy Spirit descending upon Jesus like a dove, and that this was a sign given him whereby he might know his Messlahship, then came the time for the Master to brlug the matter pointedly to the attention of his followers. John had been cast into prison and later had been beheaded. John's prophetic testimony was fulfilled, when he said of Jesus, "He muat in crease, but I must decrease." The mission of Jesus and his Apostles became more prominent every day, and those who had formerly talked about John wero now asking respecting Jesus, whether he was a prophet sent of God, or whether be was the Messiah. Do the rulers Indeed know wbethef thia Is the Messiah or not? Surely "no man could do the miracles which he doeth unless God be with him" In some special manner. Our Lord first Inquired respecting the general opinion of the people con cerning himself. 110 did this, not because of bis, own ignorance, but that he might draw out the thoughts of his disciples. They replied that some thought be was John the Baptist; others supposed he was one of the prophets. The Ideas of the heathen were gradually making biroads upon the Jews. The doctrine of reincarnation, wholly unscrlptural, is suggested in these answer*. All the answers, of conrso, wero wrong, for the prophets were all dead and could not reappear until the resurrection. Then our Lord pointedly put the question to his chosen followers; "Who do ye say that 1 am?" The courageous St. Peter promptly answered as spokesman for the whole company, "Thou art the Christ [Messiah], the Son of tho living God." This was the very answer designed to bo brought forth. It was the truth, but our Lord hesitated to present It, because It would better come /rorn tho disciples themselves and then have his endorsement. Ills answer fo St. Peter was, "Blessed art thou, Simon Bar-Jona, for flesh and blood hath not revealed It unto thee, but my Father which is In heaven." It was not that St, Peter had experienced a special vision or revelation, but such n great spiritual fact as was then under consideration, at that tinna could be appreciated only by those who were specially favored of the Father. Indeed, It is evident that the same princlplo still operates, for we read, "No man can come unto me, except the Father which sent me djpaw him." Our primary drawing and calling Is of the Father up to the time when we nccept ills grace in Christ and make our consecration to do his will arid receive the spirit of adoption into his family as God's children; we are then put Into the school of Christ to learn of him. Let us learn the lesson that the special bless ings always come, not onJy from believing in Christ, but also from confessing to and beforo others. According to the Greek, our Lord replied to Peter, "Thou art a stone, and upon this rock will I build ruy Church." The rock upon which the Church is built is this confession which St. Peter made. St. Peter himself was not the rock, but ho was one of the living stones built by faith upon the rock of truth. It was this same Apostle who so beautifully explained the whole matter, as suring us that all consecrated believers are "living stones" In the temple of God, whose foundation and cap stone is Christ, in whom we are bullded to- gether through the operation of the holy Spirit.—l Peter 2:4-7. The expression, "Upon this rock I will build my Church and the gates of hell [hades] shall not prevail against it," is one that is much misunderstood. The gates of hell are not gates to some place of torture, nor gates to purga tory. They are, in the Greek, "gates of hades," and hades signifies a state or condition of death. The passago might well lie translated, "The gates of the grave shall not prevail against It." That is to say, Christ Jesus invites the Church to die with him, to share in his sacrifice, in his death, and while, ap parently, the of hades have prevailed against the Church, against God's people, for more than eighteen centuries, nevertheless, we have the nssurance that they shall not forever prevail. The Master's assurance Is that by his death he lias become Lord of all and has the keys of death anil hades., Ho has the right to open hades, the tomb, and to call forth all who have gone down into It. lie assures us that he will do this, as he says, "All that are in their graves shall hear the voice of the Son of man and shall come forth." Nevertheless, for all these centuries It lias required faith to believe that, by dying with Christ, his followers shall yet live with him—that sharing with hltn in his denth they shall yet share with him in his resurrection to the glory, honor and Immortality of the liivine nature. So, then, our Lord's words mean that there will be a resurrection from the grave, and since the Church Is to be "a kind of firstfruits unto God of his creatures" (.lames 1:18; Revelation 11:1), her resurrection means. Indirectly, this result, the uplifting of mankind, the opening of the grave to every member of the human family. The giving of the "keys" of the Kingdom to St. Peter has no reference to locks and bars of heaven, over which St. Peter Is the custodian. The Church In the present time Is the Kingdom of Heaven in Its preparatory or enihryotic state, and St. Peter was .privileged to do the opening work to the Gospel Church. He opjptled the door to the .lews at Pentecost, when, as the mouth piece of the Lord, he proclaimed (lie meaning of the Pentecostal blessing and the hopes then open to every Jew coming. Individually into membership In Christ, lie used the second "key" to open the same kingdom privileges to the Gentiles, In that when the difetlmo came for Cornelius, the first Gentile, con vert, to bo received, St. Peter did the work. By preaching to Cornelius the Gospel and by baptizing him into Christ he threw open the door to the Gentiles, as our Lord foretold hi the words of this lesson. St. Peter's commission that whatever tilings he should bind on earth should be bound in heaven and what things he should loose on earth should bo loosed in heaven, Is the same that was Riven to the other Apostles. (See Matthew 18:18.) It docs not mean, of course, that the Lord has turned mat ters over to St. Peter and made him Lord of heaven aud earth, nor that any or all of the Apostles were so honored. It simply means this: God purposes to use his Apostles and to so hold up their hands, in all thQjx.. affairs, that the whole Church may have confidence In them, and may recognize their teach ings as of God. If they declared that certain of the commaudments under the Jewish law were not binding upon Christians, we must know that their statements were true, and that, similarly, in heaven, the release or change is recognized. And if they bound certain doctrines and teachings, we must know that those are bound and firmly established in heaven. In other words, we must recognize the Apostles as God's Inherent mouthpieces. Tho time for proclaiming Jesus as the Messiah did not come until after his death and resurrection. Indeed his Messlahship properly dates from his resurrection. lie desired Ills disciples to recognize him properly, and he explained to them about his approachiug death and resurrection, but he did not Vlsh them to proclaim this to the world until the due time. St. Peter, perhaps elated with tho Lord's commendation of his previous speech, under took now the role of teacher to the one whom he had ,lust acknowledged as the Messiah. In this he erred. It was in sympathy that he urged that the Master should not think of any steps which lead to suffering and death, but should rather of prosperity and earthly favor, yet our Lord's reproof was pointed. He said: You are my adversary, Peter, when you thus speak to me. You will thus endeavor to dissuade me from doing my Father's will, to binder-me from drinking the cup which my Father has poured for me; your counsel is that common to the world and not of God. Similarly, the followers of JCBUS sometimes need to resist their friends, who thus offer counsel contrary to DlTlne will and word and providence. These should not be encouraged nor their advlce»foilowcd. They need correc tion from tjielr fellow disciples, as did St. Peter. The words of Peter furnished tho Master an opportunity for calling the attention Ills followers to the terms of discipleshlp. Not only must the Master himself suffer, but all of his followers likewise. This course was pro vided for every one, aud whoever would flee from it would lose the eternal life hoped for. Whoever would take up his cross and follow the Master to death would thereby make sure of his share In eternal life on the heavenly plane. Ills disciples had already pledged their earthly lives, and for them to withhold them for worldly advantage, would mean that they would lose their souls, their lives. This Is not true of the world In general, but merely of the Church, called to bo of the elect. Royal Priesthood. lie then assured them of his. second coming, when he would come in the glory of the Father and with his angels (messengers)—not again as a man as a sacrifice. At the time of his second coming he would reward every one of his followers according to the faithfulness of each. He concluded this ref erence to the 'coming Kingdom by the assurance that some of them would have an ocular demonstration of his coming power and glory before they, would die. This we will constder-ln our next study. t , |I ' ~ 4 " ''" Father Goose. Lloyd-George is a Welchman, Lloyd-George is a chief: Lloyd-George smote the peerags And caused it lots of grief. The dukes snd lords were angry. But Lloyd-George didn't care; He biffed 'em with his budget And had some votes to spare. —The Commoner. Break, Break, Break! .« "Your new maid uses broken Eng lish, doesn't she?" "Mostly broken china."—Clavalasd Plain Stealer. A ©rerrsotne Je«t. She —"They say her husband yrm driven to his grave." He—"Well, he couldn't very well walk."—Boston Transcript. For Conservation. Housewife —"Are you willing to chop some wood for your dinner?" I Plodding Pete —"Sorry, mum, but I am aPlnchot man."—Eoston Tran« i script. Ifer Instructions. j Conductor—"Ticket, please!" i Passenger—"Certainly, sir. Here ' Is the key of my trunk, which is in i the baggage car. In the pocket of my second best drc»3 Is my mileage i book."—Harper's IJazar. | Non Sequitor. J Innis—"Do I love her? Why, man, ! I can't sleep nights for thinking about i her." I Owens —"Thßt's not proof positive. I I get the same efloct from my tallor'f bills.—Boston Transcript. Solicitude. i I "During our stay In Egypt we vis ited tho Pyramids. They are covered ! with hieroglyphics." 1 "Lor"! Wasn't you afraid of get | ting some on you?"— New York Tele. I gram. I- ■ 1 • llcr Flat. Mrs.. Noobride—"Yes, dear, I was I married last month. I'd like you to call on me and see the pretty flat I have." Miss Jellus—"l've seen him, my lear." —The Sacred Heart Review. A Lick and a Flick. Mr. Hubb—"The intelligence of fice manager told me that our new girl was once an actress." Mrs. Hubb—"l believe It. She ! dusts the furniture exactly as the sou brelte does it on the stage."—Boston Transcript. The Bargain Instinct. Lady (who has been shopping) "When does the next train for Oshkosh?" Trainman—"Two-fifty, ma«?am." Lady (absent-mindedly)—" Make It two Jorty-elglit and I'll take It."—* Chicago News. Hound to Stand. "We expect to have every track In the country put out of business," said the reformer. "I suppose you will," answered the New York man, "except the hundred mile course between Washington and Warrentown."—Washington Star. A Quicker Way. "I'd like to pay my respects to the king." "I can arrange for an audience In about three weeks," explained the American minister. "How long would it take yon t* g*t him on the telephone?"—Loul* ▼llle Courier-Journal. •o Had Yachta of Their Owi. McCarthy was boasting of the prominence of his family in bygone ages. "Bat there were no McCar thys In Noah's Ark," said O'Brien. "No," said McCarthy, "our family wae very exclusive in those days and had yachts of their own."—Front Norman E. Mack's National Monthly, The Handwriting. "If you look about you," said the ominous acquaintance, "you will see the handwriting on the wall." "The handwriting on the wail doesn't worry me," replied Senator Sorghum, "so long as they don't so rummaging into my private mem« oranda."—Washington Star. How It Happened. "How does it happen," said the young woman in the library, '"that Lord Byron is the only poet yo« read?" "Well," replied Mr. Lobrow, "I ®nce won a hunch of money on a horse by that name, and I thought 11 was up to me to get acquainted wiU my aMucot." —Washington Star. i Weak Throat— Weak Lungs | Cold after cosd; cough after cough! Troubled with this taking-cold habit? Better break it up. We have great 5 confidence in A yer's Cherry Pectoral for this work. No S medicine like it for weak throats and weak lungs. Ask I your doctor for his opinion. He knows all about it. 5 !!;•", approval is valuable. Follow his advice at all times. \No alcohol in this cough medicine. JX. Ayex Co.. Lowell, Mass^ ,\!» .lyskcepa gaod laxative in thehousc. Take a d ose w hen your cold fi r»t comes oil. What •s liie best laxative for this? Ayer's Pills. Ask your doctor his opinion. Let him decide. I Women Suffer J InmcH needless pain when they delay using Oarduil I for their female troubles. Cardui has found to I I relieve headache, backache, pain in the side and diz-1 I ziness arising from deranged organs. It does moreß I than relieve, —if used persistently,—many have :writ-B I ten to say that it cured them. "CARDUI I It Will Help You "j Mrs. Maxwell Johnson, Tampa, Fla., writes: "Cardui cared I fSjj me after doctors and everything else had failed. I had been surfer- I ing with numb spells ever since I was 16 years old. One day 11 figj decided to take Cardui. I have now taken 5 bottles and I can say I ME that it has cured me. I advise all suffering women to give Cardui I Bra a long and fair trial." Mrs. Johnson suffered years. Have you? Do you \rish to? I Ma But why suffer at all? Take Cardui. Give it a fair trial. BttMTEM RIDER AGENT S unple Latest Model "Renrer" bicycle fornithed by us. Oar agents everywhere art tukinff money last. H 'rUoforfuil Particulars and social offer at once. NO MONKY KKQUIBIu> until you receive and approve of your bicycle. We ship to anyone, anywhere in the U. S. without a cent deposit in advance, prepay freight, and allow TEN IJAVB* FKKJK TKIAL during which time you may rioe the bicycle and Dut it to any test you wish. II you are then not perfectly satisfied or do not wish tm keep the bicycle ship it back to us at our expense and you will not do out one cent. ■TAfiTfIDV PRIfF* We urn ' s^l tilc highest grade Ucvcles it is possible to makt INVlvni rniVLilat one small profit above actual factory cost. You save sl9 to $n middlemen s profits by buving direct of us and have the manufacturer's guar antee behind your bicycle. I>o WOT iiU Y a bicycle or a pair of tires from anyom at any Price until vou receive our catalogues ind learn our unheard ot prices and remarkable special offers to rider agents. vnil Mill I DC MCTHMICMrn when you receive our beautiful catalogue and WU WILL DC HdlUVHdnuU study our superb models at the wonu-r/ulty iowPrt. es we can make you this year. We sell grade Sicycles for less monef than any other factory. We are satisfied with f- >& profit above factory ccst. RICYCLiE I>KAJiKKB« you can sell our bicyclcL -/ndcr your own name plate at jr prices. Orders filled the day received. D HAND IIICYCXKS. We do not regularly handle second hand bicycles, but a number on hand taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores. These wcclear out ■ices ranging from to or SIO. Descriptive bargain lists mailed free. f*AICTTD QDAVKTt "heels. Imported roller clMitns and pedals, parts, repairs and GUMILK-BIIAAMf equipment of all kinds at half the usual retail Prices. *ol° HEDGETHORN PUNCTURE-PROOF 'J 80 rowmoouof,o^r tellyouasamfilcpairlurt4.HOUazhwUhordtrt4.ii). 10 MORE TROUBLE FROM PBICTDRES NAILS, Tfckl or (iliina will not lot the BBKkfiH; I j - / / St Air out. Sixty thoimnnd pairs sold last year. Over two hundred thousand pairs now in use. DCSORIFTIOHI Made in all sizes. It islively / and easy ridiug.vefy durableand lined inside wit h W. a special quality o* rubber, which never becomes porous and which closes up small punctures without allow* 111 , k . ,ki_w __ hK -_ . . . (ng theuirtoescape. We have hundreds of letters from satis- 111 thl °* *?*? Bedcustoraera stating that their tires haveonly been pumped IS * d .t 't ' -M --uponce or twice in a whole season. They weign no more than JH r„ TKI. en ordinary tire, the puncture resisting qualities beinggiven IB J? £ ... Lav oSS by several layers of thin, specially prepared fabric on the %M KLASTIO tread. The regular price of thcsetiresis&yoperpair.butfor g kAS Y KliiTjfO advertisinepurpose* wearemalringa special factory price to the rider ol only $4.80 per pair. All crdera shipped same day letter is received. We ship CO.D. oa approval. Vou do not pay a cent until you have examined and found them strictly as represented. We will allow a cash discount of 5 per cent (thereby making the price 94. 80 per pair) if yon aend i'ULI. CASH WITH ORDEII and enclose this advertisement. Yon ran no risk fn sending ns an order as the tires may be returned at OIIK expense if for any reason they are not satisfactory on examination. We are perfectly reliable and jnoney sent to us is as safe as in a bank. If you order a pair of these tires, you will find that they will ride easier, run faster, wear tetter, last longer sud look finer than any tire you have ever used or seen at any price. We know, that you will De so well pleased that when you want a bicycle you will give us your order. We want you to send us a trial order at once, hence this remarkable tire offer. mmm \Mgxmm irrn riarc don't buy any kind at any price until yoa send for a pair of Mr Y W fVCCV # fnca Hod get horn Puncture. Proof tires oa approval and trial at the special introductory price quoted above; o* write for ow big Tire and Sandry Catalogue which describes and quotes all makes and kinds of tires at about half the usual Prites. mm umw ufs m* but write us a postal today. IMI NOT THINK OF BCTINO a bicyclt MJfJ twfj f Tv/U § or a pair of Urea from anyone until you know the new and woadcrfal offers we are making. It aaly coats a postal to learn 1111 jttriag Write it SOW. &L. MEAD CYCLE COMPAIY." CHICAGO, ILL PbdflmraxT people. Professor Giovanni Schlaparelll tied in Milan. John A. Hegeman, who died No vember 26, 1908. left an estate of 9200,039. The portrait host of John D. Rocke feller made by William Couper waa finished and sent to be cast. The funeral of Bishop McVjpkar waa held at Providence, R. I.* five of his colleagues officiating at the ser ▼lee. J. P. Stuart complained of inade quate protection given by the Italian Government to American mission aries. George Turner argued seven days for the United States In the New foundland fisheries case at The Hague. i Engene Zimmerman, of Cincinnati, ■aid If Colonel Roosevelt should be elected President again he would he come a British subject. In administering the oath to the newly appointed Chief Magistrates, in New York City, Mayor Gaynor urged them to put the professional bands men out of business. Thomas A. Edison, Archduke Leo pold, Sir Hiram Maxim and foreign aviators talked of the importance of the aeroplane in future wars as fore cast by Curtlsa' experiments. Daniel Guggenheim said the Gov ernment should encourage corpora tions and capitalists to develop Alaska and open that rich territory to the young men of jy Justice the dean of the bench, having been a Justice for nearly thirty-three years. If he Urea two years more he will have served longer than any other Justice of the Supreme Court at Waahlngton, Ol C. Nearly 30,000 person* Tlilt«4 Shakespeare's home in 1509. OTSWBY OLHAIfINGfI. The Fourth was observed In all the large European capitals. , Great anti-clerical demonstrations were made in Madrid and other Span ish cities. \ The first Dental Hygiene Confer ence and Exhibit was held in New York City. At the International Railway Con gress at Berne fifteen hundred del*" gates were present. The steamers Venus and San JBCIHT to were repulsed in an attempt ta recapture Pearl Lagoon, Nicaragua. Advices from Washington are that the United States would take action to end speedily the wnr In Nicaragua. Reports from various cities showed a decreased number of casualties, due to a "safe and sane** celebration of the Fourth. With State troops in readiness to prevent a combat, the Kaufman- Langford prize fight in San Francisco was postponed. Elections for Deputies to the Pan aman National Assembly passed quietly, there being no opposition to the government candidates. Knives and pistols were freely nsed at primaries of the Zaylsta faction In Cuba, to choose delegates to make terms with the Miguelistas. Over three thousand Americans at tended the Independence Day recep tion given by Ambassador and Mrs. Reld at Dbrchester House, London. The Russian government has decid ed to communicate to the United State® apd other powers the Rosso • Japanese convention regarding Man churia. New York State Superintendent ot Insurance Hotchkiss declared hia par pose to lay the facts of the late Presi dent Sheldon's misconduct of the Phenlx Insurance Company before the District Attorney.
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 15, 1910, edition 1
6
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