Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / Aug. 27, 1915, edition 1 / Page 3
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UGH! GALUHEL HIKES YOU SICKI GLEUI LIVER AND BOWELS If WHY Just Once! Try "Dodson't Uver Ton®" When Bilious, Consti pated, Headachy—Don't Lose a Day's Work. L!T« up your sluggish liver! Feel 1 Bne end cheerful; make your work a 1 pleasure; be vigorous end toll of ais- 1 bitlon. But take no nasty, danger- I one calomel, because It makes yon sick sad you may lose a day's work, i Calomel is mercury or quicksilver, i which causes necroels of the hones. I Calomel crashes Into sour bile like dynamite, breaking It up. That's : when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. Listen to me! If yon want to enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced Just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Tour druggist or dealer sells you a 60 cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone under my personal money- Mandy Didnt Care. "Mandy," said the old woman to her daughter Just back from a day's wash ing. "Mandy, whut-all did Mis' Sally done say t' yo'?" "She done say," repeated Mandy sol emnly and Impressively: "'Mandy, does yo' know that yo' persessea s im mor-tal soul?' " "Lan' sakcs, Mandy! An' whut did yo' respon'T" "Ah aayed," answered Msndy flip pantly, "'Ah don' care!'" —Times of Cuba No Bookworm. "What works on political economy have you read?" "None," replied Senator Sorghum "Political economy It a science that tells you how a government ought to be run. but it doesn't tell you how to get the votes that will enable you to run It" Every town dog believes he can catch a rabbit, but a country dog knows better. Mother Jh-r Knows What sßgt. J To Use Mmil v 2 * TTvCI HAN FORD S I Balsam of Myrrh A. LINIMINt Far Gits, Burns, Bruises, Sprains, Strains, Stiff Neck, ' Chflblaim, f Park, Old Sores, Open Wounds, and all External Injuries. Made Since 1846. Prfc* 25c, SOctnd SI.OO All Dealers —LADIES!!—! USE GILBERTS JEWEL TALCUM POWDER The Talcum of Quality, tor reflned people, Perfume rich, lasting aad •»- qulalte; Powder of velvety fluenees la Glut Jan—l Sc. «■ Ik. Sold toy ail dealer*, f MADE BY GILBERT BROS, 4k CO - BALTIMORE. MP. DR. SALTER'S EYE LOTION CVXCS SORE EYES Relieves, enree ton. Inflamed •ruin * w Help* week eyee, curlna »libout peln. Aakdhic|l*t ——— SfMri imitation* . I A toilet peiperstk* of mertt Balpa to enull tmU For Roaterlaa aad MDtr toGnr e>JFe4el H* | r, @ DROPSY nurtn usually r« quick unurai rtU totm rtmOT „ ,weiun* and *hort breath, often fives entire relief in I S to tS dajsTTilsl treatment Ml* FREE DR. THOMAS E. GREEN, Isu.mr js Dr. H. H. Gross's Sett, Sec A. Cfceuwertfc.Ce. Your Sweetheart Talks ABOUT TODS FACTE M oent eackage Onar Faee Oma, the ireM beavtlSer for » ceo to, and ten lad lae naaoee. H. RYAN, HVO. CHRIS IST, BROKEN BOW, NEB. (C , KODAKS & SUPPLIES IBM We atao do kl«hMt claas of Bnlahlaf. [■DC Price* aad Catalogue upon requeet Galeeid Optical Co , KirtsnafVa. SPECIAL PRICES g^iffir£L> w w*£ Lechonta; greateat en la»la« a train la AsMrtea. SefoatillralTr bred on tb« Jaryeet aad beet eqai,pad Rshrrram aoetfcot KWoaaad Dljoa Uae., • JKe HUSTLING AGENTS tona&MartSeta^e? claalvn territory Hrnd for sartiralara. The Reno Nuvelly Co., JUept. IS.UIW. llUi St., Lue Angelas, CaL WHERE ARE THE DEAD? *£££& URRTS WANTkU— fcaa> Incomr for active nea aad wemea celling »• "ear houeehoi* .c. Fr..* call. J. ehlffman, Lakeworth. Fta .V. N. U. CHARLOTTE. NO. 30-1915- beck guarantee that each spoonful will clean your sluggish Uver better than r dose of nasty calomel and that It won't make yon sick. Dodson's Liver Tone Is real liver medicine. You'll know It nest morn ing. because yon will wake up feel ing fine, your liver will be working, your headache and dlssiness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular. Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely vegetable, therefore harmless and cannot salivate. Give It to your chil dren. Millions of people are using Dodson's Liver Tone Instead of dan gerous calomel now. Your druggist will tell you that the sale of calomel Is almost stopped entirely here. Feces Turned Toward Sunrise. This Is a busy world, but the age Is calling for men who can help bear lte burens, who can do things, whose faces are turned toward the sunrise —Elbert Hubbard. • HAD PELLAGRA; IS NOW CURED Hillaboro, Ala.—J. W. Turner, of this place, aaya: "I ought to have written you two weeka ago, but failed to do eo. I got well and then forgot to write you. i I can get about like s 10-year-old boy; vou ought to aee me run around and tend to my farm. 1 can go all day juat like I used to. I am eo thankful to know there , ia such s good remedy to cure people of pellagra. There ia no longer any doubt that pel lagra can be cured. delay until it U too late. It ia your duty to conault the reeourceful Baughn. The aymptoma—hinds red, like sunburn, akin peeling off, sore inouth, the lips, throat and tongue a (laming red, with much mucus and choking; indigestion and nausea, either diarrhoea or constipation. There ia hope; get Baughn's big Free book on Fellngra and lenrn about the remedy for Pellagra that has at last been found. Address American Compounding Co., bo* 2000, Jasper, Ala., remembering monev ia refunded in any case where the remedy fails to cure. —Adv. False Pride. Charles W. Morse began life bum bly and hates false pride. "I'll never forget the wise sdvlce that an old employer of mine once gave to a youth who had a good deal of false pride. "The youth was complaining about the hard tiroes, his enforced idleness and so forth. My old employer cut him off gruffly with the words: "'Well, Oeorge, if you can't obtain a position these days, why dont' you look up a Job?' " —Philadelphia Ledger. NO DOUBT THAT RESINOL DOES STOP ITCHING It Is a fact that the moment reslnol ointment touches Itching skins, the I Itching stops and healing begins. With the sld of reainol soap, It almost al ways clears away all trace of eczema, summer rashes, pimples, or similar tor menting, unsightly eruption quickly, leaving the skin clear and healthy. And the best of It Is you need never hesitate to use reslnol soap and resl nol ointment. Resinol is a doctor's prescription which for twenty years has been used by careful physicians for many kinds of skin affections. The; know that Its soothing, healing action Is brought about by medication so bland and gentle as to be suited to tL* most delicate or irritated skin. Resinol ointment and reainol soap are sold by all druggists.—Adv. J To Protect a State's Wsrds. Insurauca Commissioner Ekern of Wisconsin has sent a letter to each member of the legislature urging im mediate action to protect life and property against the Are hazard In the Stat* charitable and penal insti tutions. A bureau recommended the installation of sprinkler equipments, especially in the hospitals for the In sane at 6'»liko*h and Meiidota. The commissioner said it was cheaper to make Improvements than to pay Ore losses and the families and friends of the helpless Inmates had a right to ask that their lives be made safe from the dangers of Are. Whenever Yon Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove a Taste lesi chill Tonic ia equally valuable as a Gen era! Tonic because it coqtains the well >ncwn tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acta on the Liver Drives oul Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Buildi up the Whole System SO cents. Adv Germany's Potato Crop. The potato crop of Germany was one of the largest on record The offl clal statistics place the figures at 60. 200i>00 metric tons, as against 34,300, 000 metric tons in 1912. Quite a high percentage of the potatoes were dls eased and could not be kept over win ter, and the crop being large the prices obtained were low. The Hewlett Family. There Is a corporation named "The Hewlett Family of America." All 01. the members are descendants ol George Hewlett, who came to thi> country from England in 1640. • . v „ ;• aMif THE ENTERPRISE, WILLIAMSTON, NORTH CAROLINA KILL ENEMY OF BABY '• 11-I 1 - DUTY OP ALL 18 TO DO AWAY WITH THE FLY. f . As a Disseminator of Disease It It Recognized That Thla Peat Can In No Way Find an Equal. (Prep*it4 by th» CklKm'i Bur*M. C»lt«4 StilM Department of Labor.) No one llkea to hare a single fly and, much leas, a ■warm of them bus ing about him, or lighting on hit food. Bat in addition to being - nuisance, tha fly Is alao a real source of danger, owing to the fact that he may carry the germs of disease from the sick to the well. Typhoid fever Is known to be distributed in this way, and it Is believed that other forms of illness, Including diarrhea, are also carried about on the hairy feet and legs of the ordinary house or "typhoid" fly. Oo this account. It Is especially the baby who needs to be protected from flies. Awake or asleep, he needs It. HJa milk should be kept out of their reach, and his bed or his sleeping room should be carefully screened agalnat them. If It Is not possible to have the whole house and the porch screened. The flies that get Into the house In spite of screens should be trapped, poisoned or swatted, but far more ef fective than any of these measures is that of destroying the fly larvae before they hatch Into full-grown flies. The favorite breeding place If the common house fly is In horse manure. In a pile of a thousand pounds there may be half a million maggots ready , to hatch, unless they are destroyed In j the larval stage, as the eggs are called. Various substancea have been sug gested for use upon horse manure In order to destroy the fly maggots. Among these are iron sulphate, kero sene, chloride of lime, hellebore and borax. Some of these are too expen sive for continued, aw, and some, such as borax, when used In too large quan- j titles, may be injurious to the crops upon which the manure so treated ts used. The United States department of agriculture has recently recommended powdered hellebore as a cheap, safe and effective substance for the treat ment of manure. "One-half pound of powdered hellebore mixed with ten gallons of water is sufficient to kill the larvae In eight bushels, or ten cubic feet of manure. In most places helle bore Is obtainable In 100-pound lots at a cost of 11 cents a pound. This makes the cost of the treatment a little less than seven-tenths of a cent per bushel of manure. A liberal estimate of the output of manure is two bushels a day per horse." After the summer has advanced, the effort muat be made to keep each Indi vidual home as free from the pest as can be done with screens, fly papers, traps and swatters. Garbage palls must be kept cov ered, and no refuse of any sort should be allowed to accumulate about the premises, to provide breeding and feeding places. As in most other things, prevention is far better than cure; the time for preventive meas ures to.be most effective Is in April and May, when the fly crop is small. There are a great many kinds of fly traps on the market. Such trapH ran be made at home with little trouble, and the department of agriculture, Washington, will send directions upon request not only for traps, but for methods of destroying the eggs be fore they hatch Into flies. (A home made fly trap for 20 cents, and Bulle tin 245.) Fly Poison. House flies are more than nui sances; they convey disease and filth wherever they go. So, if there are no screens In the house, try these sim ple methods for getting rid of them: In the bedroom put a sponge in a «au cer and saturate it with oil of laven der. If this is bung two or three feet above the table one may eat In pence throughout the meal. Pots of rose geranium, or the branches bruised and bung up, are also raid to be good for flies. A honey pot of death and de struction to them may be made with two ounces of grcund black pepper, four ounces of white sugar and half a pint of sweet jnillt Cook the things together for a minute or so, and then All small plates vlth the mixtures, keeping edibles closely covered. Bweep up tho dead flies twice a day and burn them. - Salt Fish Sausage. Soak one pound of salt cod over night, cook and fme from bones, cut fine and mix with equal amount of mashed potatoes; add pinch of mus tard, pepper to taste and one egg we)l beaten. Mix well and form Into large sausage with floured hands; have hot bacon fat In frying pan one inch deep, roll until nicely browned. Heat one can peas in their liquor, drain and All center of platter, placing sausage Ground the edge. Thla makes an ap petizing surprise for any man's tabic, either rich or poor. ~ , Fruit Trifle. For a quick dessert try beating one half cupful of crer-pi until thick, then fold In one pint of canned peaches, which have been d*alned. Sweeten to taste. Serve very «old. Other fruit may be used. For the Mattress. If the wire mattreas becomes rusty, try rubbing it with paraffin; then dry thoroughly and give both aides • coat of black lacquer. > ' | The Qoody That's Good For Them | The best way in this world to spend a nickel for refreshment is to get | WRIGLEYS | 0 wholesome, impurity-proof chewing gum. It's made 0 clean and kept clean. It's wrapped in waxed 0 paper and sealed. Its two delicious flavors are 0. always fresh and full strength. 0: It is the longest-lasting, most beneficial and 0 pleasant goody possible to buy. It aids appetite and digestion, quenches thirst, sweetens mouth 0 and breath. Write for free copy of "WRIGLEVS MOTHER GOOSE," a handsomely illustrated booklet in colors that will amuse young and old and remind you of this Perfect Gum. 0 In it the WRIGLEY SPEARMEN have acted A || all the old familiar Mother Goose scenes to the "tune" of new jingles. Address Wm. Wrigley Av Jr. Co., 1312 Kesner Building, Chicago. 0 "Chew it after every meal" Two Boys, a Cow and Two Calvea. Tbla in a abort story of how two Vermont boys, still ID their teens, have made some real money on a thor oughbred Guernsey. They paid S2OO for the animal when she was two years old, and as their father was a banker and they were away to school a farmer was Induced to keep the ani mal for them. They owned the cow a little over two years and during that time she had two calve?. The boys found a ready market for the calves and have Just sold the cow, the three animals having been sold for $52&. The farmer charged them $125 for keeping of the r.tcek and other ex penses and the boys will net SIOO apiece from the transaction. The boys are quite satisfied with their Invest ment and Incidentally have become somewhat Interested In life upon a Vermont farm. —Springfield (Vt.) Ke porter. HOW TO CURE ECZEMA, ITCH AND ALL SKIN DISEASES Don't suffer any longer with eczema or any other akin trouble. Just apply Hancock's Sulphur Compound to the parta affected and It will stop the itch ing at once and cure the trouble per manently. Many sufferers from skin troubles have written us that the Sul phur Compound cured them after everything else failed Mrs. Evelyn Garst, of Salem, Va., writes: "Three years ago I had a rough place on my cheek. It would burn and itch. I was fearful it might be of cancerous na ture. I used different preparations, but nothing helped it. One bottle of Hancock's Sulphur Compound cured me completely." To beautify the com plexion, remove blackheads and pimples use Hancock's Sulphur Oint ment. For sale by all dealers.— Adv. Th* Terrible Turk. ~¥here are no old maids in Turkey. No wonder, then, that country haß so many unhappy men.—Detroit Times. The Limit "What a pessimist he is." "Yes, indeed. Even misery shuns hU company." • m Invisible Splendocs. "How do yoO like living In the country?" "This ain't the country." replied Farmer Corntossel, "Tlila place was subdivided five years ago, and If you'll look at the map you'll see you're llvln" right across from the city hall with a fountain playln' In the park an' automobiles all ovei 4 the place." "Two-Way" Masons. Members of the Chicago Craftsmen chapter of Operative Masons are Ma sons In two senses of the word. They are bricklayers and stone maaonß and are members of the Masonlf order. What kind of roofing shall I buy? Si JMMM Thm Gtntral say: You can buy a cheap unguaranteed kj roofing and save a few dollar* in fni "SHISSI tial cost—or you can pay this slight difference and get a RTvflSttl roofing guaranteed by the world's largest manufacturer of roofing and building papers. The final coat is what 2 counts and you'll find it cheaper in the long run to boy Certain-teed I Roofing Shingles I This roofing is the highest quality pouible (Slai • Surfaced) H to m,l !« 10 or 15 Singles are «ifaced with M year*, foe I, 2Of 3 ply reapectively. When ' *«uu*.w. .... y once laid Certtyn-tmmd suit remain genuine red or green crushed alate, intact at least lor the period ol the S u*r- making • moat artistic and durable . rool covering. Guuanteed 10 yean. For safe by JaaUr* t—rywhmrm ml rtatonablm price* General Roofing Manufacturing Company World'i largest manufacturer* of Hoofing and Building Paper* _ . N New York City Chicago Philadelphia S'. Louis Bo.toa Cleveland imaa-is- N Detroit Sa?F«~i~o Cincinnati Min—PoK. K.n~ C*r Seattle Atlanta Houtfon Loodoa Ha**berg aydaay You Know About ifJjtfMOON SHINE CHEWING TOBACCO "Sweeter than ChicLsa." , Try the Sewke—MeOew as the Meeaiifht MaJe by BAILEY BROS., lac.. WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. ' ' * * Half Educated. "It wouldn't be a bad Idea." said the boy's father. "If you did a littla work during your summer vacation. You surely don't need three whole rnonthß to rest up after the little work you did at college. When 1 wee your age I earned enough during the Hummer to pay my college expenses." "Yes," replied the boy, "and look at the result. You can't play Tennis at all, your golf is a joke and you dont know as much about Ty Cobb's bat* ting average as the lowest paid office boy in your establishment."—New York World Leaders of fashion always follow It.
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 27, 1915, edition 1
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