Newspapers / The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.) / March 21, 1913, edition 1 / Page 2
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FREE ADVICE I TO SICK WOMEN Thousands Have Been Helped By Common Sense Suggestions. Women Buffering from any form of female ills are invited to communicate promptly with tho woman', private /Jy correspondence de -7 / fa \ r PBftment of the Ly- II vy )) dlaE.PinkhamMed- II AfcuJ| If idne Co., Lynn, rA /o) Mass. Your letter wi " °P® rea^ and answered by a woman and held In •trict confidence. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman ; thus h&B been established a confidential correspondence which has extended over many years and which has never boon broken. Never have they published a testimonial or used a letter without tho written consent of the writer,and never has the Company allowed theso confi dential letters to get out of their pos session, as the hundreds of thousands of them in their files will attest Out of the vast volume, of experience which they have to draw from, it is more than )K>ssible that they possess the very knowledge needed in your cose. Noth ing is asked in return except your good will, and their advice has helped thou sands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, should be glad to take advantage of this Csnerous offer of assistance. Address ydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (con fidential) Lynn, Mass. Every woman ought to have I.ydla E. Plnkliani'H HO-pago Text Rook. It Is not u book for general distribution, an it is too expensive. It in free and only obtainable by mail. 'Write for it today. BABY'S FACE ONE SORE WITH ECZEMA Cried for Hours, Could Not Sloep, Resinol Brought Rett and Cur*. Reading, Pa.—"My baby girl had eczema for over hix month*. It wa« painful and itrhinp, mlic could not sleep day or night, •he would scratch till blond and water would run down her neck. Then it burned her k) she cried for bourn at a time. The right aide of her face was one sore and •cab. "1 got. the samples of Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment on a Saturday morning, and put ihem ofi, and put them on agnin in the afternoon and in the evening before I put her to bed, and she went to sleep •nd slept till next morning. I thought ! wan in heaven the first night, and by Monday the eczema was dried up so that all the scabs fell off. Resinol Soap and Ointment cured mv babv." Mrs. Win. M. Fletcher, 544 So. 17ty St., Aug. 21, 1012. lf.j'ou or any of your little ones arc suf fering from eczema, rash, tetter, ringworm, or other itching, burning skin eruption, there is only one better proof of the value > of Resinol. That is, try it yourself and ' see You can get samples free by writing to l>ept. 4K, Resinol, Italtimore, Md. Resinol stops itching instantly. Prescribed by careful doctors for eighteen years, sold by every druggist, or sent by parcel post on receipt of price, Resinol Ointment, 500 and sl. Ilcsinol Soap, 25c. CdiS It Pays f l to Clip NOIIIN, ■( l.lft mm 4 WWII. Ther m healthlerand render Itettareerv Ire. n Wlifltb liNvviftai that Imltlß the I M wetnweetandillrt Is removed.ther Tl are inert easily kept clean. look Mm baiter pet mora from thslr QB feed and ara hatter Is every war Insist on having The Stewart ■•II Bearing Clipping Machine It turna «Ml»r. ell|« falter ami rloaer and ataja aharp lotiarr J 1 than anr other. (tear* are all Ale hard ana cut from solid ruin I »taal bar. Thay ara en *■■■/) I rlosed. protected and * £ Sjb m£ m run In oil little frle- # W\_ M tloo.llttla wear Ilea all feet of new r fttyle eeey running fleilble aliaft and the celebrated Htewart slnirls rnggmmmmmmm tension dipping head, highest ■ gnule. Sal aaamMß year ieeUnevery machine fuarauteed to please. I CHICAGO FLEXIBLE SHAFT CO. I Wallaand Ohloßta. CHICAQO, ILL. I Write for coiupleta new catalogue allowing world'* ■ largest and moat modern line of horee dipping and FALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, The Antineptir powdeiV* haken into the shoe*—The Standard «dy lor the !«et for a quarter centurr SO.OOOteatiinonial*. Sold Trad* Hark everywhere, 2V. Sample KRKK. Addres*. All»n 8. Olmsted, T.e Rov N Y. The Mm who put the EEs 1m FEET. Salesmen Wanted WahaTeaCAflll weekly proposition for a reapon alkle man to handle oar llna of llltiU OKAI>H MUttflBRY atoek. COMPMCTB NKW OUTUT rBMH Wrlta at once for our liberal offer and eeenre exclualte Afenr;. W. T. HOOD A COMPANY OLD DOMINION NURSERIES, Richmond. Va. Mention tilli paper when writing c Attention Prtraa reasonable. kJMfr Herri c - prompt. Baud for Prica Lint, ouiijrm, ■.«, Saaasarih MaM Dm Ifil Ikj Dnntah. B ft TITMTT jpl j? faster SUtra - The Easier ... The window where they show T"Aei> purify, bring hack '° me ) [j^. ~~ -; -. ,-•;> \ The faith of long ago- J '*^| |fijS,~~-» \ Again I hear my mother ling flif \ \ The gentle Savior 's lot* . . £-fw Bp*-*! „ „ //.- ! - X / .. ■ i "B Hk 5We rush for gain through all the year, *jf' y > Forgetting those oh!prayers j ■ *gi /earned long before we leameJ fa know \ |' *'■' ~"Mp H| W-. Tha world and its affairs: • 7~V _. ' j| flft Rut when, at Easter Kmc, fAe pure "TT v^ —'■ ■■■; t.. -=.—.. WhUc lilies come again ■jffP. ■ Our thoughts tum Heaoenward and Christ V%^99 ' (/if hearh JjL While at Easter J—*""' - " l- i&'s Ijngdom shall endure: * r T|rjtl The Idy leans to me and I Cease doubting and am acre: J- »f*>. *; s- JVfy ht&rt once more is lifted by \ V . jS- Ihe tones the. faithful r,!ng: HhJ , 'M „ 1 Thvnk hecccn for live higher hope* \?he Easier lilies bring. "Christ Is Risen; I Will Arise" HUMANITY hud grown dry, old, withered All the best Bprinss of its nature had dried up, and there was no flow of Invigor ating hope, and barely nny ihliiK of pureness and Bweetness itau inp; from It. The emperor of the world was at onee "a priest, an atheist, and a god " The fairest and noblest In life permitted their names to bo In scribed upon the "tabulae" of those *ho had failed to maintain even the •tlcanlinene of the flesh. The human •are lwij- gone to Heed Hut by the overruling of Providence, One Life had been prematurely maintained In righteousness, true to man's original, Divine type. Mown down by the aword of injustice, this harvested seed was pown In a garden In Jerusalem. Sown, as the sowei of wheat flings his good grain into the soil, and Him ply leaves it to the mercy of the Mas ter of the earth aud the Lord of life! As the farmer merely closes the Ifeld gate upon hia seeded field and can do no more than wait' Just an wo BOW the forms of them wKhfivyloved, set a stone, or some mark to show whore we have laid them, and come away to soothe ourselves with weeping Till life's lens- shadows break tn cloud less love." There is a wonderful vitality in n seed A wealthy man once built n great atone tomb for hlmaelf and carved upon it; "This tomb, tho over lasting anode of ita owner, must not be opened to all eternity." Inadvert ently the workmen burled a tiny seed with the Impious dead man. Swollen by tho moisture from his decaying corpse, It sprouted, found a crevice where light slioue through, grew to It, and through It, and today a tall tree stands with its roots in the old tomb, and the stones so laboriously built Into place are shattered and thrown asldo by tho resistless growing power of what had been contained In that tiny soed. There is an immortal vitality about humanity. That sown in the garden at Jerusalem burst through tho tomb, and appeared again, as much tnoro glo rious than the liody which tad beeu sown, as the field of corn ia lovelier as it waves in the autumn sunshine than the bare grain tho farmer cowed in the spring. "Sown in a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body." It is a prudent howover; to ap ply the actual tests to the seeds of the crop, upon the vitality of which much may depend. That sort of a test was applied to humanity at Easter time. One of ourselves, bone of our bone, flesh of our flesh, was sown, and by the mastery of the Master of Life, the resurrection process was accelerated, and the innate vitality of iR&n was proved to be a great, glorious reality. It is the message of spring. It comes to encourage us, just when wo ire committing so much wealth to the '■ * nirn aHtr tin a nino | soil, and ita Master. It Buys to the farmer, "have no for results, since the flowers have corno_ through the ground, your gruin will also camo. The Easter lily is a sign to you of tho gra clous beauty which will cro-Ati your hard labor, which will follow what Is so disagreeable at the moment. There was nothing lovely about the Illy bulb, remember!" The resurrection message is a signal set up In the race through lifi\ J remnia!ng tT that there* Is nothing more certain than "That men rimy ilf on nti-pplui? ■tones U Of th«*lr dead prlvts to hl ( ;!u*r thi.igl." lie is not here," said the heavenly, lutelllgenco to thoae who sought n dead body in the tomb. To the world of men the nit.', sago runs, "do not I grope in the grave of disappointed hope, or of unfulfilled desire." "New ness of life" is yours. Let the paat. lie tload, as It will. New days arise for j you, with new hopes, better openings. You ean never lose vitality! While there is life there is hope. And hope porsovered in finity certain fruition at I harvest tlme.- "110 is Risen" rings out from tho I Ltoiie beside the tomb. And the little j crocus bud, thrusting itself through I even snow and cold, points the iura cage: "Since I aw licro doubt not Ho rose And kcrp with mo this Easter day " For he was juat the testing seed, I lie] (list, fruits. If he rose, so will our blessed doar ones in like manner, ever BO much better for having been laid aside as tho watchmaker lays your watch to pieces on his tray. The answering message is not sim ply "1. too, shall rise, some day." Not "TOUCH only the halicoaitorUJ e>yof bereave ment, "1 shall moot them all agski some is a graveside raor. allty which liTouly hall religious. Tho true answer to the Easter call "lie lu Risen" la, "I will aricc, and eo to my Father, and wll', oay unto him, Father!" "Resurgam!" "I will arise!" That is humanity's watchword now. There is no noed for hiding even under the chadow of the cross Itself. No shirk ing of hard duty, even for the blessed security of a life given to devotion and contemplation, away from life's tcmj»- tations. No sitting under the willow trees In helpless grief. Merry ring lets of golden beauty bedeok even the willows at Easter tlmo. H With all the world springing Into re newed activity, man too, rrlee from m irrn kun *lirr*» 7 - J;~r - - ' his failures, his griefs, his backslid | ing, "I will ariso and go to xny Father." ! Every night ho reminds himself, "I I shall arise again tomorrow to a new j life, sofßewbere.'* Every time ho slips j buck in some manner, he cries, "I will arise." ROE urreel ions are occurring all around us every day. New giip 1h ta ken on work here, new hope of better lifo there, everywhere tho world la trying""to rise and bear flowers, not thorns, Tor ho one. now deliberately .starts out to do any but the right thing. H'a little flower can preach, an Easter message, how much more a ruon or woman or child? Cheery I fighlirg against trouble and difficulty bas blessing in it for all wluMwitnosa it. lu rising to better things by sheer hard climbing, many another Is. helpod too The ruin of a man, who has found liis way back to the strength which hua made a man of hiin ngain is 'himself one to whom others look and almost incredulously cry, "He is Risen," end possibly some one may Bay, "Then will 1 also cry, "I will ariso and go to my F&ther' alao." In tho word* of one of the sweetest of the Master hymns, written juut as its author was telling his dying body. "I will the Raster message translated into action, hau for its mot to; "I fenr no foe, with Thee at hand to bless; Tils have no weight, and tears no bitter ness; Where I* Death's sting? Where Grave thy vl'-tory? 1 triumph still. If Thou abide with mo." Sharing In Es«t«. v To have lost no joy, buried no bopo. known no Buffering is to corao to ; Haster day with little sense of it a i meaning arid fellowship. Only those who have deeply Buffered c.ui enter deeply inlo its glorious message. Kastcr is the symbol of life triumph ant, lifo more abundant, life rejoicing over death, it is the birthday of im mortality, to ho celebrated by alLmen with gladness. Whatever hope haß been defeated in our lives, Easter of fers us tho victory. Tfco doad we loved are not deed; they livo fcrcve> in fewness of life, awaiting our en hoped to do, the things we bavfe longed to reach, ar» only nntiei /iliOtJ. after all, ef what the soul '-ballf,possess in the larger life that i 'a:;ter foreshadows. Ui our modern living, of the day and 'of the day, the thought of immortal Ity .is often pushed aside. Easter bod ies it out afresh—immortal love, im mortal life, endless joy, everlasting hope, a clarion-call of power—Harper's paiar. Orlg'n cf the Eactsr Egg Custom. Vfco favor accorded to eggs among Eastertide observances is salil to have originated from the ancient worship of Ostara, goddess of the East, whose feast was celebrated with much eat ing and drinking, many special of ferings being made, ir.ludtng the egg of sea fowl. From northern German: tha worship extended Into Great Brit ain. The Anglo-Saxon name for April, the season of the festival, was Eaettr monath, and in Germany tbi3 mcnth iB still known as Octermonatb. Many other of tho popular Easter obeerv ances, especially in tlio Notherland and Germany Indicate traces of aim ilar origin. The cgg«ls symbolical >.> tho resurrection. Explained. "Why am I always the goat?" "Because you persist in butting in." AKOUtSKB THR 1.1 VEX AND rtUIIKS Till'. BLOOD. The Old Standardjfer.eral strengthening tonic. ©BOTE'S TAaTiUJB* chill TOSfC. troiiut the liverto mtltn. driven Mut»ria»ni of tbe blood aod brcii.i* op th« jjsleiu. A-rueWolc. Voradoliaaad ciuidrco. SUc. The Process. "How can a inlik trust be investi gated?" * "By pumping this witnesses." DDKS YOUR HEAD ACHEf Try Hleka' CAPUDINE. It's IWuid —piqu ant to take—effect* Immediate— iwx>d to prevent Bick Uc«dM'bea ami Norvoim Ileadacbea ai*o. Ynur money back If not HatiKAeU. 10c.,25c. aod Wc. at medicine stores. Adv. Corrected. "Bliggins always knows the latest story. ".Not the latest," replied Miss Cay enne, wearily, "the longest."—Wash ington Star. Burduco Liver Powder. Nature's remedy for biliousness, constipation,) indigestion and all stom ach diseases. A vegetable prepara tion, better than calouel and will not salivate. In screw top cans at 250 each. Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C Adv. Plea for Liberty. Mrs. B. was entertaining a few friends and Elsie was allowed to re main invthe room, provided she made no disturbance. But she was iutcr- Hud talkative and asked so mail., questions that at last her mother be came exasperated. "Elsie, if you, open your mouth an other time, you'll have to go back up stairs, Now, remember!" Elsie was accustomed to obey, so, for a long time, Elsie's lij>3 were kept tightly closed. At last, however, uhb touched her mother and said softly: "Mautona, can I opeu my mouth if I don't tsay anything?"— Chicago Trib une. Too Late for Answer. lienry Watterson, the well-known American joprnalist, told this story at a recent dinner party: "One day when I was the city edi tor of a small newspaper, a fine tur key was left at the office. We all hankered after the bird, but the editor finally claimed it, took it home, and had It cooked for dinner. The next day a letter wan handed in to liim, which he opened und rend: " Mr. Editor—l sent you a turkey yesterday which had been the cause of much dispute among us. To settle a bet, will you please state in tomor row s issue what the turkey di~o of?'" HIS CHANCE. Mn. Henpcck- \\ h>, I only mar Tied you to spite Dick Jones. Mr. llenpeck—Glad to bear it. Here tofore 1 thought it was because you bad a grudge against me. IN A SHADOW. Inveterate Tea Drinker Feared Par alysis. Steady use of either tea or coffoo j'often produces alarming symptoms as j the poison (caffeine) contained in these beverages acts with more po j tency Ui eotno persons than in others. "I was never a coffee drinker," ! writes an 111. woman, "but a tea drink hsr. I waa very nervous, bad frequent I spells of sick headache and heart trouble, and was subject at times to severe attacks of bilious colic. "No end of sleepless nights—would have spelis at night when my right side would get numb and tingle liko a tliousaud needles were pricking my flcsl). At times I could hardly put my i tongue out of my mouth and my right j eye and ear were affected. "The doctors told me 1 was liable to become paralyzed at any time, so I was in constant dread. I took no end ot medicine —all to no good. "Tbe doctors told me to quit using ! tea, but I thought I could not live i without it —that it was my only stay. I had beon a tea drinker for twenty five years: was under the doctor's care for fifteen. "About six months ago, I finally quit tea and commenced to drink Postum. "1 have never had one spell of sick headache since and only one light attack of bilious colic. Have quit hav ing those numb spells at night, sleep well and my heart is getting stronger all the time." Name given upon re quest. Postum now comes in concentrated, powder form, called Instant Post am. It Is prepared by stirring a level tea spoonful in a cup of hot water, adding sugar to taste, and enough cream to bring the color to golden brown. Instant Postum la convenient; there's no waste; and the flavor is al ways uniform. Sold by grocer* every where. A 6-cup trial tin mailed for grocer's name and 2-cent stamp for postage. Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. r" ~v-r*,h&Car- .§SK : 'i WOULDN'T TAKE ANY CHANCES Womap Surely Could Not Be AccuM# of Having Any Lack of Caution. One day a very nervoua, timid-look ing woman, accompanied by a robuat farmer, appeared on the platform of a little railway at a remote country town. For a time ahe devoted her at tention to the time table, but ahe did not find there, the information she nought, and she atepped up to the star tion master as he came out of the office. "Will you please tell me if the three flfteen train has gone yet?" she asked, in apparent concern. "Yes, about twenty minutes ago," he replied. "And when will the four-thirty ba along, do you think?" "Why, not for some time yet, of course." "Are there any expresses before then V "Not one." "Any freight trains?" "No." "Nothing at all?" "Nothing whatever." „ "Are you quite sure?" "Certainly I am, or I wouldn't have said so." "Then," said the timid woman, turn ing to her husband, "I think well eroes the tracks, William."—Youtb'a Companion. CRUST COVERED BAFTS HEAD 632 Brunswick St., Baltimore, Md. — "My baby's face broke out in pimplea, which after bathing would weep and form scabs until bis head and face were completely covered with a cruat and his bair all fell out. It was cross and would not sleep. Each day It spread until his entire face and head were covered with weeping sores. I tried several prescriptions, but did not And any relief. Then I decided to try Cutlcura Soap ahd Ointment.' "After using them two or three times the sores dried up and after a half dozen applications all disfigure ment disappeared. In leaa than three weeks the sores and scales were com pletely gone, and baby's akin aa smooth and clear as when he was flrat born. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment cured him." (Signed) Mrs. Lottie V. Steinwedel, Jan. 14, 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32 p Skin Book. Addreaa post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston." Adv. Member of the Union. Men who worked under a formar city editor on the Washington Poet vouch for the truth of this atory about htm. —— The telegraph editor, so the story goes, got a "flash" one night that Join La Fargo, the painter, was dead. He called the news out to the city editor, who. catching only the name and pro fession, yelled to a reporter: "WllioughbyJ A painter by the name of Farge iB dead. Rush down to the Central Laboi- Union and see what you can dig up about him!" Cruel to Be Kind. "What makes you carry that horri ble shriek machine for an automobile signal?" "For humane reasons," replied Mr Chtiggins. "If I can paralyze a per son with fear he will keep'still and I can run to one side of him." A Confession. Startled by convincing evidence that they were the victims of serious kid ney and bladder trouble, numbers of prominent people confess they have found relief by using KURIN Kidney and Illadder Pills. For sale by all medical dealers at 25c. Burwell A Dunn Co., Mfrs.. Charlotte, N. C. Adv. Its Nature. "What's the weather report?" "Blowing great guns." "Great report!" Constipation cauwn manj serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by l)oclor lleroe's i'lftasatit I'ellcts. Duo a laxative, three far catliurilc. Adv. However, the man who knows just how to manage a woman never tried it. rir.EN CI'KKD IM fl TO 14 I>ATB Tnttrilnmsist will rutaDd nionry If PAZO OUfT MKNT fails to cam any caw of Itching, 111 lad. Ui >-dius or Protruding Ptl«» In Sto 14 days. iOo. No, Cordelia, a criminal lawyer isn't necessarily a criminal. Brs. Wlnalow's Boothlng Syrnp for ChlUtrea teething, miftena the |WIM, rrdtirrH InlUtnmfc- Uon.aJlaya lain,cures wind colic JSc a bottle JUr Silence Is the college yell of thf school of experience. ——————— ' UP FOLEV 1 pw^nus Backache Rheumatism Kidneys and Bladder C—«al— Ho Hafcit PDwp Why Scratch? "Hunt's Cure" is guar- J&JE\ antecd to stop and P permanently cure that f/jKyn terrible itching. It is MKWI compounded for that jfll porpoee and yoor money rif M. FLL H wfll promptly refunded PPUFJ wm WITHOUT QUESTION [ jW WW " Ham's Care fails to cure ItflHH| (tch. Eczema, Tetter, Ring *■■■ Worm or any other Skin Disease. 50c at twjt druggist's, or by mail direct if he hasn't h. ManoCsctaredoolyby ft. B RICHARDS BEDICINE CO., Sh«rma«,Tim r v " i ; i
The Enterprise (Williamston, N.C.)
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March 21, 1913, edition 1
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