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\ # FOISTS % : H0NoE?o?TAR STOPS COUGHS - CURES COLDS Cnrtalw No Opfatw U S?f? For Children DISFIGURED BY SHIN ERUPTION If That Is Your Plight, Let Resinol Clear It Away! Pimple*, blackhead*, raahes, ringworm and, worst of all, that red, itching, scaly torment, eczema, vanish when you use Kesinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. There is no doubt about it. Even v. though your skin is so unsightly with eruption that you shun your friends and your friends shun you, Resinol makes it clear and healthy, quickly, easily and at trifling coat. When you are sick of wast- ; ing time and money on tediors, expensive j treatments, get Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap from the nearest druggist and you will quickly see why it has been prescribed for eighteen years for just such troubles as yours. The Resinol treatment works so gently, and is so absolutely free from anything that could injure even the tenderest skin, I that it is perfect for healing the skin troubles of infante and children. You can test Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap ] t our expense. Write to Dept. 5-K. ResiInol, Baltimore, Md., and we will send you a generous trial. Resinol Ointment (50c and $1) and Resirol Soap (25c), by parcel post on receipt of price. F We are headqtiarBaafl flL ters for Kggs, Poultry, H I mm Fruits, Potatoes and I IB I Y* Vegetables. If you H 1 IV It 1 want a reliable finn and wF a live house, ship us. We guarantee murncf prices ami prompt rctufns. Quotations sent on application, i WOODSON-CRAIG CO.. inc. COMMISSION MEDCUANTS.Rlcbmnn4.Va. Salesmen Wanted Wob??raCA8lI weekly proposition for a responsible man to handle our line of lliWH (jKAl'H MltSKHY Mock. COMl'I.KTH NKW OUTFIT KRKK. Write nt once for our liberal oiler end Mre*^^^Tclu*lTO Agency HHMkrf^COMPANY v?. WW E^RKgR'S i * BALSAM KAKfH|flpSjflCl*a~?a* ^*-ul bMiAiiM* the tu*? faSMWly Ttouk<?? > luxuriant gwwth. BS^R; ; Never Y.uls to Restore Otxj IPlMHiMi Hair to Its Youthful Color. Prevents hair falling-. ^_?l_ III IITfn Men to learn barber trade im ft (\l I Lll In alx toeight weeks. To J4 In I ill Ition with net of too I ? Ilia I La U with j our own toola, FJ6. Waged while learning, full or write. RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE, Richmond, Va. ^^TYPEWRITERS TgHSBtjSSr All makes. aolil. rented nnil skilfully IlLV^^^jSul repaired. Rented I.N for 8 luouilm, Kl rent applies on purchase. ilKRII tt TTPKWKITKn KS . la*.. Il..m? OS?. eo? Km.t Balm turret, klrhaoak, * a. finRnPCY TKKATKf). (live quick reIfnU'tfl lief, uhua'.ljr remove swrelling and short breath In n few dits anil entire relief In IN-tNdays, trial trealiuent FIIKK. UE.UUKKNMHOkS Hoi A,AUaata,Oa. gettifetSueSdW ?trca?nMS I.1HTKN?Send for picture of farma In South Missouri free. So dnrkles or mosqullora 40 a. IK00. Others. II. SM4. Mountuin Vlew. Mo. nunif lo. Special Need (urn, Hrrrt Iwrnlr years for purity & yield. 12 luiahel shelled JJ cob. C. TV. Tnmpklnn ? Son. ( ulnra. Va. CADI1 fNA/WCOQ deslrlny to m-11 or fichaniia. lAnM UTYrlt.no writ" us. K... A<1 vertIntnr 4ft Distributing Cu.t Itiu t> 1H. Klcliuioiitl, \ a WANTKD?Afeoli?Two to foul dollars tiullv Klclit huura work Sample and catalot; free. Write to W. ti. I'ltmotiM, llouidek I alls, N. Y.. 43 Main SI. KOR SA I.K?250 A. IN O ItliKNSV I l,l,E CO.. Va.. all conv., 175 n cult . S r dwclllnK. ' tenant houai h. outbids* . etc will aacrltlre. II I>. Roblnaon. OaryaburK. North Carolina. W. N. U.. CHARLOTTE, NO. 13-1913. Classified Column POTATO PLANTS?Nancy Hall and Porto Rico Yams. $1.75 per thousand. M. L. Fant, Waldo, Fla. AGENTS WANTED- 10o per cent. Selling "Electro-Edge" Razor Strop paste. Putfe keen edge on any razor; buyers everywhere, sample 2f?c (coin.) J. E. Rue, Littleton, N. C. SWEET CLOVER SEED?For spring sowing, white and yellow cultivated biennial varieties. Price and circulars how to grow it, free. Jno. A Sheehan, lt-4, Falmouth, Ky. PARCEL POST?Your Dyeing and cleaning The superior service of ttie South's largest exclusive establishment is now at your door. We handle everytning that can be successfully cleaned or dyed and pay return postage on everything except gloves. Write for catalog today. The Hen Vonde Co., "Quality" Dyers & French Cleaners. Charlotte, N. C. Charlotte Directory <*aM ONUMENTS J 30 Flrat. elaa* work. Write for prices. ^ -^^Mecklenburg Marble k Cranlte Company Charlotte. North Carolina TYPEWRITERS aV New. rebuilt and arennd hand, jl7.lt H^^Esffifl np and m>araot??*l ?ati?facu>r?. W? JfaflkKl aril supplies for all uakua. We re / pair all makes. l a. (UtTDl atOMPiJT, ChaHstta, I. C 28-FOOT SHARK IS Kll I Fn AT I AST iikitahW I.IIUI "San Jose Joe" Swallowed a Stick of Dynamite. WAS SAILORS' TERROR During Its Lifetime Estimates of Its Length Were as High as Forty Feet?Had Roamed the Coast From Panama to 'Frisco. \ Los Angeles, Cal.?San Joso Joe Is dead. This may not be of vast importance to residents of New York, but it is the best bit of news sailors on the west coast of Central America and California. between l*anama and San Francisco, have heard in many years. For San Jose was a shark fully twenty-eight feet in length in death, although guesses about his size in life ranged from what he really was up to forty feet. The news of Joe's death was brought to this country by an officer who has been many years in the employ of big Bteamship company. Joe's home port was San Jose de Guatelamala, and his cruising ground 1 from Champerico on the north to San Juan del Sur on the south. All that came to his maw 011 that long stretch of coast was legitimate prey. According to sailors who dreaded him. any one of their number who happened to fall overboard when the shark was near had little chance of ever again walking a deck. In fact, everything i that fell within reach of San Jose Joe j belonged to him by right of might, and If tin. #1.1. ?? * .v .. ...r. him h^'cuiuebH uiHi r.nauy cost biin his lift*. At San Joso the succulent red snapper abounds, and every captain that makes a call at the place gets at least one iness Some do it one way. some . another, but the captain that unwit- | tingly caused Jog's death had an or- I lginal scheme all his own. Dynamite was what he relied on. I He had sticks of the explosive about two inches in length and of the circumference of a lead pencil. To these ; a time fuse was attached, and when the snappers, hundreds, of them, gathered close to his vessiH after a meal and the leavings were dumped over- I board, he would throw one into tho i very center of t.he school. The explosion that speedily follow- ; ed caused a concussion that stunned the tish and caused them to tloat on top of the water as though dead i Then it was an easy matter to put i off from tho vessel in a small boat and with a net dip up as many as desired. Of course, this- was not sportsmanlike, but it was highly satisfactory 1 to a lot of hungry sailors. At the time Joe died the snappers were there?so was the captain, so , was the dynamite and so were the sailors. It WilR vnnn nftor hronl'f?iu? - explosive had been thrown overboard ' and all hands were waiting for the result. Suddenly there was a great commotion in the water, a scurrying of tin* snappers in every direction, and directly off the port gangway a|>peared Joe, his little eyes hungrily watching the sailors lining the rail. With a swish of liis tail ho turned | ^ ?ili8 I'V/ LI Had Hardly Gotten Down the Stick When It Exploded. over on his back, shot toward the slowly sinking piece of dynamite, opened his great Jaws and swallowed it. That was his death warrant. He hardly had gotten down the stick before it exploded. There wasn't even a st uggle a gasp As a sailor would say, ne was ripped from stem to st(;rn," and his great bulk of a body floated on top of the water." Remitted the Fine, but? Detroit. Mich. ? When Willie Schwantek. aged seventeen, protested i against a fine imposed in Judge l'he- j | Ian s court, the judge ordered the line I remitted and the boy spanked in , court. Ten resounding wallops t'olI 'owed. Some Job! Albany, N. Y.?Assemblyman Movie introduced a bill In the legislature providing for a commissioner of social welfare. His duty will be to shake hands for the governor and other officials. MknJvtionai. sdnmsoke 9 * TERRIBLE AGONIES ^ WORSE MISERY Advices From Durant's Neck TeQ of Mrs. Bazemore's Trying Ordeal, and Her Condition at Present. Durant's Neck. N. C.?Mrs. Emma Dazemore, of this place, says: "Words fall to express my appreciation and gratitude for the benefit 1 received from Cardul. the woman's tonic. I suffered agonies from womanly troubles. 1 tried different doctors, but they didn't help. The last one I went to said 1 needed an operation, so I agreed to It. and bore those terrible pains. I felt better, but only for a short time, and soon the misery was worse than ever before. I began to use Cardul, and it made me feel entirely different. Now 1 nm the picture of health, weighing 170 pounds. Ilefore I started the treatment. I could not do my housework. Now 1 can do my work, and I feel so much better." Cardul. the woman's tonic, acting In Its gentle, healing way. upon the womanly organs, helps to restore your natural vigor, and to build up the womanly constitution. If you are tired, worn-out, weak, nervous, or suffer from anv r?f th? oil. ments peculiar to women, do what , over a million other women have done ?try Cardui. Jt cannot do you harm, and is almost sure to help you. Just as it has them. Begin taking Cardui ' today. Your druggist sells It. N. R?Write tc: Chattanooga Medicine Co . Ladifi' Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga. Tenn.. for Seecialinttru. n.trts on your caw and 64-paae b<x)k. 'Home Treatment for Women." aent in plain Wrapper. Adv. Perfectly Clear. "1 wonder why so many trains are late?" said young Mrs. Torklns as she watched the man chalk up the figures on the blackboard. "Well," replied her husband, "for one thing, traffic Is much heavier than it used to be." "Of course! And the heavier a load is. the harder work a locomotive has to pull it!" TO It AVKAKNKSH AND I.OSS OF APPKT1TK. Thr Old Stnndsird urn.-nl strengthening tonic, OKoVK S TASTH1.RSS . hill TONIC drlvcv ..nt Nlalarla an.l t.lllMx ?p the ayai.-m A tnu? tonic ami Burv Appcllwr. For niltilts nnd children. N) cetitn. Matter Easily Explained. Two lawyers met on the street. "I've been wondering about you." said one. "What were you wondering about me?" "Well, I've heard you address a jury and 1 thought that you were the most eloquent man In Cleveland. Then I've heard you make an after-dinner 6peech at a banquet and you were? pardon me?pretty rotten. Now, how is that?" "I'll tell you. When I'm talking to a Jury my dinner de- ends on my speech. When I'm talking to a bunch of diners I've already had my dinner." HOW IT WAS. ^ ' "How did yo' all get yo' nose busted?" "1 done slipped down an' plumb lit on my back." "Hut, name o' goodness, salt!?yo' nose isn't locnted on yo' back." "No. Bab; an' needer was Hrudder Jones." THE KNOW HOW To Feed Children and Get Good Results. There are more nervous persons made so by undigested food lying in the stomach than the average individual would suppose. If food remains undigested in the stomach, it begins to ferment, set up gas and a large portion is thus converted into poison. That's whv illtrootn/l I may, and often does, cause irritation of the nerves and stupor of the mind? brain and nerves are really poisoned "My daughter had complained fo some time of a distressed feeling it ! the stomach, after eating, which se me thinking that her diet was nr. right," writes an anxious and intell gent mother. "She had been fond of cereals, bit had never tried O^apeNuts. Froi | reading the account of this predlgef.* ed food, it seemed reasonable to t> ' Grape-Nuts for her case. "The results were really wonderff. The little brain that seemed at tin's j unable to do its work, took on i -w j life and vigor. Rvery morning, nfw before going to school, she eats tlit crisp little morsels and is now com | pletely and entirely well, she seems t< have a new lease on life?no mor distress in the stomach, nor head ache, but sound and well everyway; | Name given by Postum Co., Itatti ! Creek, Mich. Read the book, "Th Uoad to Wellvllle," In pkgs. "There's a Reason." Etfr rend the above letter f A ne? one npprnri from time to time. The re tcenuloe, true, and full of hum* i Interest. ! . L H LESSON (By E. O. SELLERS. Director of EvenInK Bepartmontl The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) LESSOrTF^ REVIEW. RRAPTNO LESSON?Hebrews 11:1-19. GOLDEN TEXTT?"Our fathers trusted In Thee: They tfru Steel. and Thou didst deliver them." ] ? . 22:4. The ScrlptU^ e lesBon before us 1b suggested for ' -eadlng purposes only. In these verst* we have rehearsed the principal rents (Bavlng Easter) of which we h Eire been studying this past quarter, mut presented from the view point of the values and victories of faith. Th? golden text suggests three things, mrst the God of the fathers; second,, the trust of the fathers, , and third. th?* deliverance of the fathers because! of tholr tmot in i Therefore it teems to bo logical for us to think ol' these lessons from the standpoint of faith. The first lnsson of this quarter Is suggested^ln /verse threo of our reading lesson. J God Is the creator and works by his'divine flat, framing these vlsiblo things from thoso thnt are not; working or framing them by his "word." So| God today through the "Living Word" makes himself known to nil men. JHe Is the God of all resource, and places thoso resources at the disposal, of men. becoming to each under varied! circumstances all that is needed. Verllv "God Is love." Srfcond Great Fact. Tho sjccind lesson presents to us the secfgdrgre.it fnct of the "begin- . nings," fizfi that man is to have dominion yvmr all of those created things, mA that woman is to be his , helpmot. m Again, there is Bet heforo us nuCs firelation to the Creator, a j relation ot trust, and when that re- . latlou failed wo have presented In I this und the succeeding lesson, the disastrous Effect of disobedience. Where trust is .active there has always hern dallvbh&ce. Where trust has failed, digaster has Inevitably followed. Tho great central truth of these two lessons Is the folly of doubting and disobeying God's Word. Returning to verso four of tho reading lesson attention is called to Abel ; (Lesson IV.) as an illustration of a | man whose faith In God expressed It- j self In the sacrifice he offered unto : God. Abel's gift was one of sacrlflc yard not tliut of tho lubor of his oi.M hands. The great fact of lesson five is that Noah obeyed God by preparing for tio coming judgment long before then vgas any external evidence of i the f 5og. He was "mpved with godly I fear" he saved his house, ho con- | demited the world, and ho became heir of the righteousness which Is according to faith." Thoso who believe God's word, live; those who disbelieve I God's word, perish?John 5:24. The sixth lesson, which also considers the life of Noah, presents for our consideration God's everlasting ] covenant. Ia verses eight to twelve of the rending lesson, the writer seizes upon three supremo events in the life of 1 Abraham when faith was manifest. If we properly present these tlireo wo sligll summarize the remaining lesi sons of this qunrter saving that of Eastoy, lessons seven to and including Ithe eleventh, The first great event Is of c^Brso God's call to Abram.?Heb. ll:H Ho must leave kindred, native ir.nt^fea, even his father's house. | The second great illustration of faith was that Abraham should obtain God's promises.?Heb. 11:9-10. Thin he did by obeying the call to become a sojourner in a land not his own, looking for a city whose builder and maker is God. Necessity of Faith. The third illustration, Heb. 11:11,12, was Abraham's willingness to part with his son Isaac in obedience to God's command to offer him as a sac- 1 riflce. True faith holds back nothing from God. Notice in this illustration how Sarah's name is linked > with that of Abraham. How it is declared that she received power to con- , ctivo through faith and because she counted him faithful who promised, tlere sprang of one "so many as the ! sfars of heaven in multitude and the sands which is by the seashoro innu- ( merable." Thus the message of the past quar- j tor is the revelation of God and of the necessity of taith in him on man's i part. Some may have chosen to use the I lesson of Isaac and Rebecca, rather than the suggested Easter lesson. We judged the Easter lesson of the greater value. Therefore In the final lesson, that of Easier Sunday, we behold Clod's j matchless grace and mercy in that ho , rolled away for those of loving, sim- i l?le childlike faith, the stone of their difficulty. "Cherish the hope that the world is traveling towards the dawn. Man's day begins with the morning and ends j with the night, but the day of God be- > gins with the night, and ends in the glorious dawn."?D. F. D. Meyer. It might bo well to require several written stories of nbout two hundred ] words each from different members of the class, relating these beginnings. | The Creation ;The First Sin; The Two Ilrothers; The First Immigrant; Ixit's Choice; The First Easter. Surely there is an abundance of material to make review Sunday ooe long to be remembered. ? Healthy Be Preciot To Make It Healthy and Keep it HealthyUse a Reliable Baby Laxative In spite of the greatest personal fare and the most intelligent attention to diet, babies and children will become constipated, and it is a fact that constipation and indigestion have wrecked many a young life. To start with a good digestive apparatus 1b to start life without handicap. But as we cannot ail have perfect working bowels we must do the next best thing and acquire them, or train them to become healthy. This can be done by the uso of a laxative-tonic very highly recommended by a great many mothers. Tho remedy is called Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and has been on the market for two generations. It can bo bought conveniently at any drug store for fifty cents or one dollar a bottle, and those who are already convinced of its merits buy the dollar size. Its mildness makes it the Ideal medliclne for children, and it is also very pleasant to the taste. It is sure in its effect and genuinely harmless. Very little of it Is required and its frequent use does not cause it to lose its effect, as is the case with so many other remedies. Thousands can testify to its merits in constipation, indigestion, biliousness, sick headaches, etc., among them reliable people like Mrs. M. Johnson, 7f>2 Dayton St., Kenosha. Wis. She is tho mother of little Dorothy Johnson who was always in delleato health until her mother gave her Dr. Caldwell'sSvrup Pepsin. Mrs. Johnson says: Great N? HpHERE'S a farm for you out penetrated by the Great Nortl under the ~ ,, New Three-Year ?which givra full title to 320 or 160 acre* tn let year biggest ever?the Nortliweat proi ????. tremendous ten-bil! year. There are tin (tQ < independence all th ?-*?-* Idaho,Wellington, ( from CHICAGO to i *|* MONTANA Point* . jW RoUnc}*T and 3d Tuesdays < 3>00 Write A ?APAI.S. I. IJaLa rr ' llC 1 ' Wuhinxton.' Oru- anri Fu,t Informati 8on.ndBrili.hCo- booklet*, initp*. iImi lumbit. Propor- e.ver tionally Ixnv Pttr.s bend the coupon, or to AIX POINTS M NORT1WRST! M- MU' 836 C/i. _ Panama-Pacific International I E. C. LEEDY, Crn'l M; fit)FAT Bid*.. St. Paul, Minn. K; - , A? tuie irlutlnu to oppori lL $ime aui in Of WW/Mk potash (or I I- Good* with early for yi thus tntttre Potash Pays, especially in rotations with cotton, heavier than with cotton alone. We sell Polasl Writ* far (in<( Vrr (iKKMAN KALI WORKS. Inc Ernptr* Bldf, Atlanta Bank A Tru?t Bid Whitney ruptral Batik Bldr , New 0 KW. L. DOI /v $3^J2 s4i t\ ;CTJ$4._5o and s5iO< SHOES FOR MEN AND W0ME1N uu rwcW";. BESJSOrS SHOES In the WOULD 00. $2.60 and 93.00. /^L. TV- * 1 ' . n/j nc loryevi maKfri Of h Men's $3.50 and $4.00 A'' ah oca in the world \Jk ' a'. Auk your deitilrr to ahow > W . I.. I?oiiKlu? ?n.M>. *-.<H Ml Hi e4.no lion. ,1.1.1 wh koo.I i CCTTHAM (it iind wnr iw otlior uinV /k -th* ofily ilirfrrfner I. /Y!^^ leathora, atylra mill ah f 2 If \.iu r, i ll id \ i- ii W. k " rlM at ltrocktoii, *ln?> ' t.', . t* Imiw rarrfiillv W. I,. Ik fa ' vR you would t lit'ii iniilernt mid yZtk to tit liotteir, look fontler. In 'l^j Vj-k^'jDL longfir than any ottirr mu tyo V61' vdZBek. If W. 1, Iinugla* ahoe* are not dlrert .roin the factory and ';k Khoea for ?ri-ry member of t ' .". -.( Carrel Coat. f<oat*ife free. xairr air>^S&S^ ? "toto*. It will aliow yr I *Rt NO ' anil wty you ran aave ml 8UB8TITUTE W I,. IIOPOI.AA tEMEmmZESEL Trachea Bookkeeping, Hh .riband and thti I'limmiTr enoed tiiaclwra. One of the oldest and nioat ri-lla Urcaoilwro, Nortii Carolina, for Information ; /.- . ' t -? . ' m iby is is Blessing Dorothy Johnson. "I never saw such rapid improvement la the health of anyone. Syrup Pej>* Bin 1b a wonderful remedy and I shall never be without it again." Thousands keep Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin conutantly in the house, for every mem* ber of the family can use it from ininfanev to nlri Kirn Tho mow nf Pepsin have learned to avoid cathai* ties, salts, mineral waters, pills and other harsh remedies for they do but temporary good and are a shock to any delicate system. If no member of your family has ever used Syrup Pepsin, and you would liko to make a personal trial of it before buying it in the regular way of a druggist, send your address?a postal will do?to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 203 Washington Street, Montlcello, 111., and a free sample bottle will be mailed you. Low One-Way I onist Fares to the 1 arthwest I ' * in that ereat, prosperous country | j lem Railway ? and it's easy to get HI Homestead Law !| three yenrm in Montana or Oregon. Crop# lllj duced many times its share of the nation's i ion-dollar crop. Prospect* m?t for this |||| .unm.ua t'i opportunities to win wealth and | III rouith the wonderfully productive state* of IIH Oregon. Montana, and in British Columbia. I IH rip Homesee leers' Fares in effect 1st | if each month te all points Northwest. IIU Tow for Free Booklets j j I on. We will gladly mail you Interesting I III i and other literature ? the moat complete | III on the opportunities in the Northwest. 11|| a postal or letter to j ,, 9BERT. District Pateengar Agent ' , imtnut Street, Philadelphia. Pa. |[[|j Exposition?San Francisco?1915 \ ! j IUMP1R CROP COUPON Immigration A(t., Dept. 85 Great Northern i I'leiute send me booklets and all ilteratunities in the Northwest?free. State or locality. Ilia" yj of (he Bolls You Harvest pend on flow You Feed (he Plants Vhatever the nature of your soil, its natural ply of available potash will not meet th? demands of a big cotton crop. 4 'OTASH r should contain at least 3 to 4 per cent, of actual heavy soils, and 5 to 7 percent, for light soils. 1 or 2 per cent, potash arc out of date. Provide our Kaimt requirements for side dressing, and against blight and mil. corn and peas, where the potash demand is muctk h in any quantity from one 200-pound bag up, r tUn>k rm Oiflofi Culture 42 Rrotdway, New York I , Savannah Monsdooek Block, Chirac* rl?sn? Ban Franalseo Jl LAS #-*^T*^woMrNh Yfcl.lW-.'^^COVNTUS .< * eostlng Sft.OO to #7 00 npra to mitt- avarthodif.i^Kyi^fev I.. I tonglxa I urge fwlo- /A >., Kiul ird f?>r yonraalfw^ ougla* ahoea are m?d?, i| why they ?rr warrantncl [>M their atmpe and wear F^J^-^irW ike for the price. rt|5^:^# for tale In rotir vicinity, order f Jf vl~'M wOMtat bhtc ihr middleman'* prom, fjar* ,vj|LRiiUMI ,hr family, M all prlraa, by J*V> Vrite for 111..Mr., led JF Ml bow to order by mall, *1; K.?Maa >nejr <,n your footwear. lal Hranrhe*. Connie* by malL Able and ex petiole arhoola In the xtata. Write the Reboot a* i before taking a bnalneM oonraa. Ma vacation*.