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To Cool a Bum ^^ and Take i the Fire Out^J*S] X A Hotaehold Remedy HANFORD'S Balsam of Myrrh i For Cuts, Bruises, Sprains, Strains, Stiff Neck, riiilkl??n>f I jithw Rnr^ Old Sores, Open Woimds,^^H and all External Injuries. ^ Made Since 184GL Ai^53iuy Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 AUDealere- ?-^ PATENTED IRONING BOARD COVER The Faaclnatnr, alae eighteen by fifty-fOur tnchea. Nine nickel locka on either edge connected by a firm cord which adjuata It firmly to any ordinary trontna board Inatead of old blnnketa tacked on your Ironing board, why not have a Sanitary cover with felt center three-etghtha of an Inch thick (not dyed), with removable facing aheeta. one of which la ahrnnk cotton for ordinary Ironing and the other opting flannel for Ironing laco and filagree work, thereby bringing out the fine llnca of the fabric. Facing aheeta can be removed, laundered and replaced, or new facing aheeta put on eaally. Sent prepaid, to your addrraa on receipt of two dollara and a nn If by the Jfl.IFN M ANIKACTI'IUNH COMPANY. INCOKPOHATKI). EI.MIRA. 1 NEW YORK. TYPEWRITERS i^fT^ All makes, sold, rented and Tskillfully repaired. Rented jvpTwlffi *5 *or ^ months and up; rent applies on purchase. American Typewriter Exchange, Inc. Homo Office, 605 E. Main SI, Richmond, Va. We are headquar! ! ^ ter? for Eggs, Poultry, (?| I mI Fruits, Potatoes and I D K| 1 ^ Vegetables. If you |R ? ? Ml W want a reliable firm and * a live house, ship us. We guarantee highest market prices and prompt re turns. Quotations sent on application. WOODSON-CRAIG CO.Jnc. COMMISSION MCBCPANTS. Blch mssA. Vs. jf\ If A n I I# fk and mKb Oriole \ H 0 ^UllAKa KtniHhlnir. Mail L|y ? ?? ?? **?? ?? order* given Hj?eI Pyuria. cl**- Attention. Price* reasonable. I lKi.!? Service prompt Send for Price I.int. LsasKAtu ami ti ro us. uimianTov, a. u. Pneumonia and Erysipelas Serum. Not long before his death last February I)r. Philip HanBon HUbb of HaW tlmore discovered serum for the treat- ! mi nt of pneumonia and erysipelas, ' which are now being tcBted with much Interest. I>r. Ford of the Johns Hopkins Mi dicul school, who followed Dr. Hllss In his work, says that the serum i for pneumonia Is not n cure In any such sense as the antitoxin for diphtheria, but that It Is helpful in the treatment of the disease. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOHIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and Bee that it SlK tur?or I In Uso For Over 30 Tears. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Cleaning Tiles. Many times the tiles in a hearth will become so stained that water will not clean them. Never clean tiles with water. Use turpentine on a pioco of flannel and polish with a dry cloth and the tiles will look like new. I.A1MKS CAN WKAR SHOES cn? also mailer after uahix Allcn'n Foot- , Kmo, the Antlaepttc powder to he ahuken Into the ahovfi- It nukra tight or new ahoca feel iimy. Olvca rest and comfort. Itefuan ohatltutca. For FIIRB trlul package, ?(1drcaa Allen S. Olmsted, I.c ltoy, N. Y. Adv. An Exception. "I don't want anybody to mince matters about this house." "Hut, dear, how about the pies?" For MI'MMin* IfRAI>ACIIKS flicks' CAPTJDINE In the best remedyno matter whnt causes them?whether from the heat, sitting In draughts, fever- 1 Ish condition, etc. JOc., 25c and 60c per buttle at medicine stores. Adv. " Probably the hardest thing for n girl to do when sho is being kissed by a young man la to make him believe that It is her first experience. Cure*Old Korea,<11 her Retnodlea Won't Cnra The wont cu.ho* no matter of how long Mending are cured by the nondorful, old reliable Or. Porter a Antiseptic I Icallng till. Uniterm pain and boali at the huuio time. '?* .. hoc, ll.UU. When you know how n man pray* you know what kind of a God he be lioves in. ' Mr*. WlnRinw'n Rootlilng Byrnp for Children Irrlhlnir, nofletiH the gum*, retlueeM InDanimnUnn.Ailiiya puln.curaa wlml eollcjk a liottlc.Mr When a sea captain marricR a widow i ho becomes second mate. S To Women Broken Down? 55 Whether It'a from bualnee* raraa. S houanhold drudgery or overfrequent S child-bearing. you need a Reatorativu S3 Tonic and Strength-giving Nervine S and Regulator. | Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Its recommended as eoch. hartns haap compounded to act In harmony with womufi peculiarly delicate and awal tlve organization. Yoqr Dranist Will Supply Yoy f GERMAN WAR B j| . N\ \ ' ; s ' ^ A^*r' ] i'tr j iuiim?iijimai ^*??MW???l?SCTJl)AJW^Sra^ Top left?Zeppelin IV., at Lunevlll French territory are holding the ropes Zeppelin, liottoni left?French Boldieri ? # Bill Is Before French Parliament to Abolish Publicity. Spectacle of "Red Widow" and Her Victims in Streets of Paris Being Opposed By Many as Conducive to Crime. Paris.?The death of criminals upon a guillotine set up in the street in full view of the public may sooa be abolished in France. A bill for the repeal of the law providing for public executions of the death sentence is now pending in the chamber of deputies. It is therefore probable that when the three?und possibly four?heads of the notorious bandits of the liounot band of outlaws are chopped off by the "Red Widow," as the French call the guillotine, the gory spectacle may be given in private. Should that be the case the motor bandits would be the first to "benefit" by the new law. Fublic beheadings are intended to inspire awe. The would-be assassin is supposed to see the terrible end of fellows such as he and refrain from committing the deed. The reverse of the picture is said by many to be true. The hardeued criminal usually meets his doom In a way that inspires other of his stamp with the notion that ho is a real hero, for public beheadings furnish occasion for the exhibition of a certain kind Of bravado which has a strong appeal to the desperado type. Senator de Chaumle, one of the leaders of the public beheading abolition movement, so says, adding thnt not only are such scenes disgusting beyond expression, but demoralizing in the extreme. Beheadings now take place at Bunrise. The condemned man is kept in ignorance of the date of his death until he is awakened to have his final toilet made for the knife. Until that moment ho has hopes of executive clemency. It being the invariable rule to ask the president as a last resort to use his prerogative and show inercy. The scene usually is in some Btreet near the prison in which the man is confined. The narrower and more crooked that Btreet, the better, since the authorities desire as few of the rabble as possible to see the blade fall. Scores of police and a large ! number of troops, on foot and ahorse, keep the crowds back and only the ofllclals, newspaper men and prison chaplain are grouped about tho base i of the guillotine. When several persons are beheaded they aro brought out of the prison one at a time, the last to die not seeing the others meet their fate. The crim ; inal is tied to a sort of block which ' pivots in tho middle; he is giyen a push, he falls horizontal and the trl- I angular blade descends. The head rolls into a basket on one side, the ; body is dumped into a similar but | longer receptacle on the other. Then j the carcass Is carted away at a gallop while tho headman's assistants wash the guillotine with huge sponges, which they wring out in palls of water. They call this "making the widow's ' toilet for her next husband." Much of this sickening sight as pos- ! sible Is hidden from the public, which remains passive, or becomes demon- : stratlvo according as to whether the man 1h an ordinary criminal, or "popular" or much disliked. If hated cries of "A mort!" and "Death to the murj derer!" are heard as the knife falls. Senator Chaumle Is against hiding ! the gulllotlno up a narrow street or blind alley. In a speech before the senate he said he favored abolition of the guillotine as a public exhibition, but until the government should make the necessary laws, beheading should take place in the broad open day and In the most crowded squares to be found. If the death is to be made public, said, then let It be really public. Have It where all may see it - yw ALLOON CAPTURED B1 e, France. French soldiers who capti and guarding the dirigible. Top rigl ? on guard. Bottom right?Balloon d? SjuXotine He guarantees that If this rule be followed everybody would be so sickened at the sight there would be little opposition to private beheadings. GENEVIEVE CLARK TO EUROPE Daughter of Speaker Says She Will Not Lose Time In Learning How Governments Are Run. New York.?Miss Genevieve Clark, daughter of Speaker Champ Clark of the house of representatives, arrived here from Washington with her mother recently to meet Mrs. George B. M. Harvey, wife of the publisher, with whom Bhe is going to Europe. "I have seen In the papers that I am going to study the governments of Europe." said Miss Clark. "I am i going for a pleasure trip, for I have just llulshed school and I want recreation, and I want to see Italy. But 1 don't Intend to lose time in gaining new 'knowledge. I have no definite itinerary. Mrs. Harvey's daughter, who Is nearly my own age, is in school in Rome and will join us on my 'Alice in Wonderland' trip. That's what I want it to be." "What are your plans for the future ?1b it a specific work or is it marriage?" The protty dimples about the mouth came and tho pretty face broke into a smile. "Maybe both; who knows? But one thing is sure; I have yet to meet a man, like papa?my ideal. My present plan is to return after thiB trip and go to my mother's alma mater?the University of Missouri. I Intend to specialize later on educational work to aid the mountain folk of Tennessee and Kentucky. HADLEY IS SUEE i Former Governor of Missouri Says Likeness for Capitol Wall Is Too Hard About Mouth. St. Eouls,' Mo.?Whllo Governor Hadley was the chief executive of Missouri he had his portrait painted It was to take its place in the gallery at the state capltol building. Though "Governor" H^dloy is now "Mr." Hadley and though the portrait has long Ex-Governor Hadley. since been finished from a-4echnlcal standpoint, the "sittings" are not yet over. A deposition filed in tho Superior court recently made clear this fact It also showed thAt the former state executive didn't like the expression of his own face. The deposition is that of Miss Anita Moore of St. Louis and was filed on behalf of Miss Samantha L. Huntley, an artist, who has brought suit for I r FRENCH TROOPS ired the balloon when It strayed Into it?French soldiers looking at the jbcendlng at Luneville. "These people have adhered so closely to the customs of their ancestors that some of their children, 1 am told, carry names that are entire bibll- I cal verses." "Hut marriage?that Is something that Is indefinite as yet In your life?" j "Oh, yes, I suppose, as a girl of nineteen. I should be thinking of mar^ ^ Miss Genevieve Clark. rlage, but I do not. You see co-education makes girls and boys remain longer in the family relation, so to speak. We are all like a lot of children, in a way. We chum with boys just as we do with our brothers, and romance is not lost but deferred, 1 should say." ) BY AN ARTIST $1,185 against Colonel A. Houts and three other members of the state legislature. who. It is charged, have refused to order the payment of tho I duiii ukciiubc me portrait was changed 1 after its completion. According to Miss Huntley, who is now in Italy, the former governor before vacating his office ordered her to modify the hard expression In tbo | mouth of the likeness. FILM RECORD OF WEDDING Relatives of Couple Unable to Attend, So Ceremony Is Conducted Before Movies Machine. Denver. Colo.?Harry L. Rand of this city aud Helen Stanford of Salt 1 Dnko City wanted to repeat the marriage ceremony in the presence of ! their families. Circumstances prevented the appearance of any relatives. so it was decided that the entire ceremony would be taken on motion picture films. Therefore, every action of the young couple, from the time Rand kissed the I bride-to-be at tho station until the con- , elusion of the ceremony, was recorded on motion-picture films. Rov. A. A. Tanner of the First Con- ! gregatlonal church of this city performed the ceremony. LIFE INSURANCE BY WIRELESS Banker Applies For and Receives $5,000 Policy on Steamship While at Sea. Ix>ndon.?The first Instance of life Insurance being contracted at sea by wireless was reported from an ocean liner. Among the passengers was Arthur P. Williams, a New York banker, who met a London insurance broker on board. They talked insurance. with the result that the broker wirelessed his company, proposing Williams as a $5,000 life risk. He also wirelessed ths report of the ship's doctor approving Williams. The com- j pany flashed its acceptance. I mqmnonal sunmtsoiool Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS. Director of Evening Departirfent The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) WNA^AAAVWVWWVWVVWVVVWVVSMVI LESSON FOR MAY 11. JOSEPH MADE RULER OF EGYPT. LESSON* TEXT?Gen. 41:25-40. GOLDEN TEXT?"God glveth grace to the humble." I Peter 5:5. "Hope deferred maketh the heart J sick." Surely Joseph has had enough j of deferred hope during his thirteen years of humiliation, yet he did not lose faith in God during those days of i the Beemlng failure of God's Word <^ii. *v:o; 11:10) ana now mere is dawning the day of his exaltation. 1 Two years have elapsed since the events of last week's lesson and again his powers of interpretation are called into use. I. Pharaoh's Dreams, vv. 25-32. Pharaoh is perplexed and his perplex- ! ity recalls to the butler his forgotten promise to his fellow prisoner, 40:14 and 41:9-13. It does not seem to us that the butler was much possessed by honest sorrow, but rather he is Impelled by a desire to secure the advantage he felt sure would accrue if he could succeed In securing for Pharaoh the interpretation of his dreams. He ought to have remembered Joseph before this but even his ingratitude is used of God as a means of bringing Joseph to the fore at the most opportune moment. Did Not Forget God. Joseph Is a good exnmplo for present day church members to follow In that being exalted among men or being away from home he did not forget to confess God. Furthermore his predictions based upon his intelligent knowledge of God came true to the letter. The whole matter, Pharaoh's dream and Joseph's nbiliiy as an interpreter were inspired "established" by God. There is no such thing as chance in the spiritual realm any more than in the realm of physics or chemistry. Hack of every effort is an adequate cause. Joseph renlized this hence his words that, "the thing Is established (prepared) by God. and God will shortly bring it to pass." II. Pharaoh's Deliverer, vv. 33-40. Joseph told Pharaoh the meaning of his dream which had been repeated and which seemed like two different dreamB whereas it was but one in the lesson to bo taught. It is not\nough, 1 however, to tWl a man what is the matter with him. most men know j without being told, but it is quite an- ! other thing to present a rational cure. Joseph's interpretation commanded i Pharaoh's confidence and his suggest- ! ed policy is one of wisdom and good 1 Judgment, viz: (1) a man who shall be the executive supervisor of tho plans for meeting the impending catas- ; trophy; (2) a governmental department which shall devote itself solely 1 to this matter, nnd (3) abundant storage of provisions during tho sever years of plenty. Pharaoh's Wisdom. This man of piety knew how to properly improve his opportunity and Pharaoh saw the secret of Joseph's i wisdom (v. 38), "a man in whom the spirit of Clod is" (2 Tltn. 1:7). Pharaoh had tho wisdom to set in authority the spirit-filled man, a broad sug gestlon for voters, business men. anc' even church members. True discr tlon is God taught (v. 39) and we no begin to see that Joseph's testimony for God is being honored (Jno. 12:26) ' nnd that Joseph was worthy of the honor and power conferred upon him (vv. 40. 41, 44; cf. Matt. 28:18). The J source of Joseph's wisdom is open to all (Jas. 1:5), and his worthiness cnme because of his obedience (Tsa. 1:19). Ills training and testing had i prepared him to occunv his exalted no pit ion with proper humility and zeal. Faithfulness is of great value and always pays well in the long run. Joseph's exaltation to power is a good type of Christ, (a) in the power bestowed upon him, Jno. 3:35; (b) in that the power was unlimited?all the princes were under his feet, Ps. 105: 20-22; Eph. 1:20-22; I Peter 3:22; (c) by the certainty of 'Pharaoh's promise, : "I am P^raoh," see Ex. 3:13, 14. Joseph did not use his great power for his own selfish ends as do so mhny modern rulers among men. He did not at once send for the members of his family and place them in lucrative positions, but at once set nbout making provision for the future. It has been suggested that the unsuccessful Interpreters of Pharaoh's dream must have ridiculed Joseph but he certainly was sustained by the conviction that God's word was true and that the years of famine wero certain to come. This ought to admonish us to Improve our present., priceless, opportunities (Eph. 5:16). Joseph's open confession was his leaning back upon God. This story gives us a remarkable revelation of the valuo of faith as tho chief element of strength of a man. It is also a valuable lesson in its revelation of the methods of God in ruling and over-ruling the affairs of men. When we remember Joseph in a pit because of the hatred of his brothers and see him now occupying tho supreme place of power in Egypt it seems impossible to reconcile the two events, and yet we see how perfectly natural the order of events are and remember how God is constantly performing these seemingly impossi ble feats. V H Bfl RUBBERONI^H Wife so Weak tmdV^^^^A Could Not ^andSp^^H Noise ? How Cured. Munford, Ala.?" I was so weak nervous while passing through ::m?-tns;ih;n;?TT;lH;IHhH?illl'{!lli Change ^ssw^^j&i - ' could hiwUy ?|\ ,. ^1 ;' nail ruhboraf&I^^^^^^Hj ^?i:= gates for I couldH^^I^H If? 7M 8tand {t to \ ^ /;:- > g^te slam. piliV^VPP "1 al8?bad 4 B ache and a v r%' r^'fitprin y stomachr^^^M^H Ll>'/\ ' noticed that \7%[ !\ /M'yl'i Pinkham's Vefl H ?- ? ' * ' table Compound advertised for such cases and I sent prot a bottle. It did me bo much that I kept on taking it and found it^^^^^H be all you claim. I recommend Compound to all women afflicted was."?Mrs. F. P. Mullen do re, ford, Alabama. An Iloncst Dependable is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable pound. A Root and Herb medicine inated nearly forty years ago by E. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass., for trolling female ills. ^^B^H Its wonderful success in this line made it the safest and most dcpendabj^^^^^H medicine of the age for women and woman suiTering from female ills herself justice who does not give n&H H If you havo the slightest don l*B^B| that Lydia 13. Piiiklmm's Vcget hie Compound will help yon.wnioB B to Lydia 1I'inkhaia Medicine < <>. (confidential) 1 ,ynn, Mass., for vice. Your letter will l>e opencdt^H^^J read and answered by a womaii,^B and held in strict confidence. ECZEMA 25 YEARS ^ FACE A MASS OF IT I Says "Rosinol Cured Me of One of the Worst Cases Anybody Ever Saw." Philadelphia, Pa., Sept. 20 1912.?"I had eczenip for tin- last twenty-five ^B years, and have been afflicted so badly that for weeks I could not go outside ^B| the door. My face was.one mass of pimples, and not only the looks of it but the itching and burning pains I ^^B experienced were just dreadful. I lost a great deal of sleep and had to keep H dampened cloths on iny face all night to relieve the pain. 1 had become dlsguated with trying different thingiL^^^^B up mim)gpaB|^^^B Resinol, and after using oho Jar llesinol Qintmeut, and one cake B B Resihol Soap, I saw the dlfferene^^^^B and now my face* Is as clear as anj^M^^H body's, and I certainly don't need be ashamed to go out. Resinol So.i^^B^J and Resinol Ointment cured me one of the worst cases of eczema, guess, that anybody ever saw.'^^^^M (Signed) Mrs. C. Hellmuth, 6611 Appl -B B tree Street. H^^B Nothing we ran say of Resin. ! B B equals what others, such as Mrs. Hellninth, say of it. If you are Buffering IB from itching, burning skin troubles, pimples, blackheads, dandruff, chapped ^^B^ face and hands, ulcers, boils, stubborn ^^B sorie, or piles, At will cost you nothing M^B to try Resinol Ointment and Soap.. Ju?t ^^B send to Dept. 11K, Resinol Chem. Co., Baltimore, Md., for a free sample ofeach. Sold by all druggists. ^^B Make the Liver I Do its Duty I Nine times in ten when the liver is right the stomach and bowels are right. CARTER'S LITTLE B LIVER PILLS 1 gentlvhnt firmly corn^ Na pel a lazy liver to P fc OT rDC M do its duty. tglTTL? fl tipation, In^j^C Wjfc IKS I Headache, 1 and Diatreaa After Eating. l SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature :r. , annvu; dumlm, aou yeaaio avi? Brooklyn, H. T. ^ - l? guaranteed to gl<re fullest satisfaction. l/LUCtCUAjJ- Write ns for copies ol 4 < _^mrT>n treatments from people who hare heen KTTIVFY i\t| benefited. 35r and 6oa ItllkVMATIsM ?* 7?ur dealer's or RKMKDV direct from RYDALE REMEDY CO., NEWPORT NEWS.VA. MONUMENTS L__=^_M First clans work. Write for prices. rW. - mLMechlanburo Marble <iGranite Company ?Charlotte. North Carolina Snnnnkv traathd (? ? quick r*> UnUTOI |te(, usually nmort swelling and short breath In s fair days and entire relief In 10-46days, trial treatment FREE. as. wmaaaaeoaa. Qe? *. uiwii.Qs. \lrglole Isrni?Write for tny catalogue ot stock and grain bargains JOHN 1111.L CARTER. MtKHHIKG. VA. J* -y . . * Hr ' war!