1 *. \ ' %
OLEMN WARNING TO PARENT8.
The season for. bowel trouble Is fast
approaching and you should a( once
provide your home with King's Diarrhoea
and Dysentery Cordial. ' A guaranteed
remedy for Dysentery, Cholera
Morbus, Flux, Cholera Infantum
and all kindred diseases. Numerous
testimonials on our flies telling of
marvelous cures can be had by request.
Mr. Robert Yount, who is employed
by me at Fullers, N. C., was quite ill
recently with a stubborn attack of
dysentery. He was treated by physicians
without benefit, and continued
to grow weaker. Half a: bottle of
King's Diarrhoea and Dysentery Cordial
completely cured him, and he said
unless he knew where more could bo
obtained he would not take ten dollars
for the other half of the bottle.?A.
!W. Fuller.
Sold by all medicine dealers. Prico
15 cents the bottle. Adv.
Young Financier,. ,
Freddie came Into the tiouse one
duy and said that the woman next
door had offered him a penny if ho
would tell what his mother had Baid
about her.
"I'm to glad you didn't 'tell," remarked
his mother. "I wouldn't
have her know lor anything that I
even mention her. You're 'a wise little
boy, my dear." j
"You bet, I nm," returned Freddie.
-When she offered me the penny I
told her that what you said wan something
awful and It was wdrth half a
dollar."
Not on the Map.
Joan was a most conscientious pupil,
eight years old. During one of the
school study periods the teacher noticed
her searching a large atlas Intently
with a most puzzled expression.
After a few minutes she asked the
child what she was looking for.
"Oh." said the anxious student, I
-Miss Kane said we were to llnd all
the placcB spoken of in the history
lesson on the map, and it- says that
'Columbus was at the l'oini of Starvation.'
and I can't find It anywheres!" |
?Youth's Companion.
nill.I.S ANI> KICVKIl AMI ARl'IC
Art- I'runiplly Currtl l>>- ICIIilr llnlirlc.
"I recommend 'IUII*lr llnl.rk' to all
sufferers of Malaria and Chills. Ilavo ;
sufft-rcd for several years, havo tried
everything, hut failed, until I rnm?
across your wonderful medicine. "Can
truly say It has cured me."?(IrorKc Inscoe.
Company O. 4th Itatalllon.
XCllxIr lliitirk f>0 cents, all druggists or
by Parcels Post prepaid from Kloczew
hi uMiiingtun, D. c.
Our Wonderful Energy.
Andro do Fouquleres, whom society
lionized during tho New York
season, praised on his departure for
Paris the wonderful energy of the
American business man.
"1 once asked an American business
man." he said:
" 'Do you know what leisure
means?'
" 'Why, to be sure, I do,' the business
man replied. 'leisure is spare
time that can bo devoted to sorao
fresh Job of work." "
DORS VOl)II HEAD ACIIKf
Try Hicks'CAPUDINK. It's liquid ? plruu?nt
to t.-lkc ? effects Immediate?po.>d to prevent
Hick lli>niliki<h'is and Ncnroun Hruilnrbi'ii nlno.
Your money buck If not satisfied. 10c., lite, lux]
10c. at inediciue stores. Adv.
Best Way.
"How would you mnko these remedies
popular?"
"Make them nnti-skeptic."
AUDI SICK Till! l.rVKR ANO rt ?IFIE8
Til K lll.OOI).
Tho Old 8lnn<lnr<l ccncrul ulrcniphcnlna tonic,
GllOVBX TAHTKl.BHS chill TONUl. arouses I ho
llmrto action, drivesMalnriaotit of the blood and
builds up tin- system. A irur tonic. For adults and
chlld.cn. bl'r.
To know that which lies hofore us
In dally life is the prime wisdom.?
Milton.
For sores apply Hnnford's Balsam
lightly. Adv.
What n lot of unklcked kicks the
average man has coming to him!
What Ails You?
C An Invitation la extended by Doctor Pteroe 3
3 to every alek and aillnjr man or woman to 3
5 conault tho Faculty oiihe Invallda' Hotel g
-g at IlulfiVi, N. Y., by letter. Writ* your ?
B symptom* fully and frankly, and evert 3
B lot tor will bo carefully cnnaldcrad, fully B
eg answered and ita statement* hold as
3 strictly private and sacredly confidential. 3
~ Dr. Fierce**
| Golden Medical Discovery 3
3 makes for rich, pure blood and thus In- B
B 'igorato the system For n torpid llvor g
m and Ita attendant indigi'slion, dyspepsia. 3
3 headache, pcrhnps dizsinesa, foul breath, B
B nasty coated tonipic with bitter taato, g
3 joe* of appetite with distress after eat- 3
B nvryuusuaaa and debility, nothing la 3
B ** tfoodWhy
Scratch^
"Hunt'9Cure"isguaranteed
to stop and
Permanently cure that
[ ( terrible itching. It is
W comPoundcd *or *kat
Jlf will be promptly refunded
(Mm WITHOUT QUESTION
I jjmVjlji if Hunt's Cure fails to cure
L'tch, Eczema, Tetter,Ring
tMLxJkM/I W Worm or any other Skin
Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mail
direct ifhc hasn't it. Manufactured only by
A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman, Texas
I y L*uuigiLj=gan
Ik j ttpluin,Whiskey and Itrua llablth treatIk
J led nt hnmn or ai KanttarTnm Hook nn
I &J V? DR, II. M.WOOI.I.KY,
tir Tirroa (usiTAHit a. atlas*? a, gcokuia
KODAKS |?SU
iflUluV flexp (tiro developed Mle. Prima 3 loS
WBfT-jy eta. Prompt attention to mall orders.
r. o. BERNAUt GREENSBORO,N.C.
Virginia I-arms?Writs for my catalogu? of
stork and grain bargains. JOHN Hit.I.
CAlWlt. X.CT8BPBO. TA.
Twelve Imported Japanese novelties sent fres
to new eustorosra Bend to stamps post ass
Haltamore, IMI Amsterdam Ave.. Jt. Y. City.
Agents Wast tad?1?0% profit ssllingour hl(h
grade goods Particulars fres. LeskwtM
fcppty Co.. #skMw Orovaa. Mo.
;i ^ t iiil
i
CROSSING HLA.D
ONE of the largest, and In
many respects the most wonderful,
waterworks system In
the world will be completed
and placed in operatlou in the
course of this month by the City 6f
Los Angeles, Cal. The Aqueduct,
with Its system of 11 vo storage reservoirs,
is 235 miles in length, and is
designed to carry a daily supply of
2f?S\000,000 gallons from, the Sierra
NeVuda mountains southward across
the great Mojave desert, under t~he
Sierra Madre range and Into the Sau
Fernando vulley, twenty-five tulles
northwest of the city. From here the
water needed for domestic consumption
will be carried in a six-foot steel
pipe into the city's present distribution
mains. The system comprises the
longest aqueduct in the world.
The project }vas inaugurated >!n
190.r>, and since 1908 an army of f>,000
men have been steadily employed
night and day in its construction. On
the desoluto and sun-scorched desert
the summer temperatures have
ranged as high as 120 degrees P. In
fact, oue of the great problems has
been to provide the men and animals
with food and wa'.or and proper accommodations
to withstand th? rllnm
tic conditions.
Of Various Forms.
i The Loa Angeles Aqueduct, aa it la
called, la of various forms and derlgna.
The first twenty-two miles is
unlined open canal, the following
tliirty-eight miles is an open ditch, and
the remainder is in covered concrete
conduit, tunnels, and concrete and
riveted steel siphons, the latter being
used to carry tho water across deep
canyons, or valleys. More than fiftythree
miles of tho aqueduct is composed
of tunnels driven through solid
grar.lte, the longest being tho Elizabeth
tunnel, under tho Sierra Madre
mountains, with a length of five miles.
Tho system of four storage reservoirs
provides for the impounding of fifty
billion gallons, which, at the rate of
tho city's present daily consumption,
would be sufficient to supply the municipality
for three years.
Much of the work has been done
from five to thirty-five miles from any
railroad. Preliminary to the construction
of tho aqueduct it was necessary
to build 390 miles of roads and
trails, four water systems with 190
miles of mains, three hydroelectric
power plants, a telephone system 350
miles long, a standard gauge steam
railroad 120 mlle3 into the Mojave
desert, and a cement mill costing
$875,000. With the exception of one
smull contract for nine miles of conduits
and tunnels, the entire work
has been done by the city.
Tho system is a gravity one throughout,
tho intake being at an elevation
of 3,812 feet above sea-level, and the
elevation of Los Angeles being on an
average only 276 feet. The cost of
; tho work has been $20,000,000, exclusive
of any power development. By
| Impounding tho flow of the aqueduct
ut its outlet during .he rainy season
It will be possible to deliver more
| than 200,000,000 gallons daily during
1 the dry season?April 15 to October 15
j ?in which no rain falls. This is
much more than 3ufllclcnt to meet the
i dally requirements of the City of
Ixmdon. As the City of Los Angeles
! has a present population of only 400,000,
and requires but 50,000,000 gallons
daily, tho surplus aqueduct llow for n
i long period of years will bo devoted
to the Irrigation of 135,000 acres of
' orange and lemon lands adjacent to
the city.
Chief Features.
One of the chief features of tho
enterprise is in the generation of
hydro-electric enorgy. There ia a fall
of 1,500 feet in the aqueduct fortyseven
milea from the city, with the
i possibility of developing 120,000,000
; horse power. Of thla amount, 37,500
horse-power are now being developed
' at a cost of $3,360,000. The power
houses will be ready for operation
I within several months after the aqueduct
is placed In operation, and their
output will be devoted to lighting the
city's streets and boulevards. The
designer and constructor of this great
work, which In point of magnitude
ranks as the third largest hydraulic
work under way in thj western hernia
phere. Is the City's Water Engineer,
Mr. William Hulbolland.
The accompanying picture gives a
/
y
' < *j~?M
MAN CANYON
| good Idea of Che formidable nature
of the enterprise, and the immense
scale on which the. work has been carried
out. It shows how the huge I
pipe has been carried down one side
of tin arid Jawbone canyon, across the
bottom of the valley and higff up on
the opposite side to the point whore it
dives bolow the Burface of the soil,
and is continued underground.
. The Jawbone Bipbon alone Ls 8,000 j
feet in length?or over one and a half J
miles?measures from aeven feet Bix
inches to ten teet in diameter, and
has a total weight of 3,300 tons. The
picture is taken looking north, from
the south rim of the canyon and 800
feet above the valley floor, and between
the bottom of the canyon und
the point on Its aide -where the pipo ;
plunges underground the difference in
level is 850 feet At the lowest point
the water pressure 1b enormous?330
pounds to the square inch, which is
equivalent to twenty-four atmospheres
?and to resist this internal pressure
on the pipe the steel here is one and
one-quarter inches In thlcknesB, the
rlvetu used in fastening the sections 1
together being seven inches long.
MANY CLIMATES IN ALASKA
But There la One Island Where Cold
Weather Is Absolutely Unknown.
"There Isn't a section of the United
States, I venture to say, where at some
time frost has not been known." remarked
Hugh C. Todd of Seattle, -j
chairman of the Democratic state
committee of Washington, at the Wlllard,
according to the Washington
Post. "Hut in Alaska, which is looked
upon as the coldest country on earth,
bar Greenland and the arctic region,
there ia an island where frost has j
never been heard of. This is Middleton
island, one of the Aleutian group
of islands close to the Japan current.
There the temperature is always mild.
Twenty miles away on the other side
of the islands, it is nearly always
freezing'- in fact, ia a country of such
varied climate that almost anything
can be produced. If' is possible to
grow strawberries, blackberries and
other early summer fruit for the win- ter
market. In the Susitna valleyv,
which Is the valley that distributed
the waters of the southern slope of >
the coast range, the weather, 1 venture,
is now warmer and liner than
in any part of the United States. That 1
is brought about, of course, by the
Japan current-'"
Mr. Todd Is the youngest chairman
In the country, it ia raid, lie was a
candidate for governor of Washington
In the primaries and was defeated
by Governor Listen by* only 300 votes.
Then he turned in and managed Governor
Lister's campaign and won a
victory.
"Washington state 1b a common
wealth that is just as widely diversified
in her politics as her resources,"
said Mr. Todd. "We can produce nearly
everything, and we raise all kinds
of politicians. In the recent election
every party. Including the woman suffragists.
Prohibitionists and Socialists,
got some ofllce."
Have to Watch Crops.
Unwelcomo visits of predatory
bands during the harvest season in
China have led to professional "crop
watchers" being hired to guard
against the larcenlsts eager to ply
their trade in orchard or field. In
some districts societies exist whose
business it Is to furnish watchers
whenever required Almost every
field has Its watch tower, and these
frail tenements are never deserted,
night or day, until the crop Is gath
ered. Towers are necessary, as giant
millet grows to a height of ten feet,
usually, and often reaches fifteen feet
Armed wHh pharp knives, the thieves
enter the fields and cut off the large
. I millet heads.
i Law Aimed at Careless Autolsts.
i Following the example of other for
elgn cities. Paris has seen the light
i and henceforth the use of muffler cut
i outs on automobiles in that city will
bring retribution In the form of the
, law. Their use has been made a
misdemeanor punishable by fine 01
i Im prison menL
ALMOST LOST _
HER REASON
But Thanks To An Old Friend,
This Terrible Catastrophe
Was Avoided.
Tampa, Fla.?Mrs. E. C. Coram ol
No. 2905 Hlgblnnd Ave. says: "1 was
very weak and worn out from womanly
troubles. My husband bought me
two bottles of Cardui to take as a
tonic, and from the first day it Beemed
to mo I felt its good effects.
By the time I had. used the two bot
lies, i leit ana looked like a new
woman.
Some time later I got my feet wet
at the wrong time, and I turned to
Qardd to remedy the mischief done.
Before I had taken one bottle It
gave me the needed relief.
Again, in later life, when passing j
over a critical time, I almost lost my
reason, but thanks to three or four
bottles of Cardui, I did not. That has
been 15 years ago. I afh now 59 years
of age. and feeling line.
I constantly praise Cardui to all my
sick friends.
It is a wonderful remedy."
This earnest letter should take from
your mind any doubt you might have
as to the merits of Cardui, the woman's
tonic. Mrs. Coram is certainly
competent to recommend Cardui,
since it helped her over three critical
stages of life. *
Don't neglect your troubles longer.
Get a bottle of Cardui today.
' N. B.? WHtt to: Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
Ladies' Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga. Tenn., for
SHcialInitructiom on your case and 54-page book,
"Home Treatment for Women," sent in plain
Wrapper. Adv.
He May Be a Great Doctor Some Day.
William, aged live, had wfttchod
with much curiosity the family physician
each day count his grandmother's
tyuLse.;. When the doctor's visits ceased,
William felt the responsibility of
counting his grandmother's pulse
dally. One morning William's father
came into the room and found his
young son looking thoughtfully at his
tiny \yatch, his fingers on grandmother
h wrist.
. "W,ell, son, what is It today?" inquired
the father. William looked .
grave, but without hesitation replied; ,
"Ten dollars, sir."
Paraphrasing the Immortals.
Tennyson's "Brcok" and Scott's
"J-ochtnvar" were recently sot for
luiruphrase at a girls' school. The
conscientious students set to work
with a dictionary. Here follow sped- j
mens of the results; To bicker down
a valley?"To have an undignified
quarrel in a low place among tho
hills." He staid not for brake?"Ho '
never stopped for a mechanical con- i
trivance to reduce speed by means of j
friction."
SKIN DISEASE ON FACE
Barthell. Ky.?"I had a Bkin disease
on my face, neck and hands that tormented
me all tho time and when I
would got hot the places would burn
so that I had to keep my face wet in (
cold water It began as pimples and
indeed it was disfiguring, for it would !
get In spots on my face and hands as ]
largo ns a quarter of a dollar. It would i
get into blisters sometimes and I sure ;
did suffer. My face burned all tho j
time. It was this way so bad for !
about six years nnd I tried everything |
that I could hear of. but nothing did
any good.
"One day I found tho Cuticura Soap
and Ointment advertised and ordered
some at once. I would wash my face
good with the Cuticura. Soap and then
apply the Cuticura Ointment and they
Vaver cured me. " It would take half a
tablet to toll all I suffered In those six
years." (Signed) Mrs. Delia Hill,
;Jan. 3. 1912. '
r Cutfcnra Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each j
frpe, with 32-p. Skin Hook. Address !
{xist-card "Cuticura, Dept. L. Boston." !
| Adv. ......
More Painful to Marty.
-The worst of all isms." said tho j
I lecturer "is pugilism.""
"Pardon me," my friend," rejoined a
I man who had just entered the hall on
crutches, "but 1 know a worse one
j than thnt."
"What is it. sir?" queried the lec!
lurer.
|thei;matism," answered the other.
?Stray Stories.
it Is Gocd for Man.
i To heal cuts, sores, burns, lameness !
' and other external ailments quickly i
use Hanford's rtalsnm. It is a valu- |
] able household remedy and should al
ways be kept in every home. Adv.
No Hope of Return.
"I am nfrald I will lose my mind."
"That's bad. for nobody who snw
, it when you lost it, would notice it."
I'or SI'MMnn llKADACIITCS
Tilrh:-.' <!* API* DINK Is the l>o?t rcmodv|
no in;: J tor what muse* them?whether
1 from the boat, sitting in draughts, fever|
l.-h ondltlon. etc. !<)? ., 2T?e nnd 00c pot
! buttle at ined'.eino stores. Adv.
A friend yo.t have to buy won't be
worth what you pay for him.?G. I).
Prentiss.
To Kellevo t tie t'Hln of a It urn Instantly
nn<t lake <mi all tnllniamntton In one <luy. apply t h/
wonderful, old reliable l?K. I'OltTKlfS ANTISKI*T10
11KA I.I NO Oil.. Keller, ? pcln and beals at
Ihe same tiuio. ZSo, Mr, $1.00.
A man's children are nearly always
well trained If his wife does it.
Mrs, Wlnslow's Soothing Syrnp for Children
teething, softena the guina. red < iff a liiMmmniv
Uau.alloys pain,euro* wind college a bottlejUi
Work might be more to our liking
if we didn't have to do it.
J
. )
momtional
SUNMrSCtlOOL
Lesson
(By 13. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening
Department, The Moody Bible Institute
of Chicago.)
LESSON FOR MAY 18
JOSEPH MEETS HIS BRETHREN.
LESSON TKXT-Oen. 42:3-17. . ' GOLDEN
TEXT?"Whatsoever a man
aoweth, that shall lie also reap." Gal.
6:7.
Joseph was thirty years of age when
he reached his position of supreme au- ,
thority, but we ought not to allow our- 1
selves to forget those thirteen; y??ars i
of humiliation, during which ho' was
betrayed, sold into slavery and neglected
by those whom he befriended.
Yet thoso were days of fidelity in his
service, of victory over fierce tempta- i
tion. of enduring unjust imprisonment
?a long period of patient waiting but
a valuable period in that now at thirty
years of wge ho comes to this position i
of power fully equipped with that
knowledge of men, control of himself
and faith in God as to be prooerly fitted
for tho burden of responsibility
thrust upon him.
. Did Not Forget. ;
I. The Brothers Need, w. 3-6. The i
famine was not confined to Egypt, but ]
ronchod over to Canaan, where Jacob !
and his sons lived. The desperateness
of the famine is indicated by' Ja- j
cob's commahd-to buy, "thjat we may ,
live," and not die." But Jacob is too
old to travel, hence .tho' brSthers undertake
tho Journey. t Twenty-two
years have passed since that ex perl- ;
enco when Josepli'8 brethren cast him
iiito tho pit. Tliey havo been years
filled With wonderful experiences^for ,
Joseph. Now their attitude is changed;
instead of beiug his tormentors they
nre suppliants at his feet. During
tbese seven years of garnering Joseph
had set up his own family and two
sons were born, the names of whom
were significant.
Tho possession of a child of his own
would naturally quicken his inquiries
as to his father's household, for ho
assumed that in the order of events :
his father must be dead.
II. A Brother's Memory, vv. 7-17. Joseph
at once recognized his brothers,
but treated them brusquely, demand- !
ing from whence they camo and the
purpose that brought them hither
(v. 7). Again (vv. 8, 9) tho text reminds
us that Joseph remembered.
Only God can forgive and forget. But
Joseph is an Inspiration to us that !
though we may not be able to forget j
no uiu sur^ivu, a 111; question nilgai
bo raised, "Why then did Joseph disBimulate?"
The answer is threefold:
(1) Joseph desired to ascertain the
characters of his brothers. Did they
remember? Yes. for they replied that
they were "twelve brethren." Ten
were before him. one at home und
"one is not." That their characters
were not entirely changed is evidenced
by their words, "We are truo
men" (v. 11), which of course was not
the truth. (2) Joseph desired to know j
of his father and of their home life. * j
The accusation that the brothers are ,
spies called forth the statement that ;
the father, Jacob, is still alive. Tho |
third reason for this treatment devel- j
oped out of these first two, viz., Jo- !
soph desired to reach his father and ,
Benjamin, whom he .had newer seen. |
We do not commend Joseph's .method
as being of the highest ethical value,
for his standard was not the. standard
of the man who knows Christ. Joseph
is a type; there is only one perfect
roan, Jesus Christ, and Joseph points
toward that promised Saviour.
Guilty Consciences.
Jbseph knew his brothers told tho ;
truth about their not being spies, but
he nlso'lfnriw that they lied when they |
asserted themselves to be true men j
and that one brother "is not." Hero
is the lesson of mistaken estimates of .
one's self and that a man's true value
is known and appreciated. Little did i
t I. * 11 *? e - * I
imvj iiruiuc, uuwcver, nun uu'ir iaise- {
hood was being read as it was uttered ;
and that the man before whom they |
were standing was this snme brother, i
Joseph affected not to believe any of i
their story and demanded proof (vv. j
15, 16) of their assertions. After throe
days In jail he appeared to relent and 1
orderod that only one of their number
should remain as hostage. The result J
of all is shown in v. 21. After invol- }
untarily leaving Simeon shut up in the i
Egyptian prison their minds traveled ,
back to that time twenty yearB before '
and they remembered Joseph's an- J
guish and distress when they would
not hear, "thercforo is this distress
come upon us." Their guilty consciences
are aroused.
Jacob's cry, "All things aro against
me," v. 36, was a mistake. Joseph i
' wan alive and exalted that he might
save the llfo of Jacob and bis children.
Simeon was alive and drawing
i his brothers back to Egypt. Benjamin 1
i would come back safely.
Emphasize the fact that wa cannot :
| forget our wrong acts and that Josenli I
i was not troubled by any Buch mem- >
orles. Also emphasize the return of ,
pood for evil, Rom. 12:20, 21. Joseph's
brethren were sowing the fruit of the j
seeds of envy and malice they had
sown twenty years previouoly. So also
was Jacob reaping the seeds of his
deceit, for In spite of his great material
prosperity he has great anguish
of heart. We try to row and not to
reap. See that the seed thoughts in
the heart are right. Tho grace of
God forgives sin, but It remains &
terrible fact in our lives.
I
5 |p C '
tf
ITS HARD TO WORK ;
It's torture to work with a lame, aching
back. Get rid of it. Attack the cause.
, Probably it's weak kidneys.
Heavy or confining work is hard on
the kidneys, anyway, and once the kid- ;
neys become inflamed and congested,
the trouble keeps getting worse.
Tho danger of running into gravel,
dropsy or Bright's disease is serious.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills, a fine remedy
for backache or bad kidneys.
^ "twry Ptctwr
ANew Jersey jj===fj \
Louis- Henry,
"- 26 Grove. Bt., w,
Jersey City, N. ? kSV*'
J., says: "I suf- |it?r/ \ WTy f.
fered almost cv- ?!*?{ l\ V
erythlng from
broken down
kldnevs. Mv /" w
back was stiff
und pained ter- ?/C*^^3r ,'
rlbly. I was '(.|E*T -ZJE-?^ i,
all run down, v wf] ( "-JR III \ It !1
. Doan's Kidney v BV *TV JLl
Pills gave my L/!l
kidneys n e vy *"1^? U J y
life and a few
boxes cured mo
completely."
Cat Doan's at Any Store. 50c a Box
DOAN'S Kr,,IUiV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
RESINOL STOPS
ITCHING INSTANTIY
T
It is a positive fact that the moment
Resinol Ointment touches any itching
skin, the' itching stops and healing be- 1 .
gins. With the aid of. Resinol Soap, it
yuickly .clears .away all trace of. eczema, j
ringworm, pimples, blackheads, or. other |
tormenting, unsightly eruptions, leaving j
the skin clear and healthy.
; And the best of it is you need never
hesitate to use Resinol Soap and. Resi- |
n<?l Ointment. There is nothing in them
to injure the tendercst surface. Resinol
is a doctor's prescription which for
eighteen years has been U3cd by careful
physicians for all kinds of skin af- '
fcetions. They prescribe Resinol freely.
Confident that its soothing, healing ac- ,
tion is brought nbout by medication so
bland and gentle n* *o he suited to tho
most delicate, or irrita.ed skin?even of ,
a tiny baby. I
Resinol is sold by every druggist in 1
the United States, but you can prove J
at our expense what it will do for you.
Write today to Dept. 12-K, Resinol, Bal- 1
tinrore, Md., and we will send you by 1
parcel post n lil>cral trial of Resinol - I
Ointment and Resinol l>oap. I
ADVICE TO THE AGED j
Age brings Infirmities, such as sluggish 1
bow els, weak kidneys and torpid liver.
tuft's Pills
have a specific effect on. these organs,
stimulating the bowels, gives natural action,
and Imparts vigor to the whole sytsem.
USE ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE,
The antiseptic powder to be shaken Into the shoes.
If you want rtv and comfort for tired, aching,
swollen, sweating feet, use Allen's Foot- Fuse. It relieves
corns and bunions of all pain and prevents
blisters, sore and cqMaus spots." Just the thing for
Insuring Parties, tda^h't Leather Bboes, and for
Breaking In New Shoes. It Is tho greatest comfort
discovery of tho age. Try It today. Sold everywhere,
torts. Don ? neer;>t any Mbititutf. For FHHK trial
package, address Alton 8. Olmsted, La lioy, N. T.
e~v _ Is guaranteed to give
x/Z^z/lCy/xtlL fnileat satisfaction,
aiiii Write us for copies of
treatments from pete
t>le who have Keen
irinVLf M vr% lioilpfi I ?*t1 9Ats ftnd
KIlVVO MAT ISM >""r dealer's or
KKMK.DV direct from
RYDALE REMEDY CO.. Newport news.va.
A Bleeping car porter earns mA'? money
than, any man on his train. Knsy and
pleasant work, good chance for travel and
advancement. Any colored man deatrtng
such a position, write us today for free
information. No experience necessary.
AMERICAN SERVICE SCHOOL. Desk Z. 80 Sth An, N. V.City
:i II.ii? iiiwisii.'II M.I an in ii ii?w
^ I# ft f> A ISO and High Urndo
KODAKS *^fce?2?
Ota: Attention. Prices reasonable.
Service prompt. Send for Price List.
L*A?fcAt'S ^Jir UTU1UL. UU&LKUTOX. 9. C.
& . FILMS DEVELOPED FREE
All prints up to 2} x 4J." 8c
rnUilJy All i>rlnts larger to 4 x 6, 5o
Postage 4c. Send us a trial order.
DAVIS STUDIO. RICHMOND. VA.
g APM ffr
to bo an auto ex- tB? 11 iy
pert nndniBko blit
rraploy yi>u while
leurning. I ron model to Ilomn Study Students. Small
cost K?* j payments W rite for special offer.planC-fL
lalMHbil. KagU?rHp( Ulbp ?f Weak'., lac., Ria'i, D. C.
WBH the greatest
rl LAMP OF THE AGE
? Prodnce* pure white light from org"
fti 3 dlnary kerosene?perfectly odortff/.j,
L?r*x 5 less; brighter than 2 lamps, burns
WUUdtl& ,wllf the t>"' p0t? 1or "s?"? Write
?i uncfl ior Tree folder Riving
fact*. Agents make Rood money.
L. IN. MAUCK
60s I. Main St., Richmond,Va.
?*J? a
BAROLD BOMCRS, 180 D?K*\b At*.. Brooklyn, k/t!
TYPEWRITERS
^/*l ^ Al'. makes, sold, rented and
V^SflSsJZr skillfully repaired. Rented
jj&jjS&Ut'/) Ss for 3 months and up;
rent applies on purchase.
American Typewriter Exchange, Inc.
Homo Office, 605 E. Main St., Richmond, Va.
BE A MOVING PICTURE ACTOR OR
IPTRCCC III* Money In It. Our book toarhea
MO I nWJ by mall. Totla bow to get poatllone.
No < ?|N>rlenc<> nr.r.'arj, l'. st^)al(1, *2(?J Hand
<& j KODAKS & SUPPLIES
rfin'af a'''0 *'? hlffhent rl&sa of finUhlng.
1'rlcea and Catalogoa upon roquea*.
S. Galcskl Optical Co., RirfcwioJ, Yo.
1