I How To Make the QuickestjSimplestCough ! Remedy Hack Better tbaa the Knlf. mmm i om save 94, Kallr Gaacaatee This home-made cough syrup is now used in more hornet than any other cough remedy. Its promptness, ease and cer tainty in conquering distressing coughs, chest and throat colds, is really remark able. You can actually feel it take hold. A day's use will usually oreroome the ordinary cough relieves even whooping cough quickly. Splendid, too, for bron chitis, spasmodic croup, bronchial asthma and winter coughs. .Get UZm drupeist 2 ounces of rmex (60 cents worth), pour it in a pint bottle and till the bottle with plain granu lated sugar syrup. This gives you at a cost of only 64 cents a full pint of better cough syrup than you could buy for $2.50. Takes but a few minutes to prepare. Full directions with Pinex. Tastes good and never spoils. You will be pleasantly surprised how quickly it loosens drr, hoarse or tight coughs, and heals the inflamed mem branes in a painful cough. It also stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending the per sistent loose cough. Pinex is a most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norway; pine ex tract, rich in guaiacol. which is so heal ing to the niembrunes. To avoid disappointment, be sure and ask your druggist for "214 ouncrs i'inex," .and don't accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satiHiaction, or money promptly refunded, gors with this preparation. The Piux Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. , ON ADVERTISING Once in a while, when we fee! strong and patient to go out soliciting advertising from Some of our friends and neighbors who seldom break into print, we are handed somthing like this: "Now tell me, what is the use of my spending money for advertising ' I have been here for years and every body in the county knows what I s Yes, brethren, there still exist a few isolated specimens of the old fashion ed merchant who nsk that qucstro: and really believe that there is no : swer to it. It is hard to answer. " fact it is hard to speak at all. A fel low feels like bringing up a 42-ccntl-motre gun and shooting a little twentieth-century ginger into the man who asks it. Yes, Mr. Merchant, you have been here 20 years, but every body in tho county docs NOT know what you soil. They know that you are here, just as they know that there is a big tree at the side of the road a mile out of town, or the same as they know that somewhere in town there is a lock-up. And when they come into town they drive right past your place just as they drive past the big tree or the callaboose and they pull up in front of the store of the fellow who has NOT been here 20 years but 'who is doing a bigger business than you are, just because he advertises and makes pood what he says in his ads. You can do the big business, too, Mr. Old Timer, any day you get r of the idea that because you have been here a long time everybody is thinking about you. This does not refer to any particular merchant bvt to one and all the the non?advertis 'ing kind. ROBERT EDWARD LEE When the future historian shall come to survey the character of Lee, he will find it rising like a huge moun tain above the undulating plain of humanity, and must lift his eyes high toward heaven to catch its summit. He possessed every virtue of other great comrades without their vices. He was a foe without hate, friend without treachery, a soldier without oppression, and a victim without mur muring. He was a public officer without vices, a private citizen without wrong, a neighbor without reproach, a Chris tian without hypocrisy, and a man without guile. He was a Caesar without his ambi tion, Frederick without his tyranny, Napoleon without his selfishness, and Washington without his reward. He was obedient to authority as r -servant, and- royal in authority as va true king. He was gentle as a woman in life, modest and pure as a virgin ivt thought, watchful as a Roman vestal in duty, submissive to law as Socra tes, and grand in battle as Achilles. Benjamin Harvey Hill. ' SAVES DAUGHTER Airicc of Mother Doult Pw ftsA Dasgkter'a Uctiffiely End. Read?, Ky. " I was not able to do anything for nearly six months," writes Mrs. Laum Bratcher. el this plaoe, "and was down in bed for three months, I cannet tell yea hew 1 suffered with my bead, an a with nervousness and womanly troubles. Our family doctor told my husband he could act do me any good, and he had to give it up. we tried another doctor, but he Aid not help mo. Attest, my mother advised me to take CarduS, the woman's tonic. 1 thought a was no use for 1 was nearly dead and nothing seemed to do me any good. But I took eleven bottles, and now 1 am able to do all of my work and my own washing. I think Cardul Is the best medicine in the world. My weight has increased, and 1 look the picture of health. " If you suffer from any of the ailments peculiar to women, get a bottle of Cardui oday. Delay is dangerous. We know it will help you, for it has helped so many thousands of other weak women in the past 50 years. At all druggists. mXHU,,! Chattanooga If (dicta Co., LadW UYltory Dot.. Chattanooga, Tsnn., lor SfcM Inttrtu-iini on your om and 64-pac book. Homo Crtatmtot tor Woman." in plain wrapper. W.O. lit teMOONAL awrsaiooL ISSGH (By E. O. SiLLiSR3, Acting Director ot Sunday School Course Moody Eiblo In stitute. Chicago.) , LESSON FOR JANUARY 31 THE BIRTH OF SAMSON. LESSON TEXT Judges 13:8-16. 24-36. and drink no Wins nnr a'lrnnir rirlnk Judges 13:4. The story of Samson bulks large In the book of Judges and In the interest and imagination of all men ever since his day. This being the only lesson in a seven years' course we suggest, in outline, Samson's entire life. I. Samson's Parents. God chooses a humble man and woman, folk of piety and prayer, to bring forth and rear this great deliverer. The angel's most improbable promise (13:3) is accepted by Manoah and his wife (13:6, 7). They express a desire to be able to measure up to the responsibility a suggestion to parents There is also a hint of the dual responsibility of par ents in the words, "teach us." (See Eph. 6:4; Jas. 1:5-7.) It was reason able to believe that the one who brought the promise could alss tell them how to train and nurture the child. Qod honored the mother's pray er and she shares, her experience with the father (v. 9). As the mother of a Nazarlte she must keep herself from all things unclean (v. 14; II Cor. 6: 17), even as Mary, the mother of Jesus (Luke 1:38). The experience of the sacrifice, the worship of Manoah and his wife and the fact of Sam son's birth completes the record of chapter 13. Manoah could not worship the angel, but could show him hospi tality. Verse 18 (R.V.) seems to indi cate that this was another premani festatlon of our Lord Jesus. II. Samuel's Power. Every race has its superman, and usually it is one of physical strength. That Samson had no physical evidence of his superior strength is evident from the fact that Delilah asked to know his secret. Nor was bis strength in his hair, else there was no need that the "Spirit of Jehovah" should come upon him. The secret of his power is indicated in 13:25. The word "move" suggests to play upon a harp, as if Samson's heart was open to God as a harp is open to human touch. "Samson's power was the result of a faith that was open to the infinite storehouse of the di vine dynamic." Such spiritual power Is within the reach of every man. Samson ("sunny") was full of laugh ter; not the comic, but the joyous. He did the big things God gave him to do and was filled with gladness. But Samson came under the spell of an evil woman and all of this true laugh ter and glad joyousness left his soul. III. Samson's Impurity. A woman can make or mar the man with whom she associates. As a Nazarlte, Samson was dedicated unto God. must not al low a razor to touch his bead, was not to touch anything unclean, nor drink Intoxicating liquor. This vow was usually for a short period Samuel and John the Baptizer are other Naza rites recorded in Scripture, and are said to have been such from birth (3.14; 16:17; Luke 1:15). Samson's strength burned out when he lay his head in a harlot's lap and the laughter went out of his soul. It was that which broke the contact between him and God. Samson's birth in a godly home, his knowlege of his relation to God and the experience of God's power did not keep him from an ignoble failure. IV. Samson's Imprisonment. We find him 'after his excesses grinding in the Philistine prison, where he perhaps overheard praises being sung to Dagon who had overthrown Jehovah's judge. It is never safe to play with tempta tion though conscious of our own strength; then it is we are most apt to fall (I Cor. 10:12). One act and the gay hero is grinding In a prison house. Directly a man goes into im purity, whether in act or thought, be loses the power that formerly moved men or worked wonders. Tear after year Samson plodded his round of en forced toil, a type of the force sad power of intemperance and other im pure habits. Finally, "when their hearts were merry" (16:25), he is brought out to make sport During one of his resting periods he said to a boy near by, "Let me feel of the two pillars," those upon which the main walls rested and which were within a man's reach. Then It was that he was able to grip the mysterious power of the unseen (16:30). Was Samson a suicide T No! He accepted death as the inevitable consequence of his act of duty (See Heb. 11:32). The growth of his hair was only a token of that consecration which he had surrendered when he failed to withstand the wiles of Delilah. The Temperance Teaching of this lesson Is all too plain. It must begin in the home and continue throughout an of life. As we have scattered in formation throughout our land we have seen the work of temperance ad vancing mightily Samson's exploit with the lion is a temperance sermon in parable (14:6. 6; Prov. 20:1). The business of the temperance forces is to slay the lion. We are also to eat "honey out of the rock." to gain vic tories, within and without and, like Samson, we can give honey to others. To have a part in helping to redeem a lost world requires that we keep clean. INGESTION, GAS OR SICK, SOUR STOMACH Time "Papc's Diapepsin!" In Five Minutes All Stomach Misery Is Gone "Really doss" put bad stomachs in order "really does" overcome indi gestion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes that just that makes Pape'a Diapepsin the largest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat fer ments into stubborn lumps, you bold gas and erucate sour, undigested foo" and acid; heed is dizzy and aches; breath foul; tongue coated; your ir sides filled with bile and indigestible waste, remember the moment "Pape'i Diapepsin" comes in contact with th stomach all such distress vanishes. It s truly astonishing almost marve; ous, and the joy is its harmlessness ' A large fifty-cent case of Pane' Diapepsin will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction or youi druggist hands you your money baci It's worth its weight in gold to me and women who can't get their storr achs regulated. It "celongs in you home should always be kept hat" in case of a sick, sour, upset stomac! during the day or at night. It's t quickest, surest and most harmlesr stomach doctor in the world. GENERAL FARM NOTES Clean up. Burn the rubbish. Paint all the ladders. Try feeding the cows for milk pro duction and see if the cream checks will not grow larger. Eggs at this season nean a good price. Are you getting any? Timothy hay is not good for she-'-p. Clover or alfalfa hay is ideal. Don't forget a box of fine, dry dust for winter use in the hen house. If a farmer crosses a heavy and a light horse he will only get a plug. Every horse, young or old, should exercise in harness or yard every day. More farms fail because of poor management than because of poor soil. Live stock raising tends to encour age boys and girls to remain on the farm. If the ram is weak and in poor con dition, the crop of lambs will be the same. Clean up the barn and corral and spread the manure where it is most needed. If you don't grade your eggs some one else will and you will pay him for doing it. i Better to have freedom, health and 1 productive thrift than pampered , showiness. , I After molting, a little linseed meal I is a fine thing to round out a good poultry ration, i I With proper care and feed a sow can proltably produce two litters of pigs a year. No man can make money feeding 80-cent corn and and 30-dollar mill feed to mongrel hogs. Partly decayed feeds, such as spoil ed meats, are a menace to the health of the flock. Well bred live stock furnishes the best possible market for the farmers' roughage and grain. For seed potatoes next year select the best hills entire, discarding latei on all the small ones. USE THE NEWSPAPER If a member of your family died would you print the obituary on a billboard if If your wife entertained would you send an account of it to the theater program man? If you were to enlarge your business, would you advertise in a hotel register ? If you were going to have a wedding in your family would you get out a handbill": You would send such items to a news paper, wouldn't you ? Then why don't you put your advertisement in a news paper? Every man who uses a bill board is adding to nature faking. The newspapers build your town. GIRLS! THICKEN AND BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR Brings Back its Gloss, Luster, Charm And Get Rid of Dandruff Try The Moist Cloth To be possessed of a head of heavy beautiful hair; sou, lustrous, fluffy wavy and free from dandruff is mere ly a matter of using a little Dander- lne. It is easy and inexpensive to have nice, soft hair and lots of it. ' Just get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine now all drug stores rec ommend it apply a little as directed and withing ten minutes there will br an appearance of abundance; fresh ness, fluffness and an incomparah' gloss and luster, and try as you will you cannot find a trace of dandruff or falling hair; but your real surprise will be after about two weeks' use, when you will see new hair fine ana downy at hrst yes but really new hair sprouting out all over youi scalp Danderine is, we believe, the only sure hair grower; destroyer of dandruff and cure for itchy scalp and never fails to stop falling hair at once, If you want to prove how pretty and soft your nair reany is, moisten i cloth with a little Danderine and care fully draw it through your hair tak ing one small strand at a time. Your hair will be soft, glossy, and beautir ful in just a few moments a cieugn' ful surprise awaits everyone who tries this. THOUGHTS OF AN IDLE HOUR (By Major F. W. Barber.) Chicago's oldest book shoD has sought refuge in bankruptcy because its ncn patrons did not pay their bills. Hut Chicago is no different from other parts of the country in that re spect. It is the way of a queer world. The poor man pays, because he must. The rich man owes, because his wealth grants him immunity from "vulgar dun." The poor man pays his taxes, be cause he must pay or lose his few possessions. the rich man hides most of his wealth and dodges the majority of his taxes, because under our political system his millions place him practi cally above the law. Of course officials wl ose business it is to enforce the law will take issue with this statement. But it is true and they know it, and you know it. And the common people, who are vastly in the majority, are becoming weary of such practices, and the mur- murings and muttenngs are becoming louder day by day. Some day the explosion will come. I stopped on a street corner a few days ago and listened to a speaker harangue a crowd. We was railing at Big Business, and made a magni ficent ass of himself. His insistant demand was for an equal division of the wealth of the country. In other words, he would have the man who worked and a cumulated a competence divide his gains with others who are too lazy to work. Judging from his personal appear- ence (he was well dressed and wore a big diamond) he was one of those who do not practice what thes preach. Of course he never thinks of settinr a "noble example" by first dividing his own pile. He prefers that the flow of gold be always in his direction, and diverts public attention by raging at Big Business. His own lnperfeitions are kept in the back ground. But Big Business has made this country what it is today the richest on the globe. The fault of our system is not with Big Business. It is in the manner in which Big Businness is handled and controlled. When we send men to Congress who think more of country than they do of self, and who have the nerve to enact just laws for the regulation of Big Business, we will then have progress ed far toward the solution of the pro blem. And when we elect State's attorneys and assessors, and Sheriffs and other officials who will enforce those laws, irrespectively of person or wealth or political affiliations, we will have solved the problem and will cease to have any just cause for complaint regarding Big Business. And we will send such men to Con gress and elect such others to office only when we begin to do our own thinking and free our noses from the strangle hold of the political bosses. Don t worry about your rival s lit tle jabs at you. You have him going and he knows it. A wise man is a fellow who has horse sense and doesn't know it. When in doubt, look it up before the other fellow shows you up. Some men are men, while others. merely wear pants. Boost! A little word with big re suits. Many a fool coughs up wisdom unawares. MINERS' ASTHMA is caused by inhaling tiny parti cles of dust; they, choke the bron chial tubes and, bronchitis or pneumonia easily follows. The cod liver oil in Scott's Emulsion corrects asthma by building healthy tissue; it soothes and heals the irri tated membranes, and strengthens the lungs, throat and nerves. Alwayt takm Scott" Emaltion CyML for Acnara' Atthma. Hlf TKA vim ma n mnntrv little cur doc snapping at a sleeping bulldog? Mexico ana uncle bam. Mr. Roosevelt urges a law to save the moose from extinction. Huh! "Still harping on my daughter," a the bard put it. Maybe it's remorse New lork, Evening telegram. Wood's Seeds Wood's Descriptive Catalog for 1915 has been carefully pre pared bo as to enable our formers and market growers to determine intelli gently as to the best and most profi table crops which they can undertake to grow. The present agricultural conditions make it very necessary to consider the question of diversilied crops, and our catalog; gives full information, both in regard to Farm and Garden Seeds that can be planted to profit and advantage. Write for Descriptive Catalog and prices of any Grass and Clover Seeds. Seed Grain or Seed Potatoes required. Catalog mailed on request. T. W. WOOD O SONS, Seedsmen, Richmond, V. i .. yV,. vWi- V2,r4vij UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF EDUCA TION LETTERS SERIES NO. 11 Country-Life Clubs in Granville The work of Miss Mary G. Shotwell, rural supervisor in Granville county, in organizing Country Life Clubs, should be known by every rural teach er in the State. A copy of the Con stitution and By-laws of this organi zation has just been received by thi UNIVERSITY NEWS LETTER. Write for a copy and read for your self. Says Miss Shotwell: "This bulletin is offered to the teachers in the hope that it may promote the progress a.i interests of the school and community Let us do more for the country bo. and girls than 'keep order' and 'heii recitations.' " Objects of Organization "Sec. 1. To arouse interest in edu cation and to insist upon the impoi tance of every child's being in sc-ho every day of the term. "Ses. 2. To encourage the study c agriculture and to cultivate amor, the boys and girls a love for the country home. "Sec. 3. To make the school the center of the community by furnish ing wnoiesome ana instructive ami;, ments to improve the physical v. intellectual environments of our i ture citizens." Activities Sec. 1. All local and countv ag ricultural contests, such as corn and tomato-growing, cooking, sewing, poul iry raising, etc., snail engage the ac tive interest of the club. Sec. 2. The society shall arrantre for public meetings some time dur ing the year, which all the people of the community shall be invited." Special Day Programs Miss Shotwell has included in the bulletin several very valuable pro grams for special days, for example: centennial ot. btar-fepangled Ban ner: 1. Occasion of writing song. 2. "Old Glory" Origin of tune. 3. Brief account of celebration in Baltimore. 4. Song Star-Spangled Banner. Health: 1. Song. 2. The house flv as a SDreader of diseases. 3. Ventilation of bedroom. 4. Why we have colds. 5. The greatest source of disease in this community. (Address by a physician.) Agricultural and Rural Life Dav. (Write U. S. Bureau of Education for Educational Bulletin No. 43 for ma terial for program:) 1 1. Song America. 2. Repeat in concert. "The Coun try Boys' Creed." 3. Ancient knowledge of cooking. 4. Origin of food plants. 5. Effect of invention on agricul ture. I. Name three things that the fol lowing men have contributed to ag riculture: George Washington. Sea man Knapp, Luther Burbank, James Wilson. II. 1. Song. 2. Improved machinery as labor savers. 3. Boys corn clubs. 4. How to increase average vicld or corn. 5. How to make farm life happier for farm women. (By farmers wife.) v. uood roads. 7. Rural telephone, mail delivery and parcels post. 8. How to improve the rural school Helpful Hints This is suggested in order to give the people of the community an op portunity of helping each other. Let each member tell some one thing that he or she can do for instance: make cake, soap, beaten biscuit, what to do with sick cattle, etc. Travel The aim here should be to utilize the traveling experiences of the com munity. If none of the children have traveled let them tell where they would like to go. By use of maps the program may be made a valuable geography lesson. 1. Song. 2. Where I spent my vacation. 3. My first visit to a great city. 4. My trip to the west. 5. An ocean voyage. A number of other very valuable programs were outlined. Miss Shotwell states that there are now fifteen Clubs in the county, and gives an interesting account of the work of two of them. PO' LIL' BRACK SHEEP (Ethel Maud Colson.) Po' lil' brack sheep that strayed away, Done los in the wind an de rain, An' de Shepherd he say, "O hirelin, Go fin' my sheep again." An' de hirelin' say, "O Shepherd, Dat sheep is brack and bad. But de Shepherd he smile, like dat HI brack sheep Wuz the onliest lamb he haV An he say, "O hirelin', hasten, For de win and de ram am coT, An' dat HI' brack sheep am loneeome Out dere, so far rum de fol, But de hirelin' frown, "O Shephern, Dat sheep am or and gray!" But de Shepherd he smile, like dat lir brack sheep Wuz fair as de break ob day. An' he say, "0 hirelin', hasten, Lo. here is de ninety an nine, But here away off f'um de sheep fol' Is dat lir brack sheep of mine!" An' de hirelin' frown, "O Shepherd, De res' of de sheep am here!" But de Shepherd he smile, like dat hi brack sheep He hoi' it mostes' dear. An' de Shepherd go out in de darkness Where do night was cor an' DieaK, An' dat lil' brack sheep he fin' it, An he lay it agains his cheek. An' de hirelin' frown, "O Shepherd. Don't bring dat sheep to me!" But de Shepherd he smile an' hoi' it close, An' dat lil' brack sheep wuz me! Who would have thought, while the six-piwer loan controversy was mk inc. that the first gold to reach Amer ica since the war broke out would come from China? Springfield Re publican. ' OUTLINE FOR DEBATE ON CHILD LABOR The development of North Carelina, as well as that of any other state, de pends upon the health and intelligence of its people; and the foundatioas of health and intelligence must be laid during childhood. A question always worth the con sideration of those interested i;i ... eating or getting educated is, hew is North Carolina providing opportunity for her children to become healthy an intelligent men and women? Doe she open a free way for their develop ment, or does she stunt the gfwt body and mind by allowing theas to work in mills and factories ? Brought into the form ef a debate query, the question is: "Resolved, That North Carolina should enact a law prohibiting all children useer 14 years of age from working is ai mill, factory or manufacturng plant." Affirmative Arguments I. Child labor results in mental and physical retardation and incomplete development, for A No time for play, one of tin chief agents of development is gfivi B Very little, if any. time is ziven for school. C The work is frequently carried on in badly lighted unsanitary bui,.. ings. II. Child labor defeats the very object for its employment, for A It tends to industrial deteriora tion, for in retarding the physical and mental growth of the child, it prevents him from becoming a skilled laborer. III. Child labor is cheap labor, and cheap labor tends to poverty, for A The total income of a family working in an industry that regularly employs child labor is almost always less than that of a family working 'in an industry that employs only adults. IV. Child labor is detrimental to society in general, for A It promotes crime, for workir.; children contribute a much larger pro portion of delinquents thaa de nc working children. B It embitters the spirit of the child, for as it hinders his highest de velopment as a citizen,- it fills him with hatred of those whom he consid ers responsible. V. . It is contended that some forms of manufacture are dependent upon child labor; but though child labor may be an economy and a convenience it cannot be a necessity to any form of legitimate manufacture. VI. It is contended that the child of the widow or the needy child should be allowed to work; but on the con trary, such children should be given special protection so that their po::-: bilites for future maintenance may not be limited. Negative Arguments. I. Society absolutely needs child la bor in in some forms of legitimate manufacture, for A Children are better fitted for some ocupations than adults. II. Many parents who are uaable to work or who cannot earn enough to support their families, need the help of their children. III. Under present educational conditions, North Carolina is better with child labor than without it, far A At present the compulsory school law does not apply to children between the ages of twelve and fourt een years of age, and even if it did. it would affect them only four months in the year; and the children are much better off employed in the factories than idle and out of school. IV. The proposel law does aot do more touch the edge of the child labor question, for A It prohibits child labor "i any mill, factory, or manufacturing plant," and thus does not extend its so-alled protection over the thousands ef child labor workers on the farms. B The number of children emaleyed in mills, factories and manufacturing plants is small compared with those employed on farms, for out of a total of 84,279 engaged in gainful pursuits, 74,080 are engaged in agricultnre. V. Children in mill communities are much better off than those who are emploved in agricultural work, for A North Carolina mill owners have adopted the practice of providing; san itary homes, and thus the proportio of those adversely affected through work must be email. CHAMBERLAIN'S COUGH RHME DY THE MOTHER'S FATOR ITE. "I give Chamberlain's Cough Reme dy to my children when they have colds or coughs," writes Mrs. Yerne Shaffer, Vandergrift, Pa. "It always helps them and is far superior to aay other cough medicine I have used. I advise any one in need of such a med icine to give it a trial." For sale by all dealers. STRAIGHTEN YOU UP Tonight! Clean Your Bowels And End ueaaacnea, twa, Sour Stomach Get a 10-cent box now. You men and women who caa't get feeling right who have headache, coated tongue, foul taste and foul breath, dizziness, can't sleep, are bil lious, nervous and upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stom ach, or have backache and feel worn out. Are you keeping your bowels clean with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway, every few days with salts, cathartic pills or castor oil ? Cascarets work while you sleep; cleanse the stomach, remove the sou undigested, fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile rrom tne liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter an' poison in the bowels. A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning a 10-cent box from any drug store will keep your stomach sweet; liver and bowels reg ular, and head clear for months. Don't forget the children. They love Cascarets because they taste good never gripe or sicken. .