i -is RHUPiATlSlfl '? s ? Get a ; I wn money Munyoru MUNYON'S RHEUMATISM CORE THE BEST MEDICINE Htor coughs 6 Colds LEFT TO A WORSE FATE Dynamiter, Himself a Married Man, Knew What Awaited Forgetful Husband. The business man was sitting in his office, thinking of starting for home, when a suspicious looking person, came in with a leather bag in his hand. "If you don't give me $25," said the visitor, coming at once to the point, T will drop this on the floor." The business man was cool. "What is in it?" he asked. "Dynamite," was the brief reply. "What will it do if you drop it?" "Blow you up." "Drop it!" was the instant com mand. "My wife told me when I left home this morning to be sure and send up a bag of flour, and I forgot it. I guess it will take just about as much dynamite as you have there to prepare me for the blowing up I'll get when she sees me!" He threw himself back in his chair and waited for the explosion, but it did not come. "I'm a married man myself," said the dynamiter, and quietly slipped out. Illustrated Bits. History of Red Cross Seal. "Charity stamps," first used in Boston in 1S62 for the soldiers' relief funds during the Civil war, were the original forerunners of the Red Cross Christmas seal, which will be used this year to bring happiness and cheer to millions. The Delaware Anti-Tuberculosis society in 1907 for the first time in America made use of a stamp for the purpose of getting revenue to fight consumption. In a hastily or ganized campaign of only three weeks they realized $3,000. The next year, 1908, the American Red Cross con ducted the first national tuberculosis stamp campaign. From this sale $135, 000 was realized for the anti-tuberculosis movement. In 1909, under many adverse conditions, $250,000 was rea lized from these stamps. This year the slogan of. the tuberculosis fighters and the Red Cross is "A Million for Turberculosis From Red Cross Seals in 1910." Tit for Tat. Lloyd C. Griscom, in an interview in New York, said of party dissen sions: "They are animated by a nasty spir it, a tit-for-tat spirit; and they go from bad to worse. "It's like the case of the engaged couple at the seaside dance. The young man, a little jealous, said cold ly to his fiancee at supper: " 'Let me see was it you I kissed in the conservatory?" " 'About what time?' the young girl answered, with a little laugh." Like the Other Kind. It was in a "down east" village that the young man met his sweetheart, a charming country beauty. When he returned to the city he sent her a jar of cold cream to keep her cheeks as fresh as the budding rose. On his next visit he asked her how she liked his little gift. "The taste was very nice," she said, with a rather sickly smile, "but I think that I like the other kind of cream best, dear." Lippincott's. A critic is a man who by the light of his own experience explains io ciders why they, too, have ianea. The word "tired" is much used and abused. r Toothsome Tid-Bits Can be made of many ordinary "home" dishes by adding Toastie The little booklet, "GOOD THINGS MADE WITH TOAST IES," in pkgs., tells how. Two dozen of more simple in expensive dainties that will delight the family. "The Memory Lingers" Postum Cereal Company, Ltd., Battle Creek, Micli. El 13 Post Enoch, Man Who Walked With God By REV. C. A. S. DWIGHT, D. D. IS 19 - Text. And Enoch walked with God; and he was not; for God took him. Gen. 5:24. God has many distinguished serv- ants whose dignity Is all derived from their heavenly Master. The names and histories of many of these, as portrayed in the Scripturaes, are coupled with tell-tale epithets or brief characterizations, which have' now become familiar as household words, that are significant of the peculiar aptitudes and achievements of the men to whom they are applied. Of one man in the Bible a phrase is used (applied elsewhere to one other, Noah) which is strangely suggestive and wonderfully inspiring for it is said cf Enoch that he "walked with God." All men, good and bad, walk in the sight of God, and all good men may be said to walk before or in the pres- ence of God guided by his eye, shone upon by nis glory, and sur rounded by tokens of his love but of that primal, pre-eminent man of an early rude age it is declared that he walked "with God," which must mean something very illustrious, and denote a nignity almost, if not quite, unex ampled in the whole course of human history. The character of Snpch, as viewed through the lengthened vistas of the varying ages, seems to shine with a pure white light almost, if not quite, unearthly. Its gleam was never light ened on man-made altars, the sheen is not dimmable by earth-born mists or garish glare or historic contraven tions. We cannot know just what were the psychologic qualities of this holy, happy man, but we may be sure of one thing, that his character was singularly pure, far above that of his fellows, or the unexampled honor of "walking with God" and of being translated without hint or hurt of death would never have been given to him. "Be ye holy, for I am holy," must have been fulfilled in marvelous de gree in Enoch's case. He was a sinner, as were others of his contemporaries, but somehow, in close contact with the fires of the Divino holiness, the dress of his own humanity was burn ed away so that even before he was caught aawy to paradise, he became detached from earth and filled with the very spirit of heaven. ,- Enoch walked with God it appears, as a prophet. God may have revealed to him in quiet, tender converse many wonderful secrets of his plans. What did Enoch see in prophecy? Who knows but that in those ecstatic 300 years there may have passed be fore his vision, revealed by the di rect will and wish of Jehovah, the outlines of redemption the coming history of the ages, exhibited as it were, in an elongated panorama, all illustrating the wonders of grace and centering about the cross, whose dis tant gleam Enoch's quickened eyes may have clearly seen? Paul, in a later age, was taken up into the third heaven why may Enoch not have been granted the vision of a redeem ed earth? We cannot saoy that it was so but we may wonder whether sucn, churches, wishing to provide some dreams and visions did not come to , tbing usually instructive for Re that holy and unique man. yiew Sunday, chose this plan: she WTe are told, at any rate, in the pr0cured a large number of photo epistle of Jude, of a wonderful vision graphs descriptive of the life of our which Enoch had of the consumma- tion of human history, when the Lord will come with ten thousand oi nis angels to visit a dire punishment on ungodly mein a message which seems to have been a quotation from or an adaptation of, a prophecy in the Book of Enoch, which last is a collection of apochryphal stories regarding mony natters in nature and in life which ;the chruch has declined to introduce into the canon, and does not receive as veritable Scripture. The general truth holds good at all events that the nearer one walks with God and the more transparent is the moral nature of any believer the broader and grander is the vision whicn sucn a one enjoys of eternal things for in the highest ranges of Christian ex perience being is seeing. There is need today for the trans- narent guileless, reverent, meditative Wn -u i! v timQ nf character a frame i' n mi 1 1 -1 1 tr; i. v.. ' nr fashion of moral being wnicn may ""v - -. . . seem, indeed, quite foreign to me ' " - . i zeiteceist" or prevailing spirit oi ma times. . i et in a rusuiug obc """6" anything, than in any other, ra men need the close converse witn iue Maker to kep them poised amid so- cial agitations steadily against the assaults of temptation, and clear- eyed amid the whirl and swiri oi numberless worldly distractions. It chnnld not be thought, because ii,nocn lived In a simple age, that, therefore, ho cminved exceptional opportunities for being religious, wnne m ims cuai- acteristically worldly day it Is quite out of the question to maintain a spiritual frame. The fact is that Enoch lived in an age that was rude, riotous and coarse, when vice was rampant, when the sanctions of so- ciety itself were largely lacking,, when there were no Bibles, churches, En deavor societies, religious clubs or rplieious books or weeklies, and, therefore, it was all the more to his "w -tj praise that, unuer uuiuuuS more unfriendly, pernaps, to rignt eousness tnan tuose mat uuwm I ll 4-V. - 4- j-vVirtiv day, he wanted wnu juu auu wm- ported hlmseii as Denu a baiut the Most High. Salvation means more than simply a kind of ticket to heaven. Rev. Carter H. Jones, Baptist, Louisville. (i i i Oct. 23. 1910 f Specially Arranged for This Paper Golden Text "And it came to pass, when the days were well nigh come that he should be received up, he steadfastly set his face to go to Jerusalem, and sent messengers before his face." Luke 9:51. The first element of a good review Is to make it a real review, a general view of the whole period which has been studied. In this case our review cov ers 13 lessons, from Lesson III. of the third quarter to Lesson III. of this quar ter. The second element is that the re- view he made attractive auu muci esting. And it can be so conducted both in the class and for the whole school as to become one of the most attractive and helpful sessions of the year. The period covered by this review extends from the summer of A. D. 29 to April 4, A. D. 30; about nine months. The place in the life of Christ is the last part of tne great Galiiean min- istry; the whole of the Perean minis try in the country east of the Jordan; and the last four days of Christ's pub lic ministry, in Jerusalem and vi cinity. The Map. Trace on the map the movements of Jesus Capernaum, Caesarea, Philippi, Galilee, Caper naum, Jerusalem, Galilee, Perea, Jeri cho, Bethany, Mount of Olives, Jeru salem. Picture Review. Reproductions from photographs of great paintings, and of Biblical and historical places and events, (both m color and in black and white), are now so reason able in price as to make them avail able for regular use in the class or Sunday school. It is a great help to the memory, if each class or each scholar makes a picture book of this part of the life of Christ. The best book for this purpose is one made for this object, of 140 pages, with a peculiar but simple back, which enables one to fill the book with pictures without at all distorting the covers, which are of heavy board covered with tasty paper. The text of Matthew's Gos pel can be pasted in from some cheap edition of the Gospels, or, better, writ ten in the words of the scholar. Great interest can be added to the making of these volumes in various ways. They are ornamented with pen drawings. "For instance, the fact of Jesus working as a carpenter during his young manhood is happily illus trated by sketching a hammer, a jack knife, saw, or other carpenter's tools." Maps and charts and small pictures can be cut out of disused Quarterlies; illustrations can be preserved from magazines and newspapers; small cards can be obtained with beautifully arranged pressed flowers in various natural colors, from different parts of Palestine which Jesus has made sa cred, two cents each, in packages of 25. Another Form of Picture Review. Mrs. Estelle M. Hurll, author or a capital volume on "The Life of Our Lord in Art," advocating the greater use of pictures in the Sunday school, says: "A successful teacher of a larsre Bible class in one of our Lord, placed them upon the walls and upon easels In the class room, un- til stle ad the whole story told in pictures. During the session no word rom her was necessary, except a few simpie explanations, while the pupils passeti in silence from one picture to another, taking in its beauty and its lesson at the same time. "It was Lg m0st impressive service I ever at- tended," said one who was there, and e whole class echoed the same sen- timent as they slowly left the church. Traveling by Stereoscopic Pictures, These are growing more popular, be- lng used in day schools as well as in Sunday schools, because the pictures are incomparably better than those of a ew years ago. They are such lifelike representations of the places where our Lord lived and walked and tausht. the figures and the scenes are bought out so clearly that It is 1 r.rnnr. tiio oomo n if wo wflra actu- i ti iiiwaL lii ot" "-J . ally traveling in the Holy Land. Fee- I . ple more and more waking up to tne likeness or tne experiences mat I may ne gameu m iue swicuscuye those gained by viewing them on the spot. There are 100 pictures of Palestine, In a ieather case, with a book en- closmg a map and a description of the tour through the Holy Land. Of course a selection can be made of the natures. This can be made most usefui for an evening meeting with thft ciasg. it would be well for each gunday school to own a set of these. The Topical Review. Let the schol- ars go through the lessons during the previ0us week, some taking one class of g-jects, and others another, if they are unat,ie to examine all thoroughly, L F-nd &u the statements that were applied to the life of the apostles. II. Find those two which contain references to children. III. Find those which refer to mar- riage' feastg IV mnd those which are fcased on - vinevards I ' " y TeU the gtory of each of the par. abies. ui yI TeU gtory of the triumphai entry. VII. What do we learn about watch ing? V 111. inui.c icidciiucs to lilxlsLS Buffering and death. jljj & Specially Arranged for This Paper B BANKERS KNEW THEIR MAN In His Customary Condition, and Further Identification Was Necessary. No One day a big city bank received the following message from one of its country correspondents: "Pay $25 to John Smith who will call today." The cashier's curiosity became suspicion when a cabman assisted into the bank a drunken "fare" who shouted that he was John Smith, and wanted some money. Two clerks pushed, pulled and piloted the boisterous individual into a private room away from the sight and hearing of regular depos itors. The cashier wired the country bank: "Alan claiming to be John Smith is here. Highly intoxicated. Shall we await identification?" The answer read: "Identification complete. Pay the money." Success Magazine. May Sell 100,000,000 Red Cross Seals. Twenty-five million Red Cross Christmas Seals have been printed and are being distributed by the Amer ican Red Cross, and arrangements have been made to print 100,000,000 if necessary. It Is expected that this number will be needed. While the sticker Is perforated like those used last year, It is intended for use only as a seal on the back of letters. The seal is one inch square with the con ventional Red Cross in the center and the words, "Merry Christmas Happy New Year. American Red Cross" in a circle about it. The col ors are red and green. The design is by Mrs. Guion Thompson of Water bury, Conn., who received S100 as a prize for her sketch. Slightly Mixed Two Englishmen were resting at the Red Home inn at Stratford-on-Avon. One of them discovered a print pictur ing a low, tumbling building under neath which was printed: "The House in Which Shakespeare Was Born." Turning to his friend in mild surprise he pointed to the print. His friend exhibited equal surprise and called a waiter, who assured them of the accuracy of the inscription. " Ton my word," said the observing Englishman, shaking his head dubious ly. "I thought he was born in a man ger! ? Free Blood Cure. If you have pimples, offensive eruptions, old sores, cancer, itching, scratching eczema, suppurating swellings, bone pains, hot skin, or if your blood is thin or im pure, then Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.) will heal every sore, stop all itching and make the blood pure and rich. Cures after all else fails. $1.00 per large bottle at drug stores. Sample free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., Department B. More to Be Pitied. Tramp (to lonely spinster) Come Missus, arst yer "usband if 'e ain't got a pair o' trousers to give away. Spinster (anxious not to expose her solitude) Sorry, my good man, he eh never wears such things. Punch. TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn't Smart Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Books and Eye Advice Free by Mail. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. Tired Out. 'Is the first edition of your novel exhausted yet?" 'No. Why?" T thought it might be from stand ing so long on the counters.' TO DRIVE OUT MAAKIA gygTEM Take the Old Standard GKOVE'S TA8T iSLKSS CHLuL TOJNiU. ion Know wnai you are uium. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle. Showing it is simply uuuane ami iron 111 less form. The Quinine drives out the malaria and tne iron builds up the system. Sold by all dealers for SO years. Price 60 cents. Its Advantages. "There is one appropriate use of a good poker hand." "What is that?" "It will shovel in the money." For HEADACHE Hicks' CAPUDINE Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or Nervous Troubles, Capudine vrill relieve you. It's liquid pleasant to take acts immedi ately. Try it. 10c, 25c.. ana 60 cents at drug stores. Considering what most people are willing to do for money it's a wonder there are not more millionaires. . -. . I 1 V U.vnn'c Pollofti email oneroid - 7' T"' "7- I did. LCU. caov lVJ l-aug t,fij vuuu , iB,uiii and invig0rate stomach, liver and bow- ei3. Vo not gripe Life is a grind, but the world is full of cranks. No Man is Stronger Than His Stomach . A strong man is strong all over. No man can be strong who is suffering from weak stomach with its consequent indigestion, or from some other disease of the stomach and its associated organs, which im pairs digestion and nutrition. For when the stomach is weak or diseased there is a loss of the nutrition contained in food, which is the source of all physical Strength. When a man "doesn't when he doesn't sleep well, has an uncomfortable feeling in the stomach after eating, is languid, nervous, irritable and despond- eat, he is losing the nutrition needed to make strength. Such a man should use Dr. Pierce s Golden Medical Discovery. It cares diseases of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition. It enriches the blood, invigorates the liver, strengthens the kidneys, nourishes the nerves, and so GIVES HEZLLTH ZIND STRENGTH TO THE WHOLE BODY. Yon can't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute ior this non alcoholic medicine of known composition, not even though the urgent dealer may thereby make a little bigger profit. Ingredients printed on wrapper. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more floods briahter and laster colon than any other dye. One 10c oackaoe colors all fibers. They d (In cold water better tha Miothtr ojrt. You in dye any garment without ripping apart. Wrlte lor free booklet-How to Oye. Bleach and Ml Colors. MONROE DRUG OO.. Ouinay. lltlnoiBr OF THE VIRTUE OF Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound What is the use of procrastinating in the face of such evidence as the following letters represent? If you are a sick woman or know one who is, what sensible reason have you for not giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound a trial ? For 30 years we have been publishing such testimonial letters as these thousands of them they are . genuine and honest, too, every Mrs. S. J. Barber says : lill "I think Lydia E. lilliannKham's vege table compound IsiHlaia thp hpst merli- llllicine in the world mils for women and IIH I feel it my duty to let otners know the good it has done for me. Three years ago I had a tumor which the doctor said would have to be removed by an operation or I could not live more than a year, or two, at most. I wrote Mrs. Pink ham, at Lynn, Mass., for advice, and took 14 bottles of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and to day the tumor is gone and I am a perfectly well woman. I hope my testimonial will be of benefit to oth ers." Mrs. S. J. I3af.ber, Scott, tf.Y. Mrs. E. F. Hayes says : 'I was under the doctor's treat ment for a fibroid tumor. I suffered with pain, sore ness, bloating. and could not walk or stand on my feet any length of time. I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for ad vice, followed her Jdirections and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. To-day I am a well woman, the tumor was expelled and my whole system strengthened. I advise all women who are afflicted with tumors or female troubles to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. E. F. Hates, 1890 Washington St., Boston, Mass. mm Tss 111 - il ML III mwtm www For 30 years liydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills. No sick: woman does justice to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herbs, and has thousands of cures to its credit. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to -write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health Attciress lYirs. jt.-iiii5ju.iiui, STEADY WHITE UGHT W8 L. DOUGLAS 3 3-M2 & $S4 SHOES oKIK BOYS' SHOES, $2.00 $2.50 AND $3.00. WmlmDouglas $300, $3.50 and $4.00 shoes ar positively the best made and mast pop tsSat shoes fop the pvice in America, and are the most economical shoes for you to buy Do you realize that my shoes have been the standard for over SO years, that I make and sell more SS.OO, $3.50 and 84.00 shoes than any other manufacturer in the U.S., and that DOIi IAB FOB DOLLAR, I G UARANTEE MY SHOES to hold their shape, look and fit better,and wear longer than any other SS3.00, 83.50 or $4.00 shoes you can buy ? Quality counts. It has ronriA mir sIioas THK T.TCAT5KK.S5 OF THE WORLD. Yon -will he pleased when you buy my shoes because of the fit and appearance, and when it comes time for you to purchaso another pair, you will be more than pleased because the last ones wore so well, and gave you so much comfort. CAUTION ! E1$5&ZTAKE HO SUBSTITUTE If your dealer cannot supply yon with. w. L. Douglas Shoes, write for Mail Order Catalog. W. A.. UOUUMS) 145 Spark Street, JLlrockton, Ma. , Y That the NORTH CAROLINA AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE 1 turning out graduates -who, as scientific farmers, skilled mechanics and well prepared teachers, are in great demand? That board, lodging and tuition cost only $7.00 per month? That graduates and under-graduates are earning from $50 to $150 per month? That you, young man, cannot afford to miss this opportunity? For catalogue or free tuition write TODAY to President Dudley, Greensboro, N. CJ. INCORPORATED One of the best equipped schools in the South. THE LARGEST, THE BEST. The strongest faculty. MORE GRADUATES IN POSITIONS than all other Business Schools in the State, BOOK KEEPING, SHORTHAND and ENGLISH. Write for Handsome Catalogue. Addrese KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Raleigh, North Carolina, or Charlotte, North Carolina, gy We also teach Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Penmanship, etc., by mail. Send for Home Study Circular feel just right one of them. Mrs. George May says : ilSlliSliisi J"No one know I what I have suf- jfered from fe--Imale troubles,. neuralgia pains,. land backacne. IMy doctor said ne could, not give me .anything to cure it. Through the advice of a riend I began rco use Lydia E. lnkham s vege table Compound, and the pain soon disappeared. I continued its use and am now in perfect health. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has been a God-send to me as I believe I should have been in, my grave if it had not been for Mrs. Pinkham's advice and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. George Mat, 86 4th Ave Paterson, N. J. Mrs. W. K. Iloush says s l"I have been completely cured of a severe fe male trouble by Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, and want to recom mend it to all suf fering women." Mrs. W. Hotjsh, 7 East view Ave., Cin zolcinnati, Ohio. Because your case is a difficult one, doctors having done you no good, do not continue to suffer with out giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound a trial. It surely' has cured many cases of female ills, such as inflammation, ulceration,dis- Elacements, fibroid tumors, irregu irities, periodic pains, backache.etc free of charge. .uyiiu, iu.sa 1NKHAI4 1 zffirrAv if tYtlA if The Rayo Lamp is a high grade lamp, sold at a low price Tfcore are lamps that cost more, but therel s no better lamp made at any price. Constructed of solid brass; nickel plated easily kept clean; an ornament to any room in any house. There 1 s nottiine known to the art of lamp-making thatcan add to the vallie of the R A YO Lamp as a ligtat giving device. Bvery dealer everywhere. If not at yours, write for descriptive circular to the nearest agency of the STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) That North Carolina is far nishing the Negro youth upon the lowest terms, the very best facilities for in dustrial training:? A SCHOOL WITH A REPUTATION tor DOING HIGH GRADE WORK FOR Twenty horse power Return Tubular Boiler and 18 horse power Liddell-Tomp-kins Engine, together with a Moffitt Heater all in good condition and can be had at a bargain. Above in operation now on our premises Corner Fifth and College Streets, Charlotte, N. C.,' and can be inspected before purchasing. Address SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER UNION Charlotte North Carolina Restores Cray Hair to Natural Colon REMOVES DANDRUFF AMD SCURF - Invigorates And prevents the hair from falling For Sal by Druggists, or Sont Diroet by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia Vlca SI Far Bottle; Sampta Bottls 35c Sand for Circa Lara! nrriflUrr TbRPU easiest to work with ana ULMHnbC. dlfUlbn atarchoB clotlies nlcsat, W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 43-1910. SALE -ASES fn on iy;5C