I f are dependent Their health as men and women is largely established In childhood. r I - J If your child is languid, bloodless, tired when rising, with out ambition or rosy cheeks, Scoff Emaleion is a wonderful help. It possesses nature's grandest body-building fats so delicately predigested that the blood absorbs its strength . , and carries it to every organ and tissue end fibre. 1V first It Increases their appetite, then It adds flesh-strengthens Vfj t the bonesmakes them sturdy, active and healthy. J' No alcohol or narcotic b Scott's Emulsion, jast pcrfty and strength. Memory of Mrs. Sarah J. Pugh. Jlrs. Sarah Jane Pugh died Wed iday, -March 4th, 1914, and was ietly laid to rest in Bethel ceme--y March 5th. Funeral services ire- conducted by her pastor, Mrs. ilner Cox. In spite of the rain at fell that day, the church was full, hich shows that Mrs. Pugh was ved by all who knew her. She was kind and loving wife and mother d a faithful member of Bethel - .urch, at which place she will be reatly missed. She was superinten 4. tit of the cradle roll department, :. d took much delight in trying to -5ase the little folks. She was al lys present on preaching days if te was able to be there, and many ' ,nes has she arose to her feet and stifled to the goodness and mercies S the Lord, but today her voice is 'ill both in the church and in the 3me. While Bethel realizes that she has ' st a good member, yet they will robably not miss her half as much will the family, for when mother i gone the brightest jewel on earth I gone. She cannot come to us but fe -can go to her. Mrs. Pugh leaves so mourn their loss a devoted hus band, four children Myrtle, Vernon, Hazel and Roy, three sisters, Mes dames Mary Trogdon, Amy Glasgow And Miss Annas Kemp; two brothers, Messrs. David and Eli Kemp, and a host of relatives and friends. But we realize that our loss is her eternal Jcain. We pray God's blessing upon the Bereaved family, that He will whis per words of comfort to their achin hearts. A FRIEND. Cause of Rheumatism. Two English physicians have an il flounced that they have discovered J -he microbe for rheumatism. We trust I ihat this may be true, for rheuma- jjsm has been one of the most baffling j; diseases. f f Since the days of Louis Pasteur great progress has been made in certain branches of medical science, nuch more than had been accom plished previous to him. j Now, a great many diseases are transmitted by the microbe and if you fight the microbe you fight the (disease and do away with the I cause. j When disease microbes get into the human system there is no effort on the part of the system to destroy them. It is therefore of the highest 'importance that the human beinir e Should always have pure blood a. id I 'that his system should be capable I of throwing off infections of dij-f-ease. I I Most diseases are aided by wrong t habits of living, with too much i food, the wrong kind of food, and L the wrong kind . of drink, insuffi I $ent exercise, etc., making a person -a prey to the microbes of disease. y I It is certainly a great step to dis y cover the exact cause of rheuma f tism. It will enable the physician to treat it more successfully; and I St will enable persons to escape fr.M K'its effects. Winston Sentinel. Him E2S Beef and Milk A-plenty I leant for two nurnnSAft! ddction and for mUk production. To do either fight they mult be healthy. There Is nnthincr hatter ia keep them in continued good health, or to make them well quickly when sick, than few doses of STOCK MEDICINE Stirs up the liver Drives disease poisons away. JUST RECEIVED Car tow is the time to make vour Implements. If you are not already a customer, come to see is. Start right, as we are n position to give vou the very est class of hardware. ! McCrary-Redding Hardware Co. i Asheboro, N. Carolina All Growing Children on nourishment for growth. We Must Realize Our Responsibility, Clarence Poe at the Social Service Conference. The first thing needed in buildnng a great civiuzauun in jNorcn Caro lina is to realize our possibilities to realize that we have yet but a State in the making, a pioneer common wealth a State larger in area, be it rememDerea, man England or Scot land or Greece, and which may well achieve, in the providence of God, a civimuliuii na ncii, variea ana nis toric as theirs. That is the faith that I should like for us to cherish. We must dream the great dreams. We must behold the land that is very far off. All great acnievemenr, is bunt on srreat asnira nun. j.no mediaeval catnearai ever lifted its spires towards heaven or awed the spectator by the solemn yastness of its interior, no Taj Mahal in far away India ever grew into a beauty almost divine, no master's hand 'round Peter's dome and groined tne aisles oi Christian Rome, until first the y dynamic, irresistible Dower of a great vision, a great faith, drew yearning men through months and years of conflict and struggle, even as Arthur followed the Golden Grail and Israel of old the Dillar of fire and cloud. So those of us sons and daughters of North Carolina, we who were nur tured at her bosom and who love her with a passionate love, we who would build here a rich and beautiful, a puissant and fruitful civilization, we must first of all electrify our people with the driving power of a great weal, we must hitcn our wagon to a star. We must believe that no civili zation anywhere that men have known is greater than we build here in our own beloved home State. The Best Thing About Wilson. Baltimore Sua. , Twelve months of Woodrow Wilson have produced a number of tangible and definite reforms. But the best result of all is the spirit of public confidence in sane, progressive poli cies and in the integrity of the Ad ministration behind them, in the sub sidence of the fever of hysteria, and in all increasing strength at the same time of the resolve to go forward along higher planes of national life. The material gain of these twelve months is great, but the spiritual gain is far greater. Other Presi dents may have delivered inaugurals at the beginning of their terms which seemed equally striking to men oi their day, but few of them have lied up with such absolute consciousness as Woodrow Wilson to the spirit of their professed dedication to the pub lic service. He has made his mistakes, like the rest of us, but they have not been serious, and the whole country today gives him the rate credit of absolute sincerity, honesty and patri otism. However we may disagree with him oh this or that policy, we have the comfort of feeling that we have in the White House a man who is a public servant in the best sense of that word, and with whom the pub lic interests will always be paramount to party and personal consideration. Diversified Farming Is Making the South Planters are finding that it pays to rotate crops. Corn, hay and cotton follow each other with a sure profit. Besides raising diversified crops, more planters use fertilizers containing enough tobalance the phosphoric acid. Enough Potash means at least as much Potash as phosphoric acid. To get full value out of your feriilizer, in sist on high-grade goods. If your dealer doesn't carry such grades, buy Potash sepa rately. Potash Pays. ' W$ wlllullf aJ imhIAm m 200-lt. tat at GERMAN KALI WORKS. Inc. 42 Broadway, Niw York Caleala. MeCanalel Black Savaaaah. Sunk S Trail lldf. H.W 0M.1M, Whlll.7 Ceatlal Sink RIM. Su fraatlica. Calllarala St. allaala, Braplrt Ild. for heel nro- 1 Anytime any of nur cat tle get anything wrong with them I give them a few dose of B a e D STOCK MEDICINE. They soon set well. John 8. Carroll. Moorhead, Miss, 85c, 50c and SI. per can. At vnm ibaWl load of Oliver Chilled dIows. purchases of all kinds larmin? GET RIO OF DUST ON . ROADS One of the Most Important Problems w iomront Highway Engineers Two Methods 8uggsted. (By L. W. PAGE.) The most imDortant nrohlnm whtoh has confronted highway engineers la recent years is tne getting rid of the dust on roads. Not until the Introduc tion of motor vehicles, however, did tills become a factor of sufficient Im portance to engage the serious con sideration of road builders and road users. Fast motor traffic has reached such proportions at the Dresent time as to shorten the life of our mint carefully constructed and expensive fir ' 4, V!S Dust Raised by Automobile Traveling at High speed. macadam roads to a great extent, and to keep them in a loose and uneven condition. The macadam road has been devel oped with the object In view of with standing the wear of iron-tired horse vehicles, and it has met successfully the demands of suburban and rural traffic until the advent of the auto mobile. When In Its highest state of perfection, the rock from which such a road is made is so suited to the volume and character of traffic which passes over it that only an amount of dust is worn off sufficiently to replace that removed by wind and rain. The dust remaining should be just enough to bond the surface stones of the road thoroughly, forming a smooth, Impervious shell. A road of this char acter wears uniformly under the trafflo for which It was designed, and always presents an even surface. When such a road is subjected to automobile traffic, entirely new con ditions are brought about. The pow erful tractive force exerted by the driving wheels of automobiles soon disintegrates the road surface. The fine dust, which ordinarily acts as a cementing ag?nt. Is thrown into the air and carried off by wind or is easily washed off by rains. The pneumatic rubber tires .wear off little or no dust to replace tbat removed by natural agencies. The result Is that the stones composing the road become loose and rounded, giving the greatest resist ance to traction, and water is allowed to make its way freely to the founda tion of the road. Many remedies have been suggested and tried for meeting this new condi tion, but a perfectly satisfactory olu tlon of the problem is still to be found. Some success has attended the efforts of those who have sought to find a cure for the evil and this Is encourag ing when the many difficulties to be overcome in the treatment of thou sands of miles of roadway are con sidered. It 1b apparent that this prob lem can be solved only by the adop tion of one or two general methods. (1) By constructing roads In such a Road Treated With One Application of an Oil Emulsion Automobile Traveling at Rate of 40 Miles an Hour, With No Dust Resulting. manner and with suoh materials as to seduce to a minimum the formation of dust; and (2) by treating the sur faces of existing roads with materials that will give the same result. Among the materials whloh have been applied with some suoeess to the finished road suifaee without the agenoy of iram tha ntBstal oils and coal tar re undoribtedly the most important, Alma to Promote Road In West, L plan to promote road building In WJfltBrn states was embodied In but Introduced by Senator Warren. It woiljd' grajft 600,000 acres of pubOo lands to eaoh of the ftCowing state to be sold for the aid of road building: Arizona, , Ootoando, kab4. Montana, New ftexlco, Nevada, TJtab and Wyt omtng. for Oatarto. Better roads tor Ontario pcovino re to be made with the $U),00M00 ap propriation, expenditure of which will be onoar the sopertialon of a nonpa Uaan oommisarton annornted by tha gioaniiiaant. DOES DANGER THREATEN YOU? Are You in the Coils of Disease? Maybe the serpent -of sickness is crush- in? you to death? Your back is hpnw eyes dull, a never end ing weariness holds you. ijj, iw uuny women well is. know the meaning of r hopeless dragging days and endless nichta. I Functional and or ganic derangements grow steadily when neglected they become deadly in time. Don't suffer longer. Stella- Vitae will relieve you now. This wonderful remedy 13 the guaranteed wo man' tonic of the world. It is the fin ished work of a lifetime of a distin guished physician who gave the best years of life ntudy to its perfection. Stella-Vita is a life giving tonic guar anteed by every dealer who se!l3 it. Whenever a bottle fails to benefit you. the dealer cheerfully refunds every penny it cost you. It is perfectly harm lesshealing and health in every drop. Thousands of well women all over the South testify to its wonderful proper ties. Shake off the serpent. Get well. Begin today. Get a bottle of Stetta Vitae, the guaranteed-to-benefit rem edy. Your dealer sells it in $1 bottles. Thacher Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. . Ia Memory of Martitia Cox Martitia McMasters Cox was born Dec. 3rd, 1844, married to Milton Cox Sept. 19, 18(i5, and died at her home near Providence . Feb. 27th, 1914, of pneumonia. Her husband preceded her just ten years and one month. Unto them were born six children, S. U. and A. L. pf Climax; J. A. of Greensboro; A. C. of Biscoe; Mrs. J. B. Hockette and Miss Nettie Cox of Pleasant Garden. All were with her during her sickness. Everything that her faithful physician and lov ing children could do was done, but ufter nine days of suffering the lit tle shapely hands that were never long idle from fashioning some dain ty piece of work for her children, lay still at last cold in death, mother. She joined the M. P. Church in childhood and was a faithful worker, with Jier husband, in Sunday school for years at Providence. During her sickness she bore her suffering without a murmur; ex pressed a wish that her children and friends meet her in a better land. Much of her last hours were spent in prayer, and as they bent to catch her words she was heard to say: "Jesus, let me to thy bosom fly." The triumphant look she wore was not of this world; and we believe uro loss is her eternal gain and that she is with her Savior nrA the mor we all be as- she expressed her self to be,- "Ready and waiting for His coming." State of Ohio, city of Toledo, I Lucas County. ss. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and very case of Ca tarrh that cannot be cured by the u.-e of HALL'S CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of De cember, A. D. 1886. (Seal) A. W. GLEASON, ' Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally and acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. Cullen Rhyne. a nrosDerous vouner farmer living near Gastonia, met an instant and tragic death on the court house square in Dallas when he was hurled against a telephone post by a wild horse he was driving and his neck broken. THIS STOMACH REMEDY HELPS YOUR FRIENDS Almost every day some grateful person comes into our store and tells us of benefits received from the use of Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets. Know ing how much good they have done others and knowing what they are made of we feel sure they will help you. So great is our faith in them that we urge you to try them entirely at our risk, with our personal prom ise that if they don't do all you expect them to do and make your stomach comfortable and healthy and your di gestion easy, we'll hand back your money. We couldn't endure anvthinc? anv more strongly than we do Rexall Dys pepsia Tablets. Containing Pepsin and Bismuth two of the greatest di gestive aids known to medical science, they soothe the stomach, check heart burn and distress .promote a natural flow of the gastric juice, and help reg ulate the bowels. Remember, if they don't make your digestion so easy and comfortable that you can eat whatever you like whenever you like, we want you to come back and tell us and get your money. Sold only at the more than 7,000 Rexall Stores, and in this- town only at our store. Three sizes, 26c, 50c and $1.00. Standard Drg Co., the Rexall Store, Asheboro, N. C. MmmoNAL swrSdooL Lesson (Br E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evenm Department. The Moody Bible Institute, : Chicago.) LESSON FOR MARCH 22 LE880N8 BY THE WAY. LESSON TEXT Luke lS:M-ffi. GOLDEN TEXT "Not every one that aalth unto me, Lord. Lord, ah an enter Into the kingdom of heaven; bat he that doeth the will of my father who l In heaveq." Matt ?:a. The paragraph selected for out study Is wisely entitled "Lessons by the Way," and easily falls Into three sections. There are two parables about the kingdom, a reply as to who shall be saved, and an answer to the advice given Jesus about Herod seeking after his life. The first section Is 'properly a por tion of the preceding paragraph which relates to the incident of the woman .healed on a Sabbath. I. What the Kingdom of God Is! like, vv. 18-21. The word, "there fore" (v. 18, R. V.), links this1 section with the lesson oi last week wherein we observed the effect upon his adversaries when Jesus worked his miracle of healing upon the woman (v. 13), and they were "put to shame," v. 17. With this fact in mind It is easy to reconcile the principles advanced by the two different narables. viz.. th fact of Intense opposition on the part of hia enemies, and that of rejoicing on the part of his friends. 8ymbols of Evil. The faithful servants of an absent1 but ejected Lord are to watch for svmpath'y that uns th h aimal him that they may give him suitable Hfe and the readiness with which so welcome when he comes. This king- mUch of it responds to the cry of dis dom is to be outwardly prosperous ' tress. Perhaps all men reared in and grow to that extent that it shall the country have seen fastened in the be a shelter to the birds, which rep- fence a pig whose squeals brought .resent the nations, Ezek. 17:23. But a11 the swine on the plantation run at the same time there is to be an In- nng to its rescue and giving great ward growth as well, one of leaven g,r"nts, of symPa,th.y n t-he way. The . r .i o i E n cy f a wounded bird, or of one (yeast) putrefaction. See I. Cor 5 67. whose ,1est ,)as bee invaded icklv also Gal. 5:8, 9. A mustard seed thus brings together all the birds withm growing large i3 abnormal; the birds rcach of the call. They will go closer are symbolic of evil; so Jesus teaches to their enemies at such times than us here as elsewhere (Matt. 13: 24-! under any other circumstances, except 30), that the kingdom is to be of a 'when they conceive their eggs or mixed character, an intermixture of young to be in danger. When a bird good and evil, opposition and victory. I returns to its nest, finds a snake History has abundantly fulfilled these ' "jere llovv.ng its nestlings and- nrML Inna ofc tlm- Tonus ' Uttei S its note of distress, birds of 1. " " "'"o--- "other species will assemble at the uttered these words nothing seemed iscene as tlickly as those of its kind. more improbable than such a suggest ed development, either of outward prosperity and power, or of such a possibility of finding evil within. Common Question. Who shall be saved, vv. 22-30. What is more natural in view of these cried piteously. T hastened to the thoughts than to ask this question, aj8pot and when t alTjved the vines question that Is a most common one ( were aii-e wiih various kinds of birds still. Notice, ho did not answer in a that had rushed in. I recall a little way to satisfy idle curiosity, but ai- rected each to his own duty, to see it they themselves had entered th king dom rather than be concerned about how many are to be saved. The sec- fi, , tn, 'out and made such a hue and cry that ret then is sti a secret. He told it t toether a snlall bunch 0birds them to "strive' (contend earnestly) , that took turns at peeping down in to er.ter in. Soon the door will ba the cavity at the owl and scolding it shut, now they are able to enter, then for being an owl and upsetting the not at all. He is the "door," John chickadee. I was much impressed by 10: S. There is one form of work ' a little occurrence a few days ago. I which Is essential to the salvation of, drove out with my boys to where the believer, see John 0:29. "Works," j" had set a rabbit trap on my altruistic service, Is an essential part pl??e '? countiy- ,Theie was a ,-,....,.. ' . .-, Jrabbit in the trap and as we were of Christianity being an evidence ofjtaki it out it th usua, faith, James 2:17, 18, but altruism 1b This was answered instantly by the not the whole of religion as some voices of two crows in the woods, a seem to imply. We do not drift into short distance away. The rabbit re the kingdom, Acts 14:22; I. Cor. 9:24- peated his cries and in a few moments 27; Heb. 4:11; 2 Pet. 1:10. All one needs to do to be lost Is to do noth ing. To be saved calls for an hon est, earnest effort Jesus again sug gests his return as he reveals the 7:13, 14) Jesus states this same thought. The way of unrighteousness Is broad, easy to follow and many walk therein. Whereas the way oi life is narrow, straight, and few choose to follow It. To be even so familiar as to have eaten and to have drunk in his presence, or to have lived on the same street, will not suffice, and will not merit an entrance. In another connection (Matt. 25) Jesus taught that even If admission ia claimed on the basis of actual service gems uia leiuru us lie leveum luaijv 1 " M kind of seeking which fails to find ani KAtirPfl jPOrffia rlantfir S rendered there was still lacking one relief that I purchased a one dollar thing, viz., the Lord's knowledge of bottle and by the time this was tak them. To be casually, superficially ,en the old pains had left my back familiar with him is not enough they ;and I could sleep the whole" night did not know him. Many of our through. I am a retired planter 70 flro nannla -oHl! than ha "loaf when that door Is closed, and they find themselves without "Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord." "Word and Work the two Ws. You'll soon get spiritually gorged If it is all word and no work, and you will soon be' without flower it it ia all work and no word. If you want to be healthy Christians, there must be both word and work." D. ti. iiOOdjr. : ll(. Warning about Herod, w. 3faj 85. Why the Pharisees gave Jefltia this warning is hard to tall. They! were not Interested In his safety par ticularly and perhaps' only wanted to, frighten him and thereby limit bis tat fluence and activity, see Neh. 6:9-11;! Amos 7:12, 13. There Is no doubt,! however, of the truth of their words and we know that Jesus never need lessly Incurred danger. He had his; work to do and couM not be killed until It was done, John 11:8-10. The! mention of the usurper called from Jesus a revelation of a his compassion-! ate love for the city of Jerusalem. mc "No, madam, I never re commend headache medicines that affect tho heart action. It's easier to suffer tsmporarily with a burstincf head than it is to die with a bursiin? heart." "But I c:mi safely recom mend thin. Been sollirg it for 15 years and nevrr had a case where it did tho least hrrrri." "Oh, yes, it's pleasant to take, we servo it pt our foun tain nr.d it 3 the most popular remedy we have for Headache, Neuralgia, Backache and other aches that are superinduced by coltls and stomach disorders." "Wh!ch Biso bottle will you havi ; "Thank you. Call again." 70c, 25c, 50c Bottlei A Pleassst Liquid Potioa. It 1 1 Taunts. " ' How Animals Respond to the Cry of Distress. Richard B. McLauchlin of Statesvilla in Forest and Stream. Few things in nature are so inter- In such instances, it is not uncommon to see birds or a dozen or more spe cies collect within a few minutes. I once heard the cry of a bird caught by a snake concealed in honeysuckle vines. The snake held it by its wing incident tnat was not nearly so sen- ous. A Carolina chicadee started down n a hole in a sycamore when it discovered a screech owl that had quartered there. It speedily backed the crows were hovering above crowing loudly. This is the first time I have seen birds come to the call of a quadruped. Advice to Kidney Sufferers Regarding the wonderful curative merits of your Swamp-Root. I can not say too much. After suffering severely for three years or more with severe pains caused by weak kidneys, I was finally induced to try Swamp-Root through n testi monial I read in one of the news-pa-pprs. I was In such a condition that I was obliged to arise from my bed or eight times every night. I purchased a fifty-cent bottle and before it was used I felt f much "I Ke. DO OWlUg 10 Jjr. mer's Swamp-Root ,1 am in the best of health and feel like a boy. I am always glad to recommend Swamp-Root to those who are in need of it. a Sincerely yours, C. E. USSERY, Bowersville. Ga. Personally appeared before me, this 8th day of September. 1909, C. E. Ussery. who subscribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. ' T. H. McLANE, Notary Public. Letter to Dr. Kilmer Go., Binghamton, N. V. Prove What Swamp-Root AYill 1 For You. Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer and Co.. Binghamton, N. Y.. for a sam ple size bottle. It will conince any one. You will also receive a book let of valuable Information telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Asheboro Weekly Courier. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. 4T iff

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